Precedence: bulk


The following article was printed in the Down to Earth newsletter, No.
41, May 1999, Special Supplement on alternative development strategies
in Indonesia.

AMAN: INDONESIA@S NEW INDIGENOUS VOICE 

The first ever Congress of Indigenous Peoples of the Archipelago has met
in Jakarta. A new indigenous peoples' alliance, AMAN, has been launched
and the need to address the issue of indigenous peoples has been brought
to the attention of the government, the political parties and the
public. 

The week-long meeting, from March 15th - 22nd, was the result of many
months of planning and fund-raising by a group of Indonesian NGOs
committed to working for the interests of indigenous peoples. The NGOs'
idea was to bring indigenous peoples together, provide a venue, funding
for travel and accommodation and so on, then step back to ensure that
the agenda was set and the proceedings run by the indigenous people
themselves. 

The Congress was attended by 231 indigenous representatives from across
the archipelago, with around 50 NGO staff accompanying them. The
representatives had been selected by regional meetings of indigenous
peoples earlier in the year. Several international observers (including
Down to Earth) and academics also attended along with the 50-member
Indonesian NGO facilitating committee. Although observers and the media
were allowed to attend most sessions, only indigenous peoples
representatives were allowed to voice their opinions and take decisions
in the working groups and full conference sessions.

The first two days were devoted to preliminary discussion sessions on a
variety of topics to identify key issues, share experiences and allow
representatives to get used to airing their views in public. The
Congress proper started on the third day. The working groups covered
much of the relevant ground: there were sessions on human rights and the
politics of indigenous peoples; the impact on the lives of indigenous
peoples of  large-scale commercial plantations, mining and fisheries and
international campaigning. Representatives from the International
Alliance of Indigenous-Tribal Peoples of the Tropical Forests and IWGIA,
the International Workgroup on Indigenous Affairs, spoke about
international instruments that can be used to promote the interests of
indigenous peoples. There were also several sessions on women's issues
(see box). 

But above all, the congress provided a much-needed opportunity for
indigenous peoples to share their experiences of human rights
violations, colonisation and oppression at the hands of the government.
It was the occasion of a mass outpouring of grievances against the
injustices that indigenous peoples have suffered for generations.
Delegate after delegate expressed his or her frustration and anger at
the way their land had been taken from them without consultation; the
way the government treated them as ignorant, unskilled and useful only
to attract tourists, showing no respect for their knowledge, culture or
beliefs. They also protested strongly against the way the government had
imposed a uniform village administration system which had no reference
to their own customary laws.

These views were clearly expressed to a panel of government officials
including Land Affairs Minister Hasan Basri Durin, and assistant
ministers from the forestry ministry and social affairs department who
seemed to be completely taken aback by the lack of deference usually
shown them at formal meetings. 

 The result of the days of discussions was the creation of the new
organisation, AMAN, or the Alliance of Indigenous Peoples of the
Archipelago. The use of archipelago instead of 'Indonesia' gets round
the problem of current state boundaries which are rejected by a number
of West Papuan and Acehnese groups. No East Timorese representatives
attended.

The new organisation will consist of indigenous peoples' groups
throughout the archipelago. These will be represented by the Alliance
National Board of 54 people, comprising two representatives - a man and
a woman - from each region. West Papua will have four representatives
because of its size. As some of the delegations had no women members the
selection of their woman representative was to be their first task on
returning to their areas. 

The newly formed Board of AMAN decided that - for practical reasons
(lobbying parliament, ministers etc.)  - there should be a secretariat
in Jakarta for the time being and H. Arifin, a representative of the
Banten/Baduy communities in West Java was chosen as executive secretary.
Three people representing central, eastern and western Indonesia will
act as a management committee. The next Congress will take place in
three years' time.

The Alliance's declaration, issued at a press conference on the final
day stated that:
� Customary law (adat) forms the basis of indigenous peoples' lives;
� The diversity of customary law must be acknowledged - there is no
place for uniform state policy;
� The state must recognise sovereignty of indigenous peoples as they
have had their own systems of organisation long before the Indonesia 
state was created;
� The state must operate in accordance with the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights and stop violating their right to live by customary law;
� Women are the most oppressed group. 

The specific demands included the following:
� Withdraw all laws and regulations that violate the sovereignty of
indigenous peoples before the 1999 elections;
� Review the existence of Transmigration and Forest Squatters
Resettlement Department;
� Get rid of the dual political role of the Armed Forces;
� Abolish all land concession schemes (including logging concessions)
which disadvantage indigenous peoples.
� The government must recognise indigenous peoples' rights.
The statement also rejected the use of discriminatory language such as
"illegal cultivators" (peladang liar) or "isolated tribes" (suku suku
terasing)  and the use of the term "state-owned land" for forests and
other lands of indigenous peoples. "We are equals, we are human beings;
we want to decide our own future."

Last but not least, the Congress was a celebration of ethnicity and
regional identity. There were displays in the conference hotel lobby of
weaving, artefacts, foods, photos, musical instruments, carving, and
traditional clothes. There were dances and songs at closing sessions -
not for tourists, not for money, but for pure enjoyment.

Protest at Parliament

The Alliance's first steps were to take their demands to the national
parliament and human rights commission. On the last day of the congress,
a protest was held outside the parliament building in Jakarta. The group
of around 50 people, many in traditional dress, was surrounded by
anti-riot troops before nine representatives were allowed into the
building. There was anger that it was so hard to get access to the
parliamentarians. "We have been colonised for the past 30 years and yet
it is so difficult for us to meet the government," shouted one
protester. "It is so easy for the government to steal from the
provinces, " he said. 

The Alliance wants the issue of indigenous rights to figure prominently
in this year's general election in June and several political parties
wereinvited to the congress to attend to explain their stand on
indigenous issues. Three representatives  attended from the opposition
parties. They were pressed hard by Congress delegates to explain how
each would support the rights of indigenous peoples. 

Sovereign rights and independence

The West Papuans attending the conference explained very  clearly that
they were demanding independence from Indonesia in order to protect
their rights. They also called upon other indigenous groups to support
them. Increasing levels of disaffection with the centralised nature of
the Indonesian state are becoming apparent in many other areas too. The
indigenous delegates from Kalimantan, for example, identified themselves
as coming from Borneo, implying stronger loyalties to the island and
their ethnic links with the indigenous peoples on the Malaysian part of
the island, than with the rest of Indonesia. A delegate from North
Sulawesi stated that if the government ignored their rights they would
demand to separate from Indonesia. Similar warnings have been heard in
Riau and Maluku. 

Others at the Congress were not demanding any separation from Indonesia,
but still wanted the restoration of their sovereign rights. They wanted
to regain control over their lands and resources and to follow their own
customary laws. They demanded the abolition of laws introduced in the
1970s which impose a uniform village administration system. As one
speaker suggested, restoration of sovereignty may mean revising the 1945
constitution, on which Indonesia's legal system is based. This entrusts
to the state the exploitation of the country's resources for "the
maximum benefit of the people".  What has always been the problem for
indigenous people and the rural poor, is that "the people" has come to
mean the president, his friends and relations.

An indigenous milestone 

The Congress marks a milestone in the development of indigenous peoples'
organisations in Indonesia, as this was the first time that so many
representatives of indigenous peoples have come together. Until now
indigenous peoples have been unable to speak out as a united voice - to
do so would have been considered subversive under the Suharto regime.
For decades indigenous peoples have been fighting to defend their rights
in the face of government development programmes like transmigration and
the forcible resettlement schemes of the social affairs department. They
have been struggling to defend their lands and resources against the
onslaught of large-scale commercial development promoted by the
government. This has been largely at local or sometimes at regional
level. Now, with the founding of the AMAN, indigenous peoples have an
opportunity to work at a country-wide level, to push for change in
government policies and laws. And to ensure that indigenous people are
no longer treated as suku suku terasing who need to be 'developed' by
government programmes, but are instead recognised as highly skilled
managers of the fragile ecosystems that support the
livelihoods of millions of others.

Box: Indigenous women 

Women's concerns were clearly voiced at the congress through a group
called the Alliance of Indigenous Women of the Archipelago. Their
discussions covered the erosion of women's status and participation in
traditional life caused by state intervention.

Government programmes and companies that take over indigenous land for
plantations, timber estates, mines and other projects marginalise women.
Employment opportunities and compensation payments are directed at men,
while women's status under adat law is not recognised. This erodes the
decision-making and leadership roles of women in their communities.

Another major grievance among indigenous women is the state-sponsored
family planning programme under which women are forced to use methods
prescribed by the government. One Komoro woman participant from West
Papua explained how women were suffering from the side effects of family
planning methods forced upon them by the government. Before, she said,
women had been able to limit the number of children by using traditional
medicines without side-effects.  [Indonesia generally has been a major
buyer of  injectables like Depo
Provera and hormone-releasing implants like Norplant. Studies have
identified major health problems among women in remote areas who are
coerced into using what the government terms "effective" methods, which
also include IUDs or coils, as they have little access to the health
care and monitoring that these methods require.]

The women were not afraid to direct some criticism at their own
communities as well as at the state. A protest against the oppression of
women in indigenous communities got the attention of their male
colleagues and became a major talking point of the congress. Their point
was underlined by the fact that only 20 out of the 231 delegates - less
than 10% - were women. The structure of the Alliance (see main text)
should ensure that there are equal number of votes for women and men
representatives. It remains to be seen how far and how quickly a more
balanced representation can be achieved.

(Sources: Gaung KMAN - the Indonesian language Congress newsletter
published by members of the organising committee. This highlights the
progress of theCongress, and includes features on different indigenous
peoples. Also: personal impressions of DTE staff, AFP 14/3/99, Straits
Times 23/3/99)

Note: Down to Earth plans to publish a fuller account of the congress in
the near future. Please email or write to us if you would be interested
in receiving a copy.

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