Papuan suport Freedom |
Huffingtonpost.com The world's largest archipelago -- an enormous place of more than
17,500 islands -- is among the world's most fractious places. It's the
many islands that make up Indonesia, currently the powerhouse of
recession-proof Southeast Asia, where growing middle classes are
spurring rapid economic growth that, unlike in the West, is not largely
based on debt.
Jayapura Voice baptist,-- On
For more than three decades, the country was ruled by the dictator
Suharto, who was deposed amid roiling economic calamity in 1998 that I
witnessed firsthand as mobs bayed and tanks patrolled the streets of
Jakarta. Among the first acts of his successor, his then-vice president
B.J. Habibie, now a resident of Germany, performed was to permit East
Timor, which Indonesia invaded in 1975, an independence referendum in
which it voted overwhelmingly to break free. It is now officially known
as the Democratic Republic of Timor-Leste, and also notable for being
one of the world's smallest and poorest nations.
Successive Indonesian governments grappled with a bloody insurgency
in the northernmost part of the country, Aceh, in the province of North
Sumatra, a traditionally Muslim place where the Free Aceh Movement had
for decades been trying to create their own state. The Asian tsunami of
2004 that flattened the province and killed at least 130,000 people
there gave them their wish, at least partly. Aceh is now a special
autonomous region of Indonesia, ruled by Islamic law and gaining
headlines for such practices as enacting legislation to stone adulterers
to death.
Elsewhere in the giant country of 204 million people, the Republic of
South Maluku has been trying to establish itself as a separate entity
since the 1950s, but has gained little traction. However, further to the
East, on the island that Indonesia shares with Papua New Guinea, a more
robust rebellion has been brewing ever since it was annexed in 1969
following a United Nations-observed vote known as the Act of Free Choice
-- essentially a show of hands among a hand-picked group and before the
military -- that has since been widely dismissed as a sham.
Jakarta maintains a strong military presence in this province of
primitive tribes, many of whose menfolk wear nothing other than gourds,
or penis sheaths, and it is largely off-limits to foreigners,
particularly prying journalists, as had long been the case in warring
Aceh. The military stands accused of abuses in Papua, some of which it
has admitted to, as in the case of an incident in 2010 in which soldiers
tortured Papuan villagers, This video of
which was uploaded to the internet, making it impossible for the
military to refute. The breakaway Free Papua Movement's members are
routinely jailed for treason, as is anyone who dares to raise the
Morning Star flag.
The Indonesian government protects Papua for another reason: it is
where the largest gold mine in the world is located, the Grasberg mine
operated by the American firm Freeport-McRoRan, an annual billion-dollar
generator of income for the state coffers. Despite the vast wealth
produced by the mine, and also copper mining at Grasberg, Papuan
villagers contend that they are largely impoverished and have scant
infrastructure in the remote and jungle-covered region as the funds flow
to Jakarta, that their natural resources are raped to feed the central
government.
Recently a new figurehead in the Papua independence struggle has
emerged, in the form of Benny Wenda, who was jailed and later managed to
flee to Britain, where he lives in exile. In the past month, Wenda has
been on a tour of Pacific nations, raising awareness about the plight of
his people and calling for an independence vote.
Should those around the world who supported the East Timor cause now
join with the Papuan struggle? The cause has been gaining attention,
most especially from the American activist Noam Chomsky and Archbishop
Desmond Tutu of South Africa, a Nobel Peace Laureate.
President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, a former military commander, is
coming to the end of his time in office, with a presidential election
scheduled the middle of next year; he is ineligible to run again because
he is in his second and final term. But it is a safe bet that whomever
gains power will not relinquish control over the very lucrative part of
the country that is Papua, certainly not as easy as it let East Timor
slip away.
Papua has a tiny population of just 2.1 million; East Timor has just
1.1 million. Aceh, by contrast, is home to almost 4.5 million - a
sustainable figure to support the needs and workings of a small country.
Do those in Papua who are seeking statehood really think they can go it
alone? As with Aceh, it seems that dialogue with Jakarta in which the
terms of special autonomy are worked out is the more workable solution,
for all concerned.
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