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a long way from libya ......"This brings me to the final area where we are leading - our support for the fundamental rights of every human being. Every nation will chart its own course. Yet it is also true that certain rights are universal, among them freedom of speech, freedom of the press, freedom of assembly, freedom of religion, and the freedom of citizens to choose their own leaders. These are not American rights, or Australian rights, or Western rights. They are human rights. They stir in every soul, as we've seen in democracy's success in Asia. Other models have been tried and they have failed - fascism and communism, rule by one man and rule by committee. And they have failed for the same simple reason. They ignore the ultimate source of power and legitimacy - the will of the people. We help strengthen civil societies, because they empower citizens to hold their governments accountable. And we advance the rights of all people - women, minorities and indigenous cultures - because when societies harness the potential of all their citizens, those societies are more successful, more prosperous and more just." Barack Obama POTUS Address to Parliament in Canberra
Thursday, November 17, 2011. rewind seven years ..... Washington, D.C. - July 8, 2004 - "You should tell [Suharto] that we understand the problems they face in West Irian," national security adviser Henry Kissinger wrote President Nixon on the eve of Nixon's July 1969 visit to Indonesia. On the 35th anniversary of West Papua's so-called "Act of Free Choice" and Indonesia's first direct presidential elections, the National Security Archive posted recently declassified documents on U.S. policy deliberations leading to Indonesia's controversial 1969 annexation of the territory. The documents detail United States support for Indonesia's heavy-handed takeover of West Papua despite overwhelming Papuan opposition and United Nations requirements for genuine self-determination. Ambassador Frank Galbraith noted on July 9, 1969 that past abuses had stimulated intense anti-Indonesian and pro-independence sentiment at all levels of Irian society, suggesting that "possibly 85 to 90%" of the population "are in sympathy with the Free Papua cause." Moreover, Galbraith observed, recent Indonesian military operations, which resulted in the deaths of hundreds, possibly thousands of civilians, "had stimulated fears and rumours of intended genocide among the Irianese." President Nixon and national security adviser Henry Kissinger visited Jakarta in July 1969 while the "Act of Free Choice" was underway. Improving relations with Indonesia's authoritarian regime was clearly uppermost in the mind of Kissinger, who characterized Suharto as a "moderate military man ... committed to progress and reform." In Nixon's secret briefing papers (Document 9 and Document 10) for the visit Kissinger flatly told the President "you should not raise this issue" of West Irian and argued "we should avoid any U.S. identification with that act." The White House generally held to this position throughout the period preceding and following the "Act of Free Choice." Although they recognized the deep flaws in the Act and in Indonesia's intentions, U.S. officials were not interested in creating any problems for a Suharto regime they saw as non-aligned but pro-Washington. While the U.S. was unwilling to actively intervene on Indonesia's behalf (an action they thought unnecessary and counterproductive) at the UN to insure quick General Assembly acceptance of Indonesia's formal takeover of West Papua, the U.S. quietly signaled that it was uninterested in a lengthy debate over an issue it viewed as a foregone conclusion and marginal to U.S. interests. In a secret briefing memo for a meeting with Indonesia's Ambassador to the United States Soedjakmoto, a State Department official expressed confidence that international criticism of the "Act of Free Choice" would quickly fade, allowing the Nixon Administration to move forward with its plans for forging closer military and economic ties with the authoritarian regime in Jakarta. http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB128/ fast forward to May, 2011 ..... This report from Channel 4 News in the UK shows the degrading level of brutality that the Papuan people are exposed to on a daily basis under Indonesian colonial rule. Foreign journalists are banned from West Papua - the Indonesian Government is desperate to hide the genocide from the outside world. Even NGO groups like Red Cross and Peace Brigades have been expelled in recent times. This disturbing footage was shot on mobile phones by Indonesian soldiers as 'trophy footage' for them to show their families. In West Papua there is no peace, no justice. There is only killing, rape, torture, intimidation, bloodshed, oppression, village burnings, racism and eternal suffering for those living under Indonesia's colonial occupation. http://freewestpapua.wordpress.com/2011/05/31/indonesias-genocide-in-west-papua-continues/ then, last weekend .... When Julia Gillard meet Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhuyono in Bali on the weekend West Papua barely got a mention. Although the text messages inside West Papua went into overdrive with the rumour that the reason Australia and the United States were stationing 2,500 U.S Marines in Darwin was to prepare for military intervention in West Papua. I told my friends in West Papua it wasn't true. But then I got thinking. Actually Australia is doing a lot to help Indonesia loosen their grip on the troubled territory. Not by design of course. But the effect is much the same as if the Government suddenly adopted a radical pro-independence policy. Confused? Let me explain. Last month the Indonesian police and military fired live rounds into an unarmed crowd of civilians in West Papua, killing five. The Army and Police then tried to make out that it wasn't them, that what had taken place was a coup by the Papuan Liberation Army; that it was the Papuans who were doing the shooting. Yudhuyono tried to sell Obama and Gillard a version of that story in Bali on the weekend. That might have washed twenty years ago but in this age of social media and smart phones it is much more difficult to hide the evidence. Since the killing of five Papuans on October 19, the wounding of scores more and the arrest of six Papuan leaders, international media coverage of West Papua has spiked and Indonesia's international standing has taken a beating. The Army, Police and President's denials and attempts at cover-up have not helped the government's reputation. The killings have also generated outrage and division within Indonesia. And October 19 was not an isolated incident. A series of shocking acts of torture of Papuans by the Indonesian military have been captured on video and recently released. And when I speak of outrage I am not talking about protests from human rights groups. National legislators from a range of Indonesian political parties have begun to publicly criticise the Indonesian military, police and even the President over the government's policy, or lack of it, in West Papua. Even the cautious Indonesian Bishop's Conference urged Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhuyono to hold a third party mediated dialogue without delay. Indonesian critics recognise that the political crisis in West Papua is spiralling out of control and that the central government and the security forces are making things worse. Indonesian journalist Bramantyo Prijosusilo writing in the Jakarta Globe went as far as saying that the "powerful forces bent on forcing Papuans to separate from Indonesia are none other than the central government, especially its military and police force." He has a point. West Papua teeters on the brink of open rebellion. After the shooting on October 19 one student previously uninvolved with politics told me "if the police and military thought they could shoot us dead like animals and we would somehow stop pressing for freedom, they are wrong. We don't care about the military; we don't care about the police. We are not afraid anymore." Days later he was on the streets along with 3,000 other Papuans calling for a referendum. This is not just about political insurrection. The economy is on the brink as well. Consider the massive Freeport/Rio Tinto gold and copper mine. Eight thousand mine workers there have been on strike since July. Freeport's pipeline has been cut in more than 20 places, the company has been unable to deliver on its contracts, the local government in Mimika which depends on revenue from the mine to supply services is cash strapped, and Freeport itself is losing billions. That could mean Australian jobs are affected. Over 800 Australian companies supply the mine through Cairns and Darwin. The Australian owned company International Purveying Incorporated sends everything from Toyota's, heavy mining equipment, and frozen beef dinners to Freeport every few days. How long shareholders and investors will put up with heavy loses and adverse economic risk is any ones guess. But it won't be forever. And it is not just Freeport / Rio Tinto that is in the firing line. BP, Clive Palmer's nickel businesses in Raja Ampat, and logging interests are all the target of a torrent of anger from landowners. CEOs like Palmer and Freeport's Bob Moffet may not ask the Indonesian government to negotiate with Papuans demanding political freedoms but sooner or later shareholders and investors will demand just that. So how is the Australian government responding to these shifting power dynamics? Well that is the problem. They are not. The government's position is the same as it has always been: continued support for the Indonesian military / police unhinged from any tangible improvements in human rights such as guarantees of free speech, release of political prisoners or moves towards supporting political dialogue. No matter what side of the political fence you sit this is not smart policy. For years Papuans have been telling our leaders that Special Autonomy had failed, that the Freeport mine was a source of conflict, and that the military and police were killing them. Just in case we were not paying attention they described the situation as "slow motion genocide". So for those realists out there who think an independent West Papua would be a mistake, here's some free policy advice: stop funding the armed group splitting Indonesia apart. Giving a blank cheque to the Indonesian military while there is continued suppression of political freedoms in West Papua is the surest way for Australia to help Indonesia lose a country. It seems the Australian government might be eager to usher in freedom in West Papua after all.
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who would have thought .....
The man anointed as leader of an independent Papua, Forkorus Yaboisembut, says democratic nations that espouse human rights are hypocrites if they don't support the region's desire for self-determination.
Speaking by phone from his prison cell in the Papuan capital of Jayapura, Mr Yaboisembut was unflagging in his optimism that Papua will be independent from Indonesia one day, even though not a single nation supports his aspirations.
He spoke as thousands of Papuans across the troubled region commemorated yesterday the 50th anniversary of the first declaration of Papuan ''independence'', when the western half of the island of New Guinea was still a Dutch colony.
While there were fears of widespread violence, the occasion was relatively peaceful, except for the violent dispersal of a rally in Timika and an early morning fracas between police and separatists near Jayapura that left a policeman dead and another badly injured from arrow wounds.
Mr Yaboisembut was proclaimed president of the ''Federal Republic of West Papua'' at the Third Papuan People's Congress, a gathering of indigenous Papuan delegates, on October 19.
Within two hours he was badly beaten and arrested following a crackdown that left six people dead. Indonesian security forces were widely condemned for their actions, and their brutality brought renewed global focus on the struggle of many Papuans for self-determination.
''I call on all nations that love democracy and human rights and respect international law to recognise the Papuan nation,'' Mr Yaboisembut told the Herald.
Asked how he felt knowing that even countries that share Papua's Melanesian ethnicity recognise Indonesian sovereignty, he said it was disappointing, but he would not stop his struggle.
''All speeches made by world leaders about democracy and human rights are empty speeches because they allow the discrimination to take place against Papuans in Papua,'' he said.
Papua was incorporated into Indonesia in 1969 following a highly controversial plebiscite involving just over 1000 hand-picked tribal leaders.
Separatist sentiment has lingered and there has been a low-level insurgency against Jakarta's rule. In the meantime, migrants have flooded in from other parts of Indonesia.
''The Papuan people have been marginalised, discriminated against,'' Mr Yaboisembut said. ''We have become minority in our own land. We are going to extinction.''
Facing up to 20 years in prison for treason, Mr Yaboisembut's future looks grim but he maintains Papua will be free.
''We have strong support from the grassroots, some support from parliamentarians from many countries. What we lack is support from [foreign] governments. But we are optimistic.''
A declaration by Mr Yaboisembut demanding global recognition for an independent Papua was read out at many rallies yesterday. The banned Morning Star flag was raised in three towns but not at most events, including the biggest gathering near Jayapura.
Indonesian police largely followed orders to show restraint, with the exception of Timika.
According to Papuan student leader Markus Haluk, two men and two women were shot and later taken to hospital.
http://www.smh.com.au/world/imprisoned-leader-calls-for-papuan-recognition-20111201-1o98c.html
and then, who would have thought .....
The Queensland Parliament has called on Indonesia to investigate and act on humans rights abuses in Papua.
Retiring Labor veteran and Amnesty International advocate Judy Spence used the last sitting of Parliament overnight to call on Indonesia to act on allegations of human rights abuse at the Third Papuan Peoples' Congress in October.
Amid reports of further clashes between Indonesian police and West Papuan independence activists, Ms Spence told Parliament she despaired at "the direction that human rights is going in many countries of the world today".
"I do not think we are seeking improvements," Ms Spence said.
"In fact, I think we are taking backward steps in many countries. So it behoves us all to be very vigilant about the human rights standards in our own country and our own state but also to fight for causes internationally at every opportunity."
Liberal National Party MP Bruce Flegg backed the motion, saying "there is sufficient evidence of serious human rights abuses on our doorstep to cause us deep concern".
Dr Flegg called on Indonesia to acknowledge it has committed human rights abuses, decrease its military presence in West Papua and allow access by United Nations observers and journalists.
"This is a nation (Indonesia) that is very close to us," he said.
"In many ways, they are a friend of Australia and I think it is right and proper that the Queensland parliament and Australia as a whole should be urging them to improve their human rights record in this area. It is a black spot for them."
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/nation/queensland-calls-for-action-on-papua/story-e6frg6nf-1226212130044