March 2007 | Special Report No. 184
The Aceh Peace Process: Nothing Less than Success
Pieter Feith
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Summary
- Even though the first contacts between the Indonesian government and the Free Aceh
Movement (GAM) had already taken place before the December 2004 tsunami struck,
the disaster consolidated the political will to leave old grievances behind and join
forces in the reconstruction process and the creation of a sustainable future for the
people of Aceh.
- The determination of both parties, considerable pressure from Aceh’s people, and
significant support from the international community helped ensure a solution to the
thirty-year armed conflict with dignity for all.
- The Aceh Monitoring Mission was the first European Security and Defence Policy
operation in Asia and was conducted with five participating states from the Association
of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN).
- The European Union (EU) and ASEAN are now in a position to build on this experience
and use AMM as a model for future cooperation in crisis management between
regional actors. Parallels may be drawn to the root causes and possible solutions of
other, somewhat similar conflicts in the region.
- The EU will stand by the people of Aceh in the ongoing peace and reconciliation and
post-conflict reconstruction processes and is determined to develop a lasting and
comprehensive partnership with Indonesia.
About the Report
An EU-led mission completed its mandate of monitoring
and supporting the peace process in the Indonesian
province of Aceh on December 15, 2006. A memorandum
of understanding signed by the Indonesian government and
the Free Aceh Movement in August 2005 in Helsinki had
set up the mission. This report looks at the reasons for the
successful outcome of the Aceh peace process, which offers
useful lessons for peace implementation elsewhere.
Pieter Feith is the former head of the Aceh Monitoring
Mission. An expert in crisis management, he has been
deputy director general for politico-military affairs of
the European Union since 2001. He also served in the
Netherlands diplomatic service and in NATO, where he
worked on crisis management in the Balkans.
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