http://www.theage.com.au/opinion/politics/did-timor-teach-us-nothing-20120623-20uvi.html#ixzz1yiSATmWN
Did Timor teach us nothing? 
Jennifer Robinson
June 24, 2012 
Opinion

 
Escalating violence ... a motorcycle is set on fire in Papua. Photo: Reuters

As violence escalates in West Papua, one cannot help but recall East Timor and 
wonder how much worse it must get before Australia and the international 
community will act.

Tensions are at breaking point in the easternmost province of Indonesia after 
the police shooting of independence activist Mako Tabuni.

Human rights activists report Tabuni was unarmed when shot six times by the 
Australian-trained Detachment 88 forces. Tabuni was deputy chairman of the West 
Papua National Committee, an organisation advocating independence and the right 
to self-determination under international law. Tabuni had also been campaigning 
for an investigation into a recent spate of military killings.

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The shooting follows years of violence. At least 16 people have been killed in 
the past month, according to human rights groups, and hundreds of homes raided, 
with many burnt to the ground. Thousands are reported to be evacuating, seeking 
refuge in the forest or heading for refugee camps in Papua New Guinea. Credible 
reports of human rights violations by Indonesian security forces have emerged, 
including torture, excessive use of force and extrajudicial killings.

Yet Indonesia's State Intelligence Agency chief, Lieutenant-General Marciano 
Norman, placed blame on the Free Papua Movement, ''foreign agents'' and local 
residents for the violence. The President, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, played 
down the events. As Indonesia obfuscates and Australia remains silent, West 
Papua bleeds. While most Australians are proud of our role in ending 24 years 
of bloody Indonesian occupation in East Timor, we should not forget it came 
after a long history of accepting Indonesian assertions of sovereignty while 
ignoring human rights abuse on our doorstep.

After East Timor, we cannot claim any wide-eyed innocence regarding West Papua.

Australia is now bidding for a place on the United Nations Security Council on 
the basis of our alleged ''human rights-based foreign policy'', highlighting 
our role in East Timor while trying to keep a lid on our history of inaction 
there.

The federal Attorney-General has refused freedom of information requests for 
the release of diplomatic cables dating to the 1970s - cables that a University 
of NSW professor, Clinton Fernandes, says will show Australian complicity in 
concealing the mass starvation of Timorese.

Are we now making the same mistakes with West Papua? Few are aware of 
Australian and UN involvement in West Papua 30 years before the intervention in 
East Timor. Like East Timor, West Papua was annexed by Indonesia in 
circumstances that violated international law. Comparisons are made, and with 
good reason. Both territories are made up of distinct minorities. Both are rich 
in natural resources. Both have struggled for self-determination. Like East 
Timor, West Papua had a UN vote for self-determination, only the outcome could 
not have been more different.

In 1999, East Timor got a proper vote and won independence (not before an 
estimated 200,000 Timorese had died). But in 1969, West Papua got a sham vote 
and became part of Indonesia.

Last month, East Timor celebrated 10 years of independence or, as the Timorese 
say, 10 years since the international community recognised their independence. 
But an estimated 400,000 Papuans have now been killed after more than 40 years 
of Indonesian oppression and abuse.

This year, Indonesia faced international condemnation for the imprisonment of 
West Papuan leaders for peacefully calling for independence. When asked if 
Australia had raised concerns with Indonesia, the Foreign Affairs Minister, Bob 
Carr, responded by admitting that ''before I could raise the subject … the 
Indonesian Foreign Minister nominated that they have a clear responsibility to 
see that their sovereignty is upheld in respect of human rights standards'', 
and Carr ''was impressed by that''.

In responses eerily similar to statements made by Gareth Evans about East Timor 
during Indonesian rule, Carr warned members of Parliament ''against foolishly 
talking up'' West Papuans' right to self-determination because it ''threatens 
the territorial integrity of Indonesia'' and ''would produce a reaction'' 
towards Australia. It would be a foolish foreign affairs minister who did not 
learn from our mistakes in East Timor.

Australia should, at a minimum, reconsider military aid to Indonesia and call 
for them to allow media and international organisations access to West Papua to 
investigate abuses and facilitate peaceful dialogue.

East Timor should remind us of the hefty price of turning a blind eye to 
repression in the mistaken belief that it serves stability in our region. As a 
Deakin University academic, Scott Burchill, has long argued, it is not only ''a 
dereliction of our ethical duty, it is politically short-sighted and usually 
results in blowback''.

Jennifer Robinson is an Australian human rights lawyer in London.


Read more: 
http://www.theage.com.au/opinion/politics/did-timor-teach-us-nothing-20120623-20uvi.html#ixzz1ytCmzZ8Q


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