Transitional Justice in the Asia-Pacific (18 page)

BOOK: Transitional Justice in the Asia-Pacific
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Such behaviour indicates that security sector reform has a long way to go if it is to transform Indonesia's security agencies into truly professional organisations that are fully subordinate to civilian authority. However, it should also be pointed out that they make Aceh little different from other Indonesian provinces, where petty abuses and illicit economic activity by security personnel are also rife.

Grassroots Reconciliation and Truth Seeking Initiatives

Aceh still retains a lively civil society sector, with a large number of organisations oriented specifically to human rights, most of which can trace their origins to the immediate post-Suharto period of 1998–2001. In the absence of formal government initiatives, several such local NGOs and victims’ organisations, with support from national and international bodies, have tried to launch their own activities to push forward the transitional justice agenda.

In pursuing these activities, local groups have had to confront the two-sided nature of the conflict in Aceh. The conventional understanding
of the conflict was that it pitted members of local communities, and the GAM rebels in particular, against the central government and its security agencies. In this Aceh-versus-Jakarta ‘vertical’ struggle, many ordinary Acehnese citizens became victims of the state's security forces. Yet at the same time, the conflict also involved considerable violence
within
Acehnese society itself, even if this is not often acknowledged today (especially by former adherents of GAM). Such violence could involve threats and retribution by GAM fighters against citizens who assisted the security forces, or in some parts of the province abusive behaviours (theft, extortion, kidnapping for ransom, etc.) by GAM fighters against ordinary citizens. It also involved violence by members of pro-government militias against individuals who were believed to be sympathetic to GAM. These conflicts within Acehnese society were especially severe in ethnically mixed parts of the province, where GAM was often understood in ethnic terms and seen as representing the ethnically Acehnese sector of the population, rather than the various minority groups, and where the conflict sometimes took on the character of a ‘horizontal’ conflict between ethnic communities.

During the early post-conflict years, there were many symbolic actions designed to facilitate community-level healing in the wake of such intra-community conflicts. In particular, at many events in which former GAM fighters were welcomed back to their communities, local religious leaders held
peusijeuk
ceremonies in which participants were sprinkled with water and flour and clasped hands as signs of reconciliation.
46
Most of these events did not thus involve truth telling, even if they sometimes implied that participants forgave one another for past sins. In most places, however, reconciliation efforts ended with such one-off events, such that ordinary members of the community are sometimes still required to live
side by side with individuals who once perpetrated serious abuses against them or family members.

One example of a more recent and sustained initiative to pursue grassroots reconciliation has been organised in the central highlands district of Bener Meriah by Kontra Aceh and the Peace Loving Women's Group (
Kelompok Perempuan Cinta Damai
, KPCD). This multi-ethnic district was a site of serious communal conflict and gross abuses committed by GAM, the security forces and pro-government militias during the conflict years. The reconciliation program is designed to involve all three major ethnic groups in the district – Acehnese, Gayo and Javanese – which used to be in conflict during the years of violence, to work together in livelihoods programs, such as in vegetable production, fish farming and handicrafts, as well as in discussion groups on various aspects of transitional justice. This program began in 2008. At first it targeted only the women in the three communities. Later on, it was supported by many prominent people in the area, and has extended its activities to target various other community groups as well as ordinary villagers throughout the highlands.

In an example of what John Braithwaite and colleagues have des-cribed as bottom-up reconciliation characteristic of post-conflict regions of Indonesia (which happens ‘as a micro-politics massively dispersed among thousands of leaders of villages, clans, churches, mosques and sub-districts’
47
), this program appears to have achieved significant results. For example, former GAM combatants and their enemies in the pro-government militia group PETA have been working together in the same caucus in the district's local parliament, in part a product of the cooperation fostered by this and similar programs. Participants have also noted that interethnic mixing and communication have also increased, spreading from the formal settings of the program, such as in seminars, classes and trainings, to informal settings such as markets, schools or other public places.

As for truth seeking, although various official inquiries and investigations of past human rights abuses were held in Aceh in the brief opening between the collapse of the Suharto government and the intensification of military operations in 2000 to 2001, since the Helsinki MoU there have been no more official investigations.
48
Given the stalling of the official TRC agenda, the only serious attempts to investigate past abuses and to allow victims to speak out about their experiences have been organised by local civil society groups. The best known such attempt was initiated by the Association of Victims of Human Rights Violations of North Aceh (KP2HAU) and was a direct response to the government's failure to establish a TRC. KP2HAU set up a series of public hearings around the time of the eleventh anniversary of the so-called Simpang KKA (KKA Junction) massacre in North Aceh, a terrible event in May 1999 when military units opened fire on a crowd of several hundred demonstrators, at a junction close to the PT Kertas Kraft Aceh (KKA) paper mill, just outside the industrial city of Lhokseumawe, North Aceh, killing at least 49 people and wounding 156 others. Those speaking out at the hearing included relatives of those killed as well as individuals who had suffered both mild and serious injuries, though in the end only five persons were willing to speak out given the lack of legal protection they could expect. Several hundred villagers and local officials witnessed their very moving
testimony. Strikingly, those speaking mostly rejected the ‘forgive and forget’ discourse that is prominent when such matters are discussed by cultural and political leaders in Aceh, instead calling for trials of the perpetrators. As one of them (R, a 28-year-old female) put it: ‘I will forgive them, but they have to be sent to court first’; another explained, ‘I will not forgive them, until they are sentenced’ (HS, female, 46). After the public hearing, representatives of the community and the local government set a stone to begin construction of a memorial.
49

Civil society groups have taken other actions to keep the transitional justice agenda alive. Several groups have continued to document past acts of violence and other human rights abuses, in preparation for the day when a formal transitional justice process might begin. The International Center for Transitional Justice (ICTJ) assists several local NGOs (Koalisi NGO HAM, Kontras Aceh, Relawan Perempuan untuk Perdamaian [RPuK], and SPKP HAM)
50
in updating and managing relevant data using the Maltus Program so that it is available in an internationally recognized format and ready to be used for future advocacy. Some of these groups also supported an initiative by a local cultural organization, Tikar Pandan, to establish a Human Rights Museum (an initiative that attracted unwelcome attention from local security forces) and proposed the commemoration of several major human rights violations, as part of the memorialisation of victims of human rights abuses.

Another important step has been the organising of victims’ group. While waiting for the establishment of the TRC, civil society groups started organising solidarity and communication between victims of
abuses. About ten such groups have been established. The most active include Brotherhood Solidarity of the Victims of Human Rights Violations in Aceh (Solidaritas Persaudaraan Korban Pelangaran HAM Aceh, SPKP HAM Aceh) and Community for Missing People in Aceh (Komunitas Ureung Gadoh Aceh, KAGUNDAH), which claims about 200 members. These groups undertake various activities such as writing workshops that enable conflict survivors to record their own experiences systematically; psychosocial advocacy for conflict survivors; focus group discussions on topics such as understanding TRCs and victim-based reparation principles; and building statues to memorialize such events as the Simpang KKA tragedy. Members of these groups have also demonstrated vociferously in favour of government action on the formal TRC process, such as when several hundred members of the Aliansi Korban Pelanggaran HAM Aceh (Alliance of Human Rights Abuse Victims of Aceh) occupied the Aceh parliament building in late 2010, urging its members to pass a regulation establishing a TRC.
51

Conclusion

Our analysis suggests that the transitional justice agenda in Aceh has been beset by two formidable challenges, both of which relate to the way by which transitional justice has been bound up in the politics of the Aceh peace process and its relationship to the wider political context. On the one hand, transitional justice in Aceh will necessarily take place in a way that is fundamentally conditioned by its Indonesian context. Yet the Aceh peace process, and hence the possibility of transitional justice, occurred at a time when the wider transitional justice process at the national level was already stalling. There are many reasons for this, most of which are beyond the scope of our discussion in this chapter, but one important factor was the continuing political influence exerted at least indirectly by the military. Everybody who counts in Indonesia's official politics knows
that the military would be a major loser in any process of truth telling about the Aceh conflict, and they can see little to benefit for themselves in antagonising the military on this issue. Without a supportive national context, the Aceh transitional justice agenda has therefore stalled, just like the process at the national level.

The second challenge concerns the local context. Aceh's new rulers have been able to point to lack of action at the national level toward (re)establishing a framework for an Aceh TRC. In part, their reluctance to either press Jakarta on the issue or to bypass the centre and establish a local process is a result of a similar attitude of political pragmatism as that exhibited by national politicians: they see little to be gained from antagonising their most fearsome former rivals – and the most potentially dangerous peace spoilers – in the military, when there is so much to be gained politically and economically from securing the peace. At the same time, as already pointed out several times in this essay, former leaders and members of GAM also have reasons to suspect that a formal truth telling process would implicate them in crimes against civilians during the conflict years, crimes that do not fit easily within their narrative of an entirely ‘vertical’ conflict that pitted Aceh against the centre. Indeed, given the political dominance of the movement now in many parts of Aceh – and the thuggish behaviour of many of its supporters – it is even questionable whether people would feel sufficiently secure to be able to discuss former GAM abuses in formal hearings in GAM base areas. More broadly, however, many other influential voices in Aceh, including those of many religious scholars (
ulama
) have been raised to argue that the time is not ripe now, if it ever will be, for ‘digging into’ (
mengungkit-ungkit
) the unpalatable past.

Despite the efforts of many of Aceh's highly committed civil society organisations, the lack of strong political backing suggests there is a possibility that Aceh will become like several post-conflict societies (Mozambique is one example), where there is an ongoing peace process without truth and reconciliation.

1
Asia Watch
,
Indonesia: Human Rights Abuses in Aceh
(New York: Asia Watch, 1990);
Asia Watch
,
Indonesia: Continuing Human Rights Violations in Aceh
(New York: Asia Watch, 1991); Amnesty International, ‘“Shock Therapy”: Restoring Order in Aceh’, 1989–1993 (London: International Secretariat, Amnesty International, 1993).

2
Edward
Aspinall
,
Islam and Nation: Separatist Rebellion in Aceh, Indonesia
(Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2009), pp. 121–150.

3
Human Rights Watch, ‘Aceh under Martial Law: Inside the Secret War’, (2003), at
http://hrw.org/reports/2003/indonesia1203/indonesia1203.pdf
.

4
Edward Aspinall, ‘Peace without Justice. The Helsinki Peace Process in Aceh’, (Geneva: Centre for Humanitarian Dialogue, 2008), p. 18.

5
Aspinall, ‘Peace without Justice’, p. 17.

6
Marcus Mietzner, Military Politics, Islam, and the State in Indonesia: From Turbulent Transition to Democratic Consolidation (Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 2009).

7
ICTJ and KontraS, Derailed: Transitional Justice in Indonesia Since the Fall of Soeharto (Jakarta
:
ICTJ, 2011), p. 2.

8
Aspinall, ‘Peace without Justice’, p. 27.

9
Edward
Aspinall
, ‘Combatants to Contractors: The Political Economy of Peace in Aceh’,
Indonesia
, no. 87 (2009), pp. 1–34.

10
Blair
Palmer
, ‘Peace, Patronage and Post-Conflict Elections in Aceh’, in Edward
Aspinall
and Marcus
Mietzner
(eds.),
Problems of Democratisation in Indonesia: Elections, Institutions and Society
(Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 2010), pp. 286–306.

11
This section is adapted from Aspinall, ‘Peace without Justice’.

12
The soldiers responsible for the notorious Beutong Ateuh killings of 1999, in which they shot dead a religious teacher and more than fifty of his followers in West Aceh, were tried by a
koneksitas
(joint civil-military) court. Twenty-four low-ranking soldiers and one civilian were convicted and sentenced to terms of imprisonment of between eight and ten years. The most senior officer indicted for these killings, Lieutenant Colonel Sudjono, absconded and was never rearrested.

13
Tempo Interactive
, 16 August 2005.

14
Analisa
, 26 August 2005.

15
Kompas
, 20 August 2005. The reference to the ‘pension’ presumably referred to the (meagre) reintegration funds that were to be made available to former GAM combatants.

16
Confidential interview, 3 October 2007, Brussels.

17
For example,
see
Aceh Kita
, 2 March 2006.

18
Interview with Evi Zain, director of Koalisi NGO HAM, 13 June 2012, Banda Aceh, Indonesia.

19
Serambi Indonesia
, 27 November 2007.

20
KPK (Coalition for Truth Recovery), A Proposal for Remedy for Victims of Gross Human Rights Violations in Aceh. Working Paper, 14 June 2007.

21
KPK, A Proposal for Remedy, p. 16.

22
KPK, A Proposal for Remedy, pp. 23–24.

23
KPK, A Proposal for Remedy, p. 26.

24
Personal observation by Fajran Zain: Civil Society Consultation with President Martti Ahtisaari on Truth Commission and Reconciliation. The Pade Hotel, Banda Aceh, Indonesia, 11 December 2009.

25
For review, see minutes meeting notes of the Law and Human Rights Ministerial office in Hotel Cemara, Jakarta, 30 May 2011.

26
‘Pembahasan Raqan KKR Tunggu Pengesahan KKR Pusat’, Atjehpost.com, 11 September 2012;
‘Qanun KKR Prioritas DPRA 2013
’, Atjehlink, 6 January 2013.

27
Serambi Indonesia
, 18 August 2010.

28
Nashrun
Marzuki
, & Adi
Warsidi
,
Fakta Bicara: Mengungkap Pelanggaran HAM di Aceh 1989–2005
(Banda Aceh, Indonesia: Koalisi NGO HAM Aceh, 2011).

29
Scott
Cunliffe
, Eddie
Riyadi
, Raimondus
Arwalembun
, & Hendrik Boli
Tobi
,
Negotiating Peace in Indonesia: Prospects for Building Peace and Upholding Justice in Maluku and Aceh
(Jakarta: IFP Mediation Cluster of ICTJ and ELSAM, 2009). Country Case Study: Indonesia.

30
Interview with Evi Zain, 13 June 2012, Banda Aceh, Indonesia.

31
This section is largely adapted from Aspinall, ‘Peace without Justice’.

32
Priscilla
Hayner
,
Negotiating Peace in Sierra Leone: Confronting the Justice Challenge
, (Geneva, Switzerland: Centre for Humanitarian Dialogue, 2007).

33
Robert Hygrell, ‘Case Study – Aceh Peace Process’, presentation prepared for CSCAP Study Group on Preventive Diplomacy and the Future of the ASEAN Regional Forum, (Bandar Seri Begawan, 30–31 October, 2007), p. 6.

34
According to some confidential sources, the AMM and Judge Karphammar also worked on the basis of the principles of an amnesty which had been agreed upon between the parties in Helsinki prior to the negotiation of the MoU. It is not clear, however, if these principles were the same as the two named above, which were detailed by a very senior participant in the process.

35
Thus, for example, there were a number of prisoners convicted on narcotics charges who said that they had been involved in the marijuana trade to help fund GAM's struggle; some common criminals also tried to take advantage of the amnesty by claiming GAM membership.

36
Robert Hygrell, ‘Case Study – Aceh Peace Process’, presentation prepared for CSCAP Study Group on Preventive Diplomacy and the Future of the ASEAN Regional Forum, (Bandar Seri Begawan, 30–31 October 2007), p. 7.

37
Koran Tempo
, 8 May 2006.

38
See Aspinall, ‘Peace without Justice’, pp. 25–26 for more discussion.

39
Waspada
, 25 November 2010.

40
This opinion was aired in many discussions or workshops in Aceh attended by one of the authors (Fajran Zain), such as the Seminar and Workshop on Truth and Peace in Aceh (23–24 September 2007), National Seminar and the Dissemination of the Initial Draft of TRC Bill (23–24 July 2008), Restrategy Workshop for the Empowerment of the Truth Seeking Coalition, KPK (4 June 2009), Public Discussion and Focus Group Discussion on Reparations in Aceh (24–25 June 2009), Socialization Agenda of the Initial Draft TRC Bill in 10 Districts (July – Aug 2009), Coordination Meeting between TRC Stakeholders Aceh and the Ministry of Law and Human Rights (17 July 2009). See also Ross
Clarke
, Galuh
Wandita
and
Samsidar
,
Considering Victims: The Aceh Peace Process from a Transitional Justice Perspective
(New York: International Center for Transitional Justice, 2008), pp. 32–33.

41
Samsidar
, ‘Kehidupan korban yang semakin sulit’, in M.
Nashrun
& W.
Adi
(eds.)
Fakta Bicara: Mengungkap Pelanggaran HAM di Aceh 1989–2005
, Vol.
1
(Banda Aceh, Indonesia: Koalisi NGO HAM, 2011), pp. 209–213.

42
Personal communication, Hendra Fadli of KontraS Aceh, 13 June 2011.

43
Serambi Indonesia
, 5 June 2010.

44
For example, eight personnel of the Yon Armed 17/RC Laweung military unit beat up a businessman Tgk. Azhar on 5 February 2010 in Pidie, at
http://www.theglobejournal.com/kategori/hukum/kontras-protes-warga-dianiaya-setelah-menabrak-anggota-tni.php;
a high ranking officer tortured a journalist, Ahmadi in Simeuleu, for his report on illegal logging on 21 May 2010, at
http://hankam.kompasiana.com/2010/05/21/wartawan-aceh-dianiaya-militer;
members of the marine corps tortured a man named Syahrudin and forcibly dismantled his house in Aneuk Laot village, Sabang on 21 June 2010, at
http://international.okezone.com/read/2010/06/21/340/345194/340/oknum-tnial-aniaya-warga-sabang
.

45
Through 2008 approximately 22 billion rupiah was granted in local budgets to such vertical institutions (Kontras Aceh, Annual Report, 2010).

46
John
Braithwaite
, Valerie
Braithwaite
, Michael
Cookson
and Leah
Dunn
,
Anomie and Violence:
Non-truth and Reconciliation in Indonesian Peacebuilding
(Canberra: ANU E-Press, 2010), pp. 389–391; see also Leena
Avonius
, ‘Reconciliation and Human Rights in Post-conflict Aceh’, in Birgit
Bräuchler
(ed.),
Reconciling Indonesia: Grassroots Agency for Peace
(Abingdon, UK: Routledge, 2009), pp. 121–137.

47
Avonius, ‘Reconciliation and Human Rights in Post-conflict Aceh’, p. 42.

48
There were three major fact-finding commissions in 1998 to 1999. The first was sent by the national parliament and contributed to the ending of the ‘military operations zone’ status that (at least informally) to that time applied in Aceh. After only four days of hearings provisional findings were released which stated that at least 1,700 cases of human rights violations had occurred in Aceh, including 426 torture cases and 320 unlawful killings. The second was led by the National Human Rights Commission and involved dramatic unearthing of several mass graves. After only three days of hearings the commission released its own provisional findings that at least 781 people had been killed, 163 people were missing, 368 people had been tortured, 3,000 had been widowed, 15,000 to 20,000 had been orphaned, 98 houses had been burnt down and 102 women had been raped. A third investigation was held by the Commission on Violence in Aceh (Komisi Independen Pengusutan Tindak Kekerasan di Aceh, KIPTKA, established by Presidential Decree No. 88, 1999). This team produced a figure of at least 5,000 cases of serious human rights violations and identified five strong cases which should immediately be brought to trial.

49
Information on this event is taken from direct observation by one of us (Fajran Zain). Further details are in Fabian Junge, ‘Public Commemoration for Victims of the Aceh Conflict,
Watch Indonesia! Information and Analysis
, 9 June 2010, at
http://home.snafu.de/watchin/KKA_Commemoration.htm
.

50
Of these organisations, Koalisi NGO HAM (Human Rights NGO Coalition) is particularly noteworthy. It was established on 7 August 1998 and supervises twenty-nine local organisations in Aceh. Its main mandate is to collect data and information regarding human rights violations in Aceh and to provide advocacy for victims and their families. It is currently investigating 1,388 cases across fourteen districts in Aceh.

51
Serambi Indonesia
, 9 December 2010.

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