| Subject: Baltimore Sun: Aceh - From crisis,
opportunity
The Baltimore Sun From crisis, opportunity
By Joseph Nevins
January 12, 2005
WHILE THE international spotlight focuses on the tsunami-related
devastation in Indonesia's Aceh region, a deeper crisis--involving a
brutal war--impacts Aceh's people while undermining the current
humanitarian relief. Failure to link a just resolution of the conflict to
the relief effort would severely limit attempts to redress the region's
plight. The United States can and should play a key role in ensuring that
such a linkage takes place.
Aceh has suffered about 60 percent of the total deaths related to the
tsunami. An estimated 100,000 people of a population of 4.2 million have
perished. Much of its capital city of Banda Aceh and most of the
province's coastal towns and villages are in ruins, with about 500,000
people homeless.
The TNI, Indonesia's military, is playing the lead role in providing
aid to the afflicted population.
But it is exploiting the crisis and undercutting the delivery of
humanitarian assistance by refusing to allow local nongovernmental
organizations to distribute aid channeled through the Indonesian
government. In addition, the TNI continues to target the Free Aceh
Movement (GAM) and its civilian supporters despite the GAM's post-tsunami
declaration of a unilateral cease-fire.
The GAM first emerged in the oil-rich province of North Sumatra in the
mid-1970s. While the TNI quickly crushed the initial rebellion, the GAM
re-emerged in 1989. Since then, the TNI has generally ruled the province
under various forms of martial law and waged a bloody counterinsurgency,
resulting in the deaths of more than 10,000 civilians.
Internationally brokered peace efforts resulted in a cease-fire in
December 2002. But the truce soon ended due to violations by both sides
when the Indonesian government reimposed martial law in May 2003. A year
later, the province's status shifted to one of a civil emergency, but the
TNI continues to play a decisive role in governing Aceh while maintaining
a high level of military operations that have resulted in widespread
atrocities.
An October report by Amnesty International writes of "evidence of
a disturbing pattern of grave abuses of civil, political, economic, social
and cultural rights" in Aceh for which Indonesian security forces
bear "primary responsibility."
The human rights violations - including extrajudicial executions,
torture and the rape of women and girls - have taken place at a scale
"so pervasive that there is virtually no part of life in the province
which remains untouched," the Amnesty report says.
Aceh's pro-independence movement enjoys widespread support among the
local population. But Jakarta refuses to allow those who support
independence to organize as a political party. Instead, Indonesian
authorities tout a highly limited form of autonomy while criminalizing
peaceful protest and continuing to pursue a heavy-handed military
strategy. Such an approach is bound to fail and will only lead to more war
and suffering. Only a cease-fire and negotiations can bring an end to the
conflict.
The humanitarian relief and reconstruction efforts in the aftermath of
the deadly tsunami present profound challenges. But as in all crises,
Aceh's devastation provides opportunities as well.
Various human rights groups and organizations of U.S.-based Acehnese
refugees have written to Secretary of State Colin L. Powell calling on him
to urge the Indonesian government to allow aid organizations and the media
unimpeded access to Aceh, to lift the "civil emergency" status
and end all offensive military operations and not to involve the TNI
directly in aid distribution.
At the same time, the Bush administration should champion a negotiated
settlement to Aceh's war while Congress should resist efforts to
strengthen U.S. ties with the TNI. In the past, such ties have facilitated
death and destruction -- from the massacre of hundreds of thousands during
the Indonesian military's seizure of power in 1965 and 1966 to its brutal
1975 invasion and 24-year occupation of East Timor, during which more than
200,000 East Timorese died.
By pursuing a very different approach from materially backing the TNI,
Washington can support peace and human rights and help to bring
long-needed relief to the people of Aceh.
-----------
Joseph Nevins, an assistant professor of geography at Vassar College,
is author of the forthcoming A Not-so-distant Horror: Mass Violence in
East Timor.
baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/
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