The Struggle for Merdeka in West Papua
Robert J. Burrowes, KalimNews, Kalimpong, 14 January 2016: It has been argued that nonviolent
struggles to liberate occupied countries – such as West Papua, Tibet,
Palestine, Kanaky and Western Sahara – have failedfar more often than they have
succeededbut that secessionist struggles (that have sought to separate
territory from an existing state in order to establish a new one) conducted by
nonviolent means have always failed. See Why Civil Resistance Works: The
strategic logic of nonviolent conflict.http://cup.columbia.edu/book/why-civil-resistance-works/9780231156820
However, this argument fails to properly
take into account one crucial variable: the quality of the nonviolent strategy
that has been used. Given that none of the cases cited above, for example, has
ever planned and then systematically implemented a comprehensive nonviolent
strategy of liberation/secession, it is accurate to observe that struggles that
largely (but not necessarily wholly) reject the use of violence and then use a
randomly selected and applied range of tactics, most of which are not violent,
have 'failed far more often' or have 'always failed' to achieve the desired
outcome.
In essence, the failure is one of strategy,
not of nonviolence per se. And if we fail to identify the problem correctly, we
inaccurately assign the blame for failure.
In Jason MacLeod's new book, Merdeka and
the Morning Star: civil resistance in West Papua, http://www.uqp.uq.edu.au/Book.aspx/1374/Merdeka%20and%20the%20Morning%20Star-%20Civil%20Resistance%20in the failure to develop a comprehensive
strategy of any kind, violent or nonviolent, to liberate West Papua is
overwhelmingly evident. And MacLeod does an excellent job of identifying why
this has happened as he provides us with an overview of the history and
geopolitical circumstances of the occupation of West Papua as well as a history
of the resistance, both violent and nonviolent, to this occupation. He then
identifies what still needs to happen if Papuans are to develop and then
effectively implement a comprehensive nonviolent strategy to achieve the richly
textured and multifaceted merdeka to which they aspire.
MacLeod, an Australian, has spent an
enormous amount of time in West Papua since 1991 and the reason for this is
explained early in the book with a compelling personal story that gives his
commitment to West Papua both focus and depth. He has been actively involved in
their struggle as a student (learning about the history and culture of West
Papua), scholar (observing and documenting the origin and history of the
occupation by interviewing key personnel and reading important documents),
compassionate consultant and teacher. He has also spent time in Indonesia and
travelled to many countries in search of the knowledge necessary to better
understand why Indonesia occupies West Papua while most of the rest of the
world either supports the occupation or does nothing.
Like all occupying powers, but particularly
one that is a borderline 'failed state', the Indonesian elite cares nothing
about West Papua, simply treating it as a resource (particularly for forest and
mineral products which it can steal and then export) while subjecting Papuans
to the usual abuses of occupation: lack of political recognition and
participation, state violence, discrimination, racism, economic
marginalisation, large-scale industrial development at the expense of
traditional landowners, denial of access to health, welfare, education and
other human rights, unfettered migration of Indonesians to displace/dilute the
indigenous population, as well as police, paramilitary and military violence,
including torture, to repress Papuan dissent.
Moreover, of course, the Indonesian elite
ensures that West Papua is relatively isolated from media scrutiny, access to
international agencies and diplomats (even though many western states are well
known to oppose any indigenous struggle for self-determination, given it would
only raise questions about their own subjugated indigenous populations).
A key feature of this occupation, which is
worth emphasizing, is the Indonesian government's facilitation of resource
extraction by large transnational corporations such as Freeport-McMoRan/Rio Tinto
and BP among a host of others, including a dense network of Chinese, Malaysian
and Korean timber and mining companies. In this context, it is also worth
noting the corrupt involvement of the Indonesian police and military in the
occupation by securing financial kickbacks for providing 'security' to these
corporations. This highly profitable corruption ensures the enthusiastic
complicity and brutality of the police and military in support of the
occupation.
But these are not the only problems, as
MacLeod makes clear: 'There are also significant internal movement challenges'
including significant mistrust and disunity between the various parties of the
resistance both within and outside West Papua, lack of resources, inadequate
political analysis, and lack of strategic planning and coordination.
In many ways, MacLeod notes, West Papua is
a worst-case scenario: 'internationally isolated and internally divided
indigenous peoples facing a genocidal occupying army'.
Nevertheless, 'Papuans continue to dream,
plan and act in pursuit of self-determination and decolonisation' with
significant diplomacy, lobbying and legal work at the international level
(particularly among Melanesian allies in the Pacific), a variety of local
victories through women's and worker actions within West Papua and, most
notably, a clarity and agreement about the root causes of the conflict in West
Papua.
Moreover, there is an emerging consensus
about the desire for self-determination, respect for their rights as indigenous
peoples, greater trust and unity among Papuans symbolised by the formation of
the United Liberation Movement for West Papua in December 2014, and a gradually
emerging consensus about the nature of their liberation strategy with many
prominent Papuans articulate in their advocacy of nonviolent struggle and many
organisations publicly committed to it. In the words of Reverend Benny Giay:
'Resisting without violence is not something foreign to us, it is part of our
history'. And from Reverend Herman Awom: 'Even when we were imprisoned we tried
to keep a nonviolent struggle.'
The final section of MacLeod's book
provides a compelling explanation of how Papuans might systematically address
the problems they face in developing and implementing a comprehensive
nonviolent strategy of liberation. It reflects the work of a thoughtful scholar
who has both listened well to the needs and aspirations of the people of West
Papua, knows and understands the many obstacles that need to be overcome and
who has consulted the literature on nonviolent struggle and in other relevant
fields.
It was in 1961 that Papuans first raised
their Morning Star flag. It is still illegal to do so. Will Papuans achieve
their precious merdeka and see the Morning Star flag fly freely over
West Papua? Not without a struggle. But the commitment to make that nonviolent
struggle more strategic has never been clearer. And it is this commitment that
will make the difference. One day, West Papua will be free.
Robert J. Burrowes has a lifetime commitment to understanding and ending human violence. He has done extensive research since 1966 in an effort to understand why human beings are violent and has been a nonviolent activist since 1981. He is author of 'The Strategy of Nonviolent Defense: A Gandhian Approach'. http://www.sunypress.edu/p-2176-the-strategy-of-nonviolent-defe.aspx His email address is flametree@riseup.net and his website is at http://robertjburrowes.wordpress.com
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