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Subject: Obama Has the Power to Help Papua, the ‘Weak Man’ Under
Indonesian Rule (by Andreas Harso no, HRW Consultant)
From Joyo
The Jakarta Globe
February 22, 2010
Op-Ed
Obama Has the Power to Help Papua, the Weak Man' Under Indonesian Rule
by Andreas Harsono
In Jakarta in the late 1960s, a young Barack Obama noticed his
stepfather's great unease and silence about his one-year military service
in New Guinea. Lolo Soetoro, his stepfather, did not like to talk about
his time there. He did tell young Barack about how leeches got into his
boots in New Guinea's jungles. "They crawled inside your army boots
while you're hiking through the swamps. At night, when you take off your
socks, they're stuck there, fat with blood. You sprinkle salt on them and
they die, but you still have to dig them out with a hot knife." The
leeches created a series of indented scars on Lolo's legs.
In his book "Dreams From My Father," Obama asked Lolo,
"Have you ever seen a man killed?"
Lolo was surprised by the question.
Have you?" Obama asked again.
Yes."
Was it bloody?"
Yes."
Obama thought for a moment. "Why was the man killed?"
Lolo answered, "Because he was weak. That's usually enough. Men
take advantage of weakness in other men. They're just like countries in
that way. The strong man takes the weak man's land. He makes the weak man
work in his field. If the weak man's woman is pretty, the strong man will
take her." Lolo paused, then asked his young stepson, "Which
would you rather be?"
Obama didn't answer the question.
Lolo finally remarked, "Better to be strong."
Philosophers around the world could devote volumes to that simple
question. But as Obama prepares to visit Indonesia in March, some facts
are worth pondering.
Fact No. 1: Barack Obama, the little boy who used to live in Jakarta,
is one of the most powerful men in the world. Obama now lives in the White
House, not the little house in Menteng. And he is going to revisit the
home of his youth to sign a strategic partnership" with Indonesia.
Fact No. 2: New Guinea is now called Papua. Its western part is legally
a part of Indonesia since the controversial UN-approved Act of Free Choice
in 1969, in which 1,054 Papuans, hand-picked by Jakarta, voted unanimously
to join Indonesia. Papua, to use Lolo's words, is still the weak man under
Indonesian rule.
Human rights abuses by Indonesian security forces remain common.
Peaceful protesters continue to receive long prison sentences. Papua is
off-limits to most independent outside observers. And it remains poor and
underdeveloped, despite the fact that it has abundant natural resources,
including natural gas, minerals and timber. Papua has the worst poverty in
Indonesia, with more than 80 percent of households living below the
poverty line. Papua has the biggest HIV problem in the country, with
infection rates 15 times the national average.
Fact No. 3: Indonesia's president, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, also has a
close connection to Papua. Indonesia's military commander in Papua in the
late 1960s was Brig. Gen. Sarwo Edhie Wibowo, who had previously led a
bloody military campaign against Indonesian communists in Java. He would
later become the father-in-law of a young Army captain named Susilo
Bambang Yudhoyono.
The human rights situation in Papua remains poor. Human Rights Watch
has for many years urged the Indonesian government to stop prosecuting
peaceful Papuan protesters. We have asked the government to open Papua to
international journalists, human rights researchers and other independent
observers. If all is well in Papua, as the government claims, why do the
Indonesian police and military require a surat jalan, or "walking
permit," for any foreigner visiting Papua?
Since the 1970s, political tensions and abuses by the Indonesian
security forces have helped create a climate of fear in Papua. This
continues to the present. Impunity remains a huge problem. For example, in
November 2001, the Indonesian Army's Special Forces (Kopassus) kidnapped
and killed Papuan separatist leader Theys Eluay in Jayapura. The
then-commander of Kopassus in Papua, Lt. Col. Hartomo, denied involvement
in the murder. But international outrage prompted the Indonesian Military
Police to investigate.
In 2003, a court in Surabaya found seven Kopassus soldiers and
officers, including Lt. Col. Hartomo, guilty of mistreatment and battery
leading to Eluay's death, but crucially not of murder. Sentences served by
the seven ranged from two to three and a half years. But Hartomo was not
discharged from the Army. Instead, he is now Col. Hartomo, the head of
Kopassus Group 1 in Serang, just a three-hour drive from Jakarta.
More than 130 people are currently imprisoned throughout Indonesia for
peaceful expression, particularly in Papua and the Moluccas. Some have
been sentenced to lengthy prison terms, including Papuan activist Filep
Karma, who is serving a 15-year sentence for raising the Papuan Morning
Star flag in December 2004 in Jayapura. School teacher Johan Teterisa is
serving 15 years for raising the Southern Moluccas Republic flag in June
2007 in Ambon.
For decades, the Indonesian authorities have treated the raising of the
Morning Star and Southern Moluccas Republic flags as a crime because they
are pro-independence symbols. Article 6 of Government Regulation No.
77/2007 prohibits the display of the Morning Star flag in Papua, as well
as the South Maluku Republic flag in Ambon, and the Crescent Moon flag in
Aceh. But these prosecutions and the laws violate internationally
protected rights to freedom of expression and peaceful assembly codified
in the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, which
Indonesia ratified in 2006.
As one who knows Indonesia, the long history of conflict in Papua,
which impacted his stepfather, and how important basic freedoms are to the
struggle of a minority for equality and access to political power,
President Obama is the right man at the right time to ask the Indonesian
government to release all prisoners who have peacefully exercised their
rights to freedom of expression and assembly and to repeal laws that
criminalize speech. He can explain how tolerance of dissent is fundamental
to a democracy.
If Obama doesn't act on Papua, perhaps it will be because young Obama
grew up in Jakarta, not in Papua. If he had, he would likely see the
Papuan question from the point of view of the weak man," of a victim.
But if Obama does act, maybe then in Indonesia there will be a recognition
that a strong man is one who assists the weak.
Andreas Harsono is an Indonesia consultant for Human Rights Watch.
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