| Subject: Scott Burchill on West Papua and
ETimor parallels
SCOTT BURCHILL, INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS, DEAKIN UNIVERSITY FORUM FOR
WEST PAPUA, RMIT UNIVERSITY, Victoria, Australia 15 February 2006
I am grateful for the opportunity to speak to you briefly tonight about
this important subject. For those of you disheartened by the immensity of
the struggle for freedom in West Papua, let me say at the outset that I
still have vivid memories of addressing meetings just like this many on
a smaller scale throughout the 1980s and 1990s when East Timor was our
priority. This is how change is ultimately effected.
We were told then, as we are now, that we were wasting our time on a
“lost cause.” Our critics were wrong then and they seem determined to
repeat their mistakes today.
The picture of human rights abuses in West Papua is all too
depressingly familiar, especially to those who know what went on in East
Timor between 1975 & 1999. It has been:
- systematic & state sponsored (more accurately state terrorism,
but of the kind that doesn’t excite or even interest Western political
elites, including the use of militias to target independence activists)
- grave (bordering on genocide according to a Yale University Law
School study, perhaps 400,000 unnatural deaths over four decades)
- crimes against the West Papuans have been committed with _impunity_
(no appetite for prosecution in the Indonesian legal system, no
accountability)
- characterised by political persecution of independence activists (OPM
clearly the crucial issue of the moment for those who recently arrived
here by boat)
- involved cultural attacks against Melanesians (including attempts to
alter the demographic balance in the territory through transmigration)
- also involving resource exploitation (the enormous mineral wealth of
the country should have made the West Papuans the wealthiest people on the
planet, not some of the poorest) and environmental destruction (pollution
of river systems, illegal logging, and so on)
The good news is that these crimes have been extensively documented in
studies by Yale University’s Law School and the centre for Peace and
Conflict Studies at the University of Sydney, amongst others. No-one,
especially neighbouring governments, can plead ignorance about the plight
of the indigenous people in the territory. In my view, the evidence of
human rights violations in West Papua has been more systematically
recorded and comprehensively documented than they were in East Timor
during its period of Indonesian occupation. But then again, the crimes
have been going on much longer.
This means that although the Department of Immigration must assess all
claims for refugee status on a case by case basis, it can be in no doubt
about the context in which the 43 asylum seekers are making their appeals.
No-one, including the Indonesian Defence Minister and who knows even
the Foreign Editor of /The Australian/, now denies that these crimes took
place. Importantly, they continue today and have not been mitigated by
Indonesia’s recent democratic transition.
It should be interesting to watch events in Canberra. It’s not often
that one department of state in this case the Department of Immigration
and Multicultural Affairs - gets to pass judgement on another department
of state the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade. Vanstone v Downer
for the South Australian heavyweight title!
Let there be no mistake about what is at stake here. This is not just
an assessment of the international legal rights of 43 people. It is a
judgement about both the state of political freedom in Indonesia’s
eastern province and the success or failure of Australian diplomacy
towards Indonesia since 1969.
The granting of refugee status will formerly acknowledge that Jakarta
is guilty of crime against humanity in West Papua. The refusal to grant
refugee status to the 43 would not only further damage our international
reputation especially with the UNHCR but would confirm yet again the
triumph of tawdry and myopic politics over humanitarian concerns and
ethical obligations.
Successive Australian Governments have adopted the mistaken belief that
political stability across the Indonesian archipelago which they
believe is bedeviled by inherent centrifugal forces can be secured
through military repression. Precisely the opposite is true. Military
repression is a cause of political fragmentation and secession in
Indonesia. A few points about this deserve elaboration:
- fears about the Balkanisation of Indonesia is irrational and
unfounded (beyond Aceh & WP, what?)
- promoting stability in a territory is meaningless unless you
understand what is being stabilised (in WP repression and human rights
violations)
- Canberra looks foolish when it appears more committed to West Papua’
retention within the Republic of Indonesia that the people of the province
are
- the political boundaries of states are not immutable, they change all
the time (USSR, Germany, Yugoslavia, ET, Czechoslovakia - Palestine,
Korea, Cyprus, Kurds) they are not as sacred or sacrosanct as often
claimed
- self-determination is not a once and forever event people have the
right to reconsider their political arrangements, especially when the
bonds of nationalism are broken by state violence and exploitation
- before we consider the possible consequences of altering
stateboundaries, we need to first ask: what are the human costs of
maintaining the status quo? Does Australia believe what is going on in WP
is tolerable and sustainable?
- Canberra should also consider answering the one question they always
try to avoid asking: what do the people of West Papua want?
Now let me make some remarks about our responsibilities in this issue.
1) Outsiders shouldn’t reflexively support independence for West
Papua or integration with PNG or Indonesia or any other option. Outsiders
should support the right of the people of West Papua to decide their own
political arrangements their right to self-determination. The freedom
they are entitled to is the freedom to choose their political future.
This is the political principle at stake here. This right to fashion
their own preferred forms of political community has been denied to
them by outsiders:
- Indonesia’s territorial claim as inheritor state of the Dutch East
Indies (paradox of sanctifying the borders of a colonial system they
despised and violently resisted)
- the UN’s complicity in holding and validating a sham plebiscite
the Act of Free Choice in 1969, which has no moral or legal legitimacy
- the diplomatic preferences and conveniences of others, including
Australia, which reinforce Indonesia’s territorial claim (as we did with
ET), thus denying the West Papuans the opportunity to make their choices.
Our complicity extends to the tolerance, and therefore de facto
encouragement, of serious international crimes.
2) If the West Papuans are to enjoy the rights we take for granted,
their struggle needs to be internationalised. This will not be easy. The
East Timorese eventually received the patronage of their former colonial
overlords - the Portuguese. The West Papuans cannot expect similar levels
of support from the Dutch. A starting point is for the United Nations to
acknowledge the error of its ways in 1969 and revisit the issue so that an
authentic expression of political intention (beyond the rejection of
special autonomy) can be made. This is a responsibility New York cannot
avoid. But which state will sponsor this? A Scandinavian state?
3) The demilitarisation of the province, an end to corruption,
terrorism, exploitation, and cultural repression in the territory,
together with investigations into crimes against humanity committed in
West Papua must take place simultaneously and regardless of what
transpires in the short term on the political front. Accountability for
these crimes is a pre-requisite to any political solution. These are
matters of justice.
4) Australia should stop buckling to pressure from the political elite
in Java which gets nervous each time its crimes in West Papua are exposed
to the international community. Questions of Indonesia’s territorial
integrity are no business of Australia’s. Ritualised commitments need
not be made each time the Australian foreign minister or Prime Minister
visits the country, nor should they be written into any future bilateral
security agreement.
Why does Jakarta have so little confidence in the commitment of some of
its citizens to the Republic that it needs to elicit Canberra’s support
in persuading them otherwise? As if we have either influence or the best
interests of the West Papuans at heart.
Canberra should be telling Jakarta that it has a problem in WP because
of its own behaviour there and not because of unruly activists in the
province or solidarity groups in Australia. Until it civilianises
political rule in the territory, enforces the rule of law there and treats
its indigenous inhabitants with dignity, nothing will change.
For its part, the Australian Government should reflect on the recently
released UN report into Indonesia’s horrendous behaviour in East Timor,
its complicity in those crimes, and ask whether it has learnt from its
diplomatic mistakes there or is determined to repeat them in West Papua.
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