WWW.INFOPAPUA.ORG
West Papua News and Information
West Papua Net | Warta Papua Barat | Free West Papua Campaign (UK) | West Papua Action (Ireland) 

Last Updated: Aug 25th, 2010 - 02:12:05
WPNews Online 
 
 INFO PAPUA
 Guerilla
 Political & Diplomacy
 Editorial/ Opinion
 United Nations Review
 West Papua News
 WP Event Up Date 2006
 Awareness
 Political Dialogue
 
 Statements
 
 Papuan Human Rights
 
 Eco-Terrorism
 
 Indo Neocolonialism
 
 Refugee Issue
 
 War on Terror
 
 Melanesia Roundup
 
 WARTA PAPUA MERDEKA DALAM GAMBAR

 

PLEASE HELP US:

DONATE with PayPal

We need your support to keep our websites and campaigns going.

We need your contributions to assist us with our Human Rights campaigns.

Please use the PayPal Donate button above to help the people of West Papua

 

Search

INFO PAPUA : West Papua News


Vanuatu may hold key to Papuan independence
By Peter Woods
Aug 24, 2010, 00:05

Email this article
 Printer friendly page
The conclusion of the Pacific Island forum has left a great sense of disappointment. There was every reason to think that Vanuatu would be the prominent voice in the forum for the West Papuan demand for a seat at the table. As recent as June 19 the Vanuatu Parliament passed a motion to bring the matter of West Papua to the UN this year.

All the public reports leading up to the forum, and the private assurances to the lobbying being done by the Vanuatu Free West Papua Association even up to the Prime Minister, gave every indication that West Papua would be high on the agenda, and even that the representative West Papua delegates would at least be given observer status.

In his opening speech, incoming forum chairman Vanuatu Prime Minister Edward Nipake Natapei, said: "We need to be talking much more about how we can bring hope to the Pacific citizens who are struggling to find employment; who are without political freedom . . ."
Advertisement: Story continues below

What happened? Nothing. Silence. No delegate raised any matter publicly concerning West Papua. All the talk was that politically, the matter of Fiji dominated, and that this shut down any further debate about West Papua. Three questions arise from this: Is this the real reason why West Papua was not promoted? If not what was the reason? Does this failure mean that Vanuatu's sponsorship is now a lost cause for the West Papuan independence movement?

The real reason West Papua became the elephant in the room at the forum is that Natapei is obviously under great pressure from foreign powers — especially Australia, Papua New Guinea and Indonesia. Australia continues to advocate the territorial integrity of the Indonesian republic and the necessity of Special Autonomy working for West Papua. Australia is also the major development donor for the country, and that must come with some loyalty tag.

PNG, together with Solomon Islands, supports Fiji, contrary to Vanuatu who is taking the Australian/New Zealand stance. Indonesia, for its part, is increasingly muscling into the Pacific – it just supplied Vanuatu with new uniforms for its police force, and increased its presence from the usual six to 48 members at the most recent forum. These came in two waves, on August 1 and August 5, the last delegation including a West Papuan, Dr Felix Wainggai, an adviser to Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono on development on East Indonesia.

This probably proved too much fire-power for the Vanuatu PM, who afterwards on radio claimed that his silence on West Papua was due to procedural matters to do with the Melanesian Spearhead Group.

Another angle on Vanuatu's silence may have to do with the internal or external manifestations of the West Papuan independence groups themselves. A delegate to the PIF told Jacob Rumbiak, foreign affairs spokesman for the West Papuan National Authority (WPNA) and myself that the perception from inside the Vanuatu Foreign Office is that the West Papuan independence movement is still divided. The reality on the ground, however, is that there is a growing consensus from among the majority of activist groups, and more importantly between the Presidium and the WPNA — the transitional government increasingly recognised across West Papua as a credible political next-step to the current frameworks within West Papua.

The ire has been raised, however, of the pro-West Papua council of chiefs and various members of the coalition. They see this as a cave-in and Natapei and his government may not last.

All may not be lost then regarding Vanuatu's advocacy role for its Melanesian fellow countrymen in West Papua. PIF 2010 may prove a Pyrhhic victory for the countries leaning on Vanuatu. The groundswell of opposition is rising within Vanuatu. This will either galvanise the Natapei government or replace it with a coalition really dedicated to proceed on the West Papuan issue. Vanuatu's reluctant neighbours could indeed end up with a little mouse that is roaring in the Pacific.

Peter Woods spent five years in West Papua from 1978 to 1983.
SOURCE http://www.smh.com.au/opinion/politics/vanuatu-may-hold-key-to-papuan-independence-20100823-13he8.html

© Copyright by w@tchPAPUA

Top of Page

West Papua News
Latest Headlines
West Papua Report 91 - Dceember 2011
Photos News from Wamena: a rally held earlier today in Wamena in the West Papua highlands 2011
RI: No discussion of Papua at ASEAN Summit
The Jakarta Post: Socratez Sofyan Yoman: A voice of courage
West Papua's cry for help
Invitation - London launch event of International Lawyers for West Papua
DOCUMENT - INDONESIA: PAPUAN ACTIVIST IMPRISONED FOR PEACEFUL POLITICAL ACTIVITIES
The Papuans’ (il) legitimate battle for independence
Freeport: We Will Offer Miners a Fair Deal Ahead of Strike
AWPA update. August 2011