Ex-combatants
have not even begun
vital
reintegration in Aceh
M Nur Djuli ; An independent international consultant on
conflict resolution and post-conflict peace management; A former GAM
negotiator in Helsinki;
A leader of the Aceh National Party (PNA);
He was 2011-2012
Weatherhead Fellow for International Affairs, Harvard University
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JAKARTA
POST, 24 Desember 2014
“The government of Indonesia and the authorities
of Aceh will take measures to assist persons who have participated in GAM
[Free Aceh Movement] activities to facilitate their reintegration into civil
society. These measures include economic facilitation of former combatants,
pardoned political prisoners and affected civilians. A reintegration fund
under the administration […] of Aceh will be established,” reads
Article 3.2.3 of the memorandum of understanding (MoU) between the Indonesian
government and GAM signed in Helsinki, Finland, on Aug. 15, 2005, ending the
bloody 30-year conflict in Aceh.
Last
month a group of former GAM combatants led by a young man named Nurdin, aka
Abu Minimi, openly challenged the Aceh government under Governor Zaini
Abdullah, GAM’s former foreign minister, and his deputy, Muzakir Manaf,
former supreme commander of GAM’s armed forces. Minimi (“Minimi” is short for
the French “mini-mitrailleuse”, a Belgian-made 5.56 mm light machine gun much
prized by GAM fighters during the conflict), declared his group was ready to
fight the two former leaders to “our last drop of blood”. They said Zaini and
Muzakir had failed to implement the MoU or to improve the livelihoods of
former combatants and poor people.
“There are so many widows and orphans of
combatants living in abject poverty while they bask in luxury,” Minimi
said. They insisted that they were not rebelling against the Indonesian
republic, and that once these two leaders were out of office or killed, they
would surrender their weapons to the police.
So what
went wrong? Why have these former GAM combatants turned their anger not on
their old enemies but against their own leaders, 10 years after the conflict
ended in a peace process touted as a world model?
Naturally
there are plenty of conspiracy theories, especially when the rebels gave a
press interview with their photos splashed in the papers complete with their
weapons and battle gear that made it so much easier for the military and the
police to hunt them down.
Their
village was immediately put under a police and military “sweeping” siege
reminiscent of the dark days of the conflict. House-to-house searches,
roadblocks and the usual roughing up of villagers, young and old, followed,
as if Minimi and his gang would stay around in the village to fulfill a death
wish.
Within a
couple of days, three villagers were arrested for possession of weapons and
Minimi immediately publicly protested the “insult”. “They are not our
members, they are ordinary robbers,” conveniently forgetting his own
admission that he had been responsible for several robberies too before
announcing his political aims, and that, according to the police, Minimi had
been on their wanted list for some time — begging the question of how a
journalist could find him for an interview and the police could not.
Nevertheless
Minimi and his friends are former GAM soldiers. So what happens to the above
Article of the MoU? Ten years after its signing, aren’t these former
combatants supposed to have returned to society and become good and
productive citizens? How many more are still in this situation and what is
the likelihood that a sizable number of them will resort to violence? These
serious questions require immediate responses from both the central and Aceh
governments.
One may
say that sooner or later Minimi and his friends will be captured or killed.
But that will not solve the problem if there are others like them. The
governor cannot just dismiss this incident as a security matter that the
police, and much less the military, should handle.
He, both
as governor and former GAM leader, has the responsibility to find a better
end to this problem, lest the “peace with dignity and justice for all”
becomes just another worthless phrase of another ill-fated peace agreement,
like what happened to the 1965 Lamteh Agreement to end the 12 years of
equally bloody conflict in Aceh.
The
central government has indeed allocated a reintegration fund, as stated in
the MoU. In 2006, the Aceh Reintegration Agency (BRA) was formed as an ad-hoc
body by then acting governor Mustafa Abubakar. By April 2007, it had already
had three chairmen, and I was asked by the newly elected governor, Irwandi
Jusuf, to take over this hot seat in May 2007 and managed to become its
longest serving chairman till March 2010.
When I
was forced to leave the agency, the BRA had allocated some Rp 1.7 trillion
(US$136.4 million), largely to build some 23,000 simple one-room houses as
token replacements for the registered 29,000 houses, burned down or destroyed
all over Aceh during the conflict, to pay Rp 10 million each for 6,200
“non-military” GAM members, 6,500 militia members trained by the Indonesian
Military (TNI), the treatment of thousands of injured people, school fees for
some of the 23,000 registered orphans, and the same token amount of diyat
(death compensation) to a few thousand families.
It is a
serious misunderstanding of the terminology of “reintegration” on the part of
authorities in Jakarta and in Banda Aceh to consider that the aforementioned
measures constitute “reintegration”. Upon becoming BRA chairman, I had
specifically divided the process into two parts: the physical stage, which
should take no more than three years, and the mental stage, which would take
many years to complete before society was ready for social cohesion and the
return to normalcy — meaning that the people would no longer be identified as
“ex-combatants”, “victims of conflict” and other such terminologies linked to
the conflict.
It would
be too naïve to even think that giving Rp10 million to a former combatant who
had spent practically all his adult life in the jungle would automatically
change him from a killing machine into a law-abiding civilian. It is to their
credit that, despite the extreme hardships they have been suffering these
last 10 years of peace, very few former GAM soldiers have resorted to
violence to air their grievances.
The researcher Yuki Tajima wrote that on
their return from the war in 2005, ex-combatants found themselves with
significantly fewer assets, more injuries and lower educational attainment on
average than civilian men, and consequently less opportunity for employment.
However, none of the ex-combatants interviewed wished to return to conflict
despite their economic predicament.
A 2009
policy paper from the office of the UN secretary-general on post-conflict
employment creation, income generation and reintegration concluded there are
several economic factors that heighten the risk of conflict recurrence.
Failure to sufficiently address the issues may contribute to resumption of
violence, as mentioned in other reports.
While no
two conflicts are the same, there are generalized guidelines for a particular
post-conflict management, like that in Aceh, to be successful. The UN road
map clearly shows that what has been done in Aceh is merely reinsertion, in
which former combatants were given some money upon coming out of the jungle
so they could survive for a while, before being enrolled in training programs
to learn new life skills.
According
to these guidelines, “The second stage of demobilization encompasses the
support package […] called reinsertion [...] the assistance offered to
ex-combatants during demobilization [...]”
Such
basic needs, which can last to one year “can include transitional safety
allowances, food, clothes, shelter, medical services, short-term education,
training, employment and tools”.
Meanwhile
through reintegration ex-combatants “acquire civilian status and gain
sustainable employment and income”. Thus reintegration “is essentially a social and economic process with an open
time-frame, primarily taking place in communities [...] It is part of the
general development [...] and a national responsibility, and often
necessitates long-term external assistance”
The
Helsinki MoU even specified the necessity of granting “suitable farming land”
to former combatants. None of these measures have been carried out.
It is my fervent hope that the new government, especially Vice
President Jusuf Kalla, the initiator and architect of the Helsinki peace accord,
looks into the post-conflict peace management in Aceh, especially in the
long-overdue amendment of the 2006 law on Aceh governance, to make it more
compatible with the clauses of the Helsinki MoU. ●
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