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Oct - Dec 2000
These Women Want To Silence All The Guns, Whether
Indonesian Or Acehnese
Suraiya Kamaruzzaman
Aceh is rich in natural resources. Large corporations
moved into North Aceh following the discovery of
natural gas. Related industries spread through the
Greater Aceh region (Aceh Besar). Outsiders dominated
these huge corporations. Their displays of wealth
alienated the Acehnese, who were largely excluded from
the economic gains of industrialisation.
Even in North Aceh, referred to in jest as the petro-dollar
region, 70% of villages remained officially in the
'backward' category (desa tertinggal). According to
some sources, Aceh's natural resources supplied
Jakarta's coffers with Rp 33 trillion each year, of
which only one percent was returned to the province.
Locals who live around these companies are just
spectators who watch the prosperity inside from their
poverty outside. This has gone on for decades.
This was the context in which the armed struggle for
Acehnese independence, GAM (Gerakan Aceh Merdeka, Aceh
Freedom Movement) was established under the leadership
of Hasan di Tiro. In 1990 the Suharto government
launched its Operation Red Net (Operasi Jaring Merah)
to root out what the New Order chose to call a
Movement to Disturb Peace and Order, or GPK. The
operation continued for eight years, but failed to
resolve the Aceh problem. Instead, innocent civilians
faced state-sponsored brutality. Anyone who refused to
support the Indonesian military effort was labelled
GPK.
Thousands of women were widowed, their husbands
murdered or kidnapped. Children were orphaned. Some
women faced sexual violence from soldiers, in part as
a deliberate instrument of terror against their
communities. The women became pariahs in their own
communities, which did not want to associate with
anyone dangerously tainted by GPK suspicions. These
single women, with children to support, could no
longer go out safely to work in the fields.
In late 1998, after the fall of Suharto, and with many
human rights abuses well documented, the commander of
the armed forces General Wiranto revoked Aceh's status
as 'special military operations area' (DOM).
Data from the Coalition of Human Rights NGOs had
documented 7,727 cases of human rights abuse between
1990-98. But the situation did not improve when DOM
status was revoked. From January 1999 to February 2000
the coalition documented nine cases of 'massacre' in
which 132 civilians were killed and 472 wounded, 304
arbitrary detentions, 318 extra-judicial executions,
and 138 disappearances.
Refugees
From February 1999, the Indonesian army started
deliberately displacing inhabitants from some parts of
Aceh. From June to August 1999 there were 250,000 to
300,000 internally displaced persons in Aceh. No human
rights investigation has been conducted so far on this
tragedy. Then the numbers of refugees fell, with only
a few hundred remaining displaced by May 2000.
However, in the following two months, despite the
relative reduction in armed conflict, the numbers of
displaced rose rapidly again into the thousands. In
one camp there were 4,110 refugees, including 712
infants, 818 children less than five years, 52
pregnant women and 112 women who were still nursing
infants.
The following is a summary of their reasons for
seeking refuge:
Frequent searches for GAM members carried out by the
Indonesian army in villages. These searches were
inevitably brutal, involving beatings, forcible
removal of individuals from their home, and
destruction or forcible removal of property.
Continued armed contacts between GAM and the army in
rural areas, threatening the security of villagers.
In some villages, the Indonesian armed forces and
other unidentified groups burnt homes.
Kidnappings carried out by both the military and
civilian militia, the latter suspected of being
supporters of GAM.
Certain groups prohibited the refugees from returning
to their village, even though the refugees themselves
considered the situation safe.
Some wealthier villagers such as business people found
themselves openly harassed by alleged armed GAM
members demanding money. One witness said a man had
his house burnt down after refusing to contribute.
However, such cases were relatively few and these
people could usually afford to make a permanent move
and start business elsewhere. Also, it is not entirely
clear whether such attackers were always GAM members,
or Indonesian soldiers or even ordinary criminals
taking advantage of the chaotic law and order
situation in Aceh.
The camps did not always provide the safety the
refugees sought. On 13 October 1999, in the Abu
Beureueh Mosque camp in Pidie, the army, allegedly in
search of GAM activists, fired several rounds. The
shooting scattered 10,000 refugees in fear of their
lives. Several women were sexually assaulted. On 29
December, 150 refugees in the Seulimun Mosque camp
were poisoned and had to be hospitalised.
Living conditions in many camps remain appalling. Many
have only plastic sheets as shelter. Malnutrition is
rampant among pregnant women and children. Dozens of
babies have been born in the camps, with little or no
medical facility. Sickness due to lack of clean water
and exhaustion is commonplace.
Even in the camps no gender equity has been
established. The women's 'double burden' continues to
operate! Like the men, they face the brutality of the
state. But they also continue to be repressed by
patriarchal social practices. In Acehnese norms, the
woman's place is at home. While many women work in the
fields and in the markets, they are always seen as
only 'helping their husbands'. It was therefore normal
for the women to assume food preparation as their
function in the camps. However, that was regarded as a
public activity, so men took over the work. This
deprived women of the one function that legitimised
their existence as social beings.
Men make all decisions in the camps. Women, many of
them war widows with no access to any particular male,
are deprived of information and other facilities.
Children have been severely traumatised by their
experience of the war and by being displaced. Hundreds
of schools have been burnt. According to one report
the war has disrupted schooling for more than 11,000
Acehnese children.
When a group of women activists provided paper and pen
to children in a refugee camp, their drawings
visualised the violence they had experienced. There
were pictures of marching Indonesian soldiers, of
battle between GAM and the Indonesian army, of
weapons, dead bodies and mutilated corpses.
The armed struggle between the Indonesian army and the
Aceh Freedom Movement has been disastrous for the
civilian population. There are villages where only
women and children remain. Some of these women are
working for other people in return for a few kilos of
rice. Others are feeding their family on boiled trunks
of banana trees.
Women for peace
The armed conflict in Aceh must be brought to an end -
by whatever means. And women must be included in that
peaceprocess. This is not only because women
constitute 53% of Aceh's population. It is because
women have suffered grievously throughout this
conflict. As citizens, they have suffered at the hands
of the state, having been raped and abused by the
Indonesian army. Culturally, they have been repressed
by patriarchy and through the wrong interpretations of
Islamic law (such as the forcible imposition of dress
codes). Even at home, they have faced domestic
violence, being beaten and raped by their husbands.
Women must be included in any decision making process.
Data from the provincial government shows there are no
fewer than 460,000 female heads of households, of whom
377,000 are widows.
Women are organising for peace. They are praying,
marching in the streets, distributing flowers and the
message 'stop violence against women'. Women have held
discussions with President Gus Dur and even with the
army. They have also proposed to the commander of the
Aceh Freedom Movement army that a special zone of
peace for women should be set up. They have taken
their campaign to the United Nations.
With the cease-fire arranged in May this year, there
are new hopes for peace. But there is no peace yet in
Aceh. Violence continues, from both the Indonesian
army and GAM. New sweeps as the army searches for GAM
members are starting a fresh movement of refugees in
East Aceh. Women want all weapons to cease fire,
whether they belong to the Indonesian army or to the
soldiers of GAM. We hope that the current agreement
between the combatants for a humanitarian cessation of
hostilities is not just rhetoric for the Indonesian
army and Aceh Freedom Movement.
Suraiya Kamaruzzaman is executive director of Flower
Aceh (flower@aceh.wasantara.net.id). Established in
1989, this was the first women's group set up by
Acehnese women to deal with the consequences of the
Indonesian army's brutal crackdown on the Aceh Freedom
Movement (GAM). This article is extracted from her
passionate presentation at the recent conference on
Indonesian violence held in Melbourne. |