Essential
Reading
Important
New Strategic Literature
Fiction,
or Gaming?
Rockefeller
& The Demise of Ibu Pertiwi. By Kerry B. Collison. Melbourne, 2017: Sid
Harta Publishers. Fact-based fiction. 336pp, paperback, illust. ISBN:
978-1-92103098-7. A$24.95 Australian RRP. $16.99 (US Amazon price). Also
available as ebook.
Sometimes
a view of the future can only be presented in the form of fiction, even though
it represents a viable hypothesis of where events are leading. It is, in
effect, strategic gaming. It was certainly the case with Stefan Possony’s great
book, Waking Up The Giant (1974), which discussed how a US president takes
office during the Cold War,
Australian-born
Indonesia specialist Kerry Collison — a fluent Bahasa Indonesia speaker —
has been forced to specialize in such a genre, largely because legal constraints
in Indonesia preclude discussing many political issues. Nonetheless, his
writings invariably serve as prescient view of present and emerging trends. His
latest book, Rockefeller & The Demise of Ibu Pertiwi, is
particularly profound.
And
Mr Collison surely pushes the boundary of the Indonesian legal sys- tem merely
for its title, because it talks of “the demise of Ibu Pertiwi”: Ibu Pertiwi is
the Indonesian motherland (literally “Mother Earth” from the pre-Muslim, Hindu
era of Java).
His
book immediately immerses the reader into the context of the post-World War II
era and through to the transition from Pres. Sukarno into the era of Pres.
Suharto, in the 1960s. Suddenly the attitudes and activities of the powers of
the day — the declining Dutch and British, the increasingly concerned
Australians, and the growing needs of the US — can be seen ensuring the
inevitable global acceptance of the fatal “Act of Free Choice” (which was
anything but) in July 1969.
This
was the act which breathtakingly stole the Melanesian, former Dutch colony of
West Papua (Irian Jaya), transforming it into a colony of the
Javanese-dominated Indonesian Government. It remained a colony, disguised as
the 26th province of Indonesia, later divided into two provinces (West Papua
and Papua).
Collison’s
deep knowledge and re- search will have readers reaching for history books and
atlases. But he has been there as this history was being made, and his writing
looks for all the world as though it is the combination of diaries of the
players in all the camps: Indonesian, American, Aus- tralian, Dutch, British,
and even those in the village huts in the highlands.
The
fact that this is “current historical fiction” — a new genre? — does not make
the book any less readable or gripping as Collison weaves highly credible
scenarios in the halls of power in Jakarta, Canberra, Washing- ton, and London.
Indeed, the professional Asia hand will certainly crave even more detail, and I
challenge any serious reader not to rush off to consult
further references to read of the affairs which have plagued the lives of
Papuans for decades.
When
Collison also weaves into the story the saga of the 1961 disappearance in the
Arafura Sea, off southern West Papua, of explorer Michael Rockfeller, scion of
the wealthy and political US Rockefeller clan, he does so in a way which adds
real credibility to the overall tale. The fact that this makes the book more
appealing to US readers is a bonus.
Kerry
Collison makes it clear that the central player in the economy of Indonesian-occupied
Papua is the mining operation which, in Rockefeller & The Demise of Ibu
Pertiwi, is the fictitious P.T. Akumuga Mining corporation, run by the
also-fictitious Summit Gold Mining Company of the US. The book details the
maneuvering and corruption of Indonesian political, military, and corporate in
terests to seize the mining operation, which has already been central to the
Indonesian economy.
Collison’s
book was already at press when the real-life parallel occurred:
On
September 20, 2017, the Government selected State-owned aluminum firm PT
Indonesia Asahan Aluminium (Inalum) to acquire 51 per- cent of shares in gold
and copper miner PT Freeport Indonesia from the US Freeport McMoRan Inc. parent
company of Freeport Indonesia, which runs the mine which is central to the
region’s economy.
The
book is sub-titled “When Australia and Indonesia Again Go to War ...”, and not
without reason. The issue of Indonesian-occupied Papua is extremely sensitive
in Canberra-Jakarta relations, and Indonesian officials still burn over the
perceived Australian betrayal in supporting the independence movement in the
then-Indonesia-occupied former Portuguese colony of East Timor, now Timor
Leste, in 1999-2000. Today, West Papuan in- dependence activists find
safe-haven in Australia and, particularly, New Zealand.
Collison,
in the book, gives significant background to real activities, events, people
and organizations, including, of course, the Organisasi Papua Merdeka (Free
Papua Movement: OPM) and the very real, multinational body, the Melanesian
Spear- head Group.
On
September 26, 2017, a secretly- gathered petition signed by 1.8-mil- lion
Papuans, depending a new independence referendum for Indonesian-occupied Papua,
was presented to the United Nations; that represented more than 70 percent of
the province’s population. United Liberation Movement for West Papua spokesman
Benny Wenda told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation that signing the
petition was a “dangerous act” for West Papuans, with, he said, 57 people arrested
for supporting the petition, and 54 tortured by Indonesian security forces
during the campaign. The Prime Minister of Solomon Islands, Manasseh Sogavare,
said the petition was incredibly important and the people of West Papua had
effectively already voted to demand their self-determination.
Australian
Foreign Minister Julie Bishop said that Australia had long recognized
Indonesian sovereignty over the Papuan provinces.
Kerry
Collison’s “fictional” book is essential reading for anyone wishing to
understand the unfolding issue of West Papuan independence. — G.R. Copley,
Publisher “Washington Defense & Strategic Affairs Policy”
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