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  • http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,3604,1475176,00.html +

    In Bed With Killers

    by George Monbiot – Tuesday May 3, 2005

    The Guardian (UK)

    BP has a legal right to get a licence from Indonesia to extract gas in West Papua. Its moral case is less clearcut.

    It all seems a very long way away. But what is happening in an obscure island nation in the South Pacific has now become our business. A few weeks ago, BP, the British company which has invested most in “corporate social responsibility”, received final approval to start developing a gas field in West Papua, the western half of the island of New Guinea.(1) There is nothing unusual about this: oil and gas companies are opening new fields all the time. What makes this operation interesting is the question of whether BP has any right to be there.

    Its case seems, at first sight, clear-cut. The licence to operate, BP says, “is granted to us by the Indonesian Government which is internationally recognised as the sovereign government of Papua, including by the UK and the United Nations.”(2) That is true. But its truth arises from a grotesque injustice.

    At the beginning of 1962, West Papua was being prepared for independence by its colonial ruler, the Netherlands. But in April of that year, JF Kennedy wrote to the Dutch prime minister, warning him that if he did not give the country to Indonesia, “the entire free world position in Asia would be seriously damaged”.(3) The Indonesian government would “succumb to communism” if it were not appeased. Robert Komer, Kennedy’s CIA adviser, was even more direct. “A pro-bloc, if not communist Indonesia, is an infinitely greater threat … than Indo possession of a few thousand miles of cannibal land.”(4)

    But it couldn’t be done overtly. Kennedy proposed that the Indonesians be allowed control of West Papua for “a specified period”, after which the Papuan people would be “granted the right of self-determination.” An agreement was drawn up in New York, stating that the UN would supervise a referendum in which “all adult Papuans have the right to participate”.(5)

    The problem, as the US ambassador to Indonesia observed, was that “85 to 90 per cent” of the population was “in sympathy with the Free Papua cause.”(6) A free vote would produce a clear result in favour of independence. So the US told the UN that the result had to be rigged. As a letter from the US embassy to the State Department in 1968 revealed, the order was obeyed. The UN’s representative is “attempting to devise a formula … which will result in affirmation of Indonesian sovereignty.”(7)

    So instead of a referendum in which “all adult Papuans” participated, in 1969 the UN oversaw a rather different process. 1,022 men were selected by Indonesian soldiers, taught the words “I want Indonesia”, then lined up at gunpoint.(8) One man who refused to say his lines was shot. Others were threatened with being dropped out of helicopters.(9) This rigorous democratic exercise resulted in a unanimous vote for Indonesian rule.

    No one who has studied this transfer of sovereignty believes it was fair. Four years ago the former UN Under Secretary-General CV Narasimhan confessed, “It was just a whitewash. The mood at the United Nations was to get rid of this problem as quickly as possible … Nobody gave a thought to the fact that there were a million people there who had their fundamental human rights trampled.”(10) In a parliamentary answer in December last year, the British foreign office minister Baroness Symons agreed that “there were 1,000 handpicked representatives and that they were largely coerced into declaring for inclusion in Indonesia.”(11) Like East Timor six years later, West Papua was, in effect, annexed.

    BP has a legal right to obtain a licence from Indonesia to operate in West Papua. But it is hard to see how this translates into a moral right.

    By working under Indonesian consent, BP is at risk of lending legitimacy to the occupying power’s presence. This is dangerous moral ground. A recent report by academics at Yale Law School concludes that there is “a strong indication that the Indonesian government has committed genocide against the West Papuans.”(12) Human rights groups suggest that around 100,000 Papuans have been killed by Indonesia.(13) The armed forces have bombed, napalmed and strafed tribal villages and tortured and murdered their people.(14) The government has sought to wipe out Papuan culture through forced assimilation and mass immigration. The purpose of these schemes, according to a former governor of West Papua, was to “give birth to a new generation of people without curly hair, sowing the seeds for greater beauty.”(15) Indonesia’s genocidal intent is undimmed. Today, villages in the Papuan highlands are still being burnt out by soldiers, and their people killed or forced to flee into the forest.

    BP overlooks all this. There is a page on its website labelled “Context: Papua”. It tells you about tree kangaroos and birds of paradise, but mentions only that “human rights abuses” took place under President Suharto (who was deposed in 1998). Since then, it suggests, the Indonesian government has started granting autonomy to the Papuan people.(16)

    It has done no such thing. It has failed to implement the “special autonomy” laws it passed, and instead has divided the nation into three regions, controlled directly by Jakarta. When the Papuans tried to set up their own assembly – the Papuan presidium council – its chairman, Theys Eluay, was murdered by the army. The Indonesian government is currently flying in an extra 15,000 troops.(17) In the last few weeks the repression has intensified.

    The lack of autonomy causes a particular problem for BP, which has justified its scheme by claiming that “Papua” will benefit by obtaining a share of the revenue.(18) But who is Papua? There is no legitimate government of the Papuan people through which it could be channelled. The “central, provincial and local governments” to which BP will be giving the money all answer to Jakarta.(19) Indonesia sits close to the top of Transparency International’s corruption list.(20) In March the Indonesian army was accused by the head of the baptist church of stealing $267,000 of aid destined for West Papua.(21) How confident can we be that the money from the gas project won’t go the same way?

    BP has sought not to become directly involved with the perpetrators of the genocide. Instead of hiring soldiers to guard its gas plant, it is training local people.(22) But, as the Free West Papua Campaign (http://www.freewestpapua.org) points out, the Indonesian army has a standard technique for gaining control of extractive industries. It creates an incident, often attacking its own soldiers or burning down a village or two, blames it on the rebels and then insists it must “secure the area”, and, of course, any revenue arising from the area. The army is already building up civilian militias close to the gas field. Some of them are controlled by Laskar Jihad, which is affiliated to Al Qaeda.(23)

    But all this skirts around the major question: that of consent. BP has conducted consultations and discussions with local people. But there is no representative Papuan assembly with the power to decide whether or not the project should go ahead, and on what terms. BP derives its authority to act from an occupying power in the midst of an attempted genocide. How credible, then, are its claims that its hands are clean?

    http://www.monbiot.com

    Did anyone see a documentary a while ago about Bougainville and the self sufficient revolutonary/freedom fighter group defending the island. And can anyone remember the name of it?

    Kit

    edit: Good old google. It’s called “Our Island, Our Fight” If you get thechance to see it, do so.

    USE wrote:
    The army is already building up civilian militias close to the gas field. Some of them are controlled by Laskar Jihad, which is affiliated to Al Qaeda.(23)

    I would have thought that if this had been brought to American attention they would have attempted to “protect the motherland” (I do believe this current egocntric sevcretive ove protective embargo the United States is currently running is beginning to resemble the USSR’s iron curtain)

    i did write and ask my MP about why we were selling the arms to facilitate genocide

    the DTI replied that they were “aware of a situation in West Papua”

    no answer at all

    :mad_curse

    i’ve been getting email for about the past year about papua, the dispute seems to be that the dutch used to run it, but indonesia sees it as theirs, this has resulted in steady trickle of terrorism, torture and armed conflict in the region. the UN seem unwilling to do anything about it, although back in the 60’s they apparently tried to resolve the situation, made it worse, and left them to it. whoops.

    i’ve been completely slack in relaying this well important information, which i feel well bad about. my inbox is full of horror like this:

    State-sponsored terrorism by the TNI in Pyramid,
    near Wamena, West Papua

    Petto Wenda slashed with razors and burnt alive

    Report by DeMMaK (the Koteka Tribal Assembly)

    Wamena, 28 Jul 2005

    Tuesday 8 July 2005: 12 members of the TNI from two districts (Assologoima
    and Bogolame) began intimidating and torturing innocent Papuan civilians in
    the little village of Moragame (Pyramid) in Assologoima District, near the town
    of Wamena .

    Sunday 17 July: 10 members of the same TNI units returned to Moragame
    (Pyramid). The TNI opened fire on the Moragame villagers with automatic rifles. The
    people ran to the jungle to save their lives and are now refugees.

    Two Moragame villagers, Yiman Wenda, Abai Wenda, were shot by the TNI. They
    fled, wounded, into the jungle. Nobody knows if they are dead or still alive.

    The TNI also burnt homes and smashed down fences around the vegetable
    gardens. The same brutality and crimes against humanity committed by the TNI against
    the people of Puncak Jaya are now being committed against innocent civilians
    in Moragame (Pyramid).

    Thursday 14 July: Petto Wenda was tortured by the TNI in the village of Ndome
    (Pyramid). TNI soldiers first slashed his face with a razor and then cut his
    flesh all over his body with a knife. Finally the TNI poured petrol over his
    head and set fire to him. Petto Wenda’s hair caught fire. He received serious
    burns to his head and is now in a critical condition. He is not expected to
    survive.

    Today, 28 July 2005: The TNI is still occupying the Pyramid region. Military
    operations are still on going and hundreds of refugees are still hiding in
    the jungle, without proper food or shelter.

    We are asking for urgent international attention towards the people of West
    Papua. Without your attention it will be very dangerous for the people. Unless
    the TNI knows that the outside world is watching them, they will carry on with
    their brutality towards to the innocent people in Pyramid (Moragame). where the fuck are the bbc? what the fuck are the “coalition agaist terror” doing? (not that i want them involved, but it shows their hypocracy).

    they dont give a shit, because indonesia is controlled by the IMF and the WB, and if they take over papua as well, they will have even more poor little farmers to play with and fuck up.

    this happens in all the SE Asian countries in the border areas

    the indigenous peoples are slowly being eliminated (mostly on allegations they are involved with drugs trafficking and supporting Al-Quaeda) as they are simply not wanted in the “modernised” countries.

    More worryingly in many cases their births/deaths are not registered on the citizens ID card systems so they can basically be purged with complete immunity. Bodies also decompose very quickly in hot countries, and there are lots of animals which will feast on food sources left lying around..

    you could send the UN, the BBC or anyone else out there but even they wouldn’t be able to work out how many had died (apart from the few individuals mentioned in the e-mails) or how many were there in the first place.

    The Government can easily spin the UN by planting drugs in the villages and saying “these were drug traffickers, being dealt with under the auspices of the UN anti-drugs regulations, our soldiers just got too over-zealous as some of them had lost family through drugs…”

    The Malaysian papers regularly report incidents of this nature but it is reported as “security forces fighting bandits/people traffickers/vagabonds/drug traffiickers” etc

    These countries have a totally deregulated free market without the social structures of liberal europe, which is how this stuff can happen.

    I’m sure many European rich people would love to shoot Roma and Travellers with pistols and rifles or get their countries military/cops to do so, (and it happens in the new entrant countries sometimes) but because we have the EU and human rights laws, and the EU-funded NGOs which keep an eye on minority rights, its slighly harder for incidents like this to happen.

    In Asia there is no such protection – if someone stands in the way of the free market, they are good as dead.

    The only way we in the West can do anything about this, is to be careful about what we buy and who we do business with…

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Forums Life Politics, Media & Current Events west papua hits U.K media