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Jan - Mar 2002
A Rare Visit With The Free Aceh Movement Shows Them
Confident And Well Organized
Damien Kingsbury
The dawn awoke on the side of the mountain with the
calls of birds and monkeys in the upper canopy. The
'boys' rose slowly, slung their weapons and wandered
down to the stream to wash. We later organised and
trekked down along the overgrown track, across
gullies, over fences and across a river, coming up to
a dirt road along which walked a dozen or so school
girls in neat uniforms. The girls seemed familiar with
this gang of longhaired guerrillas carrying automatic
weapons. This was in the hills beyond Lhokseumawe, a
strongly pro-independence area. I was there as a guest
of the independence movement, to get their side of the
story.
The night had passed safely; the paramilitary police
Mobile Brigade patrol had not found us. In Aceh, on
the northwestern tip of Indonesia, some 10,000
Indonesian soldiers and around 20,000 paramilitary
police had instilled in the people fear, anger and an
overwhelming desire for a referendum on
self-determination. I was struck by the similarities
to East Timor ahead of its own referendum in 1999.
Here too, the TNI and Brimob looked like an invading
army, killing civilians and feebly trying to blame the
separatists, burning homes and schools and using rape
as a weapon. Also similar to East Timor, desire for
independence was very strong across a range of groups
and organisations. According to pro-independence
leaders there was an historical claim to separation
(partially recognised in Aceh's 'special region'
status) and a long history of rebellion against
outsiders, starting in 1873 and only pausing in 1949
and then between 1963 and 1976.
The movement started in 1976 is popularly known as the
Free Aceh Movement (Gerakan Aceh Merdeka - GAM), but
prefers to be called the Aceh Sumatra National
Liberation Front (ASNLF). The TNI and Brimob were
obvious in Banda Aceh and the major industrial city of
Lhokseumawe, but it was the highway from Banda Aceh to
near the North Sumatra border that showed their real
presence. Brimob, the Siliwangi Division, Marines, and
territorial troops ran numerous posts and roadblocks.
South of Lhokseumawe these occurred every several
hundred metres for dozens of kilometres. Burned homes
were littered in between. Yet just a short distance
from the highway one was immediately in ASNLF held
territory. Observers close to the TNI estimate the
ASNLF's military force at 3-5,000 full-time members
plus a large and active support base. What I saw was
consistent with those figures - the support base is
itself armed and could number around 10,000.
Like any guerrilla force, the ASNLF relies on popular
support. Moving from point to point near the important
industrial city of Lhokseumawe, I met no one who was
not as one with ASNLF. A local ASNLF leader in the
region said that the ASNLF was not separate from the
people. It could not otherwise function, he said. In a
violent environment few would challenge those with
guns, and the becak driver who drove me out of town
was visibly scared when he unexpectedly found himself
among a number of ASNLF. The ASNLF has a deserved
reputation for killing people it identifies as its
enemies. But cooperation otherwise seemed happy and
voluntary, unlike the obliged voluntarism I have seen
accompanying the TNI. The Indonesian government has
portrayed ASNLF as a fanatical Islamic organisation.
Two senior TNI generals made this claim to me again
just days before I met with ASNLF representatives.
While ASNLF and its supporters could be identified by
their devout Islam, another cultural marker that sets
them apart from others in the archipelago is the
Acehnese language.
Language, religion, territory and a common history,
especially in adversity, are the classical markers of
'nation'. There is no doubt that Aceh has these,
separate from the rest of Indonesia. Similar markers
could also be applied to other 'national' groups in
Indonesia. One ASNLF official laughingly referred to
not just Bangsa Aceh (Aceh Nation), but Bangsa Minang,
Bangsa Sunda and Bangsa Bali. He acknowledged,
however, that not all potential 'bangsa' might wish to
have that status. Aceh has a devout and usually
tolerant form of Islam. The ethnic Chinese and
Christian Bataks have lived in peace with their
Islamic neighbours since the 1980s. Having said that,
there is little tolerance for Javanese transmigrants,
who have been attacked by the ASNLF.
The ASNLF claims that it has only attacked Javanese
militias, although the question of who is a combatant
has become blurred in Aceh. One ASNLF official I spoke
to in Banda Aceh was keen to state that his
organisation did not want to impose itself on the
people of Aceh. What it wanted, he said, was a popular
referendum to determine whether or not Aceh should
remain as a part of Indonesia. 'Referendum' was
graffitied around Banda Aceh and Lhokseumawe. The
Acehnese organisations I contacted were unanimous in
wanting a referendum. This popular move for a
referendum reflects the squeezing of the middle ground
during the escalation since 1999. Indeed, the ASNLF
itself has only accepted the legitimacy of a
referendum since 1999. The East Timor ballot was a
critical lead. The ASNLF official stressed that Aceh
had historical and religious links with other Islamic
communities, but was not funded by them. He was at
pains to point out that ASNLF was horrified by the
terrorist attack in the US on 11 September 2001,
allegedly conducted by Islamic extremists. The ASNLF,
he said, looked to the rest of the international
community for support, including the United Kingdom
and the United States, with which Aceh once had
diplomatic relations. The ASNLF official did
acknowledge that their guerrillas had received
training in Lybia until 1999, much later than usually
thought. But the link was no longer necessary as the
ASNLF had its own training bases, and Lybia's standing
could adversely affect how the ASNLF was
internationally perceived. The ASNLF receives some
support from sympathisers and Acehnese refugees
abroad, especially in Malaysia, but its financial
component is negligible compared to its internal
capacity to raise income.
Well Funded
The ASNLF raises 'taxes'. The Indonesian government
and some NGOs call this extortion, in some cases
extracted with threats of violence. The ASNLF
justifies it on the grounds that as a legitimate
government it needs to levy taxes. The TNI and Brimob
also demand payments for 'protection', although as
institutions of a government that already levies taxes
this extra-financial activity cannot claim the
legitimacy of 'tax'. All local businesses pay a tax to
ASNLF, as a percentage of profits, according to the
ASNLF up to and including the giant Exxon-owned and
operated Arun liquid natural gas plant at Lhokseumawe.
The ASNLF is well funded and consequently well
equipped. The ASNLF's high level of organisation also
presented itself in other ways. In meeting a regional
ASNLF commander, the network of drop-offs, pick-ups
and exchanges was extraordinary, complicated and
perfectly timed. Everyone along the route knew what
was going on, and many had cellular two-way radios.
I was finally deposited in a small and remote village
and told to wait on a pavilion under a palm-thatched
roof. I had only just begun to get my small pack off
when, through a bamboo gate, came a young man wearing
a baseball cap and a clean white T-shirt over which
was black military webbing containing clips of
ammunition. In his belt was a pistol and in his left
hand an AK-47 assault rifle. He held out his right
hand to me and said: 'Hello, I am Jamaica,' indicating
his code-name. Out of the undergrowth came around
twenty young men similarly dressed, carrying AK-47s
and M-16s. Jamaica wanted Hasan di Tiro to return as
Aceh's sultan, but in a political system that included
elected parties. We discussed the UK's constitutional
monarchy, and that of Thailand, which he thought were
suitable models. Others I spoke to said they wanted an
elected US-style executive president and separate
legislature, although with Islamic ethics, and within
a local federalist system. The idea of a referendum on
self-determination logically led to a vote for
representative government, and what policies should be
followed. Jamaica, the local guerrilla leader, did not
want to see one repressive system replaced by another.
Again, there were similarities to East Timor.
I was introduced to 'Grandfather', who was in his 70s.
Grandfather had been fighting since the early 1950s
as, he said, had his father before him. Grandfather
was still enthusiastic. He later led Jamaica, myself
and a group of the 'boys' into the jungle to hide
overnight from a Brimob patrol. I later met other old
men, drinking sweet tea in the half-light of the open
shop front by the intersection of a small town. The
town was mostly deserted. Some of the boys sat
drinking black coffee and tea with ice, their radios
crackling with intermittent traffic, exchanging banter
with the old men. With guards posted at intervals and
bombs set on three of the four roads in and out it was
as safe as anywhere in Aceh. The army and Brimob had
come here, but had each time been beaten back, which
was why none of the buildings here were burnt. A
ten-year-old boy stood around, self-consciously part
of this group of hardened men. His father had been
shot dead by Brimob a few days previously. This boy
was already the next generation of the struggle,
waiting his turn. One might hope the people of Aceh
have the opportunity to vote on their future in an
internationally supervised referendum before this boy
also has to pick up a gun.

Dr. Damien Kingsbury (dlk@deakin.edu.au <mailto:dlk@deakin.edu.au>)
is Senior Lecturer in International Development at
Deakin University, Geelong, Australia. His most recent
book is the second edition of 'The politics of
Indonesia' (Oxford). |