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US ties and
challenges to peace in Aceh
Asia Times Online
January 21, 2005
By Abigail Abrash Walton and Bama Athreya
Aceh, so long isolated from international view by the Indonesian
government and military, is now - tragically - at the center of
world attention. Members of the US Congress and their staff, United
Nations officials, journalists, and humanitarian aid workers have
arrived on the scene after years of blocked access. These shifts
offer the administration of US President George W Bush and other
actors an unprecedented opportunity for peace-building and enhancement
of human security and stability in a region dominated by violent
conflict for decades.
This report analyzes three key factors in responding effectively
to the challenges of emergency aid and reconstruction efforts as
well as long-term sustainable development and conflict resolution:
1) the role of the Indonesian military (TNI) in aid delivery and
in ending the ongoing conflict; 2) the differences between Aceh's
indigenous insurgents (Free Aceh Movement or GAM) and newly arriving
extremist Islamic militias; and 3) the role of ExxonMobil in the
province.
Shortsighted US opportunism in the face of disaster?
In the aftermath of the massive earthquake and tsunami that devastated
much of Aceh, US Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld is pushing yet
again the Bush administration's frustrated desire to strengthen
ties with the Indonesian military over the well-grounded objections
of the US Congress, as cemented in US law. In his trademark Orwellian
rhetoric, the secretary argues that such a move is essential to
winning the "global war on terror". This myopic logic ignores the
numerous reports documenting the Indonesian military as a de facto
terrorist entity with a long track record of undermining human security
in Aceh and other parts of Indonesia as well as near-daily news
reports about the TNI's control-happy undermining of emergency relief
efforts.
Indeed, the US State Department's 2003 Indonesia country report
notes, "Security-force members murdered, tortured, raped, beat,
and arbitrarily detained civilians ... Human-rights abuses were
most apparent in Aceh ... however, no security-force members have
been prosecuted for unlawful killings in Aceh ... Retired and active-duty
military officers who were known to have committed serious human-rights
violations occupy or have been promoted to senior positions in both
the government and the TNI."
The TNI is also a massively corrupt institution, relying on its
private business interests for an estimated two-thirds of its annual
budget. The TNI's businesses include illegal logging, drug production
and trafficking, and prostitution, as well as "security" payments,
viewed by many as extortion, from Indonesian and US businesses.
ExxonMobil reportedly pays the military about US$6 million per year
for "security" at its Aceh natural-gas operations; Louisiana-based
Freeport-McMoRan Copper and Gold Inc paid the Indonesian military
and police at its West Papua mines $10.7 million during a recent
two-year period. These relationships with the TNI have cost US multinationals
and their shareholders both in terms of reputation and financial
liabilities resulting from associated TNI human-rights abuses.
New legislation requires the TNI to abandon its economic activities
within the next five years - a crucial yet challenging undertaking
that will require consistent backing by the international community
to Indonesia's civilian reformers, not the business-as-usual stance
proffered by normalization of military relations.
When will policymakers grasp the common-sense wisdom "With friends
like these, who needs enemies?" Attempting to build working relationships
with human-rights abusers with agendas and interests of their own
is a long-failed policy that costs lives rather than saves them.
US support and assistance - financial and political - are best channeled
to civilian-led emergency aid, good governance, and development
programs.
The political landscape and the threat to aid delivery
Because of its territorial command structure, which gives it bases
of operation from the village level up, the TNI would in theory
be the best-placed Indonesian institution to provide disaster relief.
However, the TNI cannot play an effective leadership role in disaster
relief and reconstruction for numerous reasons. Its brutal reputation,
gained during years of unfettered human-rights atrocities against
Aceh's civilians, has hindered the TNI's effectiveness by casting
grave and well-founded suspicion on the military playing any sort
of unsupervised or managerial aid role.
By severely restricting the movements of aid workers and unilaterally
setting an arbitrary March 26 deadline for the departure of US and
other foreign troops assisting with disaster relief, the TNI has
further lost credibility as an institution capable of meeting the
needs and challenges confronting disaster survivors. Instead, the
TNI's overriding mission of destroying the estimated few thousand
GAM fighters in the region - and the TNI's interest in sustaining
the conflict so as to continue to profit from the region's war economy
- constitute a conflict of interest that irreparably undermines
aid work.
In recent days, the international press has reported that foreign
aid workers to Indonesia will be restricted to two areas: Banda
Aceh and Meulaboh. The Indonesian military has claimed that it cannot
guarantee the safety of foreigners in any other part of the province,
alleging GAM might at any time attack foreigners in other parts
of the province. The alleged GAM threat is a red herring, meant
to prevent foreign aid workers, journalists, and other observers
from witnessing the TNI's ongoing military offensive in Aceh's inner
regions even since the disaster of December 26 or from hearing the
stories of survivors of pre-disaster human-rights abuses.
GAM has issued statements declaring a unilateral ceasefire (though
fighters in the field say they will return fire if the TNI strikes
first) and also declaring its intent not to fire on civilian aid
workers of any nationality. Adding to the credibility of these statements
is the simple fact that GAM members believe that a foreign presence
throughout Aceh ultimately benefits their cause. While GAM has indeed
engaged in violence against Indonesian forces and, on occasion,
civilians in the past, the group has no record of aggression against
foreigners.
It is important for international audiences to understand that
anti-foreign, violent Islamic elements do exist in Indonesia, but
these forces are not GAM. There are a number of other extremist
Islamic groups that operate in Indonesia, although historically
these groups have had no presence in Aceh. However, within the past
several weeks, the Indonesian government and military have facilitated
the movement of these extremist groups into Aceh. It is crucial
for the international donor community to recognize the past role
of the Indonesian military in aiding and abetting such groups, and
the present interest the military may have in maintaining such groups'
presence in Aceh as a proxy base for its military operations against
GAM.
In fact, the TNI has a documented record of using proxy militia
groups to engage in violence in East Timor and elsewhere. A 2002
study for the US Naval Postgraduate School notes that the Indonesian
army has become "a major facilitator of terrorism" due to "radical
Muslim militias they ... organized, trained, and financed". The
study adds that the military gave one terrorist group an estimated
$9.3 million "embezzled from its defense budget". According to a
Congressional Research Service report first released in 2002 and
updated in 2004, "Radical groups such as Laskar Jihad and the Islamic
Defenders Front ... received assistance from elements within the
Indonesian military in organizing [and] securing arms and transport
to locales throughout the Indonesian archipelago."
The Islamic Defenders Front - known for its violent attacks on
Jakarta nightclubs - as well as Laskar Mujahidin, the security wing
of the Majelis Mujahidin Indonesia (MMI), have established a presence
in Aceh reportedly to support Islamic law and tradition in the region
during aid relief efforts there. MMI once was headed by Jemaah Islamiah
(JI) leader Abu Bakar Ba'asyir, who is currently on trial for his
alleged role in the 2002 bombing of a Bali nightclub in which 202
people were killed and a 2003 blast that killed 12 people at the
JW Marriott hotel in Jakarta. JI reportedly also is responsible
for a 2004 bombing at the Australian Embassy in Jakarta. In maintaining
a coherent position in promoting peace in the region, governments
and other institutions providing disaster aid should not shy away
from protesting the entrance into Aceh of outfits with a documented
history of violence.
Corporate good citizenship:
ExxonMobil in Aceh Multinational corporations based in Indonesia,
including ExxonMobil, Newmont and Unocal, have given generously
to assist relief efforts in the region. However, in view of the
unparalleled and, in many ways, destabilizing role that ExxonMobil
has played in Aceh over the years, it is incumbent on the corporation
to do more.
ExxonMobil currently faces a multimillion-dollar lawsuit, filed
by the Washington, DC-based International Labor Rights Fund (ILRF)
on behalf of Acehnese villagers who were tortured and murdered by
the TNI on ExxonMobil's premises. Concerned about its investments,
the city of New York has filed a shareholder resolution with the
US Securities and Exchange Commission calling on ExxonMobil management
to report on the details of the company's financial relationship
with the TNI.
What did ExxonMobil do? The Arun gas field in North Sumatra is
one of the world's largest sources of liquefied natural gas (LNG),
and Exxon Mobil Corp (originally Mobil Oil Corp) has had a contract
with the government of Indonesia since 1969 to process LNG from
this site.
There have been credible reports that ExxonMobil Corp, along with
its predecessor companies, hired TNI military units to provide "security"
for the company's Arun project. The result has been TNI-perpetrated
torture, murder, rape, and other acts of terror against the local
population. In some cases, the TNI used ExxonMobil equipment or
facilities to conduct the torture and to dispose of those killed.
For example, one of the plaintiffs in the ILRF case was "disappeared"
for a period of three months, during which time he was repeatedly
beaten and tortured with electric shocks. He was then taken to an
open pit where he was shown a large pile of human heads. He was
told that he would be killed and his head would be added to the
pile. He was eventually released, but soldiers burned down his home
thereafter. Another plaintiff, who was several months pregnant,
was raped and beaten by a soldier who forced his way into her home.
These examples are typical of the stories of dozens of innocent
civilians living around the ExxonMobil area of operations.
The ExxonMobil facilities were not significantly damaged by the
tsunami, thanks to concrete barriers that had been erected long
ago to protect the site. The company's gas-extraction operations
are ongoing, and ExxonMobil personnel reportedly are continuing
to work in the area without problems. However, despite the announcement
of a $5 million donation to relief efforts, the company has been
silent regarding its own role in facilitating relief operations
in the Lhoksumawe area. The Indonesian military has denied access
to Lhoksumawe to foreign relief workers, supposedly on the grounds
that the TNI cannot protect foreigners' safety in that area, but
no such restrictions have been placed on ExxonMobil employees. ExxonMobil
owns its own airstrip at the site, but it is unclear whether the
company has offered to make it available to facilitate aid delivery
by humanitarian workers or whether ExxonMobil intends to provide
meaningful assistance to reconstruction efforts.
The company owes far more to the people of Aceh than a mere $5
million donation. ExxonMobil reportedly has extracted some $40 billion
from its Arun gas operations during the past decade alone, including
earnings of an estimated $2 billion annually in recent years. ExxonMobil's
role as a major player not only in Aceh, but also in terms of Indonesia's
national economy and the other US-based multinationals operating
there, makes the company a stakeholder with unmatched clout. (ExxonMobil
executive Robert Haines serves as chairperson of the US-ASEAN Business
Council's Indonesia subgroup and led a high-level delegation to
Jakarta early last month to meet with Indonesian President Susilo
Bambang Yudhoyono and other top-ranking government officials.) The
company should use its resources and influence to advocate that
foreign aid workers be given access to the area, facilitate their
transport and delivery of aid and, on a broader scale, encourage
the Indonesian government to move toward a ceasefire and resumption
of peace talks with GAM as an absolutely vital condition to aid
delivery and long-term security throughout the province.
Conclusion and recommendations
To ensure that the response to the tsunami contributes to both short-term
relief and long-term peace and security for the people of Aceh,
the Bush administration must support Indonesian efforts at strengthening
the country's civilian democratic governance and military reform.
Above all else, this means ensuring that in the immediate and near
term, the TNI plays a limited, non-managerial role in relief efforts.
For example, Indonesian military personnel could usefully employ
the TNI's logistical infrastructure to provide transport of aid
under the direction of local civilian government and Indonesian
and international humanitarian organizations.
The Bush administration should support efforts by the UN as well
as international and local humanitarian organizations to provide
long-term reconstruction assistance in Aceh. For recovery and reconstruction
to be effective, fighting in the region must end. The task of building
peace in Aceh is complex but, at a minimum, the US and other members
of the international community must prioritize a ceasefire between
the TNI and GAM, insist on demilitarization of the province, and
once again vigorously support peace talks. Indeed, Germany has explicitly
linked its massive aid pledge to President Yudhoyono's stated commitment
to pursue a peaceful solution to the conflict in Aceh.
As the largest debtor among the countries hit by the tsunami, Indonesia
puts roughly 25% of its annual revenues toward debt repayment to
the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the World Bank and wealthy
countries such as the United States and Japan. The Bush administration
should support an immediate, interest-free debt moratorium and the
convening of an International Debt Conference. A moratorium will
enable the Indonesian government to undertake emergency aid and
reconstruction planning; a conference is needed to develop an effective
and comprehensive approach to Indonesia's massive $132 billion external
debt burden, much of it accrued during the corrupt, 32-year regime
of ousted military dictator Suharto. Coordinated by an independent
institution such as the UN Development Program, and based on independent
research, the conference would assess the sustainability of current
debt repayments with respect to immediate disaster relief as well
as the country's overall poverty reduction and development goals.
These measures should enable the Indonesian government to meet the
new challenges of effective emergency aid and reconstruction without
having to enter into more debt slavery or by escalating exploitation
of Indonesia's unique and sensitive natural environment.
To combat terrorism effectively, the US arguably needs the friendship
of Indonesia, the world's most populous Muslim nation. Aceh's natural
disaster offers an unprecedented opportunity for enhanced long-term
human security. The way to achieve these goals is not by building
ties with the very elements that engage in destructive violence
there. It is by demonstrating that the United States is ready to
contribute materially to peace-building, sustainable development
and democratic reform.
Abigail Abrash Walton is on the faculty at Antioch New England
Graduate School and has monitored conditions in Indonesia since
1993. Bama Athreya is deputy director of the International
Labor Rights Fund. Both are regular contributors to Foreign Policy
In Focus. (Posted with permission from Foreign Policy In Focus.)
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