https://www.thejakartapost.com/academia/2019/08/27/east-timor-style-referendum-could-happen-in-papua-too.html



*East Timor-style referendum could happen in Papua too*

   -

   Kornelius Purba

   The Jakarta Post

Jakarta   /   Tue, August 27, 2019   /   09:02 am



Some 7,000 people from four regencies in Papuamarch along the street,
dancing and chanting “Papua Merdeka” (Free Papua) on Aug. 26. They demand
the government to immediately prosecute people committing racial abuse
against Papuans. (JP/Courtesy of Bonny Lanny)



Almost no one, including Dili Catholic Bishop Carlos Felipe Ximenes Belo
and independence fighter Kay Rale Xanana Gusmao, thought their homeland
East Timor could gain independence in such a short time. While they were
considering the special autonomy or limited self-governance that Jakarta
had offered in January 1999, Indonesia’s third president BJ Habibie gave
East Timor the option of breaking free.

One month after Habibie allowed the United Nations to organize an
independence referendum for East Timor, I wrote in this newspaper that his
startling decision was influenced by a desire to be remembered for East
Timor. At that time, the military was confident the people in the tiny
territory would remain with Indonesia.

“I will prove to the world that I can make a major contribution to world
peace as mandated by our Constitution,” one of Habibie’s aides recalled him
as saying. Habibie also hoped the decision would pave the way for his
election in the same year. He was wrong. But he was right too, because his
name is immortalized in the history of Timor Leste, the new name of East
Timor.

You may laugh at me now if I forecast the Papuan people will fulfill their
dream of independence much sooner than their expectations, just like the
way East Timor separated from Indonesia following the historic Aug. 30,
1999, referendum.

Many will no doubt blame the United States or Australia if a Papua exit
comes to pass. But seeing the racial abuse against Papuan students and the
heightened reactions in Papua, we Indonesians, not just the government,
should blame ourselves. We have treated the Papuans the same way we did the
people of East Timor.

In a controversial interview with German magazine* Der Spiegel* after
winning the Nobel Peace Prize along with East Timor independence fighter
José Ramos-Horta in 1996, Belo described the mistreatment the East Timorese
people endured from Indonesia. He said Indonesian soldiers treated East
Timorese like “scabby dogs”, while the government abused them like “slaves”.

Then-president Soeharto was angered by the bishop’s statement but refrained
from rebuking him openly. Belo resigned as bishop after independence.

The words “dogs”, “monkeys”, “pigs”, and “slaughter the Papuans”, were
loudly chanted when a group of people, including police and military
personnel and hard-line Muslim group members, attacked a Papuan student
dormitory in Surabaya, East Java, on Aug. 16. They accused the students of
refusing to celebrate the 74th anniversary of Indonesia’s independence. A
similar incident also occurred in other cities such as Malang also in East
Java and Semarang, Central Java.

Sadly, as Indonesia celebrated its freedom from colonialism, a group of
people, in the name of nationalism, displayed the colonial mentality by
suppressing others. What Bishop Belo recounted in the 1996 interview was
practiced by the die-hard supporters of the undisputed Unitary State of the
Republic of Indonesia (NKRI).

Indonesia has witnessed regional dissent, such as in East Timor and Aceh.
But the conflicts mostly pitted the central government (the state) against
local people. We rarely heard about anti-Acehnese or anti-East Timorese
sentiments.

This is not the case in the Papua conflict, however. Papuan people not only
face the central government but also non-Papuans, as happened around
Independence Day. Such horizontal conflict could lead to a civil war if the
government fails to handle the hostility with extra care.

In a conversation several months after the majority of East Timorese voted
for independence in 1999, the legendary Indonesian diplomat Ali Alatas told
me about the situation in Papua.

“Could Papua follow East Timor’s path?” I asked him..

“Papua is very different from East Timor,” he said. First, unlike Papua,
East Timor was never part of Indonesia until the latter annexed the former
Portuguese territory in 1975. Second, Papua comprises hundreds of ethnic
and sub-ethnic groups so that they have to use the Indonesian language for
their daily communication with each other. East Timor was relatively
homogenous.

Third, the majority of Papuans are Protestants, comprising various
congregations, and therefore it would be much more difficult to unite the
people in the province into one big force. East Timor was a predominantly
Catholic territory.

I admit the validity of the late foreign minister’s strong arguments, but
he might never have imagined during his lifetime that we Indonesians could
be so brutal toward our Papuan brothers and sisters.

We describe Indonesia as a home for all citizens, including our Papuan
compatriots. That’s why we sing the patriotic song “Dari Sabang sampai
Merauke” (From Sabang to Merauke, respectively the western tip of Aceh and
easternmost regency of Papua).

We call our home the Unitary State of the Republic of Indonesia and will
not let anyone undermine our unity as a family. In a family, father knows
best. But what happens when one or another of the family members feels they
receive discriminatory treatment like step- or adopted children but are
forced to stay in the family?

We are too lazy to discern the roots of the Papua problem but resort to the
use of force to make sure that family unity is intact, although some no
longer regard the country as their home. The Papuans will only feel
Indonesia is their true home when they find the love and equal treatment
that they deserve as part of the family.

Remember what happened in East Timor 20 years ago could recur in Papua.
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