What Kind of Solidarity for West Papua?
Western
support for a free West Papua taps into deeply embedded Indonesian narratives
of western imperialism. Pelcher writes that this is not just lingering
nationalist hurt over the loss of East Timor. Even progressive Indonesian
activists support West Papua’s continued integration into Indonesia. Notice,
for example, Indonesian Friends of the Earth’s (WALHI) recent failure to
publicly support their representative in West Papua, Fanny Kogoya when she was
forced into hiding because of her links to KNPB. Indonesian citizen support for
the occupation is a tremendous source of power for the state that helps the
state maintain and justify military aggression.
Although
attacks on KNPB have received more coverage – in what is still a grossly
under-reported struggle – other groups also continue to be targeted by the
state. Papuan political prisoners in jail represent both highlanders and
islanders and a broad diversity of political groups. Political organisations
aside from KNPB who also pursue independence include the Federal Republic of
West Papua, West Papua National Authority, AMP (Aliansa Masyarakat Papua),
AMP-PT (Aliansa Masyarakat Papua – Pegunungan Tengah), DEMAK (Dewan Masyarakat
Koteka), Sonamapa (Solidaritas Nasional Mahasiswa Papua Barat), FNMPP (Front
Nasional Mahasiswa Pemuda Papua Barat), West Papua National Youth Awarenesss
Team (Westpanyat), AMAK (Aliansa Masyarakat AntiKekerasan), ParJal (Parlamen
Jalanan), Garda and others. Activists in other parts of the country like
Fak-Fak, Manokwari, Yapen, Merauke and elsewhere have also been hit by the
repressive force of the Indonesian state. Even groups that eschew an overt
political agenda, preferring to expand the contours of freedom through
campaigning for basic rights, are routinely harassed by the state. They include
civil society groups like Elsham Papua, Dewan Adat Papua, Bersatu untuk
Keadilan, Foker LSM, Jubi, Kontras, the churches and others. Some human rights
defenders have had to periodically relocate themselves and their families to
Jakarta to protect themselves from intimidation and threats.
Papuans
also consider the TPN-PB (Tentara Pembebasan Nasional – Papua Barat), or
National West Papuan Liberation Army – which consists of a decentralised
network of groups based around attachment to clan, tribe, and geographic area –
an important part of resistance to the Indonesian state. But in terms of
numbers, activities and effectiveness the TPN-PB are marginal players. Members
of the armed struggle are routinely co-opted by the state to further the
Indonesian security services own aims, whether that is about protecting vested
private business interests – mostly in logging, mining and extortion – or pursuing
national security objectives designed to weaken and destroy the Papuan
independence movement. The random and brutal nature repression by the
Indonesian state means that citizens not actively involved in the freedom
movement routinely become victims of state violence. In his article Pelcher
focuses on KNPB but alludes to the fact that the whole of Papuan society is
caught up in the same repressive net. Papuans live with this foreboding sense
that they, their family members or their friends could be targeted at any time.
So
what should international advocates do? Pelcher has more questions than
answers. He acknowledges that Western advocates are increasingly putting Papuan
human rights on the international community’s agenda. Pelcher also recognises
the work of Papuan human rights defenders and their allies in Jakarta who have
raised questions about the Indonesian security forces use of summary justice
instead of legal means to investigate acts of violence. However, the dominant
story in the Indonesian media supports a police narrative that pins “the blame
on the student activists of KNPB as well as the wider network of underground
Papuan nationalist resistance.” The central question Pelcher raises in his
article is how can international advocates generate global solidarity against
injustice in West Papua without strengthening the state’s pretext for terror?
While
I agree with Pelcher’s analysis about how Western support for freedom in West
Papua can tap into Indonesian suspicion that there is a foreign plot to access
West Papua’s resources I disagree with his conclusions. I think Pelcher is
mistaken in his understanding of the dynamics of repression. I also think that
part of our role as solidarity activists is to continually emphasize that the
struggle is being led by Papuans and that role of outsiders is to support their
efforts and amplify their voices. I don’t think that solidarity by Westerns is
the cause of repression, even though the state will use whatever means they can
to justify their repression. One of the reasons why the Indonesian government
is employing repression against KNPB and other resistance groups – including
sanctioning extrajudicial killing – is because they fear the growing power of
organised nonviolent resistance against the state. Kopassus’ (the Indonesian
Special Forces) own intelligence analysis of the Papuan freedom movement,
leaked by Alan Nairn and the West Papua Project from the University of Sydney,
reveals that the armed struggle is not a threat because they ‘hardly do anything’.
One of the reasons the armed struggle does not “do anything” – or rarely
engages in military action – is because it is hard to recruit people to join
the armed struggle. Guerrilla fighters often live difficult lives isolated in
the jungle and mountains. The TPN does also not have a state sponsor, and while
it will be extremely difficult for the state to destroy the TPN militarily, the
TPN will also never be able to out gun or outnumber the Indonesian military.
The use of violence to achieve political goals also favours fit young men and
involves high levels of commitment and risk. Few Papuans are willing to risk
their lives joining an armed struggle that has little prospect of success.
According to the Indonesian military nonviolent resistance is “much more
dangerous” because they have “reached the outside world’’ with their
‘obsession’ with ‘merdeka’ (the independence/ freedom struggle) and persist in
“propagating the issue of severe human rights violations in Papua,’ i.e.
‘murders and abductions that are done by the security forces.’’ Stopping
Papuans who are organising to win freedom is easier if the movement uses
violence or if the Indonesian government can convince outsiders that Papuans
are engaged in armed struggle. If Papuans respond – or are seen to be
responding – with violent action the Indonesian government will be able to
frame their actions as terrorism and threats to national sovereignty. This
allows the Indonesian government to justify their use of violence against the
movement. Action that physically harms others or threatens other people reduces
support from third parties. Even if third parties are sympathetic to the goals
of the movement the majority of people will question the legitimacy of using
violence who tend to view armed movements as extremists. Innocent villagers
from the rural areas are particularly vulnerable to disproportionate violent
retaliation by the security forces because few journalists, church workers and
human rights groups are present and able to hold the security forces
accountable through human rights reportage.
---Jason
MacLeod
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