Papua is not the Stone Age
Both Australia and Indonesia are probably
about to get new leaders. We hope all the candidates for the top jobs -
Megawati, John Howard and Kim Beazley - will read this edition of Inside Indonesia. So for that matter should George W Bush (who said we don't aim high?!). Papua
has for too long been a remote, 'primitive' place whose fate is
arranged in Jakarta, Canberra, New York and Washington. Today it is far
less remote. Papua is all over the worldwide web, as Mike Cookson shows
us here. Now is the time to start listening to Papuans themselves. That
is the real meaning of self-determination, still one of the key beliefs
underpinning the United Nations.
This edition does not take a view on Papuan
independence as such. It wants to be a forum for ideas. What it does
take a view on is the importance of people. No abstract idea of
national sovereignty, or of a gross domestic product, can be more
important than the right of ordinary children, women and men to live in
peace and dignity.
I think this edition brings those Papuan
people into closeup. Not surprisingly, we discover they are human
beings who dream of a better future, not unlike humans elsewhere. Once
we have 'met' people like John Rumbiak, Tom Beanal or Beatrix Koibur we
can no longer talk about 'Stone Age rebels', as so many newspapers
still do. We will also find it much less easy to say patronising things
about what is advisable, permissible or possible for Papua.
This is about as packed an edition of our
little magazine as we have ever managed! So many people contributed so
gladly it has been an amazing one to edit. There is a growing Papuan
solidarity movement out there, that's for sure. Of course, it would
take a book to cover everything. Maybe this one can be a first guide to
action.
Gerry van Klinken
Editor
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