RELEASE
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Din Minimi during inteviewed by Metro TV in August 2015. |
JAKARTA (TAG) – Several different groups appear to be
deliberately burnishing the image of a former rebel-turned-outlaw in Aceh
to draw attention to his criticism of the provincial government, led by senior
leaders of the Free Aceh Movement (Gerakan Aceh Merdeka, GAM).
The new report released by the Institute for Policy Analysis of
Conflict (IPAC) in October stated that the misguided support for Din Minimi,
who has robbed, kidnapped and killed, encourages partisan violence, which is
the last thing Aceh needs.
Din Minimi, The Strange Story of an Armed Group in Aceh, Indonesia, the latest report from IPAC, looks at the rise and likely fall of
the outlaw who served as a combatant during the final years of GAM’s
insurgency.
He is being portrayed by various parties opposed to the current
GAM-led government as a Robin Hood who abducts corruptors and drug dealers and
uses the ransom money to assist orphans and widows neglected by the GAM leaders
now in power.
In the process, he has attracted the attention of all who would
like to see Partai Aceh, the GAM-led political party, discredited – and they
include political rivals, intelligence personnel and extremists.
“Din Minimi is a criminal, whose activities only underscore how
much violence lurks below the surface in Aceh after the 2005 peace agreement,”
says Sidney Jones, IPAC director in the statement published on its website.
”No matter how poorly Partai Aceh has governed, there is no excuse
for turning an armed thug into a hero.”
The report looks at Din Minimi’s background and his sudden rise to
media prominence in 2014. His real name is Nurdin bin Ismail Amat who claimed as a former GAM fighter.
According to the report, he man who is allegedly Aceh’s most wanted criminal has since
been in telephone contact with almost every top security official in Aceh as
well many journalists, always giving the same message: the provincial
government has failed to make good on its promises to former combatants, it has
not given them homes or land, and has not lived up to its commitment to
implement the 2005 agreement in full.
"Din Minimi’s long list of crimes since mid-2013, including the
March 2015 killing of two military intelligence officers, has been given less
prominence in the press than his grievances," the IPAC report said.
At the same time, some 20 of Din Minimi’s men are under arrest and
their trials have revealed an interesting fact.
Some of his arms were purchased through a connection to a man
serving a sentence in Banda Aceh prison on terrorism charges, for involvement
in a terrorist training camp set up in Jantho, Aceh Besar, in 2010, the report said.
"The arms were reportedly financed by a member of a GAM splinter
faction living in Norway. Among the many questions raised by this transaction
is how security can continue to be so lax in prisons," it said.
The Din Minimi story also reveals ongoing competition between the
police and military, showing how the military’s gently gently approach
contrasts with hardline police tactics.
Aceh has a history of violence around local elections, and Aceh
has 20 district races coming up in February 2016,” says Jones. “It would be in
everyone’s interests to have Din Minimi behind bars long before that.[]
The Story of Din Minimi
Reviewed by theacehglobe
on
November 03, 2015
Rating:

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