West Papua: Australia Should Take Initiative
Thursday, 30 August 2007

It has been suggested that Australian Prime Minister John Howard should build upon his reputation as a ‘peacemaker’ when he travels to Indonesia by discussing the situation in West Papua.

Below are extracts from an article published by Jake Lynch for The Canberra Times:

PRIME Minister John Howard's handshake with George W. Bush at the APEC summit will be greeted with howls of protest as his welcome for a President widely seen as a warmonger. But it is in his meeting with Indonesia's leader, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, that the Prime Minister's reputation, at least in our own quadrant of the globe, as a peacemaker will be at stake.

At the top of the two men's agenda is or should be the worsening plight of West Papua. If the Howard Government can improve the prospects there, it would add to a record of constructive interventions which any leader would be proud to carry off into the sunset or into a new term in office.

[…]

The phrase "human rights" does not even crop up in the new security pact Australia has agreed with Indonesia, however.

Under Yudhoyono, Indonesia signed up to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, with its famous Article 19 guaranteeing the right to hold opinions without interference, and to freedom of expression, including the freedom to "seek, receive and impart information and ideas of all kinds, regardless of frontiers, either orally, in writing or in print, in the form of art, or through any other media".

Clearly, then, no more Papuans should now be thrown in jail for non-violent protest, raising flags or making speeches. But listen to the new military commander for the province, Colonel Burhanuddin Siagian. "Anyone who tends towards separatism will be crushed, we are not afraid of human rights." Siagian, incidentally, has been indicted for crimes against humanity in East Timor, but never tried.

Up to now, the Howard Government, like many in the international community, has invested its hopes in a special autonomy deal for West Papua, but a recent conference at Sydney University heard from senior Papuan speakers that people have lost faith in this. Extra revenues are coming in, but, far from delivering real benefits visible in everyday life, they are being squandered on bureaucracy as administrative layers proliferate.

Above all, nothing is being done to rein in the military. To the contrary, in fact, recent reports suggest that the traditional means of the Suharto dictatorship for removing its enemies their sudden disappearance is being revived under Siagian. Ever more troops are coming in displaced, as they now are, from Timor and Aceh.

Howard needs to encourage Yudhoyono to seek dialogue with the people of West Papua, and to enable it by sticking to his commitments under the international covenant. A friendly future historian might argue that an Australian Prime Minister had no choice but to show willing when the Bush Administration wanted political cover for the invasion of Iraq, though Howard carefully kept Australia's commitment to a minimum and its troops out of harm's way.

In his own backyard, meanwhile, he could enjoy a strong reputation as a peacemaker. Bringing hope to the people of West Papua might just seal it.

Associate Professor Jake Lynch is director of the Centre for Peace and Conflict Studies at the University of Sydney.

 
 
Environment
Tolerance
Self-determination
Nonviolence
Human Rights
Democracy

Coming Soon! 


Donate
 Right Now - 10 December Human Rights Day

Click Here


Conference on Demographic Change

Speak Out

IX General Assembly

De Facto States

Model UNPO 2008 


 
 
   
Webdesign by Zietuwel.nl