Troops Block Reporter From Traveling In Aceh
Indonesian Troops Block Reporter From Traveling In Tsunami-Devastated Aceh Province
http://asia.news.yahoo.com/050208/ap/d8848aqg0.html
Indonesian soldiers prevented an Associated Press journalist from traveling in tsunami-wracked Aceh, a war-torn region that was off limits to foreigners before the disaster.
Maj.
Gen. Bambang Darmono, the Indonesian military commander in
charge of
relief operations in the province, denied
Tuesday that there were any
"rules or policies"
preventing journalists - local or foreign - from
traveling in the region, and pledged to investigate the
incident.
On Monday, a soldier blocked Irwan Firdaus, a
Jakarta-based AP reporter who
had been working in Aceh
for several weeks, from crossing a bridge into the
town
of Lhoknga. The soldier, who did not identify himself, said
the
reporter needed permission from the local military
commander.
Lhoknga, which was almost entirely wiped out by
the tsunami, is about 25
kilometers (15 miles) west of
Banda Aceh. The reporter was planning to
interview
survivors in the town.
The incident reflects the
continuing suspicion the military holds toward
journalists in the region. Foreign media and aid workers
have been banned
from Aceh since 2003, when Indonesian
troops launched a massive offensive
against the
province's separatist guerrillas. More than 2,500 people
have
been killed since then.
The travel ban has not
been formally revoked, but since the Dec. 26 tsunami
the
government has generally allowed foreign journalists and
humanitarian
officials to travel to and around the
province.
Last month, media watchdog Reporters Without
Borders said it was concerned
by signs of growing
military intolerance toward foreign news media in Aceh
after U.S. freelance reporter William Nessen was
expelled from the
province. It said at least four other
international journalists working in
the province were
either briefly detained or prevented from
traveling.
Nessen spent 40 days in jail in Aceh in 2003
for violating his visa by
spending three weeks with
separatist rebels from the Free Aceh Movement.
During
his time with the guerrillas, he contacted international
media and
accused the military of wanting to kill
him.
Immigration authorities deported him on Jan. 25 after
accusing him of
entering the country illegally, despite
granting him a visa when he arrived
three weeks earlier.
Nessen said a ban imposed on him after he served the
prison sentence had already expired.
The military is
concerned that the influx of foreign aid groups and
journalists since the disaster could lead to increased
international
sympathy for the rebels, who have been
fighting a low-level war for
independence since 1976.
The separatists have welcomed the spotlight the
tsunami
has thrown on their movement.
Human rights groups have
accused the Indonesian army of executions,
kidnappings,
torture and collective punishment of civilians. They say
most
of the victims of the fighting have been villagers
caught up in army sweeps.