Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott’s first
visit to Jakarta has been hailed a success
Although little information has been released about what the
visit achieved in regards to stopping asylum-seeker boats headed for Australia,
some softening is evident in the Coalition’s pre-election rhetoric on the
issue. This softer approach will help cooperation with Indonesia, but some
obstacles to effective cooperation remain.
Stating the obvious, Tony Abbott declared that cooperation with Indonesia is essential for the
successful combating of people smugglers. However, this requires that Australia
and Indonesia have a common understanding of responsibilities and procedures.
This is not apparent at present. From Prime Minister Abbott’s perspective, this
requirement is part of the operational details that are not to be released to
the public.
Statements of respect for each other’s sovereignty were a
feature of Abbott’s visit to Jakarta, but Indonesians and Australians think
differently about maritime sovereignty. For Indonesians, the sea is an integral
part of their nation state. Concepts of wawasan nusantara (archipelagic)
and tanah air (land water), linking the islands of the Indonesian
archipelago together rather than separating them, are fundamental nation-building
principles for Indonesia.
On the other hand, Australians regard the surrounding oceans
and seas as a moat separating them from their neighbours. The late Professor
Frank Broeze, a maritime historian at the University of Western Australia,
captured this Australian mindset when he observed that ‘[i]mages and perception
of national identity have revolved largely around inward-looking and often
racist concepts of “continental” Australia in which the sea was seen as a fence
shutting out unwanted intrusions from the surrounding region’.
This mindset is evident in the basic purpose of the Abbott
government’s Operation Sovereign Borders policy, which is to defend against
unwanted incursions. It is also apparent in the Australian government’s
negative rhetoric that promotes suspicion and mistrust about asylum seekers.
Canberra has also militarised the issue, evident in the promotion of a senior
Army officer to be in command of operations, despite their fundamental maritime
and non-military nature. Militarising the issue is a backward step for both domestic policy and for
regional cooperation.
Australia persists with a multi-agency approach to
discharging its maritime obligations and protecting its rights at sea.
Subsequent inquiries have revealed that a breakdown in coordination between
border protection and search and rescue contributed to some of the tragedies in
the waters between Australia and Indonesia. This has improved in recent years,
but Operation Sovereign Borders potentially re-opens the divide.
Most of Australia’s regional neighbours have
‘de-militarised’ maritime law enforcement. Malaysia and the Philippines already
have fully integrated civil coast guards with responsibilities that include
maritime sovereignty protection, law enforcement and search and rescue, and
Indonesia is in the process of establishing one in Badan Koordinasi Keamanan
Laut (Bakorkamla).
Australia’s arrangements for protecting its rights and
fulfilling its obligations in its large area of maritime jurisdiction remain
problematic. Criticisms at the International Maritime Organization (IMO) of
Canberra’s actions in 2001 of initially refusing access to Australian waters by
the Norwegian vessel Tampa with over 400 asylum seekers led to the IMO
amending the International Safety of Life at Sea (SOLAS) and the Maritime
Search and Rescue (SAR) Conventions. These amendments reinforced existing
obligations for shipmasters and countries to provide assistance to any person
in distress at sea, regardless of nationality or status of that person
(emphasis added). The risk remains that Australia’s operations to stop the
boats could run counter to these instruments, particularly if robust actions
led to the disabling or the sinking of a vessel.
While Australia may be going backwards with its maritime
responsibilities, Indonesia has commenced processes to get its own house in order. As well as the
establishment of Bakorkamla, Indonesia became a party to the SAR convention in
2012. Previously it had been reluctant to do so, partly because of concerns
this would admit to an obligation to allow ships and aircraft from other member
states to enter its waters to search for a vessel or persons in distress. The
UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) obliges every ship master to
render assistance to persons in distress at sea, and a national search and
rescue region of responsibility is not a zone of maritime jurisdiction where a
country has any exclusive rights or obligations.
Canberra’s secrecy regarding its tactics for stopping the
boats may keep the issue off the front page in Australia. However, it will not
satisfy Indonesia’s legitimate interests in Australia’s tactics or the IMO’s
concern that Australia may not be adequately fulfilling its obligations for the
safety of life at sea.
Dr Sam Bateman is a Senior Fellow in the Maritime Security
Programme at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies (RSIS), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore.
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