West Papua - Return to Melanesia
West Papua - Return to Melanesia
On
the 15 August 1962 an agreement was signed between the
Republic of Indonesia and the Kingdom of the Netherlands
concerning West New Guinea. A vote on a Dutch/Indonesian
resolution was adopted by the UN General Assembly in
September 1962 and included this statement:
“The
Agreement contains certain guarantees for the population of
the territory, including detailed provisions regarding the
exercise of the right of self-determination
In 1969,
Indonesia chose 1025 electors (one representative for
approximately every 700 Papuans) to vote in the UN
sanctioned election. Under coercion the electors voted to
integrate with Indonesia. The West Papuan people call this
act, “The act of no choice”
(Note. AWPA uses the
name “West Papua” to refer to the whole of the western
half of the Island of New Guinea. However, “West Papua”
at this time is divided into two provinces, Papua and West
Papua).
West Papua Leaders ‘Summit on Reconciliation
and Unification in Vanuatu
At a historic meeting of West
Papuan leaders in Port Vila in December 2014, a new
organisation called the United Liberation Movement for West
Papua (ULMWP) was formed. The groups who have united include
the Federal Republic of West Papua (NRFPB), the National
Coalition for Liberation (WPNCL) and the National Parliament
of West Papua (NPWP). An external secretariat consisting of
five elected members from the various groups will
co-ordinate the ULMWP activities. Octovianus Mote has been
elected as General Secretary, while Benny Wenda, Jacob
Rumbiak, Leone Tangahma and Rex Rumakiek are other elected
members and spokespeople. The meeting was hosted by the
Vanuatu Government, church leaders, chiefs and moderated by
the Pacific Council of Churches. The “West Papua Leaders
‘Summit on Reconciliation and Unification” was in
response to the MSG leaders inviting all West Papua groups
to form an inclusive and united umbrella group to work on
submitting a fresh application for membership after their
(MSG) special summit in Port Moresby in June 2014.
West Papua Leaders ‘Summit on
Reconciliation and Unification in Port
Vila
Background
Melanesian Spearhead Group
The Melanesian Spearhead Group (MSG) is one of the two
main regional organisations in the Pacific and is composed
of the four Melanesian countries of Fiji, Papua New
Guinea, Solomon Islands, Vanuatu as well as the Front de
Liberation Nationale Kanak et Socialiste (FLNKS) of Kanaky
(New Caledonia). The organisation celebrated its 25th
anniversary in 2013.
The West Papuan people and their supporters have been calling on the MSG to grant membership to representatives of the West Papuan people for years. In 2013 the West Papua National Coalition for Liberation (WPNCL) applied for full membership of the MSG. Representatives of the group toured the region lobbying the MSG Leaders. However, the issue of membership for West Papua at the MSG’s Summit in Noumea in June 2013 was deferred, but a number of decisions by the leaders of the MSG in relation to West Papua are to be welcomed.
From MSG
Communiqué
(In relation to WPNCL application for
Membership)
Decisions
21. Leaders:
(i) endorsed
that the MSG fully supports the inalienable rights of the
people of West Papua towards self-determination as provided
for under the preamble of the MSG constitution;
(ii)
endorsed that the concerns of the MSG regarding the human
rights violations and other forms of atrocities relating to
the West Papuan people be raised with the Government of
Indonesia bilaterally and as a Group.
The full
Communiqué
at
http://www.msgsec.info/images/PDF/leaders%20communique%20-%20retreat%20final.pdf
The Fact that the issue of self-determination for the
people of West Papua was recognised by the representative
regional body of the Melanesian Peoples is very significant
as is the fact that the MSG leaders acknowledged that there
are ongoing human rights abuses in West Papua.
The MSG
leaders also received an invitation from Indonesia to visit
West Papua on a fact-finding mission. (Indonesia has
observer status at the MSG). The MSG fact-finding mission
took place in January 2014. The purpose of the trip was to
assess what support there was for the WPNCL’s application
for MSG membership although in reality it became more of a
trade mission.
Vanuatu boycotted the Fact Finding mission
believing the agenda for the visit had been “hijacked”
by Indonesia with little chance for the delegation to meet
with civil society groups, pro-independence groups, church
leaders or other groups concerned with human rights
violations in West Papua.
The MSG’s decision
was formally announced at the Special MSG meeting in Port
Moresby in 2014. The application by the WPNCL was rejected
and the MSG invited all West Papuan groups to form an
inclusive and united umbrella group in consultation with
Indonesia to work on submitting a fresh application. (The
MSG had received another application for membership as well
as the one from the WPNCL).
The new uniting group, the United Liberation Movement for West Papua submitted their application for membership to the MSG Secretariat in Port Vila, at the beginning of February 2015. The West Papuan people believe that membership of the MSG will increase their voice and credibility with the international community and in their struggle for self-determination.
The MSG leaders relationship with West Papua has been ambivalent. The exception is Vanuatu. Vanuatu has been consistent in its support of West Papua. It is the one country in the world where everybody knows the issue of West Papua. It has raised concerns about West Papua in international fora. The former Prime Minister of Vanuatu, Moana Carcasses Kalosil raised the issue at the United Nations General Assembly and again at the Commonwealth Heads of Governments meeting in Sri Lanka.
There is one
reason the MSG leaders may support West Papua at their
coming summit in July. It is the growing support from their
people for the West Papuan Cause.
Support for West Papua by civil society groups continues to grow in the Pacific region. On the 20 February in Suva, church, civil society groups and individuals marched to mark World Social Justice Day. In Fiji the march was dedicated to the sufferings of the West Papuan people. The president of the Methodist Church in Fiji and Rotuma, Reverend Tevita Banivanua said, "for too long, we have failed to speak out against Indonesia's brutal oppression of the West Papua people,"
Approximately 50 Methodist Church heads of divisions signed the solidarity movement for West Papua’s petition at Suva's Centenary Church in support of the call for the freedom of West Papua. The petition drive was headed by the Ecumenical Centre for Research, Education and Advocacy and would be handed to Prime Minister Voreqe Bainimarama at the end of April.
In the Solomon Islands a one-day consultation to discuss and highlight issues concerning West Papua’s struggle for freedom and independence from Indonesia led to the formation of the “Solomon Islands Solidarity for West Papua Freedom”. The consultation was jointly organized and hosted by the Pacific Council of Churches (PCC) and the Anglican Church of Melanesia (ACOM).
In PNG The Hon Gary Juffa, Governor of Oro Province launched the PNG Union for Free West Papua (PNGUFWP) on the 3 April in Port Moresby.
It’s not just in the Pacific Islands that there is growing support for West Papua but also in Australia. The last two lines of an article “Tony Abbott has an Indonesian problem he doesn’t want to talk about” (News.com.au 31 March) says it all.
“Mr.
Abbott’s stance (or lack thereof) on West Papua makes
political sense for his government. But whether he likes it
or not, he might have to engage the issue sooner rather than
later”.
http://www.news.com.au/national/politics/tony-abbott-has-an-indonesian-problem-he-doesnt-want-to-talk-about/story-fns0jze1-1227286229621
It should be remembered that West Papua has always been
considered part of the Pacific Community. Netherlands New
Guinea, as West Papua was then known, was a member of the
South Pacific Commission (SPC), a forerunner to the other
regional organization, the Pacific Islands Forum. A West
Papuan representative attended the first SPC Conference and
West Papuans continued to participate in the SPC meetings
until the Dutch ceded their authority to the United Nations
Temporary Executive Authority (UNTEA) in
1962.
ENDS