Wednesday, February 28, 2018
Kerry B. Collison Asia News: Indonesia’s Ideological Convergence: Emerging Tren...
Kerry B. Collison Asia News: Indonesia’s Ideological Convergence: Emerging Tren...: There is an emerging ideological convergence among activists from different Indonesian Islamic groups toward a more Shariah-oriented ...
Indonesia’s Ideological Convergence: Emerging Trend in Islamic Regulations? – Analysis
There is an emerging
ideological convergence among activists from different Indonesian Islamic
groups toward a more Shariah-oriented outlook. Such a convergence can be seen
from the joint efforts of these activists to enact local Islamic regulations in
various Indonesian regions.
Since the Defending Islam rallies in
late 2016 and early 2017, there is a perception of a growing ideological
convergence between clerics and activists affiliated with different Indonesian
Islamic groups, ranging from mainstream ones such as Nahdlatul Ulama (NU) and
Muhammadiyah – the two largest Indonesian Islamic groups, to the more
conservative groups such as Hizb ut-Tahrir Indonesia (HTI) and Islamic
Defenders Front (FPI).
Beyond the headlines, this apparent
convergence can be found in numerous localities throughout Indonesia. Since
Indonesia’s political decentralisation began in 2001, activists from these
groups have worked together in numerous localities throughout Indonesia to
successfully enact and implement local shari’ah regulations known as perda
shari’ah in these localities. As of today, nearly 450 local regulations have
been implemented by more than 100 Indonesian cities and municipalities.
The Pamekasan Case
Previous research on Islamic regulations in Indonesia
concluded that these regulations were developed to bolster the Islamic
credentials of local mayors or regents (bupati) so that they could easily win
re-election to their positions. They also found the regulations tend to be
enacted in the regions with a strong history of Islamism in their politics, for
instance, in West Java and South Sulawesi provinces, which were former sites of
the Darul Islam rebellion during the 1950s and early 1960s.
However, research by the RSIS’ Indonesia Programme found these
regulations are enacted by local councils (DPRD) and executives after extensive
lobbying by prominent clerics representing a wide variety of Islamic
organisations, which lends support to the ideological convergence thesis
outlined above. Also these regulations are now being introduced in areas that
historically do not have a strong tradition of regional Islamism, such as in
East and Central Java provinces.
An example can be found in the Pamekasan District in Madura Island,
East Java province. The regulation here was enacted after an extensive lobbying
campaign by a group of local religious scholars (ulama). They were united under
the banner of the local branch of the Indonesian Ulama Council (MUI), with
support from the local branches of NU, Muhammadiyah, Al Irsyad, and Sarekat
Islam (SI).
The perda was enacted unanimously by Pamekasan’s legislative council
owing to the united support from these Islamic organisations, which argued the
regulation should be enacted because of the strong Islamic tradition present
both within the regency and Madura Island in general.
Uztaz Dwiyanto, the deputy chairman of MUI branch in Pamekasan, said no
DPRD councillors were willing to oppose it, as the ulama would have “campaigned
to vote them out of office” if they expressed any opposition to the regulation.
Kyai Haji Kholil-ur-Rahman, a notable cleric who led the movement to enact the
regulation, was then elected as the Bupati of Pamekasan from 2008 to 2013.
After Pamekasan enacted the first
perda in 2003, at least five additional regulations were also enacted by the
regency — including those which require women to wear headscarves (hijab) while
appearing in public places, require all primary school graduates to be tested
on their Qur’anic reading proficiency, prohibit the sale of alcoholic
beverages, and prohibit the establishment of nightclubs and other forms of
entertainment within the regency.
The Bojonegoro Regulation
A second example can be found in
Bojonegoro District, in the border between East and Central Java provinces.
While it is historically known as an area where non-observant Muslims (abangan)
predominated as late as the 1980s, it is now transformed as a region where deep
expressions of Islamic piety now can be seen clearly in the public sphere. This
motivates a group of local clerics to promote a perda mandating primary school
graduates to recite the Qur’an properly.
Introduced in 2017, the proposed
regulation receives strong support from local branches of Islamic
organisations, ranging from NU and Muhammadiyah to more conservative groups
like HTI. The latter organisation is having an increased following within this
rural region. It has established its own Islamic cooperative, which has
attracted many small farmers and tradesmen to become its members, because it
does not charge any interests on its loans.
With the Islamist Prosperous Justice
Party (PKS) as its primary sponsor, the regulation receives wide support from
Bojonegoro’s legislative council. The only party which publicly opposes its
enactment is the Indonesian Democratic Party Struggle (PDIP), which expresses
concerns that the regulation intervenes in the private lives of Bojonegoro
residents.
It also believes the perda
can be perceived as a regulation that favours Muslims over other religious
faiths, something that violates Indonesia’s national ideology Pancasila, which
promotes the equality of all recognised religious groups in Indonesia.
However, other parties represented
in the legislative council have expressed their support for the perda, because
they do not want to be seen as intimidating the local ulama who are unanimously
supporting it, especially as the regency is due to hold its local election in
June this year. It is expected to win an easy passage in the council.
Underlying Implications
The effective lobbying for local
shari’ah regulations in Pamekasan and Bojonegoro districts illustrates the emerging
ideological convergence among activists of mainstream and more conservative
Islamic groups in Indonesia to support the enactment of these regulations. This
is notwithstanding the fact they are contradictory to the national ideology of
Pancasila and the 1945 Indonesian constitution, which bars the creation of laws
that favours one religious group above others.
The proliferation of these
regulations in multiple localities throughout Indonesia is a ‘bottom-up’
strategy by Islamic groups to change Indonesia’s legal foundation to become
more religiously-based instead of Pancasila-based. This is something Indonesian
policymakers should be paying more attention to in order to better appreciate
the implications for nation building.
*Alexander R Arifianto PhD is a Research Fellow
with the Indonesia Programme, S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies
(RSIS), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore.
Kerry B. Collison Asia News: WEST PAPUA - An Indonesian District Isolated From ...
Kerry B. Collison Asia News: WEST PAPUA - An Indonesian District Isolated From ...: In a country comprised of thousands of islands, some of which have never been explored by outsiders, one of the most isolated regio...
WEST PAPUA - An Indonesian District Isolated From Development
In a country comprised of
thousands of islands, some of which have never been explored by outsiders, one
of the most isolated regions in Indonesia is Asmat District, six and a half
hours by plane from Jakarta to the Papua capital of Jayapura, then another hour’s
ride in a 10-passenger Twin Otter or Caravan, followed by a nine-hour fast
ferry ride across the Arafuru Sea.
It is a journey that can
only be regarded as risky and not for the faint-hearted, given the possibility
of extreme weather that can and does capsize vessels and that causes some
passengers to stay on uninhabited islets to await the next boat rather than
dare forbidding looking clouds.
This is the southern coast
of Papua, nearly 30,000 square kilometers of forest, rivers and swamp with only
90,316 people in a district about the size of Belgium. Surrounded by mangrove
forests and rivers, Asmat City is built on wood and boards over a swamp. The
ethnic Asmat coastal tribes live as fishermen. Motorcycles can only be found in
Agats, the capital of Asmat district 30 minutes down the river by boat. In more
remote villages, the majority walk or use boats.
Prone to Illness
In January, Asmat faced an
extraordinary crisis when 646 children were affected by a measles outbreak, a
disease eradicated in the Americas and much of Europe. With 144 children
recorded as suffering from malnutrition, the two diseases killed 70 people.
With a global mortality rate of 19 victims per million people, measles is not a
deadly disease and its treatment is not difficult. But 70 lives are an
expensive price for a preventable tragedy.
It isn’t the first time famine and disease have taken the lives of under-five children in Papua. Asmat’s children look at incoming visitors expectantly with bloated bellies and breastbones that stand out, a common indication of malnutrition, apparently hoping the arrivals mean food. A total of 55 residents of Yakuhimo District died of starvation in 2005. Twice in the same area, as many as 100 residents have died. Another 95 residents of Tambraw District died because of the same issues in 2012.
Malnutrition is inevitable because there is no real food security. The marshy soil is not suitable for agricultural use. Consequently, nutritional intake for children is far from ideal, a problem made worse by the limited availability of clean water. With the soil unsuitable for wells, clean water is obtained from rainwater catchment, a problem in the dry season.
Although water is available from nearby rivers, it is unhealthy because villagers, unaware of sanitation and clean water provision, defecate on the banks where they obtain drinking and cooking water. The rivers and swamps are murky at best and the water is unfit for consumption.
Rare Health Facilities
There are only 16 health care centers, known as Puskesmas, serving 23 districts and 224 villages. However, Asmat is not the only region in Papua with minimal health care facilities. In an area of 319,000 sq km – an area the size of Poland or Norway, with a population of just 3.5 million people, Papua has only 589 health service units. Compare that with Jakarta, with 2,763 health units covering 664 sq km.
The low number of health care facilities in Papua is proportional to the lack of health personnel. In such a vast territory, Papua has only 17,000 medical personnel. In comparison, in West Java with an area of 35,000 sq km, there are 119,000, approximately seven times as many as Papua.
The Agats district has only one surgeon and seven general practitioners. It has no pediatrician although the hundreds of cases of malnutrition in infants and toddlers require handling by specialists in childhood diseases and afflictions.
What Needs to Be Done
Asmat’s isolation is a fundamental issue affecting the availability of public services such as health, education, and others. However, the central government is not turning a blind eye to the existing development gap. Between 2002 and 2017, Papua has received a special allocation of almost Rp58 trillion (U$2.4 billion). Another Rp8 trillion has been budgeted for 2018.
With Asmat District having been allocated not less than Rp173 billion for health care, it is almost incomprehensible how famine has always repeated itself there. However, funds go unused because the sick don’t or can’t seek hospital care. A trip from one village to another requires long hours of boat travel, and few even own boats. Take Atat village, located on the banks of the Mamat River and surrounded by swamp. To reach the closest district hospital in Agats, residents must rent a boat costing Rp3-4 million (US$210-292) for three hours’ travel time. Just finding money to pay for food is difficult. Renting a boat is out of the question.
If the trillions of rupiahs allocated to the local government aren’t utilized on fundamental issues, the situation isn’t going to change. The hungry continue to be hungry, the sick will get sicker. What is really needed in Asmat is the opening of road access. Where they exist, 43 percent or Asmat’s roads are unpaved and 56 percent are made of wooden planks. Only slightly less than 1 percent of the district’s roads are made of concrete.
The construction of roads and transport facilities is vital to contribute to the eradication of various issues of low quality of life in Asmat. The opening of access would facilitate the transfer of goods and services to contribute to the mobility of the public to use public facilities such as access to health care. The availability of proper transportation of access would also allow the construction of other crucial facilities such as hospitals, schools and water treatment. But given the district’s isolation, it is a daunting task. Just getting there is hard enough.
Muhammad Zulfikar Rakhmat is a doctoral candidate at the University of Manchester. Dikanaya Tarahita is an Indonesian freelance writer. They are regular contributors to Asia Sentinel
Tuesday, February 27, 2018
Kerry B. Collison Asia News: One Belt, One Road, And Now One Circle – Analysis ...
Kerry B. Collison Asia News: One Belt, One Road, And Now One Circle – Analysis ...: Drift ice camp in the middle of the Arctic Ocean as seen from the deck of icebreaker Xue Long. Photo by Timo Palo, Wikimedia Commons. ...
One Belt, One Road, And Now One Circle – Analysis - The last frontier for exploration is being breached
The anticipated
economic and strategic windfall from environmental change in the Arctic has
spurred China to officially enunciate an Arctic policy. Key to note are: 1) the
starring role the Belt and Road Initiative plays in China’s engagement in the
Arctic, and 2) the approach of using international law to justify Chinese entry
and activity in the Arctic. The question that emerges is whether these two
approaches — China’s BRI on the one hand and international law and norms on the
other — will eventually be at cross-purpose.
The last frontier
for exploration is being breached.
Last August, a
Russian-owned LNG tanker with a unique reinforced steel hull became the first
vessel to travel from Norway to South Korea, through the Northern Sea Route
(NSR) along the Russian Arctic coast, without the aid of an ice-breaking
vessel, and that too in merely 19 days. US president Trump, within his first
100 days, signed an executive order calling for a review of the former
president’s plan that blocked offshore drilling in the polar regions. Finland
and Norway are studying the viability and profitability of an Arctic Railway
project that would connect the Nordic region to the Arctic coast, offering
pathways into Europe all the way to the Mediterranean Sea, and along the
Russian NSR to Asian markets.
China, too, has
staked claim. A non-Arctic littoral — or, as it calls itself, a “Near-Arctic
state” — China released its official Arctic policy at the end of last
month, coming on the heels of increasing activity and visibility in the region
in question that is raising eyebrows and anxieties. The white paper declares
China as “an important stakeholder in Arctic affairs” and reveals an expanding
playground in which China sees itself as a legitimate actor. Retreating ice in
the Arctic and its repercussions — effect on local climate and environment and
domestic agriculture and marine industries, waterway and resource development
in the Arctic — are matters “vital to the existence and development of all
countries and humanity, and directly affect the interests of non-Arctic States
including China.”
Motivations
These interests are
both economic and strategic. Reduced shipping costs given shorter routes
between Asia and Europe, as compared to the traditional Malacca Strait and Suez
Canal route, benefit foreign trade and strengthen energy security for China.
Indeed, as the policy document states: “The utilization of sea routes and
exploration and development of the resources in the Arctic may have a huge
impact on the energy strategy and economic development of China, which is a
major trading nation and energy consumer in the world.” 90% of China’s trade is seaborne, so even
small differences in time taken could mean big savings and greater profits. For
instance, it normally takes 48 days for container ships to reach Rotterdam from
China. Passage through the Arctic would reduce Europe to Asia distances by
anywhere between 20% to 40%. There are even time and cost savings if ships set
course from southern Chinese ports — the distance between Hong Kong and
Northwestern Europe is still shorter by as much as 14%.
An important, inter-related factor is China’s ever-enhancing shipping power and increasing
role in shipping finance. China’s state-owned shipping company,
Cosco, is the largest shipping company outside of Europe, and China today lays
claim to the third-largest merchant ship fleet in the world. This is reflective
of not only the shipping industry’s importance to China’s economy, but also the
key role China’s growing merchant fleet and shipping finance industry are set
to play in the rolling out of China’s maritime trade and infrastructure vision
— including in the Arctic — in a bid to better control its maritime trade.
The Arctic also allows transportation through a more politically
peaceable environment and is thus a more secure alternative to bottlenecked
waters prone to piracy and which are dominated by a strategic competitor. Close
to 70% of China’s energy needs are met by seaborne imports. The lure of
undiscovered oil and natural gas resources — anywhere between one-fifth and a
quarter of untapped fossil fuel resources, potentially altogether worth as much
as $35 trillion — throw up alternative energy sources that China can tap and
thus bolster its energy security. The US Geological Survey pegs 30% of the
world’s undiscovered natural gas and 13% of undiscovered oil reserves in the
Arctic. Not to forget what are thought to be considerable deposits of mineable
minerals — gold, silver, diamond, copper, nickel, titanium, graphite, uranium —
and, crucial for the manufacturing of high-tech products like electric cars and
smartphones, rare earth elements, such as lithium and cobalt. Clearly at play
is a longer-term vision to secure future trade routes to markets and resources.
The other strategic motivation implied is of course the desire to play a
bigger role in trans-regional and global issues — and not just as a permanent
member of the UN Security Council, a fact that is included in the policy
document as a rationale for China jointly shouldering the cause of peace and
security in the Arctic, or under a vision of “shared future for mankind,” also
liberally invoked throughout the document. The Arctic is a new sphere —
previously inaccessible — where China wants to play a leading role, “since the
traditional areas are already taken by the old powers,” as notes Jin Canrong at
Renmin University.
Critically, given the continued reality of climate change in the Arctic,
the development of this region will see new technologies and ‘economic biomes’
come to the fore. This will not only catapult the Arctic as a major theatre of
activity — economic and geopolitical — in the coming future, but will also
define science and sustainability in the 21st century.
Engagement
Given this context, it is hardly surprising that the Chinese white paper
on the Arctic advances a “Polar Silk Road” under the ambit of its broader Belt
and Road Initiative (BRI), considering the starring role the BRI is already
playing in advancing “Xiplomacy” (think the Two Centenaries and the “Chinese
Dream”). At first glance, the Chinese mandate primarily encourages its
enterprises to develop shipping routes, including infrastructure construction,
conduct commercial trial voyages, and operation of these shipping routes. Other
areas, such as energy cooperation, blue economy, and tourism, are not directly
linked to the Polar Silk Road. But these are already existing fields of Chinese
engagement under the BRI. Digital connectivity is also specifically mentioned.
China is likely to use the BRI as a key vehicle to fulfill its stated policy
goals (“to understand, protect, develop and participate in the governance of
the Arctic”).
While Beijing has been active in the Arctic since it bought its first
icebreaker from Ukraine in 1994, recent years have seen an uptick in Chinese
engagement. Not only has China’s only icebreaker now navigated the three major
shipping routes through the Arctic, a Chinese ship carrying 19,000 tonnes of
cargo became the first container vessel ever in 2013 to transit the NSR to reach
Rotterdam from Dalian — and that too in a month’s time compared to the 45 days
it normally takes through the Suez Canal. China also became an observer in the
Arctic Council, the highest-level body governing the Polar North, in 2013. In
fact, Chinese president Xi Jinping even referred to China as an “upcoming ‘polar-region power” during a
state visit to Australia in 2014.
Research of navigational routes, as well as that of climate and
environmental changes in the Arctic, and exploration of the region’s potential
resources are part of the ambit of this blue economic corridor. (An earlier
paper by the State Oceanic Administration referred to the Northwest Passage as
a “northern link” in BRI.)
On the ground, Russia’s NSR is already a strategic area of cooperation
between China and the largest Arctic state as part of the BRI — Xi and his
Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin signed a joint declaration in July last year
that invoked an “Ice Silk Road,” under which the NSR Route will be developed.
(But note that the Chinese Arctic white paper does not highlight the NSR or any
particular Arctic route as the preferred shipping route Chinese companies will
pursue.) The Yamal LNG project is the primary and largest Sino-Russian venture
in this regard, which is expected to supply China with four million tonnes of
LNG per year, transported through the NSR and reaching China in just 15 days,
less than half the time it would take using the traditional shipping route
around Europe and through the Suez Canal.[1] The Silk Road Fund
holds a 9.9% stake, and the China National Petroleum Corporation, 20%; Chinese
banks have partly funded the project; and 60% of the equipment has been
contributed by Chinese companies. Cosco is all set to send six ships to
transport equipment, steel, pulp, and other items along the NSR. Engagement in
Russia’s Far East, including in oil and gas fields; construction of ice-class
cargo vessels; and a deepwater port on the northwestern Russian coast are
Sino-Russian projects on the cards.
At the same time, China has also approached other Arctic littorals.
While none of the other Arctic states are officially part of the BRI, they are
members of the Asia Infrastructure Investment Bank (thus firmly within the
scope of the BRI) and are actively engaged in Arctic projects that are likely
to be subsumed under the BRI umbrella. For instance, Chinese mining companies
are active in the Canadian Arctic and Greenland. Last year saw China particularly
amplify its interaction with Finland, which is currently chair of the Arctic
Council until 2019. Xi became the first Chinese president to visit the Nordic
state in 22 years. The first China-Finland iron silk road began
operating last November, the first railway to link China with the Nordic
region. Both are jointly building a second Chinese icebreaker, to be completed
in 2019. And recently, China began discussing a 10,500-km fibre optic across the Arctic
to create the fastest digital highway between Europe and China as early as
2020. The proposal involves Finland, Norway, Russia, and Japan. Xi has even reached
out to Alaska, making an unexpected stop on his way back home post
the China-US bilateral summit in April last year. There, he was apparently
offered “a generation’s worth” of LNG supply by the governor.
BRI and
international law: Convergence or clash?
China’s Arctic policy — insofar as the ambition and the policy goals are
concerned — is not a surprise. The inclusion of the BRI as a means of fulfilling
China’s stated aims in the Arctic necessarily means the appearance of similar
parameters and principles — and indeed, “respect,” “cooperation,” and “win-win
result” undergird Chinese activity in this specific geography as well.
“Sustainability” is understandably given greater weight in this policy
document.
In practice, what does pursuing an Arctic policy through BRI as a
primary vehicle mean? The Chinese trade and infrastructure initiative has
already gained nomenclature as the “hardware” of Chinese — pick one —
hegemony/power projection/Sino-centric Asian and world order. As such, the
Arctic, too, is being hardwired into a hub-and-spokes architecture, with China
at the centre, that can then be supplemented with policies, norms, and
practices. Indeed, as political scientist Michael Byers has said, “They
(Chinese companies) are starting to do in Arctic what they are doing elsewhere:
they are investing in infrastructure, they are buying foreign companies, they
are competing for leases in oil and mineral extraction.”
Against this context, the repeated stress on abiding by international
law is noteworthy in the policy document. Given that China is a non-Arctic
state, it has clearly used the principles of international law to justify an
uncontested and unbarred entrance into the Arctic region: “States from outside
the region do not have territorial sovereignty in the Arctic, but they do have
rights in respect of scientific research, navigation, overflight, fishing,
laying of submarine cables and pipelines in the high seas and other relevant
sea areas in the Arctic Ocean, and rights to resource exploration and
exploitation in the Area, pursuant to treaties such as UNCLOS and general
international law.” The reiteration that Arctic shipping must be conducted in
accordance to international law further seems logical when taking into account
existing territorial disputes among the Arctic littorals — such as the
Northwest Route, which Canada sees as its internal waters, but the US claims as
an international waterway. Clearly, for China to pursue its interests in this
region, an understanding of Arctic waters as international commons — and thus
freely navigable — is critical. Such an interpretation is possible through the
UNCLOS framework.
China’s implementation of the BRI on the ground and the intended use of
the BRI to carve a different world order (“all roads lead to Beijing”) stands
as a counterpoint to the understanding of the Arctic as an international
commons where, as indicated by the policy document, China will abide by all
international legal instruments, treaties, and mechanisms of pertinent
institutions, like the International Maritime Organization. Indeed, as Chinese
and polar politics specialist Anne-Marie Brady states, “China’s focus on
becoming a polar great power represents a fundamental reorientation — a
completely new way of imagining the world” — and the polar region is one new
strategic playground where China will build and prove its burgeoning power.
Will this alternative world vision give appropriate right of way to
international law and treaties? The short shrift given to UNCLOS closer home in
the South China Sea could very well bely any true commitment on the part of
China to accepted norms beyond, perhaps, an opportunity to allay concerns of
revisionist designs.
Responses to China’s official Arctic policy run to both extremes. Some
are crying wolf and calling it a cover for a more subversive strategy; others
believe China is only stepping up as a responsible nation, and any
irresponsible activity will undermine its credibility – and that the policy
itself is a clear statement against which to measure its behaviour. While
China’s capital is in high demand among the Arctic states as well —
infrastructure investment needs are to the tune of $1 trillion over the next 15 years —
commercial shipping through the Arctic is unlikely until at least 2040 given existing
environmental, technological, and financial challenges. Matters of environment
and sustainability, navigation security, and dual-use infrastructure will
become salient in the meantime. Chinese behaviour and actions will ultimately
determine whether BRI implementation practices converge with the upholding of
international law that China promises in its official Arctic policy.
About the author:
*Ritika Passi is Project Editor and Associate Fellow at ORF. Her research focuses on issues of connectivity, security and development. She is currently working on the Belt and Road Initiative and the International North-South Transport Corridor. In an editorial capacity, she is in charge of ideating, coordinating and producing special projects. She oversees the Global Policy Journal-ORF series. She is the editor of the ORF Primer, which ran for two years, and co-editor of ORF Raisina Files 2017.
*Ritika Passi is Project Editor and Associate Fellow at ORF. Her research focuses on issues of connectivity, security and development. She is currently working on the Belt and Road Initiative and the International North-South Transport Corridor. In an editorial capacity, she is in charge of ideating, coordinating and producing special projects. She oversees the Global Policy Journal-ORF series. She is the editor of the ORF Primer, which ran for two years, and co-editor of ORF Raisina Files 2017.
Source:
This article was published by the Observer Research Foundation.
This article was published by the Observer Research Foundation.
Notes:
[1] The first shipment occurred in December last year, marking the start of commercial operations
[1] The first shipment occurred in December last year, marking the start of commercial operations
Thursday, February 22, 2018
Kerry B. Collison Asia News: The Emergence of Indonesia’s Ocean Policy – Analys...
Kerry B. Collison Asia News: The Emergence of Indonesia’s Ocean Policy – Analys...: Indonesia finally has a comprehensive Ocean Policy to steer all government agencies towards a single, unified direction: to realise...
The Emergence of Indonesia’s Ocean Policy – Analysis
Indonesia
finally has a comprehensive Ocean Policy to steer all government agencies
towards a single, unified direction: to realise the Global Maritime Fulcrum
(GMF) vision of President Joko Widodo to be a strong maritime nation.
The Indonesian
equivalent for the word “Motherland” is “Tanah Air” or literally “Land-Water”.
This signifies that the islands and waters comprising the Nusantara – the
Indonesian archipelago — make up one unified and inseparable entity. Starting
from the Djuanda Declaration of 1957 which enunciated Indonesia’s “Wawasan
Nusantara” or Archipelagic Outlook, Indonesia took a leading role in the
international acceptance of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea
(UNCLOS) 1982 which recognises Indonesia’s status as an archipelagic state.
Nevertheless,
throughout most of the New Order period (1966-1998) the Indonesian government
paid scant attention to the country’s maritime development. The priorities of
the Suharto government were predominantly land-based and focused on the densely
populated islands in the western part of Indonesia. While the limited financial
resources to develop a strong navy and other maritime capacity was a major
constraint, the real impediment to the realisation of Wawasan Nusantara was the
army’s then stranglehold on politics.
Streamlining Indonesian Ocean Law
The call for
greater attention to Indonesia’s maritime domain had started during the New
Order period, but it only found traction after the fall of President Suharto in
1998. Successive Indonesian governments since the onset of reformasi have begun
to give more attention to Indonesia’s archipelagic nature with its specific
weaknesses and potentials.
Strengthening the Indonesian
navy, ensuring better control over Indonesia’s outermost islands, finalising
maritime boundaries, improving law enforcement at sea to ensure the security
and safety of navigation, husbanding the country’s rich marine resources and
improving sea transportation to reduce the isolation of the eastern islands
have all become national priorities
One of the problems faced by Indonesia over its maritime domain was that
for a long time there was no single comprehensive ocean regulation. There were
over a dozen laws which gave different ministries and agencies particular
responsibilities at sea. Development activities were scattered over various
central government ministries and agencies to the different levels of regional
administrations without a clear roadmap, leading to disappointing results and
inefficiency.
Institutional competitions were particular hazards to law enforcement at
sea. The seriousness of the situation led to increasing calls for a more
integrated policy on managing Indonesia’s seas.
President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono established a consultative body, the
“Dewan Kelautan Indonesia” (Indonesian Maritime Council), in 2007 to help
formulate a general policy on ocean affairs. President Yudhoyono signed the
seminal Law Number 32 of 2014 on Ocean Affairs on 17 October 2014, just a few
days before he stepped down. The move brought together salient elements
scattered in different legislations pertaining to the management and
development of Indonesia’s maritime domain under one law.
Law Number 32/2014 became the legal basis for the establishment of the
“Badan Keamanan Laut” (Maritime Security Board), a full-fledged agency
responsible for ensuring security, safety and law enforcement at sea with a
stronger mandate than the coordinating agency for security at sea “BAKORKAMLA”
that it replaced.
Indonesia as a “Global Maritime Fulcrum”
While all the post-1998 presidents had given greater attention towards
Indonesia’s maritime domain, it is President Joko Widodo (Jokowi) who has
elevated maritime-related affairs to a national priority. Strengthening
Indonesia’s maritime identity was one of the campaign pledges put forward by
President Jokowi, which he followed up with the plan to make Indonesia a
“Global Maritime Fulcrum” (GMF) soon after being sworn in as president on 20
October 2014.
Jokowi created the new Coordinating Ministry for Maritime Affairs, which
coordinates the Ministry for Maritime Affairs and Fishery, the Ministry of
Transportation, the Ministry of Energy and Mineral Resources as well as the
Ministry of Tourism, reflecting its economic thrust.
On 20 February 2017 Jokowi signed Presidential Decree Number 16 of 2017
concerning Indonesian Ocean Policy (IOP) which will be the primary reference
point for all programmes and activities related to Indonesia’s maritime domain.
The goal of the IOP is to realise the GMF Vision of “Indonesia as a sovereign,
advanced, independent, strong maritime nation that is able to provide positive
contribution for peace and security in the region as well as to the world”.
The roadmap of the IOP highlights seven policy pillars: Marine and Human
Resources Development; Maritime Security, Law Enforcement and Safety at Sea;
Ocean Governance and Institutions; Development of Maritime Economy; Ocean Space
Management and Marine Protection; Maritime Culture; and Maritime Diplomacy.
Each of the policy pillars is further broken down into policies/strategies,
altogether totalling 76 policies/strategies.
The first Plan of Action is for the period 2016-2019 which highlights
five priority clusters: Maritime Boundary, Ocean Space and Maritime Diplomacy;
Maritime Industry and Sea Connectivity; Services and Industry of Marine Natural
Resources and Marine Environment Management; Maritime Defence and Security; and
Maritime Culture.
The implementation of the IOP is carried out by the ministries and non-ministerial
government agencies according to their respective roles and functions under the
supervision of the Coordinating Ministry for Maritime Affairs.
Indonesia as Promoter of World Peace
It can be seen that the IOP is primarily domestically-oriented as most
of the policy pillars and strategies are aimed at strengthening the protection
and management of the Indonesian archipelago, and maximising the economic
potentials that its maritime domain has to offer as part of Indonesia’s overall
economic development. The external dimensions of the IOP are limited to
maritime diplomacy and to defence and security.
Nevertheless, the GMF vision also underlines Indonesia’s view of itself
as an international promoter of peace. One of the IOP programmes on defence and
security is to enhance Indonesia’s participation in regional and international
cooperation on maritime defence and security. On maritime diplomacy the IOP
explicitly states that Indonesia must play a leadership role in various
maritime cooperation and initiatives at the regional and multilateral levels.
The IOP, moreover, also states that the GMF vision should take into
account of, and be synergised with, the various regional initiatives as long as
they are in line with Indonesia’s national interests and can make positive
contributions to peace.
*Dewi Fortuna Anwar is Distinguished Visiting
Professor at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies (RSIS), Nanyang
Technological University, Singapore. A Research Professor at the Centre for
Political Studies-Indonesian Institute of Sciences (LIPI), she straddles the
world of academia, political activism and government, having also served
previously in the State Secretariat during the Habibie Presidency and
subsequently in senior advisory positions to two Indonesian vice-presidents
Monday, February 19, 2018
Kerry B. Collison Asia News: Indonesia’s military craves more power
Kerry B. Collison Asia News: Indonesia’s military craves more power: Indonesia’s military craves more power To the consternation of pro-democracy activists and those with grim memories of ex-president S...
Indonesia’s military craves more power
Indonesia’s military craves more power
To the
consternation of pro-democracy activists and those with grim memories of
ex-president Suharto’s authoritarian rule, Joko Widodo’s government continues
to mull over legislation that would give the Indonesian Armed Forces (TNI) a
wider counterterrorism role.
It is not
clear yet what changes will be made to the 2003 Anti-Terrorism Law, but in a
letter to Parliament last month new armed forces chief Air Chief Marshal Hadi
Tjahjanto rang alarm bells by proposing that terrorism should be changed from a
law enforcement to an officially defined state security issue.
That, and
the contention that terrorism is also a threat to territorial integrity, would
place it squarely within the domain of the military, which lost its internal
security role when democratic reforms made it solely responsible for external
defense in 1999.
“The question is whether it is desirable to
give the military the authority to take the initiative without reference to the
police,” says Sidney Jones, director of the Institute for Policy Analysis of
Conflict, a think tank. “It opens a wedge where the dangers will outweigh the
benefits that would come from specifying its roles in the law.”
Previous
versions of the draft legislation have allowed Indonesia’s capable special
forces units to spearhead the response in cases of ship or aircraft hijacks,
mass hostage-taking and multiple simultaneous terrorist threats.
“The law
only provides for prohibited acts carrying criminal liability for the
perpetrators (and) is only applicable after terrorism acts have been carried out,” said
in his letter to the parliamentary committee working on the draft.
To deal
effectively and efficiently with terrorism, Tjahjanto wrote, the strategy of
“proactive law enforcement” should be applied where terrorists are
lawfully apprehended in the planning stages of an operation before they
can inflict death and destruction.
Maritime
Coordinating Minister Luhut Panjaitan, a former commander of the army special
forces’ (Kopassus) elite Detachment 81 counterterrorism unit, told Asia Times
that Indonesia is merely seeking to model itself along the lines of many
Western countries.
He points
in particular to the involvement of the British Special Air Service in the
dramatic 1980 Iranian Embassy operation as an example of the army being called
in when the police were not thought to be up to the task.
Panjaitan
says the government wants to create a crisis center at the presidential palace,
separate from the existing National Anti-Terrorism Agency (BNPT), which would
make decisions on threat levels and whether to involve the military in any
given situation.
“All we
want to do is create the right balance,” says the retired four-star general,
who also acts as Widodo’s chief political adviser. “We want to establish an
equilibrium for the roles of the police and the military.”
Panjaitan
rules out formalizing a specific anti-terrorism role for the military’s
nationwide territorial structure. But he says the retired non-commissioned
officers who form the village-level layer, known as babinsa, could
still act as “eyes and ears” of the counterterrorism apparatus.
Former
president Susilo Bambang Yiudhoyono was furious when he learned that the
militants responsible for the 2009 bombing of Jakarta’s J.W. Marriott Hotel had
been living in a village in Java for four years without anyone reporting their
presence.
Security
experts estimate 80% of anti-terrorism efforts focus on intelligence, 15% on
investigation and only 5% on what they call “door-kicking,” though the tactical
capabilities involved in that task are crucial.
On that
score, there is a significant difference in capabilities between Detachment 81
and its police counterpart, Detachment 88, which was created in the wake of the
devastating 2002 Bali bombing and has still performed remarkably well with
limited training.
Those
limitations became obvious during a joint exercise at a supposed terrorist-held
hotel in central Jakarta, where two police commandoes found themselves stuck
upside down as they rappelled down the front of the building – in stark
contrast to the fast-roping ability of the Kopassus operators.
US
instructors and other well-placed sources say that like other specialized
units, Detachment 88 has perishable skills which require constant training –
something that hasn’t been achieved up to now because of a continual turnover
of manpower.
This lack
of continuity, they say, means the unit has yet to learn the teamwork and
expertise needed to take down a building occupied by terrorists, one of the
main reasons why the paramilitary force has often been accused of shooting
first and asking questions later.
Kopassus
appears to have maintained its skill level, despite the 17-year embargo the US
imposed on military contacts between the two countries over the bloody events
in East Timor in 1991 and later during the then Indonesian territory’s vote for
independence in 1999.
While
Kopassus has vastly improved its human rights record, it will take more time to
relax the so-called Leahy Law, named after Democrat Senator Patrick Leahy,
which still forbids the Indonesians from engaging in combat training with US
special forces.
US
Defence Secretary James Mattis promised to re-explore the issue during a visit
to Jakarta in late January, where he was treated to a bizarre display of
Kopassus soldiers breaking concrete blocks with their heads and drinking the
blood of snakes they had killed.
Ironically,
when then US President Barrack Obama visited Indonesia for the 2011 East Asia
Summit, Kopassus and army regulars occupied the two inner rings of the security
cordon at Bali airport, leaving the police outside on the perimeter.
The
amended anti-terrorism law aims at bolstering the policy and coordination
powers of the BNPT, a 100-strong counterterrorism agency staffed by police and
military officers which has proved largely ineffectual since it was established
by the Yudhoyono administration in 2010.
Critics
say there is no guarantee that giving it more staff and a larger budget will
make it any more effective, particularly in the disengagement and
de-radicalization of terrorist convicts.
Recidivism
within five years of an arrest is surprisingly low, certainly below 10%, but
researchers say that has little to do with government programs and more to do
with pressure from wives, the birth of a new child or other family
circumstances.
On the
other hand, the Correction Department’s failure to keep convicted militants in
isolation and away from the general prison population has led to further
terrorist recruitment from among common criminals.
To
rectify that shortcoming, the government is building a new maximum security
facility on the prison island of Nusakambangan, off Java’s southern coast,
which will eventually hold 240 of the country’s convicted terrorists and other
high-risk prisoners.
It is
modeled after Louisiana’s Pollock federal penitentiary in the US, with one
notable exception: it will be surrounded by a moat, which presents potential
water-soaked escapees with an additional hazard when negotiating an electrified
perimeter fence.
Much will
depend, however, on whether the supposedly specially trained guards will make a
difference, particularly in preventing the prisoners from using mobile phones,
as they have been able to do by paying off wardens in other jails.
The
210-square-kilometer Nusakambangan is already home to seven prisons, including
Pasir Putih, which along with Cirebon and Garut in other parts of mainland West
Java is one of three facilities currently designated for terrorist convicts.
The
island houses up to 1,500 prisoners, including about 60 criminals who face
death by firing squad at one of two sites set aside for executions; it was
where Bali bombers Imam Samudra, 38, Amrozi bin Nurhasyim, 47, and Al Ghufron,
48, were put to death in 2008.
Now on
trial in Jakarta, radical cleric Aman Abdurrahman, 46, could suffer the same
fate if he is found guilty of masterminding from behind bars the January 14, 2016,
bomb and gun attack in the center of Jakarta which left four militants and four
civilians dead.
It was
that incident, inspired by the now-faltering Islamic State of Iraq and Syria
(ISIS), that prompted calls for strengthening BNPT’s ability to coordinate the
36 different ministries and agencies involved in trying to rein in violent
jihadism
By John McBeth
Jakarta, February 19, 2018 2:18 PM
(UTC+8)
Sunday, February 18, 2018
Kerry B. Collison Asia News: TRIBALISM IS KILLING MULTICULTURALISM
Kerry B. Collison Asia News: TRIBALISM IS KILLING MULTICULTURALISM: The word “Multiculturalism” may be a recent innovation in the English language. The concept however goes back a long way. Multicult...
TRIBALISM IS KILLING MULTICULTURALISM
The word “Multiculturalism” may be a recent
innovation in the English language. The concept however goes back a long way.
Multiculturalism is in fact just a rebranded form of tribalism. For most of
human existence, tribalism has been the default human condition. We are tribal
by nature. If you have any doubts about that fact, then go to an English soccer
match, that’s a lesson in anthropology you won’t forget in a hurry.
Despite its enduring persistence, tribalism is an extremely poor way to
organise a society. Tribal societies rarely rise above the most meagre level of
existence.
Tribalism is inherently destructive and inefficient. An inordinate
amount of effort is expended on offence and defence. This leaves few resources
available for productive enterprise like producing food and shelter.
Unfortunately, in a tribal system, every tribe must play the tribal game or
suffer the consequences.
The tribal game consists of looking out solely for the interests of the
tribe. In the tribal game, there are only two rules.
Rule 1) There are no rules
Rule 2) See rule one
In effect, tribalism is the law of the jungle. Kill or be killed is the
order of the day. The tribe must jealously guard its territory and seek if
possible to extend it. That can only be done through physical conflict because
neighbouring tribes are unlikely to give up territory without a fight.
In recent times, academics have imagined that tribal, and especially
pre-civilised, people lived a peaceful, idyllic existence until white people
showed up.
There is no evidence for this viewpoint. In fact, if we look more
closely, a very different picture emerges. Many skeletons excavated from times
before civilisation show unmistakable signs of human inflicted fatal
injuries.
Skulls with axe wounds, arrow heads lodged in skeletons and similar
damage allows us to estimate the levels of fatal conflict. These are probably
underestimated as they ignore other injuries which are not visible on skeletal
remains.
Even so, the numbers are shocking and paint a bleak picture of tribal
existence. Tribal warfare rarely involves large scale battles of the kind
nation states engage in. However, the lower level skirmishes carried out over a
much longer time frame had devastating results on tribal populations, including
women and children.
The chances of being involved in a kill or be killed situation is
vanishingly small for a citizen of a modern Western nation state. Even WW1,
which was one of our bloodiest conflicts had a relatively low body count. The
flu pandemic which followed wiped out more people than the war itself.
In contrast, tribal conflicts can easily wipe out
30% or more of an entire tribal population.
That is not to say that tribes are in a constant state of conflict. They
can in fact enjoy long periods of relative peace. Unfortunately, tribalism
demands that such periods are used to increase populations in readiness for
inevitable conflict. The inevitability of the conflict is caused by the
exploding populations and the demands these put on scarce resources.
Unfortunately, tribes which don’t play this game will be wiped out. Darwin’s
theories apply to societies even more than they do to individuals.
This isn’t to say that tribal people are inferior in any sense. For most
of human history, our ancestors were tribal. It is simply a destructive system.
Witness the Ethiopian famine of the early ‘80s which was met with Western aid,
spearheaded by Sir Bob “send the F@#king money” Geldof and his Live Aid
concerts.
At the time of that famine, there were 40 million hungry people in
Ethiopia. By 2010 that number had doubled. Today, there is famine once more and
yet the population is projected to double again within 20 or 30 years. How is
that possible? Only through Western Aid is the obvious answer. Unfortunately,
Western aid will eventually be either overwhelmed or withdrawn. When that
happens, Ethiopian tribes will fight and kill each other for whatever food remains
just as you or I would in that situation. The largest tribe will likely win
that fight. That is how tribalism has worked for most of human history.
The amazing thing is not the perpetuation of tribalism. It is the fact
that we managed to break out of that cycle and create the Nation State.
A nation state is like a “supersized tribe.” It holds a fixed territory
with agreed borders. Violence is monopolised by the state whose job it is to
coordinate protection of both the borders and the citizens within.
This system is not without disadvantages. The large distances between
the rulers and their citizens can lead to episodes of extreme indifference or
worse, by ruling classes.
This dynamic creates a constant struggle between rulers and ruled. In
the Western world, and especially in the Anglosphere however, we have a strong
foundation of institutions such as English Common Law, the Rule of Law and
Democracy. These philosophical and legal foundations give citizens protection
from rogue governments and have underpinned a society which previous humans
could only dream about.
The size of a Nation State means that localised droughts or catastrophes
can be dealt with through shared resources. The savage drought in Eastern
Australia in the 2000s never caused the starvation we commonly see in African
droughts.
The Rule of Law allows for large scale enterprises which produce an
abundance of foods and other consumer goods. The lack of tribal competition
removes the need for rapid population increases and our technology gives us a
means to effortlessly control our numbers.
Steadily declining populations reduce environmental strains and provide
ever increasing abundance for future generations. We live in societies which
provide a standard of living which earlier humans could only dream about.
That is not to say that tribal life is without redeeming features. Many
of our recreational activities revolve around things which tribal people take
for granted. However, the disadvantages are monumental.
Imagine an awkward childbirth in a tent, when the medical establishment
consists of a bloke with a stick with some feathers on it. Or how about
neighbours who will set fire to your hut in the middle of the night and then
butcher you and your family when you come running out. Sorry, but I’ll take
apartment living every time.
Unfortunately, the Western Nation State is now under serious threat from
tribalism. The decision to import vast numbers of tribal people into Western
Nations is undermining our very foundations.
What is often conveniently ignored, and now virtually illegal to mention
in many Western Nations, is that the European Nation States were founded as
Supersized tribes with a shared ethnic, cultural and religious foundation.
Patriotism is Tribalism writ large. “Ask not what your country can do for you,”
demanded Kennedy, “ask what you can do for your country.”
Yet the word “country,” was the wrong word. The word he should have used
was “countrymen.” As with “King and Country,” it was not land which people made
sacrifices for, it was for their countrymen.
Like it or not, people identify with their own ethnic kind. We view them
as extended family. Whenever they have the chance, people have a tendency to
self-segregate. That doesn’t mean that we are all closet Nazis. It is simply
human nature to feel more comfortable among people of “your own kind.”
Neither is that an exclusively “white” phenomenon.
In fact, from personal experience, I would suggest that white people are
among the most inclusive and tolerant of others. This could be in part a cultural
issue since the Nation State encourages “universalism” and shuns the kind of
tribal affiliations found elsewhere.
It is natural therefore, for Westerners to try to assimilate people into
their society and accommodate them as part of the nation. Our Government is
mandated to treat all people as individuals and bestow on them the same rights
and responsibilities as everyone else. We assume that all people will react as
we do and embrace the nation in its entirety.
What people never considered (or were too polite to mention), was that
the people we were bringing in, may not have the same outlook as we do.
Unfortunately, when people with a tribal culture are inserted into a
universalist society, the tribalists have a huge advantage.
By working together to advance shared benefits, tribalists gain
inordinate power and influence.
It is like collaborating in a card game. As Warren Buffet pointed out,
“if you are playing cards and you can’t figure out who the Patsy is, then it is
you.”
Nowhere is this as obvious as in politics. Westerners tend to vote in
part for their own benefit and in part for their perception of who will best
serve the interests of the nation as a whole.
Tribalists on the other hand will vote exclusively for members of the
tribe. Since votes are often split quite evenly, the solidarity of the ethnic
vote means that political parties have to pander to ethnic interests whenever
the ethnic vote becomes significant.
Muslims in London are far short of a majority. Indigenous white Britons
still outnumber them by more than two to one. Yet tribally voting Muslims have
ensured that London now has a Muslim Lord Mayor.
The entrenched involvement of indigenous peoples in the political
process has slowed this trend down to some extent, however, things will change
soon, and politicians know it.
That is why they pander incessantly to minority tribal interests. They
assume that the universalist majority can be taken for granted. The Left knows
that many whites will vote for more spending on schools and hospitals. The
Right knows that many whites will vote for lower taxes and a business-friendly
environment.
Only the tribal vote needs to be bought and paid for. This largesse can
take many forms. Sometimes it may be direct financial benefits in the form of
“community aid” or grants for community organisations.
Tribalists are not silly. They understand graft and corruption
intimately. When the government scratches ethnic backs, you can bet that a
portion of this aid will be recycled into the politician’s campaign funds.
As costly as this may be, it is not the most destructive part of the
relationship. Tribalists think tribally. Their main concern is power and
numbers. All tribalists see the majority as the biggest threat, and the one to
be taken down.
The White majority have the numbers, the power and the resources that
the tribalists covet. No matter how much they hate each other, tribalists are
happy to work together to achieve their aims.
Each tribal group sees the majority as the main obstacle to achieving
their goal. Thus, we have a coalition of tribal groups whose long term goal is
to cripple the power of the White majority at all costs. They seek to do this
primarily through government. While whites historically have been concerned
with restricting government power, most ethnic groups are more concerned with
monopolising that power to their own ends.
Thus, we have issues such as the removal of Freedom of Speech. This
right was won through great bloodshed by Westerners. It has been taken from us
by a coalition of ethnic groups. These groups argued that White Australians
might inflict a Holocaust on ethnic minorities if we were allowed to express
our opinions without government permission.
This argument is so ridiculous on so many levels that it should never
have been even considered. Yet thanks to the power of the various ethnic and
religious lobbies, our hard-won Freedom of Speech was taken from us with barely
a whimper.
The campaign of the white majority to get it back, which was led by then
Prime Minister, Tony Abbott was steamrolled by the ethnic coalition. Abbott was
subsequently removed from power and replaced by a candidate rather more
sympathetic to ethnic minority interests.
Immigration of course, is the ultimate “sacred cow” of the tribalists.
They play a numbers game, so any politician attempting to reduce immigration is
hounded down as “literally Hitler.” Witness the hatred and vitriol directed at
Trump. Yet all he has proposed is to remove illegal migrants and restrict the
immigration of people from countries which are hotbeds of terror and
anti-American hatred.
Every imaginable attack has been launched at Trump and his “deplorable”
supporters and for what? For trying to keep out known murderers and terrorists?
Trump may not be perfect, and to call him unconventional would be an
understatement. Yet his opponents were a crook and a communist who sailed along
on a sea of media adoration. Even his own party hated him. I think that most of
the Republican establishment would prefer Che Guevara as President.
There lies our immediate problem. Our politicians, with a few notable
exceptions, have been captured by ethnic interests and are now working in
lucrative and high prestige jobs with the primary purpose of hamstringing the
power of indigenous white majorities. In my opinion, that would make them the
most treasonous, treacherous leaders of any human society in the history of
ever.
In England, the Labour party is now brazenly excluding white men from
decision making conferences and charging them extra for events based solely on
their race (while simultaneously arguing that “race doesn’t exist).
“Human Rights” bodies are formed that actively discriminate against
whites as they did in the Queensland university case. When regular Pickering
Post contributor, Paul Zanetti brought a real complaint of hate speech against
white males however, the HRC treated him like something they had just stepped
in.
In a recent trip to a UK hospital, I took a photo of a noticeboard
having a poster encouraging “black” workers to join the union which has a
“Black Members Organisation.”
Can you imagine the uproar if a union had a “White Members
Organisation?” There are too many instances of anti-white racism to mention and
I’m sure you are aware of many of them. If you aren’t, then you really need to
get out more.
Australia is still behind the UK by around 20 years but we are rapidly
playing catch up. We are reaching a tipping point where we risk turning our
cohesive, homogenous nation into a divisive, beggar thy neighbour tribal slime
hole.
If that happens, whites will not be the only losers. While ethnic
leaders have their snouts deep in the multicultural trough, their constituents
are often the ones to suffer. Refugees, who fled conflicts in their homelands
are seeing their children return to die in Jihad.
Muslim girls can face FGM, honour killings and forced marriages. Jewish
leaders fight for Third World immigration while ordinary Jews face serious
threats in communities which were once safe and welcoming. Many ethnic
minorities live in ghettos plagued by crime and corruption thanks to ethnic
lobby groups and the corrupt politicians who pander to them.
So, the question is, what can we do about it? Well, we could take the
Swedish option and do nothing. This is the easy option for us, but our kids and
grandkids will pay a terrible price. Already, young white males in the UK are
finding themselves on the bottom of the heap and locked out of an increasing
number of opportunities.
This situation will deteriorate rapidly as every other ethnic group
fights for its own benefit while white people refuse to fight for theirs.
The alternative is to really push back as if your future and your family
depend on it. We have to accept that our political class does not have our
interests at heart. We need to stop voting as if we live in a homogenous nation
state. We no longer have that luxury.
Like many of you, I have to express disappointment, though not surprise,
that One Nation are a bunch of incompetent, arrogant and ineffective fools.
Unfortunately, while Pauline may not be Donald Trump, PHON is the only
political party which has any claim to represent the interests of traditional
Australians.
If we were to vote for One Nation en-masse, the other parties would soon
get the message. Whilst we could be subjected to (hopefully just) one term of
poor leadership, others would soon come forward with stronger credentials and
capabilities.
Secondly, we need to recognise and understand that what we are facing is
ethnic warfare, even though it is mostly playing out in a non-violent form at
present.
We need to fight against this ferociously. We have to watch like hawks
and pay attention to what is being said. We need to force our enemies to define
their terms.
Don’t allow racism against white people to be called “reverse racism.”
It is just racism. Demand a definition. Don’t allow discrimination against
white people to be called “positive discrimination.” It is plain old
discrimination.
Challenge people whenever possible. Share articles like this one on
Facebook and with friends and family. Most of all, share them with politicians
and make your views clear in no uncertain terms.
We can turn things around. We’ve been in worse pickles and lived to tell
the tale. All it will take is drive and courage. In my experience Australians
have these quantities in spades,
…don’t let me down.
Harry Richardson
Harry Richardson is a long-time student of Islam and author of best
seller, "the Story Of Mohammed - Islam Unveiled',
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