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Jan - Mar 2001
Jafar Siddiq Hamzah Died Defending Dialogue And
Human Rights
Sidney Jones
Many knew Jafar as a political science student at New
School University, New York. Others knew him as a
leader of the very close Acehnese community in
Woodside, Queens, where he'd lived since 1996. Some
New Yorkers may have known him as one of the least
aggressive taxi drivers this city has ever produced.
Many of us knew him as a dedicated human rights
defender, a lawyer who came to the aid of victims who
didn't dare speak out for themselves. His was a voice
for dialogue and moderation in a conflict that is now
spiralling out of control. And he was a son, a
brother, a husband, and a friend.
Jafar would have been thirty-five in about two weeks.
He was a slight, gentle, self-effacing man, very
bright, a little absent-minded, with a lovely sense of
humour. He wasn't a rabble-rouser, he wasn't a fiery
speaker, he wasn't a mobiliser of large crowds, and he
certainly wasn't a guerrilla. What he was, first and
foremost, was an Acehnese and intensely proud of it.
He wanted the world to know and appreciate Aceh's
past, and he was determined that the Acehnese should
have a say in their future.
Jafar was particularly angry over the long period
beginning in 1990 - the year he became a human rights
lawyer - when the Indonesian army declared Aceh an
area of special military operations and began
conducting a brutal counter-insurgency campaign
against what was then a tiny group of guerrillas of
the Free Aceh Movement (GAM). Jafar risked his life
then to get the word out about the atrocities that
were taking place. He helped Jakarta-based human
rights organisations and foreign journalists get in to
Aceh to find out for themselves. When Suharto was
forced to resign in May 1998, Jafar didn't want
revenge, but he did want justice. I think he also came
to the conclusion that it was not going to be possible
to protect human rights in the absence of major
political change in the relationship with Jakarta.
Some months after Suharto's fall Jafar helped found
the International Forum on Aceh. Its first conference
was held at New York University in December 1998. It
was the first ever international gathering to discuss
the political dynamics of modern-day Aceh. By the time
of the second IFA conference in the spring of last
year, a nonviolent movement for a referendum on Aceh's
political status, led by students, NGOs, and Muslim
scholars, was well underway. The second conference was
attended by an even wider range of well-known Acehnese,
from members of parliament in Jakarta to rival
factions of the guerrilla movement. Again, all
viewpoints were represented, everyone had a chance to
speak, and I remember Indonesian students in the
audience pleading with pro-independence Acehnese to
give them a second chance, now that Suharto was gone.
Jafar was not a member of GAM, and didn't try to
idealise the guerrillas or their leadership. He was in
contact with individuals in the movement, just as he
was in contact with Acehnese members of the political
establishment in Jakarta. Indonesian authorities,
however, made no distinction between IFA and GAM.
When Jafar disappeared on August 5, I didn't believe
it at first. He went from a meeting in broad daylight
on a busy street in the country's third largest city
and was never seen alive again. His body was found
three weeks later with four others about 83 km away.
Those four have not been identified to this day, and
the police in Medan purport to have no leads to
Jafar's killer. Shortly after Jafar disappeared,
another activist received a call saying, 'We took care
of Jafar, now it's your turn.' The caller complained
that the activist never raised GAM abuses but only
those of the TNI. That's not an excuse for threats,
let alone murder. Circumstantial evidence and the
pattern of killing points to military involvement in
Jafar's death, but there is no hard evidence, and we
may never know exactly what happened. Jafar's main
flaw was that he trusted everyone. He couldn't believe
that other people could be operating in bad faith when
he himself was so open about his intentions. We know
he had been threatened before his disappearance; we
know he was worried enough to call home at regular
intervals to check in. We also know that he didn't let
fear deter him from pursuing a political settlement in
Aceh.
The best tribute we can all pay Jafar is to do the
following: 1. Keep up the pressure to find and
prosecute his killers; 2. Continue to seek justice for
victims of human rights violations and their families;
3. Raise the profile of Aceh so that more and more
people across the world appreciate the culture and
history of this complex place; 4. Press ahead with
efforts to end the conflict through unrestricted
dialogue; 5. Continue symposia like this one. We all
want Jafar back, but this kind of gathering may be the
most fitting memorial.

Sidney Jones (joness@hrw.org <mailto:joness@hrw.org>)
is the Asia Director of Human Rights Watch (www.hrw.org
<HTTP://www.hrw.org>). She read this obituary at a
memorial service held in New York on 24 October 2000. |