http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/GA04Ae01.html

Aceh feels the fallout
By Bill Guerin

JAKARTA - In the wake of the tsunami tragedy that has claimed more than 
80,000 Indonesian lives, President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has called on 
his people to approach the New Year with optimism. The latest death toll in 
the country's poorest region - the resource-rich but war-ravaged province of 
Aceh on the northwestern tip of Sumatra Island - has been estimated at 
82,000, mostly in Banda Aceh, Sabang and the west coast regencies of Aceh 
Jaya and Aceh Besar.

More than 40% of the population of the province was living below the poverty 
line before the disaster, which has deepened the poverty of thousands more 
by snatching away their livelihoods. Communities are shattered by the deaths 
of older people, traditional leaders and local officials. Health Minister 
Siti Fadilah Supari has said officials would now offer only general 
estimates of the death toll because there were simply too many bodies to 
count.

Concluding his year-end speech to the nation by declaring 2005 "The Year of 
Solidarity and Togetherness", Yudhoyono asked people to open their hearts to 
the victims of tragedies and to assist the relief effort. "Don't let them 
feel alone because they are a part of us, of our national family," he said.

Aceh's military commander, Major General Endang Suwarya, said up to 
three-quarters of the western coastline has been destroyed, with some towns 
being totally leveled. Vast tracts of the province are still flooded a week 
after the killer waves struck on Sunday, December 26.

Lack of coordination
The Aceh provincial administration and its structure were decimated. Reports 
say only half of the administration's employees survived the tragedy, and 
most government offices there were destroyed.

According to the United Nations, it could take up to a year to secure 
afflicted communities from hunger and disease. The central government has 
been slow to get its act together and face the daunting task of sustaining 
rescue efforts. The relief effort is being coordinated by the National 
Coordination Board (Bakornas) under the Coordinating Ministry for People's 
Welfare.

Operational coordination units (Satkorlak) have been established in Aceh and 
North Sumatra provinces under the governor. Regents are leading the 
regency-level operational units (Satlak). Though aid is beginning to filter 
in slowly in the wake of the disaster, distribution on the ground is 
severely hampered by a lack of coordination and a severe shortage of fuel 
and vehicles.

Sea Hawk helicopters from the United States aircraft carrier Abraham Lincoln 
have been carrying emergency aid to some of the worst-hit towns such as 
Meulaboh and Calang. US and Australian C-130 Hercules transport planes, 
along with other civilian and military aircraft, are bringing bulk supplies 
and medical equipment into the capital, Banda Aceh.

Rebels under attack
Continuing separatist fighting in Aceh has raised concern among aid workers 
who claim the safety of thousands of homeless refugees could be at risk if 
the military (TNI) and Free Aceh Movement (GAM) do not respect a cease fire 
in the province.

The GAM leadership in exile in Sweden has offered a unilateral cease fire, 
and self-styled GAM Prime Minister Malik Mahmud said the tsunami might 
eventually help peace prospects. Critics claim the war against the rebels 
and earlier restrictions on foreigners were part of an effort by the 
security forces and provincial government to embezzle development funds, 
profit from illegal businesses and cover up the extent of severe 
human-rights abuses.

As for the military and police, they are now concentrating on burying the 
thousands of dead that line the streets, amid fears that epidemic outbreaks 
of water-borne diseases could claim thousands more lives. More than 370 
soldiers and 51 members of their families are among the dead.

Yet the TNI are still finding time to continue the offensive against the 
rebels. Reports from the field said hundreds of troops were raiding GAM 
hideouts across East and North Aceh.

The president himself, possibly viewing the disaster in the war zone as an 
opportunity to negotiate an end to the long-running conflict, has called for 
a permanent end to the rebellion. "I call on those who are still raising 
arms to come out ... Let us use this historic momentum to join and be united 
again," he said in Jakarta less than two days after the earthquake.

Fears of graft
Leading parliamentarians also support the government's relief efforts but 
have been quick to urge extreme caution in disbursing aid to a province 
where corruption has been singularly rampant.

In 2003, the government allocated Rp4.06 trillion (US$429.5 million) to 
military operations in Aceh - roughly three times larger than the annual 
provincial budget - but a state-appointed auditor later found that about 
$291 million went missing. Aceh Governor Abdullah Puteh is on trial for 
graft in the new Anti-Corruption Court.

Speaker of the People's Consultative Assembly Hidayat Nurwahid warned the 
government it must ensure that relief aid to the province does not fall into 
the hands of corrupt officials with a propensity to "fish for great catches 
in murky waters". Nurwahid's younger brother Ahmad Wisanggeni and his wife 
died in Aceh.

The Prosperous Justice Party (PKS), which Nurwahid led prior to his 
appointment to the assembly, has a strong political base in Aceh, where its 
reputation for incorruptibility has won widespread support from ordinary 
voters. But despite the more favorable political landscape since Vice 
President Jusuf Kalla's victory over Akbar Tandjung to become Golkar's new 
leader, the parliamentary opposition movement still poses problems.

Speakers in the House of Representatives (DPR) and House faction and 
commission heads have agreed to establish a team to monitor the flow and 
utilization of material aid and monetary-relief funds. The move was in 
response to concerns voiced by Nurwahid and others that the aid should be 
disbursed quickly to the persons most in need and not find its way into the 
pockets of corrupt military and government officials. But the head of former 
president Megawati Sukarnoputri's Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle 
(PDI-P) faction in the House, Tjahyo Kumolo, said that his party would not 
support the formation of the monitoring team.

Reconstruction and rescheduling
Of the nine nations hit by the tsunami, Indonesia's $208 billion economy is 
the second largest behind India's ($600 billion). According to central bank 
data, total external public debt is around $81 billion, with almost half of 
this owed to the Paris Club of creditor nations.

As Finance Minister Jusuf Anwar points out, a moratorium would help ease 
pressure on foreign debt servicing and thus free up more funds for 
reconstruction of the disaster areas. Coordinating Minister for the Economy 
Aburizal Bakrie told Vice President Kalla that rebuilding Aceh and the 
surrounding areas will take at least five years and could cost some Rp33 
trillion (about $3.5 billion).

Standard & Poor's last month raised Indonesia's long-term foreign-currency 
credit rating one step to the fourth-highest junk level, B+, from B. This is 
the highest its credit rating has reached since the 1997 Asian financial 
crisis and stemmed from the "declining debt and debt-servicing burden and 
increased stability". The rating will mean cheaper rates for government 
borrowing and help reduce the interest payment on overseas debt.

"It will likely lower the interest rate by 0.25 percentage points. That 
would translate into a saving of around $125 million in interest payments" a 
year, Bakrie said, adding that the upgrade "shows that foreign investors 
have confidence in Indonesia".

Leaving the International Monetary Fund (IMF) rescue package at the end of 
2003 makes it, in theory, more difficult for Indonesia to seek fresh debt 
rescheduling from the Paris Club; an IMF country program is required to be 
in place for a country to be eligible for debt rescheduling. But German 
Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder and French President Jacques Chirac have both 
said their governments would press for the principle of a debt moratorium 
within the Paris Club for the countries involved - Indonesia and Somalia. 
The issue will be raised at the next scheduled meeting later this month.

Looking ahead
In the future, money will have to be spent on better disaster-relief 
programs to boost Indonesia's ability to cope with various degrees of 
disasters. Some measures and systems are in place now but have not been 
fully implemented and certainly not tested in disaster conditions. A 
Disaster Relief Brigade under the National Coordinating Board for Disaster 
Management has about 150 paramedics, doctors and disaster-management experts 
as well as several hundred paramedics and doctors on standby for 
mobilization as volunteers in case of a large-scale disaster.

The archipelago is located in an area dubbed the "Ring of Fire" for its high 
rate of volcanic and tectonic activity. Landslides and floods are also 
common, many caused by worsening environmental damage such as deforestation. 
The tsunami disaster was just the latest. An earthquake measuring 6.4 on the 
Richter scale devastated the East Nusa Tenggara island of Alor in November, 
killing more than 30, damaging more than 17,000 buildings and leaving 50,000 
people homeless. In Nabire, West Papua, a powerful earthquake took 32 lives 
in late November.

Bill Guerin, a weekly Jakarta correspondent for Asia Times Online since 
2000, has worked in Indonesia for 19 years in journalism and editorial 
positions. He has been published by the BBC on East Timor and specializes in 
business/economic and political analysis in Indonesia.

(Copyright 2005 Asia Times Online Ltd. All rights reserved. Please contact 
us for information on sales, syndication and republishing.) 



***************************************************************************
Berdikusi dg Santun & Elegan, dg Semangat Persahabatan. Menuju Indonesia yg 
Lebih Baik, in Commonality & Shared Destiny. www.ppi-india.uni.cc
***************************************************************************
__________________________________________________________________________
Mohon Perhatian:

1. Harap tdk. memposting/reply yg menyinggung SARA (kecuali sbg otokritik)
2. Pesan yg akan direply harap dihapus, kecuali yg akan dikomentari.
3. Lihat arsip sebelumnya, www.ppi-india.da.ru; 
4. Forum IT PPI-India: http://www.ppiindia.shyper.com/itforum/
5. Satu email perhari: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
6. No-email/web only: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
7. kembali menerima email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ppiindia/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 



Kirim email ke