{
    "success": true,
    "data": {
        "id": 1491550,
        "msgid": "a-year-on-little-substantive-progress-made-in-aceh-1447893297",
        "date": "2004-05-19 00:00:00",
        "title": "A year on, little substantive progress made in Aceh",
        "author": null,
        "source": "JP",
        "tags": null,
        "topic": null,
        "summary": "A year on, little substantive progress made in Aceh The Jakarta Post, Jakarta While the government has revoked martial law in Aceh, questions linger as to whether the one-year emergency actually achieved its purpose.",
        "content": "<p>A year on, little substantive progress made in Aceh<\/p>\n<p>The Jakarta Post, Jakarta<\/p>\n<p>While the government has revoked martial law in Aceh, questions<br>\nlinger as to whether the one-year emergency actually achieved its<br>\npurpose.<\/p>\n<p>When President Megawati Soekarnoputri declared a military<br>\nemergency in the country's westernmost province in mid-May 2003,<br>\nshe spelled out three main objectives -- the conducting of a<br>\nhumanitarian operation, better law enforcement and reinstating<br>\nlocal administrations in strongholds of the Free Aceh Movement<br>\n(GAM). She also set a timeframe of six months to achieve all<br>\nthree objectives.<\/p>\n<p>Overall, the so-called integrated operation was primarily<br>\naimed at stamping out the secessionist movement in Aceh,<br>\nwhere GAM rebels have been fighting for independence for the<br>\nresource-rich province since 1976. Close to 15,000 people, mostly<br>\ninnocent civilians, have reportedly been killed since then.<\/p>\n<p>Unfortunately, however, Megawati, who once melodramatically<br>\nvowed not to allow any further blood to be shed in the province,<br>\nprovided no yardsticks to gauge whether or not the integrated<br>\noperation had achieved its target.<\/p>\n<p>Arguing that a humanitarian operation would be doomed to<br>\nfailure if the rebels were not wiped out first, the Indonesian<br>\nMilitary embarked on a massive military offensive involving<br>\n40,000 troops and around 14,000 police personnel, including the<br>\nmuch-feared paramilitary Mobile Brigade (Brimob).<\/p>\n<p>The military and police boasted that they would easily<br>\nincapacitate the poorly-trained and ill-equipped GAM rebels,<br>\nwhose numbers were estimated to be around 5,200 people.<\/p>\n<p>However, even before the first phase of martial law expired in<br>\nmid-November, the military leadership was already appealing to<br>\nthe government to extend the operation for another six months.<br>\nMegawati conceded and did what the generals wanted.<\/p>\n<p>On Tuesday evening, Megawati, who is seeking her first full,<br>\nfive-year term in the July 5 direct presidential election, signed<br>\nanother decree ending martial law in Aceh.<\/p>\n<p>After one year of relentless military pressure, the TNI claims<br>\nthat it has killed nearly 2,000 rebels and detained around 3,300<br>\nothers, including those who voluntarily surrendered to the<br>\nauthorities. Inexplicable, this figure accounts for more than 100<br>\npercent of the military's original estimate of GAM's strength.<\/p>\n<p>While the TNI has succeeded in reinstating local<br>\nadministrations at the regency and district levels in areas of<br>\nGAM support, most of the people appointed as regents or district<br>\nheads are serving or former military officers.<\/p>\n<p>The humanitarian operation has been limited to keeping those<br>\nAcehnese who were forcibly moved to refugee camps alive, and<br>\nrebuilding schools allegedly burned down by GAM in the early days<br>\nof the military operation there.<\/p>\n<p>Noted Acehnese sociologist Otto Syamsuddin Ishak, however,<br>\nsaid that the one year of martial law had achieved little as many<br>\nAcehnese were now poorer and languishing in refugee camps.<\/p>\n<p>\"They are distraught at the fact that troops looted their<br>\nbelongings, and that rape, torture, arbitrary arrest and rampant<br>\ncorruption continue abated,\" said Otto of the Banda Aceh-based<br>\nSyiah Kuala University.<\/p>\n<p>He also doubted the TNI claim that it had incapacitated the<br>\nsecessionist movement, saying that the GAM leadership was still<br>\nintact even after one year of relentless military attacks.<\/p>\n<p>Otto also regretted the fact that Jakarta failed to understand<br>\nthe psychology of the Aceh people, saying the prolonged war had<br>\nengendered hatred among the Acehnese for Jakarta.<\/p>\n<p>\"In 2000, I conducted a study that showed that most Acehnese<br>\nyoung people wanted independence. Most of them have witnessed ten<br>\nyears of military brutality.<\/p>\n<p>\"We can't resolve the Aceh question with violence. History<br>\ntells us that but our country just cannot seem to learn,\" he<br>\nsaid.<\/p>\n<p>The current military operation in Aceh were launched in May<br>\nlast year after GAM leaders persisted with their demands for<br>\nindependence despite the peace agreement signed in December 2002.<\/p>\n<p>Former president Abdurrahman Wahid, who led the country from<br>\nApril 1999 to June 2001, tried to resolve the Aceh question once<br>\nand for all through negotiation.<\/p>\n<p>Early in 2000, Gus Dur promoted a humanitarian pause in an<br>\nattempt to prevent more casualties. He also introduced special<br>\nautonomy for Aceh, giving the provincial government greater power<br>\nand a bigger share of revenue. Under the special autonomy scheme,<br>\na form of sharia has also been implemented in response to<br>\nAcehnese demands.<\/p>",
        "url": "https:\/\/jawawa.id\/newsitem\/a-year-on-little-substantive-progress-made-in-aceh-1447893297",
        "image": ""
    },
    "sponsor": "Okusi Associates",
    "sponsor_url": "https:\/\/okusiassociates.com"
}