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2021, West Papua and MSG Tragedies
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When I ring home to West Papua, my village people often ask me about the rumours that they have heard, of an upcoming Melanesian Spearhead Group (MSG) meeting. They ask, "When is the MSG meeting?" and if West
Asia Pacific Report, 2023
The Melanesian Spearhead Group has thrown away a golden chance for achieving a historical step towards justice and peace in West Papua by lacking the courage to accept the main Papuan self-determination advocacy movement as full members. Membership had been widely expected across the Pacific region and the MSG's silence and failure to explain West Papua's fate at the end of the two-day leaders' summit this week was a tragic anticlimax. Many see this as a terrible betrayal of West Papuan aspirations and an undermining of Melanesian credibility and solidarity as well as an ongoing threat to the region's security and human rights. https://asiapacificreport.nz/2023/08/26/msg-throws-away-golden-chance-to-reset-peace-and-justice-for-west-papua/
West Papua remains one of the most omit issues that defies the territorial integrity of Indonesia and arguably one of the most under-reported cases of human right of the 21st Century. Its integration into Indonesia overseen by the United Nations remains disputable due to the distorted procedure in which it was conducted. West Papua witnessed a mass influx of migrants from other overpopulated areas of Indonesia who has quickly overtaken the economic sector, at the cost of the marginalized indigenous Papuan. The annexation of the territory by Indonesia in 1963 was very obnoxious with pervasive raiding, human rights abuses, the diminishing of civil liberties, and displacement of West Papuan seeking refuge across the border in PNG as well as in other parts of the world. Discernment on the insufficiency of economic opportunities within this thriving resources base economy has also created a pan-Papua identity resisting the Indonesian rule and inflamed a louder call for independence in conjunction with arising political violence. With their racial and ethnic distinction from other regions, most West Papuan does not identify themselves with the Indonesian state but with the rest of Melanesian countries. For West Papua, a membership in the Melanesian Spearhead Group (MSG) will be a stepping stone to international recognition of their right to self-determination. Yet the skepticism is whether Indonesia would be willing to give independence to this territory whose resources generate back huge substantial amount of wealth back to Jakarta.
Pacific Politics: Political news and analysis brought to you by the Pacific Institute of Public Policy , 2014
A struggle for 'truth' and the media myopic over Fiji and West Papua: On the eve of a vital meeting in Port Vila planning a more unified stance over independence in West Papua by disparate Melanesian solidarity groups earlier this month, the issue of Papua and Indonesian human rights violations was also the topic of a conference almost 2200 km away in New Zealand. In Vila, the United Liberation Movement for West Papua emerged as the umbrella organisation to carry forward Papuan aspirations and to negotiate with the Melanesian Spearhead Group. Comprising the National Committee for West Papua (KNPB), West Papuan National Coalition for Liberation and the Federal Republic of West Papua, the group wants to reverse the MSG refusal last year to grant membership status without it becoming “more representative”.
The West Papuan movement for freedom is growing. And a wave of support is building across the Pacific. The human rights situation in West Papua, however, is deteriorating. Instead of embracing the United Liberation Movement for West Papua as a partner, the body that best represents the aspirations of the West Papuan people, Indonesian President Joko Widodo has criminalised the ULMWP, fomented nationalist militia groups and created conditions that encourage state violence against the Papuan people. The fact that the Papuans have been pursuing their aspirations through a combination of nonviolent action and domestic and international diplomacy further illustrates the total failure of the Indonesian government’s willingness and ability to protect their citizens in West Papua. Pacific Island nations are ideally placed to address this situation. Individual Pacific leaders have already acted morally and courageously to help constrain Indonesian violence. In doing so they have compelled the Indonesian government to respond to persistent and serious concerns Pacific peoples have about West Papua and West Papuans, a people who are embraced as family members. An opportunity exists to elevate Pacific ways of resolving conflict and doing diplomacy and embed these in regional and sub-regional forum. By pursuing independent human rights missions, raising the issue of West Papua at the United Nations, formally including the ULMWP in the Pacific Island Forum, and granting full membership of the ULMWP in the Melanesian Spearhead Group, Pacific Island states can help constrain Indonesian state violence and create the conditions for the peaceful and dignified resolution of the conflict in West Papua. Geopolitical power and influence concerning West Papua has shifted from ‘Western countries’ to the Pacific. With that comes a unique historical choice for the members of the Pacific Island Forum and other sub-regional bodies, including the Melanesian Spearhead Group: to support the West Papuan aspirations to peacefully determine their own future or to side with the forces of empire. Pacific Island leaders can turn their backs or ‘bring West Papua back to the family’.
Land politics, clan rivalry and fear in a troubled region.
2004
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Przegląd Politologiczny, 2018
This qualitative study aims to encompass Indonesia's interest in seeking to join the MSG (Melanesian Spearhead Group). An in-depth interview was carried out with the Director of Directorate General of Asia, Pacific, and Africa under the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Indonesia aiming to obtain valid data supported by literature reviews. The findings indicate that Indonesia's attempts to join the MSG or Melanesian intergovernmental organizations basically aim to maintain domestic stability which, in this context, refers to closing down separatist movements that still exist in Indonesia, such as the FPM (Free Papua Movement), that explicitly receive international support from Melanesian countries sharing the same racial background. In an effort to preserve the country's sovereignty, Indonesia, in the era of President Joko Widodo, strives to join the MSG to prevent the Melanesian intergovernmental organization from supporting such separatist groups, which from Indonesia's perspective could disrupt the unity of the Republic of Indonesia.
2013
The front pages of Australian newspapers have been awash with stories about asylum seekers travelling to our shores from Indonesia and the newly elected Abbott government's attempts to stop them. The tensions that have developed between Australia and Indonesia as a result have been well canvassed. The prominence of this issue has tended to overshadow a major development in regional geo-politics: the rise of West Papuan diplomacy and its consequences, specifically the aggressive entry of Indonesia into the domestic politics of the Melanesian countries.
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