HELSINKI,
July 13, 2005 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) - "Amazingly surprising" advances have been made so far in
peace talks between Indonesian officials and the Free Aceh Movement
(GAM), which said it is willing to give in to Jakarta's demand that
Aceh remain a part of Indonesia.
"It's
amazingly surprising that we managed to discuss all the issues already
yesterday (Tuesday)," GAM spokesman Bakhtiar Abdullah told Agence
France-Presse (AFP) on Wednesday, July 13.
"Now
we can discuss the new peace draft today," he added amid hopes
that the two sides will finally agree to end a 30-year conflict that
has claimed nearly 15,000 lives.
As
a second day of negotiations got under way on Wednesday, delegates
said they were pleased that they had already managed to cover all the
points in a draft peace treaty, saying they were now prepared to
discuss all the suggested changes.
Maria-Elena
Cowell, a spokeswoman for the Crisis Management Initiative (CMI)
foundation organizing the talks, confirmed that "a few points
have been reformulated" in the draft treaty, but would not
elaborate.
The consultation
meetings, which are scheduled to last through
Sunday, July 17, are being held at the Koeningstedt estate outside
Helsinki and are being mediated by former Finnish president and career
diplomat Martti Ahtisaari.
The
talks involved dozens of representatives of Acehnese civil society,
including activists from the Aceh Referendum Information Center
(SIRA), and GAM's leadership in Sweden.
Aceh
has been a battleground for government and separatists since 1976 when
GAM launched its campaign for independence, angered by what it said
was Jakarta's exploitation of the province's resources.
When
government and GAM delegations met for a first round of Helsinki talks
in January it was the first time they had stood face-to-face since May
2003, when Jakarta declared martial law and launched a major military
offensive in the province.
The
renewed efforts to reach a peaceful solution were prompted by a need
for international aid to reach the province worst hit by the December
26 killer tsunami. More than 131,000 people in the province perished.
Self-Government
Most
significantly perhaps, GAM has said it is willing to give in to
Jakarta's demand that Aceh remain a part of Indonesia, a main sticking
point in the talks.
However,
GAM spelled out conditions that the Acehnese must be allowed to govern
the territory under a system of self-government, The Jakarta
Post reported on Wednesday.
"This
is one of the biggest compromises that GAM has ever made,"
Abdullah has said.
"Self-government
is a political system, which provides genuine democracy for all of the
Acehnese as we put aside our demand of being independent.
"And
the establishment of local political parties that enable the Acehnese
to participate in direct local elections is the key point of the
system," he added.
He
stressed that the Acehnese must feel free to talk about politics
without being interfered with by the central government in Jakarta.
"I
think that we have really done what we can. Now it is up to Indonesia
to give in. The ball is in their court," Abdullah said, referring
to continued government reluctance to grant the Acehnese the right to
political participation.
GAM
political advisor Damien Kingsbury told AFP that there cannot be
restrictions placed on political parties.
"That
would stop this process from going ahead," he said, calling on
Jakarta to "embrace basic democratic principles."
Indonesian
President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono said last weekend the government
would not allow local parties to stand in elections in Aceh, and while
former GAM members would be allowed to run for the vice governorship
post and those of district chiefs and mayors, the position of governor
would be off limits.
Moreover,
Coordinating Minister for Political, Legal and Security Affairs Widodo
insisted on Wednesday the government would not accommodate the GAM
wish to establish a local political party in Aceh province.
"Our
1945 amendment does not recognize the establishment of a local
political party. We only acknowledge national political parties,"
Widodo said after a meeting with Yudhoyono according to the Post.
Widido
said any former members of GAM who returned to Indonesia would be
recognized as citizens, with full rights, after the government granted
them amnesty.
"If
(the GAM) members then rejoin the Acehnese people and have normal
lives, that is their right as citizens. They are also eligible to vote
and to be voted (in an election)," Widodo said.