http://www.smh.com.au/news/Asia-Tsunami/Rebels-grieve--now-its-back-to-the-fight/2005/01/16/1105810778737.html?oneclick=true

 
Rebels grieve - now it's back to the fight
By Matthew Moore, Herald Correspondent in Banda Aceh
January 17, 2005

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Muharram believes the foreign presence in Aceh will help GAM's cause.
Photo: Mike Bowers

Muharram was high in the hills when he saw the sea recede so far he could have 
walked to the little island half a kilometre offshore.

Together with his band of 50 warriors, the Acehnese independence fighter 
watched stunned as the water vanished and then, in horror, when it returned as 
a thick, foaming mountain.

"We screamed, we prayed and we cried," he said, recounting how he and his 
comrades, hardened enemies of Indonesia, stood transfixed in their jungle perch 
as the sea tore through the flimsy houses on the mud flats below where they 
knew their families had no chance.

The fighters of the Free Aceh Movement, called GAM, ran down the mountainside 
to help but were too late to do anything more than climb through the rubble 
searching for the dead and missing. They were so overcome with grief, Muharram 
allowed them a break from their 29-year war to search for their families. He 
figured three days was enough.

Now all have returned to the tree-covered hills above Banda Aceh to resume 
their fight. They clean their guns and take shifts hiding in the bushes, just a 
few kilometres from the capital's and within easy view of foreign warships. 
They are unable, because of fear of the military, to help their countrymen 
carry on the search for missing family and friends. They cannot attend 
remembrance services or share their grief, except with each other.

Muharram, GAM's handsome 30-year-old military commander for the Aceh 
Rayeuk/Aceh Besar regions that surround the capital, lost his wife to the 
tsunami. They had only just married. Many of his men lost more. 
Forty-seven-year-old Hasan Basri, the oldest of the fighters, lost his wife and 
five children, a typical toll among the guerillas. Only his 12-year-old son 
survived.
It irks Muharram that despite the biggest aid operation in history, no help has 
come his way. "We wonder why the TNI [Indonesian military] get help from 
foreign countries, they get food, they get medical treatment, they get 
everything but we get nothing," he says after a lunch of buffalo and rice.

He knows the answer, of course. The aid lies in the refugee camps and to get to 
it risks clashes with the military.

With thousands of overseas troops, aid workers and journalists pouring into 
Aceh, Muharram and his exiled leaders in Sweden hope the world might at last 
notice their struggle, which has raged in a province long off-limits to 
foreigners.

The tsunami has taken many GAM supporters, but he believes it has also brought 
GAM its best chance to show others the injustices they suffer.

"It's been 29 years we've been fighting and fighting and thousands of Acehnese 
have been killed, yet still the UN closes its eyes. What we want is for the UN 
to send a special team to investigate in Aceh, a team to tell people what is 
actually happening here."

But he knows that is wishful thinking. When asked which country supports GAM's 
fight for an independent state, he nominates only Vanuatu. And yet he believes 
the longer foreigners remain in Aceh, the more GAM will benefit. "Indonesia 
today is afraid that the international aid agencies will find out about the 
atrocities of the TNI in Aceh and that is why Indonesia set a ... deadline for 
foreign countries to leave Aceh," he says.

Indonesia's Vice-President, Jusuf Kalla, said last week he expected all foreign 
troops to be out of Aceh by March 26, but Muharram believes it will soon be 
widened to include all outsiders.

"Now is our one big chance for us, the Aceh people, to inform, to explain, to 
show the foreigners the reality in Aceh, what exactly the Aceh people want."

Rules introduced under the emergency declared in Aceh in May 2003 banned all 
contact with GAM. But the minister in charge of aid, Alwi Shihab, told a press 
conference this month those rules were now suspended to allow the aid operation 
to go more smoothly, something for which GAM is clearly grateful.

Muharram has been a GAM fighter for nine years, during which there has been 
only one glimmer of independence, when Abdurrahman Wahid, president from 1999 
to 2001, promised a referendum. It never happened - a national outcry forced Mr 
Wahid into a humiliating climbdown.

Hasan Basri explains why he left his family eight years ago to sleep with a gun 
by his side. "It's my own nation, we have our own flag, it's our own Aceh. We 
don't want to be controlled by those Javanese colonialists."

Although armed with an odd mixture of ageing weapons from China, Russia and 
Thailand, the troops seem fit and well-disciplined and Muharram insists they 
have lost only 10 per cent of their number since Indonesia declared martial law 
and stepped up the fight in May 2003. Even if that is true, GAM's few thousand 
fighters are hopelessly outgunned by the 40,000 troops Jakarta has committed to 
the fight.

But this is no simple war, and Acehnese know that GAM and the Indonesian 
military often work together to squeeze money out of villagers and local 
businesses. Muharram does not admit that, but he does agree friends in the 
military sell munitions and sometimes give advance warnings of raids. It is an 
arrangement that suits both sides.

Muharram is happy to talk about his war, less comfortable with the notion of 
making peace. He can sense that the tsunami has brought huge change, but is 
nervous at the suggestion that GAM could suspend its campaign for independence 
and lay down its arms to allow the aid mission to proceed more smoothly.

"No," he says. "We're sticking to our demand of independence because we have 
historical and cultural grounds, we have the land, and we have the people.

"Our goal remains gaining independence. As mentioned in the UN charter, every 
nation has the rights to set their own goal on their own soil. We are a nation, 
Aceh already existed before Indonesia existed. Now we want independence, and we 
ask that by using weapons. Indonesia does the same, we attack each other. There 
is no resolution."

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