A critical juncture came
after the downfall of the authoritarian regime of former general Suharto.
Beginning in 2002, President Megawati Sukarnoputri’s administration implemented
the Papuan Provinces Special Autonomy Law, which aimed to give Papuans more authority
to manage their affairs based on local customs. For many elites in Jakarta, a
special autonomy law was the key to resolving all Papuan problems, including
creating a sense of being Indonesian and protecting against human rights
abuses. But these objectives failed to be achieved because the Indonesian
government has never thoroughly identified, or admitted to, the basic problems
regarding Papua: namely, its historical and political status.
Distrust towards Jakarta
among indigenous Papuans dating from the controversial 1969 referendum
fortifies ethno-nationalist aspirations to secede from Indonesia. In order to
tame these sentiments, the security apparatus has taken a repressive approach
towards indigenous Papuan dissent. But repressive actions by police and
military forces have instead strengthened Papuans’ separatist aspirations.
The challenges that many
Papuans have faced in expressing their political, economic, social and cultural
rights have drawn close attention from the international community, including
in recent times from a group of Melanesian countries united under the
Melanesian Spearhead Group (MSG) initiative. In 2015 the MSG granted
observer status to the United Liberation Movement for West Papua (ULWP), an
amalgamation of organisations campaigning for Papuan independence from
Indonesia.
This has compounded concerns
among Jakarta-based elites. The real question is why the Indonesian government
seems to have been unable to defuse the internationalisation of the Papuan
issue, particularly at the regional level.
Several reasons lie behind
the ineffectiveness of Indonesian foreign policy in handling the Papuan
independence issue in the Pacific. Generally, a lack of coordination between
the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and other parts of government has led to the lack
of a single policy to defuse the independence push.
There is a need to align
what happens on the ground with what is presented to the international
community. Papuans’ political and cultural aspirations are met with
heavy-handed treatment by the Indonesian security apparatus. But the Ministry
of Foreign Affairs has denied this. Rather, it has repeatedly stated at
international forums that conditions, particularly indigenous rights, have
improved significantly despite human rights
reports showing otherwise.
Another instance of rhetoric
not matching reality is the fact that although Indonesian President Joko Widodo
promised that there would be no restrictions on foreign journalists’ travelling
to Papua, there have been no specific policies to implement such a promise. Any
foreign journalist who wants to visit Papua still has to obtain permission
through complicated procedures and follow strict requirements, particularly
from security agencies, and occasionally without coordination with the Ministry
of Foreign Affairs.
For years the Pacific has
not been a diplomatic priority for the Indonesian government. There is no
single agency within the foreign affairs bureaucracy that mainly focuses on
Pacific countries. As a result, many Indonesian diplomats lack the competence to
respond to the Papuan independence campaign currently gaining
traction across the Pacific region. Indonesia lacks strong diplomatic
relationships with Pacific states, even though formal diplomatic relations with
countries such as Papua New Guinea and Fiji were established in the 1980s.
Indonesia has provided only
ad hoc economic assistance to Pacific countries, either as part of economic
diplomacy or to attempt to limit the sway of Papuan independence campaigners.
The Indonesian president’s recent rejection of a request for a meeting from the
Solomon Islands prime minister and chair of the MSG, Manasseh Sogavare, raises
doubts about Indonesia’s commitment to tackling the
pro-independence narrative through diplomacy.
In any case, the Indonesian
government has not learned from its past actions related to separatist
movements. In the case of East Timor, the Indonesian government underestimated
the role of the Fretilin group and its charismatic and savvy chief diplomat,
Jose Ramos Horta. Despite limited resources, Horta was able to convince the
international community to pay close attention to what happened in this tiny
nation from its integration in 1975 to its attaining independence in 2002. In
the case of Papua, the central government has underestimated the potency of
Papuan intellectuals, both in Papua and in exile, to coordinate their campaign
for independence.
Ineffective diplomacy in the
Pacific and elsewhere is hampering Indonesia’s ability to counter the
internationalisation of pro-independence narratives — and with that its ability
to promote solutions to the Papuan conflict that emphasise dialogue
between the Indonesian government and its Melanesian citizens. Authors:
Hipolitus Yolisandry Ringgi Wangge, Marthinus Academy, and Gafur Djali, Maluku
Institute
Hipolitus Yolisandry Ringgi
Wangge is a researcher at the Marthinus Academy in Jakarta. Gafur Djali is
Executive Director of the Maluku Institute. Both authors have been conducting
fieldwork research in Papua.
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