The Issue of Nias Land Ownership in Protected Forest Areas in
South Tapanuli, Indonesia
Suheri Harahap, Badaruddin, Zulkifli Lubis and Fikarwin Zuska
Faculty of Social and Political Science, Universitas Sumatera Utara, Medan, Indonesia
Keywords: Conflict, Land, Religion, Tribe, The Economy.
Abstract: History proves that the manipulation of religion, ethnicity, race, ethnicity for socio-economic and political
interests is very dangerous for the life of a nation state. Protected forest area becomes an event that is never
expected by many people, because actually when viewed from their residential areas which are also far apart
and even in daily activities so far the economy runs without any obstacles. The conflict occurred because
the residents of Tolang Jae Village did not fulfill the demands of the Nias tribe. Conflicts also occur because
of excessive emotions due to beatings/mistreatment of Tolang Jae Village residents carried out by the Nias
tribe in Adian Goti Village.
1 INTRODUCTION
Citizens' clashes occurred on December 23
th
, 2013 in
Tolang Jae Tapanuli Village South between Nias
residents and Tolang Jae Village residents, Sayur
Matinggi District, became an event that was never
expected by many people, because their residential
areas that are also far apart and even in daily
activities so far in the economy running without any
obstacles. Besides, the South Tapanuli society, is a
very heterogeneous society from many aspects;
ethnicity, race, and even beliefs with relatively high
mobility of life since centuries ago. But apparently
live together in this area became a potential conflict
that was unavoidable at that time.
Ethnic riots stem from various problems and lead
to socio-economic inequality and are cultural
protests that provide strong evidence that social
order in plural life has been violated and destroyed.
Pelly (1999: 34). In fact, in many cases, conflict and
ethnic violence, the religion that breaks out in
society is more motivated by social, economic, and
political conditions than differences in belief. Even
religion, ethnicity, race, ethnicity are often used as
factors of legitimacy to move emotions and
primordial solidarity.
History proves, manipulation of religion,
ethnicity, and race for social, economic and political
interests is very dangerous to the life of a nation
state which are often used as a trigger for violence.
Munandar (2003) explained that social conflicts
often arise lately are indicators of the ongoing
process of social transformation, in the form of
representations of conflicting social values and
religious values as well as a shift in values and
control of strategic resources in the form of power or
politics and the economy. Meanwhile, Klinken
(2007), summarizing five cases of communal
violence in Indonesia; Sanggau Ledo and Sambas in
West Kalimantan, Sampit in Central Kalimantan,
Poso in Southeast Sulawesi, Ambon in Maluku and
Halmahera in Southeast Maluku. Klinken in seeing
violence between ethnicity and religion inherently
rejects the cultural approach. For Klinken there are
several variants of the cultural view of communal
violence which are all irrelevant, because (1) see the
long-term tendency of violence as a root in social
configurations in Indonesia, (2) ethnic prejudice
among people considered not modern, (3) political
intolerance, (4) klen loyalty and (5) primordialist
stereotyping.
2 REVIEW OF LITERATURE
2.1 Conflict
Ethnic conflict is a conflict that is related to urgent
problems regarding politics, economy, social,
culture, and territorial between two or more ethnic
Harahap, S., Badaruddin, ., Lubis, Z. and Zuska, F.
The Issue of Nias Land Ownership in Protected Forest Areas in South Tapanuli, Indonesia.
DOI: 10.5220/0010012000870092
In Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on Social and Political Development (ICOSOP 3 2019) - Social Engineering Governance for the People, Technology and Infrastructure in
Revolution Industry 4.0, pages 87-92
ISBN: 978-989-758-472-5
Copyright
c
2020 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
87
communities. (Brown, 1996). Ethnic conflicts are
often nuanced in violence, but they may not. Ethnic
conflicts in Bosnia and Angola have an enormous
dimension of violence. Meanwhile, Quebec's
demand for greater autonomy from the Canadian
government has almost no dimension of violence at
all. Many local conflicts in a community have no
ethnic basis at all. So, these conflicts cannot be
called ethnic conflicts. The battle between the
Cambodian government and the Khmer Rouge army
can never be called an ethnic conflict because the
nature of the conflict is an ideological problem, not
an ethnic problem.
According to Brown (1996), the word 'ethnic
conflict' is often used flexibly. In fact, in some of its
uses, this word is actually used to describe a type of
conflict that has no ethnic basis at all. An example is
the conflict in Somalia. Many parties categorize
conflicts that occur in Somalia as ethnic conflicts. In
fact, Somalia is the most homogeneous country in
terms of ethnicity in Africa. The conflict in Somalia
occurred not because of conflicts between ethnic
groups, but because of conflicts between one local
authority and another local authority, both of whom
came from the same ethnic group.
Here clearly a fairly specific definition is needed
of what is meant by ethnic conflict. According to
Smith (2006), ethnic community is a concept used to
describe a group of people who have a common
ancestor, the same social memory and some cultural
elements, while Rozi (2003) says that social conflict
occurs because of the poor condition of the structure
of social structures causing people get angry easily
with other people. Suseno (2003) says that there are
at least four factors supporting social conflict in
Indonesia.
First, cultural conflict, related to primordial
conflict based on religion, ethnicity, and region.
Second, related to the accumulation of feelings of
envy and envy. People are easily provoked by others
and they tend to behave exclusively on the basis of
religion and (ethnic) groups. Third, people's
behavior is influenced by a culture of violence in the
community. Fourth, the New Order political system
which positions military power which tends to solve
problems with an undemocratic approach.
Geertz (1996), sees ethnicity as a matter of
primordial sentiment, thus ethnicity is formed by
various primordial sentiments such as kinship,
religion and language. Although Geertz himself did
not pursue studies of inter-ethnic conflict in depth,
but from his position to see that ethnicity is built on
primordial sentiment, then actually the seeds of
inter-ethnic conflict can occur because of the
encouragement of the formation of ethnic identity
due to the development of parochialism,
communalism and racism. The methodological
implication of Geertz's theoretical position, known
as symbolic interpretation, is 'unit analysis' which is
community in its effort to see symbols that are
mutually agreed upon as a 'culture' by the people.
There are several characteristics of conflict
escalation, namely:
Disputes:
1. Tension, jealousy in the community
2. Increasing scarcity of general property resources
3. The daily conversation is about complaints
4. Conflict management mechanisms succeeded in
suppressing disputes.
Non-violent confrontation:
1. appears 'latent' conflict
2. Dividing lines develop, ie "we versus them"
3. Political leaders have sprung up
4. A daily conversation about "partiality"
5. The economic and / or political power of
individuals is used to encourage personal
demands
6. The parties to the conflict no longer use the
old/tradition approach and turn to 'external'
institutional or legal mechanisms.
Escalation to violence:
1. A part of the population mobilized in the name
of "cause"
2. Tradition, institutional and legal approaches have
proven to fail to control disputes
3. Open expressions of hostility and anger
4. Everyday conversation contains demands and
threats
5. The negative language of the general population
reflects its political leaders
6. Parties in conflict raise their demands and
broaden their goals
7. Warring parties attract allies from outside the
direct population.
Open violence:
1. Violence begins with acts of sporadic aggression
and isolated against individuals and / or sabotage
of property.
2. Attacks become coordinated
3. Acts of violence are always associated with "the
other party"
4. A sense of deadlock develops
2.2 Relations between the State and
Society in Conflict Resolution
Migdal (1988) in the theory of state and society
relations states that the ability of a country to
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achieve change in society requires the role of their
leaders to strive to make state planning, public
policy and action, including the ability to enter into
involving the community, regulating social relations,
and managing existing resources properly. Changes
in the community in this regard can be related to
conflict resolution efforts.
For Migdal (1988), the ability of the state to
make changes in society requires the role of leaders
to carry out state planning, public policies (policies),
and actions (actions). That ability includes the
capacity to enter into the community (to-penetrate),
make rules of social relations (regulate social
relationship), collect resources (extract resources)
and use resources in accordance with predetermined
ways (appropriate use resources in the determined
ways). A strong country is characterized by a high
ability to complement state planning, public policy
and action, while a weak country has a low ability in
the capacity to enter into society, make social rules,
gather resources and use resources in a way that has
been determined.
Some indicators of state and community relations
(modeling of state society relations) are:
1. Compliance. Use of compliance by living
sanctions to control society.
2. Participation. Participation is related to
volunteerism and action in carrying out state life.
3. Legitimating (validity). In connection with the
acceptance of society (acceptance) even approval
(approbation) with the rules of the game made by
the state, social control as a true and good.
2.3 Theories about Ethnic Groups
According to Koentjaraningrat (1985), a group is an
individual unit that is bound, inter alia: (a) a system
of norms that regulates the behavior of group
citizens; (b) a sense of group personality based on all
citizens; (c) repeated gathering of group members'
activities; (d) a system of rights and obligations
governing interaction between group members; (e) a
leader or administrator who organizes group
activities; (f) a system of rights and obligations for
individuals towards certain productive assets,
consumptive assets or heirlooms. One such group is
the kinship (clan). The big clan (clan group) is a
kinship group consisting of all the descendants of an
ancestor who are counted through a lineage of the
same type is the descendants of male and female
citizens.
Meanwhile, ethnic groups (ethnic groups)
according to Koentjaraningrat (1999) are: groups of
people who are bound by awareness and identity of
'cultural entities' while consciousness and identity
are (not always) strengthened by language. The
cultural entity in question is sourced from the
relevant cultural citizens. This means, the culture of
Toba is different from the culture of Simalungun or
Karo even with Malay or Minangkabau, each of
which has a special personality and identity
(particular system) in accordance with their
respective cultural entities.
Furthermore, Barth (1988) asserts that ethnic
groups can be known as cultural units and as
structures. As a cultural unit, ethnic groups can be
observed from: i) the continuity of the cultural unit
and ii) the existence of factors that influence the
formation of that cultural unit. And vice versa, as an
order, ethnic groups show the existence of a group
characteristic that is astrictive and can be estimated
in terms of the background of its origin. The group
will be formed if someone uses his ethnic identity in
categorizing himself with others in the purpose of
interaction.
Nevertheless, social interaction and contact will
not necessarily eliminate local identity. Someone
who makes contact, because in interacting and social
contact requires the same sign that can be accepted
by both parties, namely the formation of certain
social systems. Such interactions will not result in
mixing with cultural change. The similarity of the
sign is needed because of the mutual dependence
(mutualism) between the two parties.
According to Barth (1988) stated that in general,
ethnic groups are known as a population that; (1)
biologically capable of breeding and surviving; (2)
have the same cultural values and be aware of a
sense of togetherness in a cultural form; (3) forming
their own communication and interaction networks;
(4) determine the characteristics of their own groups
that are accepted by other groups and can be
distinguished from other population groups.
Furthermore, Barth sees that ethnicity is formed
through social interaction, so this is where the
concept of ethnic boundary is born. Conflict
between ethnic groups can occur because of
differences in the ownership of means of production
that affect relations between ethnic groups.
Klinken (2001), by borrowing the theory of
Doug McAdam's work suggests that Dynamics of
Contention, where identity can be distinguished in
two types, namely: (1) identity of order and (2)
separate identity. The identity of the order shows the
characteristics of various kinds of social relations
that are built up while the separate identities are the
characteristics of special and narrow relationships.
The Issue of Nias Land Ownership in Protected Forest Areas in South Tapanuli, Indonesia
89
When these two identities are involved in a battle,
they both tend to show different 'repertoires'.
Furthermore, Klinken said that battles involving
embedded identities tended to prioritize lower-level
actors with repertoires that were: 1) particularistic -
especially related to specific groups, problems or
places, 2) small scale - involving a small number of
people, 3) directly not too mediated by
intermediaries who have special rights. Such battles
look spontaneous. Conversely, battles involving
separate identities tend to involve elites and present
activities that make demands, meaning that: 1)
Modular - not tied to a particular place and so on, 2)
large scale - thus requires broad coordination, and 3)
brokered - involving entrepreneurs, politics and
communication networks.
3 METHOD
To explain the conflict between ethnic groups in
Tolang Jae Village, South Tapanuli Regency in
2013, researchers used a descriptive qualitative
research approach to explain the focus of the
problem from informant sources, data and literature.
Qualitative research can explain the naturalistic
perspective and interpretive perspective of human
experience (Denzin, 1994). Qualitative research is
research that aims to understand phenomena about
what is experienced by research subjects such as
behavior, perception, motivation, actions, etc.
holistically and by means of descriptions in the form
of words and language, in a special natural context
and with utilizing various natural methods.
4 DISCUSSION
Since 1982 Nias people have settled in Tolang Jae
Village and received permission from the local
Village Head. They borrowed land to be used as a
means of production to meet their daily needs, but
over time the number of Nias tribes in Tolang Jae
Village was increasing day by day, causing the need
for land to increase as well.
The history of the Nias tribe who settled in
Adian Goti (Dolok) in Tolang Jae Village has been
in the 1980s and has owned land that was bought or
compensated by local residents.
This land is the main source of life and
livelihood from gardening/farming. The Nias people
have become citizens who have KTP, KK and they
obey the law and pay taxes and interact socially and
culturally with local customs. Because so far it has
been running normally, harmonious and harmonious
with other residents.
The Tolang Jae Village conflict occurs because
the utilization of natural resources occurs not only
vertically between the local population and the Nias
tribe, with the government and officials but also
horizontally between the Nias tribe and the residents
of the surrounding villages who have claims and
links of interest to the forest area in Adian Goti
Village.
According to an interview with Yasmin Gea, in
February 2018 said that:
"The events of 2013 between Nias people and
people in Tolang Jae. In my opinion, it is caused
by social jealousy, but the issue is directed
towards SARA issues, even though the villagers
there want to control the land of our people Nias.
The previous stage can be seen by the village
community's deliberation efforts when dividing
Nias land, for example, if the land is 10 hectares,
then 7 hectares are equal to villagers, 3 hectares
are Nias people. I have seen about 400 hectares of
land on the mountains managed by our people in
Nias.”
From a social stand point, the conflict that
occurred between Tolang Jae Village residents and
Adian Goti Village resulted in several actions aimed
at cornering the Adian Goti community by limiting
and severing social relations, removing the residents
of Adian Goti Hamlet as part of the administration
of Tolang Jae Village and all rights and obligations
they were removed by the village administration as
residents residing in the Tolang Jae Village, and the
Tolang Jae Village community avoided interaction
or contact with the Adian Goti society.
From an economic perspective, the absence of
social interaction between the residents of Adian
Goti Hamlet with the residents of Tolang Jae Village
has severed economic relations in the form of trade
in agricultural products. Trading activities and the
buying and selling process require an interaction
process. The view presented above, is contrary to the
conditions found in the traditional market in Tolang
Jae Village, which was opened. The changes that
have taken place here, the people of Adian Goti sub-
village are no longer seen trading in the market.
A number of cases of conflicts over land in the
region that appeared confronting the Nias tribe with
residents of surrounding villages began to raise their
awareness about the status and strength of their
rights to manage land in the area.
Based on an interview with Ramadhan Siregar in
April 2018, he mentioned:
"They settled and opened land for plantations to
meet their daily needs. Regarding the expansion of
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the area, we do not know clearly the boundaries of
land use given by the government for the Sayur
Matinggi Subdistrict, South Tapanuli Regency.
Obviously, the residents feel disturbed by the
people who run and make policies. The land that
we mean is customary rights and village rights; it
is natural that they use it for life. The presence of
the Nias tribe people from various regions, they
settled and settled and opened the plantation land
that they bought from the forest owner
community. The legality of the land owned by the
cultivators is evidenced by a statement of land
expenditure. Form of validity of landowners as
cultivators. The Village Government is only
limited to knowing the act on the sale and
purchase of land meant by proof of a certificate of
land management ".
They are trying to get any documents that can
strengthen their claims on the land being managed
and on their residence status in the nearby villages.
The letter of sale and purchase or compensation for
land is a piece of document they hold as evidence of
their rights, even though the documents are very
weak in terms of formal law. Identity Card (KTP) as
domicile and population identity is another
document that they try to be able to have, at least by
a family head.
Nias tribes also often come shopping on
Wednesday and Saturday to the Tolang market and
are also said to have turned on trading activities in
the market. The economy of the Nias tribe is
increasingly increasing. This can be seen from their
increasingly developing lives, they are able to send
their children to school, able to buy two-wheeled
vehicles. While the indigenous people of economic
life are increasingly declining over time. Such
conditions often lead to jealousy between indigenous
people and migrants.
Local community members or indigenous
residents in the three villages around the Tolang Jae
area differ in their position and interests when
dealing with the fact that the Nias tribe has cleared
forests in the area more than two decades ago.
However, they have the same position and interests
when faced with the fact that the status of the forest
area in Tolang Jae is a state forest that functions as a
protection and conservation.
The local people and Nias tribe alike must deal
with institutions and officials who have the authority
to administer state forests, which in this case are
represented by the Government of South Tapanuli
Regency. Residents do not know clearly that the two
government institutions have different authority
limits in managing state forests in the Tolang Jae
area, namely protected forest areas which are the
authority of the South Tapanuli Regency
Government through the local Forest Service. In the
understanding of citizens, it is quite simple that state
forests are managed by the government, and
substantively there is nothing wrong with this
understanding.
The unclear rules regarding the Nias tribe in the
protected forest area and Nias tribal population data
collection are a serious problem. Based on the
results of an interview with Ali Yamin Lubis in
February 2018 he said, in fact the events of 2013
were because the village head had initially given
KTPs and KKs to Nias people, so that Nias people
continued to grow without knowing how many of
them now. When they want to be expelled, surely
they make resistance. In addition, they have many in
number; they also have families who defend it.
This kind of incident is deliberately blown away
like the Church was set on fire. Though the proof is
not, polluting the river with pig manure. If we look
at the distance of the Aek Siondop river, it actually
goes to the Nias settlement, but that is very far away.
This is we do not know what behind this motive.
When dealing with law, this issue is raised. The
village head was wrong why they were given a KTP
and KK. Even though they were just gardeners, now
we can't do anything else. Why do we let outsiders
come in and out without permission, we cannot
blame everything on Nias people.
There are a number of interesting things to
consider about the relationship between local
residents and the Nias tribe in Tolang Jae Village.
Most of the economic land and employment that
should be owned by local residents. Finally captured
by the Nias tribe. This fact ultimately creates a
contradictory social climate and thickens the
primordial sensitivity of local communities. The
impact of the Nias tribe is very much felt in rural
areas. The Nias tribe tends to settle in mountain
areas. Because there are real economic
opportunities. Their success in managing the land is
a problem for local residents in Tolang Jae Village.
While the area is an area of lindung forest and ulayat
land and the agreement used to be a reason for the
villagers to question the position of the Nias tribe.
5 CONCLUSION
The Nias tribe who live in Adian Goti (dolok) in
Tolang Jae Village have been in the 1980s and have
owned land that was bought or compensated by local
residents, known to the Village Head, even though
most of it has been dictated. This land is the main
source of life and livelihood from gardening /
The Issue of Nias Land Ownership in Protected Forest Areas in South Tapanuli, Indonesia
91
farming. The Nias tribe have become citizens who
have Id Card (KTP), Family Card (KK) and they
obey the law and pay taxes and interact socially and
culturally (local customs) which have been running
normally, harmoniously and harmoniously with
other residents. The conflict occurred because the
residents of Tolang Jae Village did not fulfill the
demands of the Nias tribe. Conflicts also occur
because of excessive emotions due to beatings /
mistreatment of Tolang Jae Village residents carried
out by the Nias tribe in Adian Goti Village.
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