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Monday, February 22, 2010

url: http://www.developments.org.uk/articles/exchange-of-fire

Exchange of fire

Thousands of former female fighters sidelined by Aceh’s peace process are getting business start-up packages, helping them to play a full part in the region’s economic recovery. Report by Nabiha Shahab.


Banda Aceh at a glance looks no different from other provincial capitals in Indonesia. It is a bustling, colourful city filled with traditional shops and buzzing with tricycle taxis. A closer look reveals the ruins from the Indian Ocean tsunami, a legacy of the massive disaster in 2004 which claimed around 230,000 lives.

Aceh, the westernmost province of Indonesia is now at peace after decades of conflict. On 15 August, 2005, in the aftermath of the tsunami, the Indonesian government and the separatist Free Aceh Movement signed an accord in Helsinki ending 30 years of armed conflict. The predominantly Muslim province is now led by a former member of the resistance and the government’s focus is on reconciliation and economic growth.

In any conflict women, children and the elderly are caught in the crossfire. However, thousands of Acehnese women joined their men, some as informants and couriers, some to carry arms and fight battles. Asmanidar is 32 and a former fighter. She became a commander in the resistance 10 years ago, and used her parents’ brick factory as a meeting place for her fighter friends. "We cooked and got supplies for our friends in the hills, but never in our homes," she says, "as the authorities already suspected our involvement".

Asmanidar met her husband, also a fighter, during the conflict but she didn’t follow him when he gave himself up before the peace agreement was signed in 2005. Like many former female fighters, she was left out of the initial phase of reintegration. However, last year, Asmanidar started looking after her neighbour’s goats. When she heard there was an opportunity for former female fighters to receive European Commission aid, she asked for more goats of her own. Today her three children and eight goats spring around her feet. "All three of my children are a handful," she says. "But for their sake I want to be a successful goat trader, maybe next time you come here I will be a goat trading boss and have 80 goats instead of eight."

A few kilometres away, Rais Naiyah, a young mother of 23, says she was only 12 when she became an informant for the Free Aceh Movement. Her task was to buy clothes, medicine and other provisions for the fighters. As a schoolgirl, at first it was easy enough to pass through security without suspicion, but one day Rais was caught. The authorities didn’t have enough proof to convict her and she fled to Peurelak in the south to work as a housemaid. Now back in Aceh, Rais looks after her sixmonth- old daughter and, together with her husband, runs a motorcycle repair business. "We just moved our shop to this new spot and more people drop by to repair their motorcycles," she explains. "The EC aid helped a lot to complete our shop. I requested tyres, oil and other items. Now if people need tyres, we have them in stock."

Rais and Asmanidar are two of more than 2,000 beneficiaries of a livelihood programme run by the NGO Terre des Hommes, Italy. They distribute aid to female ex-combatants, especially those who did not receive aid after peace was brokered in 2005. "Most women included in this project did not have a livelihood, many are illiterate so without the assistance they would not be engaged in any income generating activities", says Akira Moretto, programme officer at Terre des Hommes.

According to the UN’s women’s agency UNIFEM, it is common for former women fighters to be undervalued or ignored during peacetime. "Reintegration of women ex-combatants is a crucial component for the stability of the peace process," says Moretto, "as women hold an important role in households, in supporting husbands, and the wider communities they live in." In spite of improvements to Aceh’s infrastructure following the tsunami, distributing the aid was no easy task, because many of the women live far from each other in remote areas. The project covers an area larger than the Netherlands and Luxembourg combined. The women will receive training in developing their business plans and they will also be linked up with local microfinancing institutions. "It is important for the women to be able to keep a record of their business. They have to understand that we will not be here for ever and they have to be able to develop their business on their own," says Moretto.

Indonesia
Population 228.8 million Average life expectancy 70 years Average per capita income $3,580

Indonesia includes many ethnic, linguistic, and religious groups and sectarian tensions and separatism have led to violent confrontations undermining stability. With a substantial part of the world’s untapped resources in energy, minerals and agriculture, prosperity has risen for many in recent decades, but more than half the population live below the international poverty line. Indonesia is also dealing with the effects of the massive tsunami in 2004 and two major earthquakes.

Find out more at www.dfid.gov.uk/indonesia

Breakdown & recovery
A visible path to peace


"Reintegration of women ex-combatants is a crucial component for the stability of the peace process - as women hold an important role in households, in supporting husbands, and the wider communities they live in."
url: http://www.dfid.gov.uk/Media-Room/Case-Studies/2009/Aceh-Women-soldiers-get-down-to-business/

Aceh: women soldiers get down to business
How UK aid, delivered through the European Commission, is making a difference

30 December 2009

Thousands of former female soldiers sidelined by Aceh's peace process are getting business start-up packages and playing a full part in the region's economic recovery, five years after the tsunami.

Asmanidar is 32 and a former ‘inong bale’ - or female fighter.

She became a commander in the resistance ten years ago, and used her parents’ brick factory as a meeting place for her fighter friends.

"We cooked and got supplies for our friends in the hills, but never in our homes as the authorities already suspected our involvement," she says.

Thousands of Acehnese women joined their men, some as informants and couriers, some to carry arms and fight battles.

Asmanidar met her husband, also a fighter, during the conflict but she didn’t follow him when he gave himself up before the peace agreement was signed in 2005.

Like many former female fighters, she was left out of the initial phase of reintegration.

Aceh, the westernmost province of Indonesia is now at peace after decades of conflict.

On 15 August, 2005, several months after the Indian Ocean tsunami, the Indonesian government and the separatist Free Aceh Movement signed an accord in Helsinki, ending 30 years of armed conflict.

The predominantly Muslim province is now led by a former member of the resistance and the government’s focus is on reconciliation and economic growth.

'I want to be successful'

Last year, Asmanidar started looking after her neighbour’s goats. She is now one of 2,000 female former fighters who has received European Commission aid in the form of a livelihood programme run by the Italian NGO, Terres des Hommes.

She used the money to buy her own goats.

Today her three children and eight goats spring around her feet. "All three of my children are a handful," she says. "But for their sake I want to be a successful goat trader, maybe next time you come here I will be a goat trading boss and have 80 goats instead of eight."

A few kilometres away, 23-year-old mother Rais Naiyah, says she was only 12 when she became an informant for the Free Aceh Movement, buying clothes, medicine and other provisions for the fighters.

As a schoolgirl she avoided suspicion from security checkpoints but one day Rais was caught.

She later fled to Peurelak in the south to work as a housemaid but news broke that she had been killed in a crossfire, allowing her to return home anonymously.
"It was my friend who died, but the mistaken identity worked in my favour", she says.

Now Rais looks after her six-month-old daughter and, together with her husband, runs a motorcycle repair business.

"We just moved our shop to this new spot and more people drop by to repair their motorcycles," she explains. "The EC aid helped a lot to complete our shop. I requested tyres, oil and other items.

"Now if people need tyres, we have them in stock."

Training and development

Former fighters were identified after a door-to-door campaign covering an area larger than Holland and Luxembourg combined, many women found living far apart in remote areas.

The women get training in developing their business plans and will also be linked up with local micro-financing institutions.

Among other livelihood projects for former female fighters are training courses for the police - with an emphasis on community policing and human rights - as well as new legislation going through parliament, which will offer people in Aceh health insurance for the first time and provide more rights for women.

Key facts and stats

* The livelihood project has a budget of US$1,376,492.
* The EC contributed 93% of the total project budget (UNDP provided 7%)

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