----------------------------------------------------------
Visit Indonesia Daily News Online HomePage:
http://www.indo-news.com/
Please Visit Our Sponsor
http://www.indo-news.com/cgi-bin/ads1
-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0-0
Free Email @KotakPos.com
visit: http://my.kotakpos.com/
----------------------------------------------------------

The Jakarta Post, November 27, 1999

Who says Aceh is integral to RI?

Editorial and Opinion - November 27, 1999

By M. Yusuf Daud

STOCKHOLM, Sweden (JP): The struggle of the oppressed peoples of the
world for their right to self-determination has often been overshadowed by
the notion of so-called "territorial integrity" and the principle of
noninterference in the "internal affairs" of a sovereign state.

The chairman of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe
(OSCE) read out a statement during the recent summit in Istanbul, Turkey,
expressing deep concern about the terrible situation in Chechnya, but at the
same time strongly supporting the "territorial integrity" of the Russian
Federation.

In response to Acehnese demands for a referendum to determine their own
future, many Indonesian ministers and top politicians have bluntly echoed the
importance of preserving the "territorial integrity" of Indonesia through any
means.

Is territorial integrity so sacrosanct it legitimizes the use of force against
innocent civilians in order to prevent a territory from breaking away?
The territorial integrity of a state is recognized by international law. But human
rights, including the right to self-determination, are also an integral part of
international law and by definition must be the legitimate concern of the
international community.

It is also a cardinal principle of international law that the legitimacy of a state's
control over a territory depends on how it acquired that territory. In the case
of Aceh, the territory was unlawfully occupied by the Dutch and then handed
over to the newly created Republic of Indonesia after World War II without
due process of international law and the laws on decolonization.

A member of the International Court of Justice, Dillard, has said: "It is the
population who decides the destiny of the territory and not the opposite."
Furthermore, the concept of the "territorial integrity" of Indonesia arose during
the era of colonialism as a means to prevent the artificial boundaries of
conquered territories from becoming separate independent states. Therefore,
the very concept of the "territorial integrity" of Indonesia is by no means
sacrosanct or absolute.

In the past months, the people of Aceh, non-governmental organizations and
human rights groups have repeatedly warned the Indonesian government and
international organizations, including the United Nations, of the extreme
danger of the Indonesian Military's approach to solving the political conflict in
Aceh.

Despite that, the Indonesian Military is now planning to impose martial law in
the area -- meaning more blood of innocent Acehnese will be spilled -- and
the UN and western democracies still consider the Aceh conflict an "internal
affair" of Indonesia.

Here again, the notion of "internal affairs" is going to be used by the regime as
a license to kill more Acehnese and prevent outside intervention. This
irresponsible attitude of the international community is also a betrayal of the
very principle of the Acehnese's right to self- determination to decide their
own future through a fair and free referendum.

The decades of flagrant violations of human and political rights by Indonesia
in Aceh is neither an internal affair nor does it fall under the domestic
jurisdiction of any state. It is an international concern that cannot be resolved
without international intervention.

Even if Indonesia succeeds in occupying Aceh militarily, and this will certainly
result in many more deaths and casualties, the war will continue unabated.
History shows that it took Dutch colonialists almost a century to understand
the Acehnese cannot be defeated in war. It also took Indonesian colonialists
54 years to learn how resilient Acehnese are in struggling for their freedom.
And a peaceful pro-referendum rally in Banda Aceh on Nov. 8, 1999, in
which a quarter of Aceh's population (1.5 million people) from all walks of
life participated, is further proof to the international community that the
Acehnese are united and prepared to sacrifice everything they possess when
their integrity, dignity and honor are downtrodden.

Two decades have passed and tens of thousands of innocent Acehnese have
either been killed or disappeared without a trace. How long will the
international community wait before taking action to save those lives that can
still be saved, or must there be many more bloodbaths before the international
community will act. Help prove this is not the case.

Given the tragic fact that the Acehnese have been subjected to centuries of
oppression by Dutch, Japanese and Indonesian colonialists, it is not difficult to
understand why an overwhelming majority -- if not 100 percent -- of
Acehnese believe that independence is the only way forward and a
referendum is the most democratic way to solve the Aceh conflict.

Therefore it is the responsibility of the international community, including the
UN, to support and uphold the right of the Acehnese to determine their own
future through a free referendum or plebiscite.

And it is also the duty of the UN to prevent the political and human rights of
the Acehnese from being usurped by Indonesia on the grounds of "territorial
integrity" and the "internal affairs" of the Republic of Indonesia.

The writer is the secretary-general of the Free Aceh Movement in Europe.

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Didistribusikan tgl. 1 Dec 1999 jam 08:00:41 GMT+1
oleh: Indonesia Daily News Online <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
http://www.Indo-News.com/
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Kirim email ke