Jakarta/Brussels, 9 May 2003: The Indonesian
government is preparing for war in Aceh. It has set a 12 May 2003 deadline for
the Free Aceh Movement (GAM) to accept Indonesian sovereignty or face all-out
war. However the International Crisis Group has repeatedly warned that a
military approach alone will not solve this conflict, largely because of the
Indonesian military's inability to control its own troops.
A new ICG briefing paper,
Aceh: Why the military option still won't work*, says both the GAM and the Indonesian
military (TNI) are to blame for the collapse of the peace process set in motion by the historic
Cessation of Hostilities Agreement (CoHA) of 9 December 2002. Neither side has
shown any real interest in making the agreement work.
ICG Jakarta Project Director Sidney Jones says: "There is no reason to believe
that the planned offensive will be conducted any more carefully than those in the past. The move
toward war in Aceh underscores the urgent need for military reform to get back on track, and for
domestic and international pressure to be exerted toward that end".
ICG urges that opportunities for resumption of negotiations should be continuously
explored and all possible effort made to ensure that military operations are kept as limited, as
transparent and as short as possible.
ICG also sets out four options available to Indonesia and assesses each of them.
Briefly, they are:
Negotiations with GAM – Resumption of talks may have to await changes in
leadership in one or both of the two sides, changes in the situation on the ground in Aceh, or a
behind-the-scenes effort by interested parties in a way less susceptible to grandstanding.
Sidney Jones said: "Past mistakes must be avoided. The threat from GAM needs to
be addressed, but military action should be kept to an absolute minimum and every effort made to
make civilian institutions function far better then they do now".
MEDIA CONTACTS
Katy Cronin (London) +44-(0)20 7981 0330
email: [email protected]
Francesca Lawe-Davies (Brussels) +32-(0)2-536 00 65
Jennifer Leonard (Washington) +1-202-785 1601
*Read the full ICG report on our website:
www.crisisweb.org