http://www.asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2650&Itemid=175

Indonesia's Aceh Province and Shariah 

Written by Dewi Kurniawati   
 Thursday, 19 August 2010 
Eroding Indonesia's Secular Freedoms 


Agnes Monica, the famous Indonesian actress and singer, is given to wearing 
sexy clothes, whether on stage, TV or advertising billboards -- but not in the 
provincial capital of Aceh province. 

Just across from the 19th-century Baiturrahman Grand Mosque is a large 
billboard that features Monica wearing a headscarf - even though she's a 
Christian. Also absent is the tank-top exposing her bare arms and navel that 
Monica wears in the ad for cell-phone service running in the rest of the 
country. 

Although the headscarf, or jilbab, is familiar attire in Indonesia, the world's 
largest Muslim-majority nation, only in Aceh is it required for Muslim women. 
Failure to wear "Islamic dress" is a violation of one of Aceh's Islamic bylaws, 
and violators can either be reprimanded or hauled into court by the Shariah 
Police. 

Despite Indonesia having a secular Constitution, devoutly Muslim Aceh was 
allowed to adopt parts of ghariah law, presumably to prevent the Acehnese from 
joining the rebellious Free Aceh Movement (GAM). In 1999, then-President BJ 
Habibie signed a special law on Aceh that, among other things, granted the 
province a special status and the right to partly implement shariah. However, 
the law did not stipulate how Islamic law would be implemented. Two years 
later, President Megawati Sukarnoputri signed into law an autonomy package that 
included comprehensive regulations on establishing Shariah courts and Shariah 
bylaws. Based on these two pieces of legislation - that were drafted, 
discussed, and approved in Jakarta, Aceh established its first shariah court in 
2003, and publicly caned its first violator in 2005. 

Five years later, the obvious question has yet to be asked: why was shariah 
rammed through the national legislative system and "given" to Aceh when neither 
the populace nor the GAM guerrillas ever asked for it and perhaps few people, 
with the exception of the provincial ulema council, actually want it? 

The answer has become increasingly crucial given that scholars, activists and 
politicians believe shariah goes against the basic principles of Indonesia's 
Pancasila state ideology, which asserts that the country is multi-religious but 
secularly governed. 

Worse, it has allowed a creeping Islamic fundamentalism to gain a foothold, 
with other provinces and districts steadily applying shariah-inspired bylaws 
since 2003 under pressure from hard-line groups. 

"Just like the majority of Acehnese, I was born a Muslim, but we don't need 
shariah," said Muhammad Chaidir, a rental car driver in Banda Aceh. "shariah 
doesn't bring us prosperity." 

Indeed, the Islamic bylaws seem to have brought the strife-torn province 
trouble, as well as negative publicity. Chaider's comments are typical of many 
Acehnese who long for security, prosperity and a sense of belonging after a 
protracted 29-year civil war between the GAM and the Indonesian military killed 
at least 20,000 Acehnese and the 2004 Asian tsunami, which killed an additional 
177,000 people in the province. 

Today, the Acehnese are governed by both national criminal law and local 
Islamic bylaws. And as if that weren't enough, the chief of the West Aceh 
district began enforcing a new regulation in May that bans Muslims there from 
wearing tight clothing. 

This bylaw - clearly aimed at women - as well as other controversial events 
including religious police breaking into a United Nations compound looking for 
Westerners drinking alcohol, and numerous instances of public caning, have put 
Aceh in a negative international spotlight. 

"After being wracked by conflict, the central and local governments should 
focus on a truth and reconciliation program, not shariah," said Evi Narti Zain, 
executive director of the Aceh Human Rights NGO Coalition. "If we raise 
objections to shariah, then we will be labeled as infidels and accused of 
disturbing the peace in Aceh." 

Independent reports on the implementation of shariah in Aceh have concluded 
that it discriminates against the poor, in particular women, who are at the 
mercy of the Shariah Police. 

Middle and upper-class Acehnese, meanwhile, have ways to skirt around shariah 
stipulations so they can enjoy their share of romance and alcohol. 

"They go to fancy hotels, or spend the weekend in Medan," in nearby North 
Sumatra Province, Zain said, laughing. 

But some of the side affects of shariah are no laughing matter, including abuse 
of power by those sworn to uphold it. 

On July 15, the Langsa District Court in East Aceh district sentenced two 
members of the Shariah Police to eight years in prison each for the rape and 
torture of a 20-year-old female student they had in custody. 

What happened? 

So where did it all start and why? Experts have a number of theories. 

Some believe that implementing shariah in Aceh was a scheme hatched by 
conservative Islamic clerics who saw an opportunity to expand their own 
political power and so they heavily lobbied Jakarta politicians. Others said 
they assumed the military was behind adding shariah to the 1999 autonomy law so 
it would have a tool to divide the independence-minded province and further 
isolate the GAM fighters. 

And still others said that Shariah was a consolation prize for the province 
after the military and the nation's political elite rejected a proposal by the 
president at the time, the late Abdurrahman Wahid, to allow Aceh to hold a 
referendum on independence, just like East Timor did in 1999. 

It was indeed under the Wahid administration that Jakarta first attempted to go 
down the road to peace after years of applying brutal military force during the 
Suharto regime. 

According to Ahmad Suaedy, an expert on Aceh from The Wahid Institute in 
Jakarta, Wahid had even enlisted members of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front 
(MILF) in the southern Philippines to lobby self-exiled civilian leaders of GAM 
residing in Sweden to start communicating with Jakarta. 

"I belief Gus Dur would never allow them to implement shariah because he was 
very committed to the unitary state of Indonesia," Ahmad Suaedy said, referring 
to Wahid by his popular nickname. 

Hoping to initiate ceasefire talks and hold off pessimistic Army generals in 
Jakarta, Wahid sent acting State Secretary Bondan Gunawan to meet the rebel 
group's field commander, Abdullah Syafi'i, in a secret jungle location in Aceh 
in March 2000. Syafi'i was later killed in a special military operation in 
January 2002, further straining tensions between GAM and the military. 

"When I met Syafi'i in the jungle, he never requested that shariah be 
implemented," Gunawan told the Jakarta Globe. "That never crossed their minds." 

Researchers on Aceh have pointed out that GAM separatists were driven by a 
nationalist ideology aimed at gaining independence from Javanese-dominated 
Indonesia, not by religion, and never wanted shariah to be pushed down their 
throats by the government in Jakarta. 

Dharmawan Ronodipuro, a former spokesman for Wahid, recalled that there had 
once been a discussion about actually implementing shariah in Aceh during a 
cabinet meeting. 

"The original idea was to separate GAM members from civilians," he said. 

However, some scholars and political observers said that implementing shariah 
in Aceh was "historical sabotage" carried out by various factions including 
hard-line Islamic groups, right-wing political parties and elements within the 
military. 

"If we look clearly at the history of Aceh, I believe what the Acehnese desired 
was not shariah, but political and economic justice," said Bachtiar Effendy, a 
political expert from Syarif Hidayatullah Islamic State University in Jakarta. 

"They had given everything they had for the establishment of this country, 
including their trust and natural resources, but they have been repeatedly 
betrayed. GAM obviously did not want anything to do with Islam, because they 
wanted support from Western countries for their [independence] struggle. It is 
so strange that suddenly shariah was inserted into the autonomy law. We should 
all question that," he said, noting that the Aceh conflict dragged on even 
after Islam became part of the laws of the land. 

"Peace was only established after the Helsinki Agreement of 2005." 

A former minister said that the decision to grant Aceh implementation of 
shariah was taken while three key government positions were in the hands of 
retired military officers - the Minister of Home Affairs, the Coordinating 
Minister for Politics, Security and Law and the Cabinet Secretary. The Minister 
of Religious Affairs was a shariah expert. 

The International Crisis Group's Sidney Jones said that allowing Aceh to 
implement Islamic bylaws, "even though in very vague terms," was seen by 
Jakarta and members of the Acehnese elite as a political solution to stave off 
more rebellion. 

"It was partly the result of concern about the reaction in Aceh to the granting 
of a referendum to East Timor," Jones said, noting that the Acehnese people 
"overwhelmingly" wanted a referendum of their own. 

Enter the Shariah Police 

In Aceh today, shariah police officers patrol the streets looking for 
violations. Their main targets are women not wearing headscarves, people 
gambling or drinking alcohol, and couples having sex out of wedlock. Far from 
being supported for upholding morals, they are largely hated for heavy-handed 
tactics that have on more than one occasion turned mobs of angry residents 
against them. 

"They act like a military force. It shows that at the subconscious level, 
militaristic hegemony is successful after decades of conflicts in Aceh," Zain 
from the NGO coalition said. 

But some groups in Aceh have attempted to go even further. In September 2009, 
the outgoing Acehnese provincial legislature passed a Qanun Jinayat, a bylaw 
with a revised and more comprehensive version of shariah, which included a 
section stipulating that convicted adulterers be stoned to death. Governor 
Irwandi Yusuf, who is a former member of GAM's civilian leadership, refused to 
sign the bylaw, effectively quashing it. 

Following embarrassing international news stories, officials in Jakarta asked 
for the controversial bylaw to be withdrawn. 

"Conservative [clerics] backed by organizations such as Hizbut Tahrir and 
conservative Islamic parties like the United Development Party (PPP) and the 
Prosperous Justice Party (PKS) badly wanted to implement the Qanun Jinayat in 
Aceh," Zain said. 

The overall implementation of Islamic bylaws has thus far been far from 
flawless. 

"We have seen many violations with the implementation of shariah. Basically, 
it's women who suffer the most," Zain said. "There are no guarantees that even 
when women cover themselves, they will not be raped or molested," she said, 
highlighting the gang rape last January in East Aceh's Langsa district that 
involved shariah police officers. 

"Many see the implementation of the Qanun in Aceh as a successful pilot 
project, and it is prompting [leaders in] other areas in Indonesia to also 
promote shariah. They copy-paste Aceh's Qanun for their areas," she said. 

Playing Follow the Leader 

Bachtiar, the political analyst, said Aceh has become something of a Pandora's 
box for the central government because other regions can now claim they are 
being discriminated against if they cannot implement shariah-inspired bylaws. 

"If it's not wrong for Aceh, then you can't criticize the emergence of shariah 
bylaws elsewhere," he said, adding that "those who criticize local shariah 
bylaws don't have the guts to criticize Aceh." 

Eva Kusuma Sundari, an Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P) 
lawmaker, questions the central government's commitment to upholding Pancasila. 
She said that since Aceh began to partially implement Islamic law, hundreds of 
shariah-inspired bylaws have been passed nationwide. 

"By accommodating too many shariah bylaws, the government is betraying the 
national Constitution," she said. "In the unitary state of Indonesia we have 
agreed to use a national criminal law, and condoning Shariah bylaws is an act 
of subversion." 

Sundari claimed that an "elite group with a certain political agenda is playing 
a big role in the Shariah-based bylaws." 

The Ministry of Home Affairs reviews regional bylaws and should quash them if 
they contradict national law. Suhatmansyah, head of the ministry's social and 
political desk, said "the state can't do much about Aceh because the people 
asked for shariah." 

But activists and scholars differ. The only people in Aceh who back shariah are 
local Islamic clerics and politicians from Islamic parties, they said. 

One such cleric is Muslim Ibrahim, chairman of the Aceh Ulema Assembly and a 
prominent lobbyist for shariah in Aceh. Ibrahim told the Globe he rejected 
claims that Aceh was given shariah as a means to isolate the GAM separatists. 

"That is nonsense. GAM didn't want shariah to be implemented," he said. "This 
is the fruit of a long struggle by us clerics." 

According to Ibrahim, shariah had been enforced in Aceh centuries ago before 
being halted by the Dutch colonial administration as it was considered cruel. 
But Ibrahim says shariah "is the best law for the Acehnese." 

He claimed gambling had decreased by 40 percent within six months after the 
first public caning, adding that shariah punishment serves as shock therapy 
because it is purposely humiliating. 

However, Zain from the NGO coalition said public punishments discriminate 
against women because afterwards, unlike men, they are shunned by society. 

"Instead of creating justice, shariah creates injustice among the Acehnese 
because we see how powerful people who violate shariah are free and never 
punished. So the poor are punished twice: by national criminal law and now by 
shariah," she said. 

This story is reprinted with permission from Jakarta Globe, with which Asia 
Sentinel has a content-sharing agreement.





[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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