BY ARIENTHA PRIMANITA
(THE JAKARTA GLOBE)
(THE JAKARTA GLOBE)
Jakarta, TAG – Home Affairs Minister Gamawan Fauzi
said on Wednesday that he was optimistic the Aceh Party would finally agree to
register its candidates for the upcoming polls in the province and bring the
long-running standoff there to a close.
“We’re praying that now that a new window for
registrations has been opened, the Aceh Party will also register its
candidates,” he said. “The word is that they’re certainly going to make good on
the opportunity.”
The minister’s remarks come a day after the
Constitutional Court ruled that unregistered candidates should be given the
chance to sign up. The ruling also stipulated that the polls be held as
scheduled on Feb. 16, with no delays to accommodate the one-week window
hopefuls now have to register their candidacies.
The prospects for the polls taking place next
month, when voters in the country’s westernmost province will choose a
governor, 14 district heads and four mayors, appeared shaky following political
bickering over the issue of candidates.
The Home Affairs Ministry had been seeking a legal
challenge to force the Aceh Independent Elections Commission (KIP) to carry out
the registration of candidates anew, in response to a decision by the KIP to
ban the Aceh Party from fielding candidates.
The ban was imposed after the party, which
dominates the provincial legislature and derives its support from former
members of the now-disbanded militant Free Aceh Movement (GAM), refused to
register its candidates in light of an earlier Constitutional Court ruling
allowing independent candidates to run.
Following the ruling, however, the party said it
would not use the seven-day window to register its candidates.
Party spokesman Fachrul Razi said the rejection was
based on its initial and overriding objection to the KIP allowing independent
candidates to run, adding the decision on whether to register would depend on
the outcome of a meeting this week.
The ruling also prompted the KIP to warn that the
verification process for the new candidates would take up to two months, and
not a week, which would postpone the polls until April.
Gamawan agreed there needed to be a delay, but said
he would wait to see whether the Constitutional Court would issue a ruling on
this point.
“Ideally the polls should be postponed for at least
a few days to allow the verification process to be completed, but we have to
wait and see what the court says,” he said.
In Banda Aceh, gubernatorial candidate Darni M.
Daud said he doubted the polls would be held on Feb. 16.
“It’s definitely going to be delayed now that we’ve
had this ruling to repoen the window for registrations. There’s no way the KIP
can hold the elections on the date that they’ve set,” he said.
He added that although yet another delay was
inevitable, the ruling was a welcome development because it would allow those
who had been unable to register earlier due to the bickering to finally file
their bids.
“With the entry of new candidates the elections
will gain greater legitimacy,” Darni said.
Prior to the ruling, the KIP had registered only
four gubernatorial candidates, including Darni. The others are Ahmad Tajuddin,
Deputy Governor Muhammad Nazar, and current Governor Irwandi Yusuf.
Irwandi’s attempt as to run as an independent
candidate is at the heart of the dispute surrounding the polls, with the Aceh
Party arguing that under the terms of the 2005 peace deal that ended almost
three decades of bitter conflict in the province, independent gubernatorial
candidates were only allowed in the 2006 elections.
Last year, however, the Constitutional Court ruled
that the restriction was unlawful because national laws allowed independents to
stand for all regional offices.
The lead-up to the polls have also been marred by a
spate of unresolved shootings and firebombings that the House of
Representatives has warned are politically motivated and should not be treated
as normal crimes.
The shootings began in October and have continued
into the new year. In the latest incident, the home of a prominent Aceh Party
politician was firebombed on Jan. 10, although no one was injured.
Five days earlier, however, two construction
workers from Java were wounded and another killed after an unknown gunman
opened fire on a group of workers in Aceh Besar district. Prior to that
incident, six people were killed in multiple shootings across the province
since Dec. 30.[]
Related articles:
Govt. Hopes Aceh Party Will Join Election
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January 19, 2012
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