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Inside Indonesia,
November 2007
Head Candidate, South Aceh, November 2007
Edward Aspinall
Now, all this has changed. Since the August 2005
Helsinki peace accord, Aceh has become in some
respects the most democratic part of Indonesia. Some
of the restrictions on electoral participation
elsewhere in the country do not operate there.
Candidates for local government positions do not have
to be nominated by political parties, but can stand as
independents. In the provincial and district elections
next year, members of local Aceh-based political
parties will be able to run, whereas in every other
province only national parties can do so. Democracy
activists in other parts of the country now look to
the Aceh model of independent candidates and local
parties.
The post-Helsinki reforms have dramatically changed
the government. In the local government elections in
Aceh in December 2006, former guerrilla leaders and
student activists ran for local government office, and
many of them won. Irwandi Yusuf, the new governor, was
a GAM propagandist and strategist, while his deputy
Mohammad Nazar was a student leader in the 1999
referendum movement. Both are former political
prisoners. Nowhere else have such implacable former
dissidents won so much power.
The new democratic mood in post-Suharto Indonesia
seeped into the mindset of the Acehnese independence
fighters.
How did this come about? Many factors were important,
but let me highlight three. First, it is unpalatable
but true that military violence did play a part. After
Suharto fell, GAM supporters did think independence
had a chance, and they tried hard to get there.
Indonesian military offensives, especially in 2003-04,
were designed to prevent them. Without destroying GAM,
they made it obvious that winning independence through
armed struggle or even diplomacy was impossible. When
they realised this, GAM leaders became more prepared
to accept a compromise autonomy solution.
Second, Indonesia’s wider democratisation made Aceh’s
transformation possible. In Suharto-era Aceh, there
was no exit route from the spiral of military
reprisals and armed revolt. Aceh was a ‘special
territory’ in little more than name. Autonomy had
little meaning while local people could not even
choose their own leaders. This is why Suharto could
not end the conflict. To return to the popular post-Suharto
metaphor, democratisation made autonomy available as a
way of slowly venting some steam from the pressure
cooker without it exploding.
Third, more subtly, the new democratic mood in post-Suharto
Indonesia seeped into the mindset of the Acehnese
independence fighters. In the old days, GAM leaders
depicted independence as the inalienable birthright of
all Acehnese, inherited from their ancestors in the
pre-colonial sultanate. But many members of the
1999-2000 student-led referendum movement had
different views. That movement grew out of the wider
anti-Suharto student activism of the late 1990s, where
all spoke the language of democracy, rejecting
militarism and campaigning for human rights and
political freedoms. The Acehnese pro-referendum
students said leaving Indonesia would be an escape
from army abuses. They talked about independence not
as a birthright, but as something to be determined
through a democratic vote. Muhammad Nazar always said
that if a majority voted to stay with Indonesia, he
would respect that choice.
In short, democracy joined history as a justification
for the Acehnese struggle. This change in mood
affected the GAM leaders, who began to use similar
language to that of the students. First, around 1999,
GAM leaders said they would accept a referendum as a
means to resolve the Aceh conflict, and would respect
the results no matter what the outcome (previously,
they had rejected a referendum because Aceh had
‘always’ been a sovereign state since time
immemorial). Later, in the 2005 peace talks, they went
further and said their real goal was to ensure Aceh
became a true democracy and that its people had the
right to determine their government and future.
Surreptitiously, ‘democracy’ had replaced
‘independence’ as the main goal. This created space
for compromise with Indonesian government leaders. The
rest is history.
Contemporary challenges
Of course, it would be ludicrous to say Aceh has
become some sort of democratic paradise. Nor are its
people suddenly enjoying greatly improved living
standards. Aceh is not immune from the problems
afflicting democracy in other parts of Indonesia. In
many ways the problems are more severe: Aceh is a
traumatised society.
Like other post-conflict societies, Aceh confronts the
problem of how to accommodate (or ‘reintegrate’ as the
peace-building lexicon would put it) the former GAM
combatants. During the war years, GAM fighters became
experts at raising funds not only from voluntary
contributions but also in the black economy and by
extortion. Gangsterism is now rife in Aceh, and the
perpetrators are often former GAM fighters. Many of
the low-level violent incidents that plague Aceh today
are related to competition for economic resources
among former fighters. Higher up the food chain, some
key former commanders are transforming themselves into
a parasitical business elite, enriching themselves by
gaining favoured access to government contracts and
licences.
Democratisation has provided new ways of addressing
old problems.
Conflict with the central government has also not
disappeared; it has simply taken non-violent form. In
2006, the Indonesian parliament passed the Law for the
Governing of Aceh (LoGA). GAM supporters thought this
should provide for almost unfettered Acehnese
‘self-government’. Yet in reality Indonesia in some
respects remains highly centralised. From control over
hydrocarbon revenues to seemingly petty (but in fact
crucial) areas like the right to hire and fire public
servants, there are ongoing disputes between the
governments in Aceh and Jakarta. Even when it came to
registering a new local political party for former GAM
members, the central government insisted it could not
use the word Free (Merdeka) in its name.
Many other issues could trigger fresh conflict. In the
centre, south and west of the province, some are
campaigning for the formation of new provinces that
would split from Aceh. They claim this will redress
decades of neglect of these areas. Acehnese
nationalists reject this stand – mostly without
recognising the irony – saying that Aceh has always
been an indivisible unity and should not be broken up.
They also point to the fact that at least some of the
leaders of these new province movements aligned with
anti-GAM militias during the conflict years, and they
mutter darkly about hidden plans to spark new
violence.
Decompression
Some gloomy commentators tell us that old Suharto-era
elites have captured the institutions of democracy,
and that old patterns of abuse of office are
entrenched. At the local level, some say, autonomy has
not empowered the people but has simply proliferated
petty fiefdoms. Such views contain some truth, but
they also miss the many changes that have taken place.
Democratisation has provided new ways of addressing
old problems. It has opened the political system to a
wider range of participants. The changes have been
most dramatic in Aceh because the challenges there
were the greatest. Aceh has become in some respects
the most democratic part of Indonesia.
For all its continuing problems, Aceh is now far
better off than during the Suharto era, when the
military’s methods of dealing with local discontent
steadily brought the province to boiling point. Around
30,000 people – perhaps many more – were killed during
the resulting war. Poverty increased dramatically. The
legacies of these bleak years will mark Acehnese
society for many years to come. But at least the
possibility is now open that Aceh’s problems can be
resolved in a spirit of compromise.

Edward Aspinall (edward.aspinall@anu.edu.au
) is a researcher at the Australian National
University and the coordinating editor of Inside
Indonesia. His book Islam and Nation: Separatist
Conflict in Aceh, Indonesia is forthcoming with
Stanford University Press. |