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An insider speaks about peace negotiations on Aceh
Otto Syamsuddin Ishak
Dialogue was first discussed late 1999, but
the Free Aceh Movement (GAM) was reluctant. The great service of the
Swiss-based organisation the Henry Dunant Centre for Humanitarian
Dialogue (HDC) is that they were able to sit the two sides down at one
table. The first HDC mission came to Aceh early in 2000. HDC had to
decide which Acehnese resistance faction they would deal with - GAM or
MP-GAM. Each was led by exiles in Sweden who had fought in Aceh in
1976. Indonesia preferred MP-GAM, but GAM had the biggest presence on
the ground. The choice fell on GAM, and they formed a delegation with
representatives from the Swedish leadership as well as commanders from
Aceh.
It was difficult. GAM feared being deceived
by Indonesia, while the Indonesian government thought of GAM as
intractable. I went to Geneva for the first meeting on 24 April 2000.
The atmosphere was tense. As a resource person, I had to provide
information about human rights after 1998 that might help lead to a
peaceful resolution.
HDC took a humanitarian approach. GAM
accordingly stressed Indonesian human rights abuses. Indonesian
representative Hassan Wirayuda, by contrast, said little about the
situation on the ground and wanted to discuss a special autonomy
solution like the one he helped broker in the southern Philippines. He
was accompanied by the military attache from the Paris embassy, so the
Indonesian delegation tended to ignore human rights.
However, the agreement signed on 12 May
2000 was fairly good in that it did revolve around humanitarian issues,
and it called on both sides to show restraint. A Joint Forum was
established in Geneva, to meet once in three months. In Aceh there were
two joint committees, for security and for humanitarian action, as well
as an independent team to monitor implementation of security aspects -
of which I was secretary. Four district monitoring teams were formed in
December 2000 as well.
In order to create a conducive sense of
security, the agreement stipulated that all troop movements whether GAM
or Indonesian should be reported to the joint security committee in
Banda Aceh. However, President Wahid was unable to control his
military, and the TNI just ignored that provision. After the agreement
was signed, Indonesia unilaterally put in place a set of 'permanent
procedures' (prosedur tetap, or protap). But GAM rejected them because
they made no allowance for reporting troop movements.
Chivalrous
For me it was the first time I had met many
of the top Acehnese in the resistance. They struck me as chivalrous.
They were so committed. But I felt nervous that upon my return to Aceh
I might be intimidated by both sides. So I asked HDC to guarantee my
security. They produced a letter signed by GAM and by the Indonesian
Foreign Affairs Department. Foreign Affairs picked me up at the
airport. But the differences between them and TNI Headquarters became
obvious when we went out to the field. Foreign Affairs had no authority
there. I was often intimidated. Police Colonel Ridwan Karim, Indonesian
delegation leader on the joint committee for security, and former
commander of the force sent in to Aceh following the troop withdrawal
in 1999, said in public that I was pro-GAM.
In Jakarta, President Wahid was under
attack. Parliamentary speaker Akbar Tanjung of Golkar blamed Wahid for
initiating the Aceh dialogue without consulting parliament. The TNI,
meanwhile, made it clear it was not about to acknowledge GAM as an
equal negotiating partner because GAM was 'not a state'.
Nevertheless, the 12 May agreement was
unprecedented in Indonesian history. Unlike the final resolution of the
Darul Islam revolt in 1962, which was a personal affair between
Acehnese leader Daud Beureueh and Indonesian military commander LtGen M
Jasin, this was an institutional agreement not dependent on
personalities.
Its big weakness was that HDC was unable to
guarantee the security of its partners in the peace process. For
example when Tengku Al Kamal, a member of the monitoring committee for
security, was killed by Indonesia in South Aceh on 30 March 2001, HDC
did not even do anything for his family. Yet he had been killed while
on duty as a partner with HDC.
The HDC negotiations of early 2000 did
offer a new alternative for the conflict, but after it was signed HDC
was no longer the engine of transformation. Instead, the initiative
passed to GAM and the Republic of Indonesia. GAM took advantage of it
to recruit new fighters and to establish a new village structure in
areas it controlled. Indonesia meanwhile sent in even more troops, who
set up new posts and, under the cover of providing humanitarian
assistance, conducted counter-insurgency intelligence operations in the
villages.
Nor was HDC able to create a new common
understanding of the conflict, as its mission statement indicates it
wanted to do. HDC used none of the abundant human rights information
(which had strong humanitarian relevance) to create a new consensus.
Instead, Jakarta dominated the media, leaving HDC with no room to build
on the agreement that had been reached. That reduced the credibility of
HDC especially within Indonesia. Indeed, HDC's influence declined
sharply as one moved from the international to the grassroots level.
For example, the agreement made provision
for regular meetings between GAM and TNI field commanders. And these
did take place. But GAM was suspicious that TNI would use these
meetings to capture senior commanders, so they only sent second or
third level commanders. When Indonesia withdrew from the meetings,
complaining that GAM was not sending its top commander Abdullah
Syafi'ie, HDC again had nothing to say. This was followed by the arrest
of the entire GAM negotiating team in Banda Aceh in July 2001. Of
course HDC had no troops to enforce any agreement, but it might have
been able to save its principles if it had brought in other mediators
with more clout such as US-AID.
Lessons
I thought 12 May was a moment of great
hope. I felt excited, but also anxious about attitudes on the two sides
- GAM stubborn as Acehnese generally are, and Indonesia cunning and
always ready to use violence. Considering the generally negative
Indonesian response to the agreement, the enthusiasm with which
countries like Norway and the US greeted it was perhaps naive.
We can draw two lessons from the HDC
process. The first is that this cannot be resolved as a domestic
Indonesian problem. Within Southeast Asia it has a negative impact on
Malaysia and Singapore because of the Acehnese refugees. And more
globally the massive American investment by Exxon is under threat of
insecurity. These concerns should lead to more international
involvement.
Second, the loss of HDC's credibility in
Indonesian eyes led to a spiral of violence. That is why I am excited
about the latest development, in which the United States is supporting
the HDC process with an additional initiative known as the Four Wise
Men. The American idea, conceived before Megawati became president, is
that she can work together better with the military and may be able to
control them. One of the four individuals will be an influential
American, one a Japanese (they buy a lot of gas from Aceh, but are not
keen to be involved), one from Yugoslavia who is a friend of Megawati,
and Surin Pitsuwan, former Thai foreign minister who is Muslim.
TNI think they can resolve the Aceh issue
alone. Shooting dead top GAM commander Tgk Abdullah Syafi'ie on 22
January 2002 encouraged them. But GAM immediately appointed a
replacement, Muzakkir Manaf. They are well organised. And the Acehnese
now have two new martyrs - Abdullah Syafi'i and his wife (who died with
him). To them he was a model of humanism, unpretentious, simple, and
devout. That he will become a legend is obvious even from the
Indonesian press reporting of his death, which was positive about him
and did not describe the soldiers who shot him as heroes.
Otto Syamsuddin Ishak has published two books on Aceh. The Henry Dunant Centre for Humanitarian Dialogue website is: www.hdcentre.org.
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