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Jakarta pressures Acehnese rebels over peace deal
By John Roberts
15 June 2005
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Talks in the Finnish capital Helsinki between the Indonesian
government and the exiled leadership of the separatist Free Aceh
Movement (GAM) ended on May 31. The outcome of the meeting, the
fourth since the devastating Boxing Day tsunami, has been praised
by spokesmen from both sides and the Finnish mediators as a major
step forward.
A final deal by August is mooted. The Crisis Management Initiative
(CMI) organisation, headed by former Finnish President Martii
Ahtisaari, has been charged with drawing up documents for a fifth
round to begin on July 12. These are to serve as the basis for
an agreement to end the 30-year conflict that has cost at least
12,000 lives. European Union (EU) observers, who attended the
May talks, have offered to mediate in the implementation of any
settlement.
It is clear that any agreement will involve major concessions
from GAM. Its participation in the talks was on the basis that
it would temporarily give up its demands for full independence
in return for political concessions in the form of increased autonomy
and a measure of self government.
At present, however, it is not even certain that GAM will be
permitted to take part in local elections. Indonesian negotiators,
headed by Justice Minister Hamid Awaluddin, ruled out any change
to constitutional and electoral law prohibitions on locally-based
political parties and on the advocacy of separatism. Indonesian
law requires all political parties to be nationally based and
have extensive organisation in at least half of the nations
33 provinces.
These anti-democratic laws effectively prevent GAM from participating
in the first-ever direct provincial regency elections due to take
place by October. Even if it were to end any agitation for secession,
GAM, which is based solely in Aceh, would not be able to meet
the legal requirements to be registered as a political party.
Another significant stumbling block remains GAMs demand
for the demilitarisation of the province. Over the past two years,
the Indonesian armed forces (TNI) have waged a ruthless counter-insurgency
operation against GAM, involving 56,000 heavily-armed troops and
police. Until recently, the province was under emergency rule,
providing the military with sweeping powers and resulting in widespread
abuses, including torture and extra-judicial killings.
The points of agreement at the talks were limited to disbursement
of royalties from the oil and gas enterprises operating in Aceh
and a number of administrative measures. Despite his publicly
expressed optimism over the result of the latest talks, CMI head
Ahtisaari admitted to the AKI news service that GAMs participation
in politics remained problematic.
If a final agreement is in sight, it indicates that the TNI
offensive, combined with the impact of the December 26 tsunami,
has seriously weakened GAM. The tsunami killed about 160,000 people,
rendered another 500,000 homeless and wrecked about one third
of the province. All foreign relief aid is being channelled through
Jakarta and much of the reconstruction is premised on a political
settlement of the separatist conflict. Moreover, the military
is involved in supervising refugee camps as a means for cutting
GAM off from sections of its social base.
Sidney Jones, an analyst with the Brussels-based International
Crisis Group (ICG), commented to Radio Singapore International
on May 11: [After] more than 20 months of martial law or
emergency period, GAM has been fairly severely damaged. That is,
while most of the leadership is intact, a lot of the fighters
and soldiers at a lower level have either been captured or killed
or made to surrender, or have voluntarily surrendered.
GAM has been pushed out of the villages in much of Aceh.
And were talking about an area where in 2001 there was an
official estimate that GAM was in control of 80 percent of the
villages in Aceh. Now, for the most part, they are out of the
settlement areas and have been pushed back to camps in the hills,
and many GAM field commanders and fighters are looking for an
exit strategy.
On May 18, in the lead up to the latest talks, Indonesian President
Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono issued a decree ending the civil
emergency status in Aceh. However, no troops have been withdrawn
from the province, operations against GAM continue and the media
remains under tight control. Sofyan Dawood, GAMs military
spokesman in Aceh, described the lifting of the emergency as a
cruel joke while the governments negotiators
in Helsinki serve up warm words across the table.
GAM negotiators, who are mostly in exile in Europe, have talked
up the results of the Helsinki meeting. Senior official Bakhtiar
Abdullah told the media: The spirit of cooperation is there
and both sides have made significant compromises and concessions.
This has brought us closer towards a final settlement. Another
GAM spokesman Mohammad Nur Djuli echoed sentiments expressed by
Ahtisaari, saying he hoped for a final agreement in August.
Indonesian Vice President Jusuf Kalla was also upbeat, claiming
that 90 percent of issues had been resolved. We are right
on track ... [the talks] have been very positive and progressive,
he said, adding that all points on the question of an amnesty
and the provinces economic and political system had been
agreed upon. Kalla said any monitoring would be conducted by the
Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN), with the EU having
only observer status. Jakarta has ruled out any role for the UN.
The character of any final agreement was made clear during
a session of Indonesias House of Representatives (DPR) national
defence committee, prior to the latest negotiations. The committee
declared that a deadline had to be set if the government failed
to make the rebels agree to accept a deal based on
a 2001 law providing for special autonomy for Aceh. In other words,
GAM would have to agree to the proposals that it rejected prior
to the TNI counter-insurgency operations launched in May 2003.
According to the Jakarta Post, opposition parties strongly
criticised the negotiations. Committee member Effendi Simbolon,
from former President Megawati Sukarnoputris Indonesian
Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P), declared that the previous
rounds had been fruitless and more talks would only
allow GAM time to consolidate. Muhammad Hikam, from of the National
Awakening Party (PKB), said the talks had no real status and there
had been no meeting of the minds on Acehs administrative
status.
Chief negotiator Awaluddin reassured the parliamentary committee
that the government would convince GAM to agree to the 2001 autonomy
deal. We managed to reduce GAMs demands since the
first talks from independence to self government, he said.
Security Minister Widodo Adi Sucipto stated that no deal would
be reached outside the governments special autonomy offer.
Following the talks, President Yudhoyono reaffirmed that the
best solution is helping Aceh with the special autonomy
status.
It remains to be seen if GAM will agree to completely abandon
the basis on which it has fought for nearly three decades. The
negotiations are clearly producing tensions in the organisationthe
most visible being between military leaders in Aceh and the exiled
political leadership.
One thing is certain, however. There is no likelihood of any
significant TNI withdrawal from the province. Jakarta obviously
feels it has gained the upper hand as a result of the two-year
offensive and the devastation caused by the tsunami and intends
to exploit its advantage to the hilt.
See Also:
Inconclusive peace talks between
Jakarta and Acehnese separatists
[28 April 2005]
Mounting concerns over fate
of tsunami victims in Aceh
[19 February 2005]
Sharp divisions in Jakarta
over foreign presence in Aceh
[26 January 2005]
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