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Rights group says military incompetent, abusive

Source
Deutsche Presse Agentur - January 6, 2005

Bangkok – The Indonesian military is hampering efforts to distribute aid to tsunami survivors in Aceh province, denying assistance and even abusing some survivors, a regional human rights organization is alleging.

The Bangkok-based Asia Forum listed a host of abuses and incompetence in managing aid distribution, and demanded that the military allow free flow of food, water and medical assistance in the devastated region at the northern end of the island of Sumatra.

The group alleged that soldiers were denying aid to survivors who were unable to present all of the proper identification documents, in spite of massive destruction to their homes and possessions.

It also said that local non-governmental organizations were being prevented from distributed their own aid, while military-held food, water, clothing and medicines were stockpiled in airports without efficient delivery.

In one case that Asia Forum said it had verified, instant noodles from relief shipments were being sold at inflated prices to victims at the Banda Aceh provincial capital airport.

"Women and children who are most vulnerable to diseases are lined up outside the only running hospital, operated by the military, and are not getting attention they desperately need for medical relief," the organization said in a public statement.

Asia Forum also criticized the army for continuing to divert resources to its ongoing counterinsurgency campaign against the separatist guerrilla Free Aceh Movement (GAM), after rejecting the rebels' December 26 offer of a ceasefire.

Delays in distributing food, water and medicines are causing mounting deaths, the statement said.

It called on the Jakarta government to suspend martial law in Aceh, limit the army to humanitarian relief efforts, and ensure the distribution of aid to all affected areas and people without discrimination.

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