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Why has this Muslim-Christian conflict continued for three years?
Lorraine V Aragon
Poso district residents have lived with
religious violence since December 1998. After three years of episodic
fighting, death toll estimates range from 1,000 to 2,500, with
thousands more injured. Scores of churches and mosques have been
torched. Nearly 100,000 have fled their burning homes, leaving the
capital of Poso district described at one time as a 'dead city', though
some are now returning.
It began as a street fight between
hot-headed young men, one Protestant and one Muslim, during a tense
local political campaign. The brawl quickly deteriorated into a
religiously polarised battle in this formerly quiet, multiethnic
region. Police and military forces could not, or would not, stop the
arson and attacks between the two communities.
The infrastructure of Poso city and
surrounding towns is devastated. Refugees in holding camps suffer harsh
conditions and burden locals - mostly Muslims in Palu and South
Sulawesi, mostly Christians in North Sulawesi, Tentena, and the Lore
Valley. Fear and vengefulness have made it difficult to stop the cycle
of bloodshed. A recent peace agreement formulated in Malino, South
Sulawesi, shows promise but faces challenges in its implementation.
Dutch missionaries from the early 1900s
converted indigenous animist groups in the mountainous interior of what
is now Central Sulawesi province. The colonial administration
envisioned these Protestants as an allied population buffer against
Muslim-influenced coastal kingdoms. Many of these slash-and-burn
farmers were resettled in model villages and taught wet-rice farming by
the Dutch. Most groups living around Poso Lake, between Poso and the
mission center of Tentena, came to identify themselves ethnically as
Pamona.
The Japanese Occupation and independence in
1945 was followed by a chaotic period when Muslim rebels from South
Sulawesi attacked interior animists and Christians. Yet, once the
Suharto regime took control, the majority population of the region
still was Protestant ('Kristen' in Indonesian), and Pamona leaders
exercised partial control over the local bureaucracy.
Much had changed by the end of Suharto's
presidency. In 1973, Suharto designated Central Sulawesi as one of ten
new transmigration provinces. The Trans-Sulawesi Highway was cut into
the rugged mountain forests to ease the path for transmigrants. The new
roads and settlements also attracted a flood of voluntary migrants,
especially Muslim Bugis and Makassar people from South Sulawesi.
The financial crisis beginning in late 1997
spurred further immigration into the ebony-producing Poso area.
Entrepreneurial Muslims arrived from South Sulawesi to cash-crop cacao,
an agricultural export that maintained an exceptionally high value
during the crisis. Pamona Protestants lost their religious and ethnic
majorities in the district. Many also had been displaced from their
ancestral lands through processes of land commodification that had
nothing to do with religion.
Pamona Protestant Christians, like many
interior groups in the outer islands, had also lost some of their
indigenous political control. After the 1970s, much local authority was
removed from customary councils of elders and transferred to a national
bureaucracy. Modernist Muslims were installed in high-ranking military
posts and Christians found it harder to get their leaders selected for
local governance. By the end of his presidency, Suharto himself had
become more pro-Muslim. Protestant mission funding became closely
regulated. The government seized many schools and clinics originally
funded by churches.
District mayor
When the Poso violence began in December
1998, the district mayor (bupati) of Poso was a Muslim named Arief
Patanga. Patanga's term of office was due to expire in June 1999. His
district secretary (sekretaris wilayah daerah, sekwilda) was a
Protestant Pamona named Yahya Patiro. This type of religious
power-sharing at the district level had been known in earlier New Order
Poso. Many Christians hoped Patiro would succeed his Muslim
predecessor. Muslim factions, representing Bugis-influenced ethnic
groups along the coast and towards South Sulawesi, promoted Muslim
candidates. The new economic stakes raised the election heat. The 1999
Regional Autonomy Laws promised a shift in control over resources from
the national to the regional level. Both Muslim and Christian elites in
Poso viewed this election as critical to their future access to
government contracts.
The street fight that began in the heart of
Poso city on the eve of both Christmas and Ramadan, 1998, fed into
religious tensions promoted by inflammatory graffiti during the
campaign. Soon, supporters from allied towns arrived to reinforce the
Protestant and Muslim mobs. After a week of chaotic street fighting and
arson, about 200 people were injured and 400 homes burned.
Reportedly, Christians suffered most of the
damage in what became the conflict's 'first phase'. A Pamona Protestant
leader of the political campaign, Herman Parimo, was jailed for heading
a group of fighting Christians. No Muslims were prosecuted. This
apparently partisan response by the authorities increased Protestant
resentment.
A second escalating street fight occurred
in mid-April 2000. By that time, a Muslim (although not the prior
incumbent's favourite) had been installed as the new district mayor.
When a Muslim youth reported being knifed by a Protestant, a Muslim
posse began a retaliation campaign that the police could not handle.
Supporters with homemade weapons again arrived from allied Muslim and
Protestant towns. Army personnel followed from Makassar, South
Sulawesi, but the fighting continued for over two weeks. By early May,
over 700 homes had been burned, mostly belonging to Christians, along
with several church buildings and a police barracks. Thousands of
refugees, mostly Christians, fled.
The 'third phase' began only three weeks
later when a group of Christians made a night-time raid on the Muslims
they considered responsible for the earlier destruction of Christian
neighbourhoods. The masked 'ninja' group of about a dozen men is
alleged to have included both Protestant Pamona and Catholic immigrants
from Flores who resided in the Poso district.
Fighting then intensified throughout the
region, abetted by teams of local Christian militias. This third phase
culminated in a massacre of Javanese men who fled to a Muslim boarding
school in a transmigration area south of Poso. Over a hundred were
executed with homemade weapons, their bodies tossed in the Poso River
and mass graves. The fighting continued until the end of July 2000,
when three Catholic ringleaders were captured. These Flores immigrants
were tried between December 2000 and April 2001, when they were
sentenced to death. To date, their appeals have been rejected and they
await execution by firing squad.
Despite a few high-profile reconciliation
efforts in late 2000, many criticised the lack of government aid and
biased processes of law enforcement. Sporadic fighting continued and
most refugees were too scared to return home. Instead, the population
underwent an increasing de facto religious segregation - Muslims in
Poso city, Protestants in the highland towns.
During the first months of 2001, violence
worsened again. In addition to surprise attacks on farmers, disgruntled
factions planted bombs in religious buildings and police posts. After
the three Catholics were sentenced to death, attacks on Muslims
increased. This began to be called 'phase four.' Then in July, the
Laskar Jihad group, based in Yogyakarta, sent emissaries to meet with
senior religious and government leaders in Central Sulawesi.
Violence surged again at the end of 2001
when thousands of well-armed Laskar Jihad troops were added to the
volatile mix of local fighters. Over a hundred more persons were killed
in what we can call 'phase five'. By mid-November, desperate pleas
emerged from Protestant towns. Christians reported invasions by Muslim
militias who threatened to rule the area by the end of Ramadan. At
least half a dozen churches and 4,000 houses in thirty villages were
burned, seemingly under the blind eye of security forces. Roughly
15,000 more people fled their homes. Muslim militias seized control of
fuel stations and roadside checkpoints, where some displayed posters of
Osama bin Laden.
In the aftermath of September 11th,
these reports caught the attention of government officials and human
rights workers in the United States and elsewhere, and led to pressure
on the Indonesian government to control radical Muslims.
Peace agreement
On December 4, 2001, Indonesia's chief
security minister, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, traveled to Sulawesi to
meet with Muslim and Christian leaders. Jusuf Kalla, the Coordinating
Minister for the People's Welfare (Menko Kesra), was assigned as
mediator. Roughly fifty delegates, half Muslim and half Christian, met
separately with Kalla in Malino, South Sulawesi.
On December 20, 2001, a ten-point bilateral
peace agreement was announced. With the arrival of 4,000 military and
police, as well as national and international attention on Central
Sulawesi, Christmas proceeded peacefully. At New Year's, four
Protestant churches were bombed in the provincial capital of Palu, but
implementation of the accord continued.
The Malino Agreement includes some
unarguable points: both sides should stop fighting, obey laws, expect
security forces to be firm and fair, reject unauthorised 'outside'
interference or militias, stop slander, and promote apologies and
respect for all traditions and religions. Problems likely will come in
implementing points such as weapons collection and the return of
property to 'pre-conflict' status. It will be difficult to divide
rehabilitation funds fairly and resettle about 90,000 refugees, who may
claim land now occupied by other mobile citizens. Finally, there is the
lingering issue of power sharing at the political level, an issue
raised by the Christian delegates, but not included in the final peace
agreement.
Lorraine Aragon (aragonl@mail.ecu.edu)
teaches anthropology at East Carolina University in Greenville, North
Carolina, USA. She has published several articles and a book on
highland Sulawesi ('Fields of the Lord', University of Hawai'i Press,
2000). Her longer article about the Poso conflicts appears in Cornell
University's journal 'Indonesia', vol. 72, October 2001.
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