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March 2000


Freedom movement strengthens as Aceh crisis deepens


Acehnese student groups, religious scholars, and civil society have joined forces to call for a non-violent dialogue to find a solution to the deepening crisis in this resource-rich province seeking independence from Indonesia. The growing movement for peace and democratization emerges even as the situation in Aceh deteriorates rapidly.

Violence has erupted since the end of the holy month of Ramadan in early January, with killing, tortures and disappearances occurring on a daily basis. At least 191 people have been confirmed killed since the beginning of the year, threatening to quickly surpass last year's total death count of 293. While a small percentage of those killed in the province are Indonesian police and military officers, the overwhelming majority of victims are civilians, including an alarming number of women and children. Besides those killed, thousands have been tortured, traumatized and dislocated, while thousands more remain unaccounted for.

Thousands of student activists, local NGOs (non-governmental organizations), youth and civilians held demonstrations in Aceh's capital on Jan. 30, calling for a cease-fire among all armed parties in the troubled province, including the Free Aceh Movement, the province's armed guerrilla group. Representatives from Non-Violence International, an NGO based in Washington, D.C., were in Aceh last month to provide nonviolence training to 21 student leaders at the request of student activist groups.

Michael Beer, Director of Training at the organization's international office, was deeply impressed by the expanding civil movement in Aceh. "Although we played a catalytic role, the movement for nonviolence in Aceh was really initiated by the students themselves," says Beer. "We came because we were invited by student groups here. There is enormous mobilization for change." There are presently 110 organizations in the formal NGO coalition in Aceh, and new ones are being formed constantly as the population experiences an awakening of social and political self-consciousness.

The Support Committee for Human Rights in Aceh (SCHRA) held a two-day conference in Banda Aceh in mid-January. The conference was attended by some 70 people, including many foreign representatives from NGOs such as International Forum for Aceh, U.S. Committee for Refugees, Asian Human Rights Commission, Non-violence International, and Asian Network for Democracy in Indonesia.

After the conference, 12 SCHRA delegates embarked on an observer mission to Pidie, North Aceh, and East Aceh, areas which have been afflicted with the worst poverty and slaughter. As the team neared their destination the military launched an attack on a Free Aceh Movement base in Pidie, halting the SCHRA bus at a checkpoint and directing it to a police station. After two hours of interrogation the team was released and allowed to continue on condition that they not disembark the vehicle and not make any stops and were accompanied thereafter by two military trucks. At the border of North Aceh, in a display of hostility, military officers fired shots from their machine guns into the air. The SCHRA team was also restricted from providing humanitarian assistance in the form of food to displaced and malnourished Acehnese at a refugee camp near Lhoksumawe, North Aceh. Systematically conducted repression, which is increasingly being directed against activists and humanitarian workers, has become routine in Aceh.

In a surprise move last week, Indonesian President Abdurrahaman Wahid (popularly known as Gus Dur) suspended the nation's chief of armed forces, General Wiranto, after the latter was named in a report about human rights abuses in East Timor. While Wahid's attempts at reform draw support from international human rights groups and governments alike, some fear that the country's ongoing conflicts will be obscured.

"The situation is very deceiving," says Jafar Siddiq Hamzah, chairman of the New York-based International Forum for Aceh. "Gus Dur's sacking of Wiranto has the international community now believing that human rights is a central concern of the new Indonesian government. Meanwhile the atrocities continue day after day in Aceh, as well as other regions of the archipelago, without admonishment from the outside world. We Acehnese feel very sad that the United States has allowed this to happen so easily." Indeed, this month the U.S. Defense Department has quietly resumed training Indonesian military officers in the U.S. The U.S. suspended its training of Indonesian soldiers after the East Timor bloodbaths last year, in which the Indonesian military played an instrumental role.

In Aceh, however, the call for self-determination continues to swell. Throughout the province people are experiencing an extraordinary surge of consciousness in their Acehnese identity. For a people whose identity was crushed by a repressive Jakarta regime for decades, this cultural reclamation is both liberating and profoundly empowering.

February saw the publication of Su Aceh (meaning "Voice of Aceh"), the first ever Acehnese-language newspaper. The first 3,000 copies of the paper's first issue sold out quickly, drawing thousands of demands for more copies, while another 1,000 copies were ordered by neighboring Malaysia. The bimonthly newspaper provides investigative reports and includes a two-page section in English. Along with providing analysis on current local issues, Su Aceh intends to print stories and correspondence from around the world.

The paper is currently working on translating a number of articles on the Zapatista movement in Chiapas, Mexico. "We want to build solidarity with movements and individuals around the world," says Jafar, who is one of the founders of the newspaper. "It is important that we realize that our struggles for a better world are not isolated. There is so much that we can learn from each other." The Acehnese are realizing that their struggle for freedom is not just regional, but of global significance as well.

-Lilianne Fan
Feb. 20, 2000
International Forum for Aceh acehforum@aol.com
Student Coalition for Aceh studentsforaceh@hotmail.com






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