Peace building in the wake of terror
This issue of Inside Indonesia is
devoted to the political and social aftermath of the Bali bombing. In
the mainstream press, the event was largely reported as a series of
images depicting flames against a night sky, rows of body bags, charred
survivors, and whole buildings laid to waste. The contributions to this
edition provide a welcome contrast to this mainstream coverage by
highlighting Indonesian people's efforts to resist terror, by
pro-actively securing peace.
This
hopeful message emerges in the lead article by Mayra Walsh in which she
describes how staff and students at Darur Ridwan embraced cross
cultural and inter-religious solidarity in their efforts to console
each other following the bombing. Ngurah Karyadi's, Christine Foster's
and Sherry Kasman Entus' contributions, which focus on Balinese
people's recovery efforts, are similarly optimistic. All three stories
stress Balinese people's heightened commitment to sustainable tourism
development in the context of post-bomb development planning.
Other
articles in this edition do not directly relate to the theme of the
Bali bombing, yet echo other stories of people's attempts to secure and
maintain peace in the wake of the bomb. Kautsar details Acehnese
civilians' efforts to play a decisive part in the implementation of the
territory's new peace accord. Jake Lynch describes Indonesian
journalists' and editors' involvement in a peace journalism training
workshop in Manado where they exhibited their eagerness to learn how to
constructively report on conflict.
On
a more somber note, Greg Fealy's and Jessica Champagne's contributions
point to widespread distrust of law enforcement agencies as the root
cause of popular conspiracy theories regarding the perpetrators of the
bombing. Tim Behrend argues that Abu Bakar Ba'asyir, the Muslim cleric
accused of masterminding a series of bombings in Indonesia that
preceded the attacks on Bali, does not advocate political violence nor
contain terrorist elements. Behrend nonetheless describes Ba'asyir as
troublesome, for his na�ve politics and strongly anti-Semitic views.
These
inclusions provide important counterweights to this edition's more
upbeat contributions. Yet they do not overshadow them, and most of this
edition's stories add considerable grit and flavour to Ed Aspinall's
assessment of national politics in the wake of the bombing. He argues
that, contrary to expectations, the bombing has not strengthened the
hand of the military. Rather, the post-bomb national political scene
now accommodates a hybrid, albeit shaky, democratic order.
Emma Baulch
Guest editor
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