| Subject: The Secret War Against the
Defenseless People of W Papua
The Secret War Against the Defenseless People of West Papua
by John Pilger
www.dissidentvoice.org
March 9, 2006
First Published in The New Statesman
In 1993, I and four others travelled clandestinely across East Timor to
gather evidence of the genocide committed by the Indonesian dictatorship.
Such was the depth of silence about this tiny country that the only map I
could find before I set out was one with blank spaces stamped "Relief
Data Incomplete." Yet few places had been as defiled and abused by
murderous forces. Not even Pol Pot had succeeded in dispatching,
proportionally, as many people as the Indonesian tyrant Suharto had done
in collusion with the "international community."
In East Timor, I found a country littered with graves, their black
crosses crowding the eye: crosses on peaks, crosses in tiers on the
hillsides, crosses beside the road. They announced the murder of entire
communities, from babies to the elderly. In 2000, when the East Timorese,
displaying a collective act of courage with few historical parallels,
finally won their freedom, the United Nations set up a truth commission;
on 24 January, its 2,500 pages were published. I have never read anything
like it. Using mostly official documents, it recounts in painful detail
the entire disgrace of East Timor's blood sacrifice. It says that 180,000
East Timorese were killed by Indonesian troops or died from enforced
starvation. It describes the "primary roles" in this carnage of
the governments of the United States, Britain and Australia. America's
"political and military support were fundamental" in crimes that
ranged from "mass executions to forced resettlements, sexual and
other horrific forms of torture as well as abuse against children."
Britain, a co-conspirator in the invasion, was the main arms supplier. If
you want to see through the smokescreen currently around Iraq, and
understand true terrorism, read this document.
As I read it, my mind went back to the letters Foreign Office officials
wrote to concerned members of the public and MPs following the showing of
my film Death of a Nation. Knowing the truth, they denied that
British-supplied Hawk jets were blowing straw-roofed villages to bits and
that British-supplied Heckler and Koch machine guns were finishing off the
occupants. They even lied about the scale of suffering.
And it is all happening again, wrapped in the same silence and with the
"international community" playing the same part as backer and
beneficiary of the crushing of a defenceless people. Indonesia's brutal
occupation of West Papua, a vast, resource-rich province -- stolen from
its people, like East Timor -- is one of the great secrets of our time.
Recently, the Australian minister of "communications", Senator
Helen Coonan, failed to place it on the map of her own region, as if it
did not exist.
An estimated 100,000 Papuans, or 10 percent of the population, have
been killed by the Indonesian military. This is a fraction of the true
figure, according to refugees. In January, 43 West Papuans reached
Australia's north coast after a hazardous six-week journey in a dugout.
They had no food, and had dribbled their last fresh water into their
children's mouths. "We knew," said Herman Wainggai, the leader,
"that if the Indonesian military had caught us, most of us would have
died. They treat West Papuans like animals. They kill us like animals.
They have created militias and jihads to do just that. It is the same as
East Timor."
For over a year, an estimated 6,000 people have been hiding in dense
jungle after their villages and crops were destroyed by Indonesian Special
Forces. Raising the West Papuan flag is "treason". Two men are
serving 15 and ten-year sentences for merely trying. Following an attack
on one village, a man was presented as an "example" and petrol
poured over him and his hair set alight.
When the Netherlands gave Indonesia its independence in 1949, it argued
that West Papua was a separate geographic and ethnic entity with a
distinctive national character. A report published last November by the
Institute of Netherlands History in The Hague revealed that the Dutch had
secretly recognized the "unmistakable beginning of the formation of a
Papuan state", but were bullied by the administration of John F
Kennedy to accept "temporary" Indonesian control over what a
White House adviser called "a few thousand miles of cannibal
land".
The West Papuans were conned. The Dutch, Americans, British and
Australians backed an "Act of Free Choice" ostensibly run by the
UN. The movements of a UN monitoring team of 25 were restricted by the
Indonesian military and they were denied interpreters. In 1969, out of a
population of 800,000, some 1,000 West Papuans "voted". All were
selected by the Indonesians. At gunpoint, they "agreed" to
remain under the rule of General Suharto -- who had seized power in 1965
in what the CIA later described as "one of the worst mass murders of
the late 20th century." In 1981, the Tribunal on Human Rights in West
Papua, held in exile, heard from Eliezer Bonay, Indonesia's first governor
of the province, that approximately 30,000 West Papuans had been murdered
during 1963-69. Little of this was reported in the west.
The silence of the "international community" is explained by
the fabulous wealth of West Papua. In November 1967, soon after Suharto
had consolidated his seizure of power, the Time-Life Corporation sponsored
an extraordinary conference in Geneva. The participants included the most
powerful capitalists in the world, led by the banker David Rockefeller.
Sitting opposite them were Suharto's men, known as the "Berkeley
mafia," as several had enjoyed US government scholarships to the
University of California at Berkeley. Over three days, the Indonesian
economy was carved up, sector by sector. An American and European
consortium was handed West Papua's nickel; American, Japanese and French
companies got its forests. However, the prize -- the world's largest gold
reserve and third-largest copper deposit, literally a mountain of copper
and gold -- went to the US mining giant Freeport-McMoran. On the board is
Henry Kissinger, who, as US secretary of state, gave the "green
light" to Suharto to invade East Timor, says the Dutch report.
Freeport is today probably the biggest single source of revenue for the
Indonesian regime: the company is said to have handed Jakarta 33 billion
dollars between 1992 and 2004. Little of this has reached the people of
West Papua. Last December 55 people reportedly starved to death in the
district of Yahukimo. The Jakarta Post noted the "horrible
irony" of hunger in such an "immensely rich" province.
According to the World Bank, "38 per cent of Papua's population is
living in poverty, more than double the national average."
The Freeport mines are guarded by Indonesia's special forces, who are
among the world's most seasoned terrorists, as their documented crimes in
East Timor demonstrate. Known as Kopassus, they have been armed by the
British and trained by the Australians. Last December, the Howard
government in Canberra announced that it would resume
"co-operation" with Kopassus at the Australian SAS base near
Perth. In an inversion of the truth, the then Australian defence minister,
Senator Robert Hill, described Kopassus as having "the most effective
capability to respond to a counter-hijack or hostage recovery
threat." The files of human-rights organizations overflow with
evidence of Kopassus's terrorism. On 6 July 1998, on the West Papuan
island of Biak, just north of Australia, special forces massacred more
than 100 people, most of them women.
However, the Indonesian military has not been able to crush the popular
Free Papua Movement (OPM). Since 1965, almost alone, the OPM has reminded
the Indonesians, often audaciously, that they are invaders. In the past
two months, the resistance has caused the Indonesians to rush more troops
to West Papua. Two British-supplied Tactica armoured personnel carriers
fitted with water cannon have arrived from Jakarta. These were first
delivered during the late Robin Cook's "ethical dimension" in
foreign policy. Hawk fighter-bombers, made by BAE Systems, have been used
against West Papuan villages.
The fate of the 43 asylum-seekers in Australia is precarious. In
contravention of international law, the Howard government has moved them
from the mainland to Christmas Island, which is part of an Australian
"exclusion zone" for refugees. We should watch carefully what
happens to these people. If the history of human rights is not the history
of great power's impunity, the UN must return to West Papua, as it did
finally to East Timor.
Or do we always have to wait for the crosses to multiply? (The
Dissident Voice)
http://www.dissidentvoice.org/Mar06/Pilger09.htm
see also
Ed McWilliams:
Response to Efforts to Deny Crimes Against Humanity in West Papua
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