BY NURDIN HASAN
Banda Aceh, TAG – Police in
Indonesia’s Aceh province are issuing increasingly strident demands for a
reluctant public to relinquish the estimated some 800 to 1,000 odd firearms
still held illegally after the region’s civil war ended in 2005.
The declaration of a weeklong notice permitting the public to hand over
the illegally held weapons and explosives without suffering legal sanctions had
netted a paltry three firearms and found six others after reporting by the
locals as of Monday, the day before it was due to expire.
During a similar initiative last year, the public handed over a total of
43 firearms, dozens of active
grenades and more than 7,000 bullets. Police believed hundreds
more firearms still held illegally.
Aceh Police spokesman Sr. Comr. Gustav Leo said if people holding
weapons illegally failed to take advantage of the intimation, they would fall
foul of a special operation to track down and prosecute those in violation of
the law.
The police will cooperate with the military on a joint search operation
called ‘Kilat Rencong 2012’, Gustav said. Kilat means “lightning” and Rencong is the name for Aceh’s distinctive
traditional kris-like dagger.
“This law enforcement operation is designed to provide a sense of
security to the Aceh public, because the presence of illegal firearms has been
very disturbing,” he said during an interview in Banda Aceh on Monday.
In addition to vehicle searches, police officers will also enter homes
to look for weapons as part of the operation, the spokesman said.
“The police will go from house to house where they suspect people are
still hiding firearms,” he said. “The searches will be conducted according to standard
police operation procedures, so the should not cause alarm among home-owners. We
will only conduct searches where we have valid information that weapons may be
present.”
After almost three decades of civil war and human rights abuses by both
government forces and the Free Aceh Movement (GAM) as believed by the rights
activists, many ordinary Acehnese are reportedly still afraid of the military
and police. Gustav was at pains to repeat that people should not worry.
“Citizens who don’t have illegal weapons need not fear us because we
will conduct this operation with the utmost professionalism,” he said. “Anyone
who has a weapon and resists handing it over will be dealt with according to
legal procedures.”
The military and police plan to focus their search on six districts that
were major GAM strongholds before the 2005 peace agreement. They are Aceh
Besar, Pidie, Bireuen, North Aceh, East Aceh and Lhokseumawe.
Aceh has seen a series of armed attacks seemingly related to a
long-awaited elections in the province, in which the governor, four mayors and
13 district heads will be chosen on April 9. None of the shootings, in which nine
people have died since December, have been solved.
President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono had previously
spoken about those spate of unresolved shootings and firebombings. He called on
all parties and the security forces keep the “hard-won peace” achieved in the
province. []
Aceh Police To Track Down Illegal Firearms
Reviewed by theacehglobe
on
February 20, 2012
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