10 years sought for GAM 'treasurers'
10 years sought for GAM 'treasurers'
Apriadi Gunawan
The Jakarta Post
Medan, North Sumatra
Two alleged Free Aceh Movement (GAM) members who prosecutors say
funded a grenade attack on a Medan hotel should be sentenced to
10 years in prison, the Medan District Court was told on Tuesday.
Prosecutors said the two men, Mustafa Halim and Tengku Zainal,
provided funds for an attack on the Asean International Hotel two
years ago, which they said was designed to intimidate the local
population. No one was hurt in the attack, which shattered the
hotel's front glass panels.
Head prosecutor Mardiana Sianturi claimed the two defendants
he called GAM "treasurers" had hired two other men, Musliadi and
Anwar, to throw grenades at the hotel, located on Jl. Adam Malik
in downtown Medan.
The attack on the hotel, which is popular with foreign
tourists, was aimed at sparking fear in Medan society, he said.
Mardiana said the two had paid Musliadi and Anwar a total of
Rp 1.8 million (US$211.8) to carry out the attack.
Musliadi and Anwar, both who are witnesses in the case,
received further payments totaling Rp 1.5 million after the Aug.
17 attack two years ago, while a remaining Rp 300,000 was used to
cover the men's communication and meal expenses, Mardiana said.
Musliadi and Anwar have admitted in earlier trials the
grenades were obtained from Abdullah Sulaiman, another defendant,
who is also an alleged GAM member.
When the pair threw their grenades at the hotel, only
Musliadi's exploded, Mardiana said. The two escaped by riding off
on motorcycles, he said.
Head judge Abid Saleh Mendrova said the trial would be
adjourned until Feb. 12 to allow the defense time to prepare its
case.
Edi Purwanto, the lawyer for defendant Mustafa Halim, said he
would the ask judges to consider a light sentence for his client.
Mustafa had already been fired by GAM leaders for
insubordination before he committed the grenade attack on the
hotel, Edi said.
"The fact he was no longer a GAM member when the attack took
place should be a mitigating factor," he said.
GAM has a staged a decades-long guerrilla war for independence
in Aceh, with its members accusing the central government of
siphoning money out of the resource-rich province. Pro-
independence sentiment has run high in Aceh following the fall of
former hardline president Soeharto in 1998.
The Indonesian government declared martial law in the province
last year after peace talks between GAM and the Indonesian
Military (TNI) failed. Many GAM members have been arrested and
sentenced to long jail terms for their roles in the rebellion.