A conversation with an activist reveals there is more than one Aceh cause�
Maree Keating
Otto Syamsuddin Ishak is at once public servant, academic and activist.
He lectures in agriculture at the Syiah University in Banda Aceh and is
executive officer of Cordova, a non-government organisation (NGO)
educating the public on civil society and human rights. He also has
links with the armed section of the Free Aceh Movement (GAM). I met
Otto in Melbourne during an awareness-raising tour last October.
To an outsider, there seem many grounds for hope. New president Gus Dur
says he is prepared to negotiate with GAM. He created the new portfolio
of Minister for Human Rights, and appointed long term Acehnese human
rights campaigner Hasballah Saad to fill it. More concessions have been
granted to Islamic syari'ah law in Aceh. Aceh is no longer classified
as a military operations area (DOM), and General Wiranto has admitted
military excesses.
But when I ask Otto how the Acehnese perceive these concessions he
tells me bluntly: 'There is not a single policy that gives us cause for
hope, because both Gus Dur and Megawati have the same principle - they
want a united nation and give no indication they will free Aceh'. He is
equally pessimistic about Hasballah: 'Nobody really believes that he
can be successful, because he is not a popular figure in Aceh. The
people in Aceh feel better represented by the PPP leader, Ghazali Abbas
Adan. He is the only one in a position to speak about human rights in
Aceh to Jakarta.'
Hasballah's position, Otto says, is dilemmatic - he stands between the
Acehnese struggle and the Indonesian military, each as determined as
the other. I wonder if rejecting Hasballah on these grounds is not
tantamount to ruling out any form of cooperation. But Otto puts it like
this: 'Jakarta always sets up teams [to investigate abuses], without
any consultation. Because of that, people have no faith in these teams.
None of its members are credible.'
Is Ghazali credible because PPP supports a referendum for Aceh, whereas
Hasballah remains less definite on it? Otto seemed reluctant to
articulate such political differences, perhaps because, as he says,
human rights have become an intensely unifying issue for those
championing independence. 'At the moment GAM has a human rights
perspective', he says. 'Human rights are being used as a way to find a
sympathetic focus. They use the issue of human rights to mobilise
society.'
Religion
Otto is also wary of Jakarta's concessions in the area of Islamic
syari'ah law. He seems to suggest it could be an attempt by Jakarta to
fuel horizontal conflict. Operasi Jilbab is a recent phenomenon where
Islamic officials force people to dress in accordance with strict
Islamic codes, attend mosque regularly and behave in a devout manner.
It is unclear whether Operasi Jilbab sprang spontaneously from a desire
for more religion within the community, or whether outside forces
played a role in developing an Islamic militancy which most people find
oppressive.
When I ask Otto to explain the role of religion in the conflict, he
says: 'It is really a secular issue. People have resorted to the
security of Islam as a kind of regional identity and as a means of
survival.... So they would not feel they were dying in vain� It is not
GAM so much as the people themselves who have turned to religion.'
It is difficult for me to imagine what living in a devoutly religious
society is like. Perhaps an Islamic version of Christian liberation
theology I can recognise, but when people start talking about holy wars
and public floggings, I realise that not all things can be translated
easily for an Australian public. It strikes me as odd that Otto calls
the Aceh conflict a secular issue, for how could anything be secular in
a society where Operasi Jilbab can take place and where religious
leaders are so powerful?
I ask him about the worst case scenario, and his reply reveals the
depth of religious feeling in Aceh. He says: 'The worst scenario is a
face to face confrontation. The religious leaders (ulama) have declared
that if there is no referendum in the next six months they will take a
decision to declare a holy war (jihad). If the ulama want it, they will
get the support from the community.' When asked how he and others in
the NGO community feel about that, his answer implies that the power of
the religious leaders is stronger than that of the non-violent civil
society movement. 'They are worried about what will happen', he says.
'But they are not brave enough to say this because they will become a
target for the community's anger.'
The referendum movement in Aceh seems to consist of groups with
sometimes opposing aims. They include the armed and unarmed sections of
GAM, the religious leaders (divided into 'old' and 'new'), students,
NGOs and other advocates for a civil society. There is in fact no
single Acehnese movement.
Some of the 'old' style ulama lost credibility in the past for aligning
themselves too closely with Golkar. They now want to regain popular
support by taking a strong stance on the referendum. According to Otto,
ninety percent of the population want a referendum. Whereas militant
GAM leaders in the past have said they will not engage with the
'Javanese' government on a referendum, Otto says this stance has
recently changed. 'If the ulama call for a referendum, GAM will support
it, even though previously they did not.'
But if ninety percent support a referendum, it is not clear whether
people want the outcome to be a sultanate or a democratic republic.
Otto says: 'There are those who want democracy (who use non-violence),
and those who want a sultanate (who use violence)� There is a symbiosis
between the two which is mutually beneficial. Student activists and all
the groups with an interest in a democratic society believe that a
sultanate will not be democratic. Because of that they are taking the
initiative towards a referendum.'
For Australians wanting to answer Otto's call for support, the
challenge remains to find a clearer understanding about what kinds of
dialogue are possible within Aceh. If groups within Aceh are afraid to
speak out against a violent solution for fear of unleashing the
community's anger upon them, the potential for a democratic process
could be a fragile one.
Maree Keating (mkeating@ozvol.org.au)
is country program manager for Indonesia with Australian Volunteers
International. The views in this article are her own and not
necessarily those of AVI.
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