|
July – Sept 2004
Aceh’s women find
themselves between an armed conflict and Islamic law
Suraiya Kamaruzzaman
Islamic law (syariah) is not the answer to the war in
Aceh. Although the implementation of syariah was
linked to government efforts to resolve the Aceh
‘problem’, it does not address the root cause of the
conflict, namely Aceh’s relationship to the central
government.
Moreover, as long as the implementation of syariah in
Aceh remains confined to symbolism, women will
continue to be the primary targets of anti-vice
campaigns carried out by both military and civilian
authorities.
Symbolic Islamic law?
The initiative for the special law allowing Aceh to
formally adopt syariah came from former President B.
J. Habibie. Based on the recommendation of H. Usman
Hasan, Habibie’s chief advisor on the conflict in Aceh,
the Habibie government proposed syariah as a means of
resolving the decades-long conflict in the province.
It was hoped that this gift would help to heal the
wounds caused by the injustices Aceh had suffered. The
response in the Acehnese community varied: some were
indifferent, while others welcomed the move. Yet
neither the Habibie government nor its successors have
provided clear practical guidelines for implementing
syariah in Aceh.
After the proposal to implement syariah in Aceh was
announced in 1999, the physical symbols of Islam
became the focus of various campaigns. Signs on public
and private offices were changed to Arabic lettering
and women were instructed to wear jilbab (Islamic
headscarf). Banners and leaflets declared several
locations to be ‘compulsory jilbab areas’ and all
government and private agencies, schools and tertiary
institutions made it obligatory for women to wear
jilbab.
In the absence of a formal legal body during this
period, many people took the enforcement of Islamic
law into their own hands. Sweepings and inspections to
find women not wearing jilbab were carried out by
talibaný(Islamic student) groups, university students,
female police officers and unknown armed groups. Every
male or person of ‘power’ felt that they had the right
to judge women. During these inspections, women were
subjected to various forms of violence. Some had their
heads shaved, others were beaten or forced to march in
public, pelted with tomatoes or eggs in the market,
yelled at or had the tight clothing they were wearing
torn or their jeans slashed to above the knees.
During a radio talk show on the effects of the
implementation of syariah in Aceh on women, I said,
‘This is Arabisation, not Islamisation, so when will
Aceh’s officials exchange their cars for camels, so
that things can be exactly like they are in the Arab
world’? The telephone lines immediately filled with
angry callers. My point was simply to highlight that
in a narrow interpretation of syariah, women are
invariably the first victims.
The events that occurred in Aceh in mid to late 1999
are reminiscent of the experiences of women elsewhere
in the world. In Iran, the public freedom of women was
restricted after the Islamic revolution of 1978-79.
Ironically, women had been amongst the strongest
supporters of the revolution. Similarly, in
Afghanistan women were confined to their homes once
the Taliban gained power. There were no exceptions,
even for women who had provided their family’s
livelihood. Does a similar fate await Aceh’s women?
If implementing syariah, even in a narrow sense, would
mean an end to the conflict, I believe that every
woman in Aceh would willingly wear jilbab. Women in
Aceh have played an important role in Aceh’s political
struggle since colonial times. Yet there are no
records of the head coverings of women causing
problems in the past. The heroines of Aceh’s political
struggle, including Cut Nyak Dien, CutÍMeutia and a
host of other prominent women, wore their hair in the
rolled up style unique to Aceh, with a shawl dangling
and covering only part of the hair. To the present
day, this hair bun is known as ‘ok sanggoi Cut Nyak
Dien’ (Cut Nyak Dien’s hair bun).
Implementation
Syariah received official recognition in Aceh with the
introduction of Law No 44/1999 under Abdurrahman
Wahid’s presidency. This law gave Aceh the right to
determine matters relating to religious and cultural
affairs, education, and the role of ulama (religious
scholars). President Megawati further strengthened the
position of syariah with the introduction of Law No
18/2001, granting Aceh special autonomy as the
province of Nanggroe Aceh Darussalam (NAD). Syariah
then received further legislative support through
Regional Regulation No 5/2001.
Although the regulation simply listed matters that
must be administered ‘in accordance with syariah’, the
Aceh provincial legislature has since ratified five
further regulations on syariah courts, Islamic
worship, liquor, gambling and indecency. The contents
of these five regulations suggest that in Aceh, the
implementation of syariah is focused on the rules of
individual worship. This may explain the emphasis on
symbolic matters so far.
During a ceremony to mark the implementation of
syariah, the provincial governor Abdullah Puteh
declared all offices in the province to be aurat-covered
areas. Men and women alike must now cover their bodies
according to the standards set by Islam. The governor
also ordered that prayers be conducted as a
congregation and forbade all forms of vice in Aceh,
including gambling, prostitution and alcohol.
Customers of hotels and salons in Aceh are now
forbidden from receiving guests of the opposite sex
apart from their relatives. Inspections are regularly
conducted to ensure compliance.
Interestingly, it has not only been ulama and the
regional government who have been involved in the
administration of syariah in Aceh. The police and the
military have also participated. For instance, in
September 2003, the Regional Military Emergency
Authority (Penguasa Darurat Militer Daerah, PDMD),
Major General Endang Suwarya, sent a telegram to all
regents and mayors in Aceh, appealing to them to
assist in supervising the implementation of syariah in
their respective districts. The PDMD also requested
that all traders cease their activities and that
traffic on thoroughfares stop half an hour before the
Friday prayer. He also called for all families,
particularly women, to wear Muslim dress.
The PDMD’s ‘appeal’ was interpreted in a broad sense.
The regent of Aceh Tamaing, Drs H. Abdul Latief, for
example, threatened to remove any district head (camat)
in his regency who failed to eliminate gambling,
prostitution and other forms of vice.
So-called jilbab inspections have also been conducted
on a regular basis by a variety of groups. On 24
January 2004, hundreds of personnel from the Banda
Aceh City Police conducted an inspection to ensure
that women were complying with proper Islamic dress
standards. The wives of high-ranking officials have
also conducted their own jilbab inspections, and have
handed out jilbab to passers-by who are not wearing
one.
In another inspection conducted in six locations in
Banda Aceh on 2–3 March 2004, around 200 women were
found to be either not wearing a jilbab or wearing
tight clothing. The inspection was carried out by a
group known as the Syariah Supervisors (Wilayatul
Hisbab, WH) in cooperation with the Banda Aceh City
Police. Wilayatul Hisbab was formed on 23 February
2003 as a legal body to assist police in enforcing
Islamic law. As syariah police, Wilayatul Hisbab’s
task is to process offenders and then surrender their
dossiers to the syariah court.
Syariah in Aceh provides for three steps to be taken
against repeat offenders, for example a woman who
continues to not wear jilbab. The initial stage is a
written warning. This is followed by a second written
warning, after which the matter is referred to the
syariah court. The offender’s details, including name,
age and address, are entered into a database to be
used as a reference for subsequent legal processes.
Punishments include lashes or a fine.
Sex workers have also been the target of recent
campaigns. The Indonesian Armed Forces Operational
Commander, Major General Bambang Darmono, has stated
that he will ‘drive out sex workers from Lhokseumawe
and the rest of Aceh’. The head of the North Aceh
district legislature (who is also an ulama), Tengku
Saifuddin Ilyas, has supported this move, and has
publicly stated that sex workers ‘sow the seeds of
filth’. The Banda Aceh City Police have also recently
arrested 12 sex workers and several of their male
customers in hotels.
This approach fails to recognise that women do not
become sex workers by choice. In social, moral and
economic terms, commercial sex workers are victims. By
rounding up, arresting and punishing these women in
the name of religion and morality, the authorities are
neglecting to address the root causes of prostitution:
poverty and low levels of education.
There are between 400–500 sex workers in and around
Banda Aceh. According to the executive director of the
Youth Sovereignty Foundation (Yayasan Daulat Remaja),
an organisation which assists commercial sex workers,
almost all of them come from a background of economic
hardship. Many are victims of the conflict who turned
to prostitution after their houses were burnt or their
parents killed. Some are rape victims. Over 100 sex
workers have registered with the foundation in the
hope of gaining education and other skills. However,
because its funds are limited, Yayasan Daulat Remaja
is only able to assist 20 of these.
Ironically, while sex
workers have been targeted in these recent campaigns,
corrupt government officials have been given free
rein. Clean government has yet to become a focus of
Islamic law in Aceh. In recent months, numerous cases
of corruption have been exposed, but this has been on
the initiative of the Regional Military Emergency
Authority, not as an aspect of the implementation of
syariah.
Building Aceh’s future
If syariah was intended as a solution to the conflict
in the province then its focus should have been law
enforcement (particularly against human rights
offenders), clean and democratic government, the
development of a people-based economy and addressing
critical environmental issues. Instead, those
interpreting Islamic law — ulama, the military and
civilian authorities — have emphasised matters of
individual worship. As a result, the implementation of
syariah in Aceh has focussed on issues such as women
not wearing jilbab, as well as people not performing
the Friday prayer or not fasting during Ramadan.
Aceh’s ulama and
academics were not ready to translate syariah and
Islamic jurisprudence (fiqh) into operational positive
law. Comprehensive legal constructs that answer the
challenge of social change have not been established.
The result is that the regional regulations that have
been ratified to date do not address the fundamental
issues involved in conflict resolution in Aceh.
Aceh’s people have suffered greatly from the prolonged
military conflict. Today, the military presence in
Aceh remains strong, with police, army, and militia
troops as well as the additional personnel deployed as
part of the military operation that began in May 2003.
The inspections carried out by the 2500 syariah police
employed to enforce Islamic law, and the intervention
of the military in religious matters, are contributing
to what is an already over-militarised society.
Moreover, women have been the first targets.
It is time for the regional government and religious
figures in Aceh to listen to the voice of Aceh’s
women. Women can make a valuable contribution to
Aceh’s future. They should be consulted in the process
of drafting regulations which govern the
implementation of syariah in Aceh, particularly those
which affect women directly. The experience of
formulating the first draft of Islamic law, where only
one woman was involved, is enough.
Aceh has much to learn from the example of Malaysian
Prime Minister Muhammad Badawi. Badawi advocates an
Islam based on progressive concepts which will help to
establish a tolerant, inclusive and modern environment
compatible with democracy; not an Islam interpreted in
a literal, rigid, and exclusive sense that is oriented
to the past. Only this kind of progressive Islam
oriented to the present and the future can carry the
Islamic community forward with dignity and respect,
both for themselves and for other people. Why not
learn from him?

Suraiya Kamaruzzaman (raiyabilly@yahoo.ca)
is the chair of the executive board of Flower Aceh and
a member of the National Oversight Board of the Union
of Women’s Solidarity. |