The new leadership in Aceh must remain vigilant about security in the province, where a militant training camp was uncovered in 2010, officials and experts agree.
The province is still considered a potential haven and training place for armed terrorists, and Aceh's new governor and deputy governor have been asked to boost co-operation with police and public order forces, according to the head of the State Intelligence Agency (Badan Intelijen Negara/BIN), Lieutenant General Marciano Norman.
"We don't see signs of anything that is going to threaten the new leadership in Aceh. There was a terrorist group that set up a military training camp there, but we have confirmed that the group was not part of the Free Aceh Movement (Gerakan Aceh Merdeka, or GAM)," Marciano told Khabar Southeast Asia recently in Jakarta.
"But the new government in Aceh must carry out surveillance that is better, more careful than before," he added.
Marciano said he met with new Governor Zaini Abdullah – who served as GAM's foreign minister -- and Deputy Governor Muzakir Manaf , ex-commander-in-chief of GAM's armed forces, shortly after their June 25th inauguration.
He told them that henceforth all security activities must be conducted within the structure of the provincial government. If they have activities or need a security escort, they must use established police or public order personnel.
"There will be no more party task forces with the connotation of ex-combatants. I hope the process in Aceh improves, that the elected governor and deputy governor are now leaders of all the people of Aceh. No more 'my group', 'your group', or 'their group'," Marciano said.
He admitted there was euphoria among their followers after Zaini and Muzakir assumed power,
unseatinganother former GAM leader, Irwandi Yusuf, after a campaign season marred by violence and allegations of voter intimidation.
"But I asked for this to be defused immediately. The tension has to be quickly calmed and they must merge with other social groups immediately," he said.
Undetected militant camps
Conditions in Aceh are still conducive for terrorism, because the region has not achieved stability and some areas are not yet monitored by the government, according to Al Chaidar, a professor and terrorism expert at Malikussaleh University in Lhokseumawe, North
Aceh.
In 2010, the Indonesian military (Tentara National Indonesia/TNI) and national police discovered a militant training camp in Jantho, Aceh, dealing a major blow to terror networks in the region. But the work is far from over, according to Al.
"Outside Jantho, they are still in North Aceh and Central Aceh. Between Nagan Raya (West Aceh) and North Aceh, there are still two more militant camps that have gone undetected by the National Police Agency and even TNI," he told Khabar in a phone interview.
He said Zaini and Muzakir have already put forward good effort in co-operating with the National Counter-Terrorism Agency (BNPT) as it combs suspected terrorist havens.
Of the 71 people arrested at the terror camp in Aceh, 13 were Acehnese, and four had links to the province's former fight against the central government that ended in 2005, he said.
"Strong collaboration with TNI and the national police is needed to address this serious potential threat. It isn't only threatening the Republic of Indonesia, but also the existence of the Free Aceh Movement," said Al, a longtime specialist on Aceh.
Any potenial link between GAM and terrorists threatens the validity of former GAM members now serving in government, analysts say. The Indonesian government and GAM now have a shared interest in keeping Aceh safe from terrorism.
Impunity for election violence?
Local journalists say the real security problem in Aceh is the pre-election violence that terrorised civil society, just as in the old days when civilians were caught between warring parties of the separatist rebellion.
"Security disturbances began in the lead-up to the election and afterwards, and there is no decision yet on sentences for the suspects, former combatants who carried out shootings, bombings, and terror," said Maimun Saleh, chairman of the Aceh branch of the Alliance of Independent Journalists (AJI).
Maimun noted that Jakarta, the local government, the military and society as a whole should increase their awareness to maintain security around the region.