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Jakarta Post
24 July 1999

TNI concerned by weapons entering Aceh

SURABAYA (JP): Indonesian Military (TNI) Commander Gen. Wiranto claimed on
Friday there was a recent increase in weapon smuggling from overseas to
Acehnese separatist guerrillas.

He did not go into detail, but said: "TNI, with all its might, is continuing
its effort to prevent the flow, so the Aceh question need not be protracted."

Speaking after installing Vice Adm. Achmad Sutjipto as the navy chief to
replace Adm. Widodo A.S. here, Wiranto denied there were more Crack Riot
Troops (PPRM) deployed in the troubled province than the number of personnel
sent there during the 10-year-long military operation which began in 1989.

"It can't be (higher). During the military operation, all of the personnel
deployed were military members. Now police officers (are posted there)," he
said.

"It was a military operation then, but what we have now is a public order
operation. Its commander was a member of the military then, but a police
officer now."

Wiranto explained that 600 marines were sent to Aceh recently to detect and
prevent the smuggling. "The marines are more able (for the task) than the
Army. I am sure that with other tasks, too, they would succeed."

Antara quoted Wiranto as saying marines were needed because most of the
smuggling was through coastal areas.

"For security in coastal areas, the force to do the job is the marines. The
marines do not spend their time hanging out in downtown areas in cities."

Meanwhile, TNI spokesman Maj. Gen. Syamsul Ma'arif said the demands that the
PPRM be pulled out of Aceh because they merely exacerbated the situation was
the result of propaganda of the separatist Free Aceh Movement.

"In actuality, the Aceh residents want security to be restored," he said as
quoted by Antara. "We all know the GPK use weapons and intimidate the
people," he said, using the military's name for the separatists.

"These (demands) are their propaganda."

He blasted those responsible for spreading rumors the PPRM wreaked havoc in
the province. "It is impossible the TNI and the National Police would create
chaos."

In Jakarta, a group of activists and Acehnese demonstrated on Friday
demanding the military pullout from Aceh. Calling themselves the Students'
Solidarity for Aceh Case (Somaka), the some 80 youths marched from the Tani
monument in Central Jakarta to the nearby ground of National Monument (Monas)
carrying five mock coffins.

In Sumedang, West Java, Minister of Home Affairs Syarwan Hamid reiterated
that neither the government nor the military would yield to the pressure for
the military pullout from Aceh. He said the military personnel are bound by
their oath to protect the people and the national sovereignty.

Meanwhile, Antara reported from the capital Banda Aceh that the liaison
office of the National Commission on Human Rights in Aceh would be upgraded
to a representative office in August.

It was confirmed during the arrival of commission members, Saparinah Sadli
and Miriam Budiardjo in the province on Wednesday, head of the commission's
liaison office, Dahlan, said on Friday.

"They came here to follow up on the plan to upgrade the liaison office into a
representative office," Dahlan said, adding the commission members also
visited the location of the new office.

He said the representative office would be staffed by youth leaders and
activists who helped reveal human rights violations which occurred in Aceh.
He declined to name the head of the representative office.

Dahlan noted the commission decided to open a representative office because
human rights abuses continued to occur, even after the military operation in
the province was halted last year.

The liaison office was set up early this year following revelations of human
rights violations in the regencies of Pidie, North Aceh and East Aceh.

The opening of the representative office will enable staff members to act on
reported violations without needing to relay them to the commission's
headquarters in Jakarta.

He explained that the liaison office was not empowered to settle human rights
issues without first reporting them to the main headquarters.

In the past few months, an estimated 75,000 Aceh residents have fled their
homes to mosques and schools, citing military violence. Volunteers fear many
more will be displaced because there is no sign of withdrawal of troops.

Ethnic clashes also have occurred periodically in West Kalimantan. Earlier
this year, more than 200 people were killed and thousands forced to flee to
refugee centers.

>From the capital city of Pontianak, West Kalimantan Police chief Col. Chairul
Rasyid said a "sweep" of firearms in the province would continue until about
a week before the General Session of the People's Consultative Assembly (MPR)
in November.

"One week before the session, the owners and makers of those firearms must
surrender the weapons. If they fail to abide by the deadline, tough actions
will be taken," he said as quoted by Antara. (04/43/nur/swe)

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Didistribusikan tgl. 24 Jul 1999 jam 07:16:11 GMT+1
oleh: Indonesia Daily News Online <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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