BY JOE COCHRANE
The Wall Street Journal
The Wall Street Journal
Jakarta, Jan 31 (TAG) – The peace agreement that ended a
separatist conflict in Indonesia’s Aceh province in 2005 was one for the annals
of successful conflict resolution. The 29-year civil war on the northern tip of
Sumatra Island, pitting guerrillas from the Free Aceh Movement (GAM) against
Indonesian army and Special Forces soldiers, had been one of Asia’s
longest-running civil wars. Both sides were accused of gross human rights
abuses, and many of the conflict’s victims were unarmed civilians.
But the Indian Ocean tsunami on December 26, 2004 – which killed more
than 170,000 people in Aceh – quickly brought the weary sides to the
negotiating table. Less than eight months later, the Indonesian government and
GAM signed an agreement in Helsinki that gave the rebels amnesty and the right
to form a political party, as well as “self-governance” for the province, in
exchange for the rebels’ laying down their weapons and accepting Indonesian
sovereignty. Resolution of the conflict helped earn its chief mediator, Former
Finnish President Martti Ahtisarri, the Nobel Peace Prize in 2008.
So it is no wonder that multiple recent violent incidents have the
country wondering whether the peace process is unraveling. Those incidents
include the sabotage of a high-voltage power pylon on January 7, the
Molotov-cocktail-bombing of the home of a candidate for district chief on
January 10, and the still-unsolved shooting deaths of seven migrant workers in
separate incidents since last December.
Although there have been no arrests in any of the incidents – and no
firm proof the violence is related to political tensions – many analysts
believe the timing suggests a link to upcoming provincial elections, which have
already been postponed twice. Chief among their fears: The possibility that Aceh’s
former rebel movement, whose Aceh Party (or Partai Aceh) now dominates Aceh’s
provincial legislature and political scene, may be violently turning on itself,
with rival factions competing for power.
“Our last report on Aceh was GAM versus GAM. The only fault was that it
was too optimistic,” said Sidney Jones, senior adviser at the International
Crisis Group in Jakarta, which issues reports on regional security issues.
Government officials in both Jakarta and Aceh previously have denied
that the violence is linked to elections there for governor and district
chiefs, now scheduled for April 9. But local media reports of a sudden private
meeting on January 16 between Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and
his former vice president, Jusuf Kalla, who together pushed through the 2005
peace agreement, to discuss the recent violence has raised skepticism about the
official line.
“They don’t want there to be recognition of an escalation,” said Kevin O’Rourke,
editor of Reformasi Weekly, a private circulation political and business
analysis newsletter. He said the government is trying to downplay the recent
violence so that there won’t be calls by nationalist Indonesian politicians or
army generals to send in soldiers, which would exacerbate tensions.
Efforts to reach a government spokesman in Jakarta were unsuccessful.
Many analysts believe the upcoming polls have revived old rivalries
within the former rebel movement. On one side, they say, is incumbent Governor
Irwandi Yusuf, a former GAM civilian spokesman and one of the founding fathers
of the Aceh Party who split from its leadership a few years ago after
long-running disputes over tactics and decision-making. On the other side, they
say, is the former diaspora GAM elite who run the Aceh Party and support Malik
Mahmud, who once helped run the movement from exile in Sweden. Irwandi and Malik
are also known to have had serious differences over the years, Sydney said.
“There’s definitely a bickering element – animosity toward Irwandi
Yusuf by the ex-GAM movement,” Mr. O’Rourke said.
All that might explain why the national government in Jakarta, some
1,100 miles away, would want to wade into the dispute, which some analysts fear
could lead to a bloody internal implosion of the now-defunct GAM movement and
destroy the 2005 peace agreement. The Aceh Party had earlier in effect
boycotted the elections by refusing to register candidates in protest that its
rival Irwandi, who won the governorship as an independent candidate in 2006,
was allowed to stand as an independent again.
Indonesia’s Ministry of Home Affairs subsequently filed a lawsuit with
Indonesia’s Constitutional Court to order Aceh election officials to reopen
registration. The court obliged in a ruling on January 16, and the Aceh Party
ended the standoff by using the new window to register its ticket for governor
and vice governor, and sign up district chief candidates.
“I think the calculation of the government is that this was necessary to
preserve the peace process, and one of the reasons for totally capitulating to
Partai Aceh is that if they, as the largest political party, refused to take
part, the turnout would be below 50 percent, which would cause public anger and
raise questions about the legitimacy of the process,” Sydney said.
Zaini Abdullah, a senior Aceh Party official and its candidate for
governor in the upcoming elections, denied that the party had anything to do
with the recent spate of violence, and said he didn’t believe the former rebel
movement was violently turning on itself.
“I think some have blamed us in the Aceh Party,” he said. But “we don’t
have very much time to think about that because we have been blamed several
times. This is not our aim, to kill somebody. We need to have peace, based on
the Helsinki Peace Agreement,” he said.
Efforts to reach Irwandi were unsuccessful.
Either way, Sydney said it was “absolutely critical” for Aceh police to
investigate all the shootings and other acts of violence there in recent
months, including murders and attacks dating back to July 2011. She said one
theory is that the violence was aimed at forcing the elections, previously
slated for December and then rescheduled for February, to be postponed until
after Irwandi’s term ends on February 8, so he would lose his advantage as an
incumbent.
Irwandi will in fact step down February 8, and Aceh’s provincial
legislature has submitted three candidates to become caretaker governor until
after the April 9 election.
Regardless, Irwandi is leading comfortably in the polls against Zaini,
the Aceh Party gubernatorial candidate, and is widely expected to be
re-elected, making any such strategy seem moot. The party is also in danger of
losing many of its district chief seats, according to analysts, given a general
feeling among voters that their welfare has not improved since the Aceh Party
won legislative elections in 2009.
If Irwandi gets five more years at Aceh’s
helm, analysts expect continued confrontation between him and the Aceh
Party-dominated provincial legislature. Peace-watchers will be hoping, however,
that future confrontations will be confined to the political arena.[]
Aceh Peace Process At Risk?
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January 31, 2012
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