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ACEH REBELS VOW TO KEEP FIGHTING
August 23, 2004 - (AP) Indonesia's 15-month military offensive against
separatists in Aceh province has failed to crush the insurgency
and left Indonesian forces in a quagmire from which they cannot
escape, a senior rebel commander said Monday.
Tjut Kafrawi, commander of rebel forces
in eastern Aceh, also pledged that the insurgents would press on
with their struggle for independence regardless of the outcome of
Indonesia's upcoming presidential elections.
"We are still a strong force,'' Kafrawi told The Associated
Press in a rare phone interview from a jungle base in eastern Aceh.
"We will continue our fight.''
Indonesia's security forces claim that they have killed about 2,000
fighters of the Free Aceh Movement and captured thousands of others
since May 2004, when the government ended a six-month truce, pulled
out of internationally brokered peace talks and arrested rebel negotiators.
Fighting in Aceh, a province of four million people, has been going
on intermittently since 1870, when Dutch colonial troops occupied
the independent sultanate on the northern tip of Sumatra island.
The latest round of fighting began in 1976, and the rebels are now
demanding a U.N.-supervised independence referendum akin to the
one which ended Indonesian rule in East Timor in 1999.
Although the rebellion poses a serious threat to Indonesia's unity,
the conflict has been dubbed "the Forgotten War'' because it
has never captured much international attention.
"We have significantly reduced the rebels' strength. Security
is improving in Aceh,'' military spokesman Lt. Col. Ahmad Yani Basuki
said Monday.
"We have not been able to get the leaders. But it's only a
matter of time.''
However, foreign analysts say the military offensive - in which
the government has engaged about 55,000 soldiers, marines and paramilitary
policemen - has barely made a dent in the insurgency.
The guerrilla force is estimated to number about 5,000 men and women.
The military recently vowed to increase the pace of operations,
and has promised that rebel strength will be reduced by 75 percent
by the end of the year. Last week, 34 people were killed in combat-related
activities.
But Indonesian and international human rights organizations say
most of the victims in Aceh are innocent villagers caught up in
army sweeps through the countryside.
They have also warned that the killings by the military are fostering
resentment against Jakarta and generating greater support for secession.
Kafrawi rejected the military claim that it is winning the war,
saying: "Only a fifth of the casualties are our fighters, while
the rest are civilians.''
"Indonesian forces have yet to breach our strongholds. They
can't get our leaders,'' he added.
Foreign negotiators have said they do not expect the two sides to
return to the negotiating table if President Megawati Sukarnoputri
- who is backed by a cabal of hardline army generals - is re-elected
on Sept. 20 for a five-year term.
But they have predicted that talks may reopen if challenger Susilo
Bambang Yudhoyono, Megawati's former security minister, wins the
runoff vote as now seems likely.
Yudhoyono was instrumental in arranging the truce with the Free
Aceh Movement in December 2003.
Kafrawi said the rebels were prepared to talk, but that Indonesia's
negotiating position was now much weaker than a year ago because
its armed forces had demonstrated their inability to win the war.
"We may agree to peace talks if there is a new president. But,
we don't expect much to change,'' he said.
"The intensity of operations and the number of troops (in Aceh)
will still be the same,'' Kafrawi said.
"In reality we will still be here for a long time. The military
cannot get rid of us.''
From: http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2004/8/23/latest/18608Acehrebel&sec=latest
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