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Background to the United Nations Involvement 

in West Papua (Irian Jaya)


Until October 1962, West Papua (Irian Jaya) was a non-self governing territory that was being prepared for eventual independence by the Netherlands.

However, Dutch policy in West Papua was strongly opposed by Indonesia's President Sukarno who claimed that, as a former part of the Dutch East Indies, the territory was Indonesian.

When diplomatic appeals to the UN General Assembly failed to win him sufficient support, Sukarno embarked upon a massive arms build up and threatened to take West Papua by force.

In September 1961, the Dutch presented a plan (the Luns Plan) to the UN General Assembly to resolve the dispute peacefully. They proposed to hand the territory over to a UN administration that would remain until the population was considered ready to exercise their right to self-determination. Although it won majority support, it fell short of the required two-thirds of votes to be passed.

With no solution agreed at the UNGA, the threat of an Indonesian attack on the territory grew. To avoid this the US put pressure on the Dutch to give in to most of Jakarta's demands and come to some form of UN-brokered agreement with them.

The result was the signing on 15 August 1962 of the New York Agreement between the Netherlands and Indonesia.

In confidential communications, the Kennedy administration made clear the motivation behind its coercion of the Dutch. As one senior official advised the President on the day the Agreement was signed:

we ought to capitalise on the WNG settlement by moving fast toward the 'future fruitful cooperation' of which you spoke to Sukarno. Capital of the sort we've gained is a transitory asset to be used while it's still good. Moreover, Indonesia is one of the truly big areas of East-West competition; having invested so much in maneuvering a WNG settlement for the express purpose of giving us leverage in this competition, we'd be foolish not to follow through. [Komer. Memorandum to President Kennedy, 15 August 1962. In US Foreign Relations 1961-63, Vol XXIII Southeast Asia, (Department of State Printing Office, 1994), p. 626 - Enclosure 1] More>>>


Sources; indymedia.org

 

Separatist Leader Found Dead; Papuans Suggest Indonesian Military Played Role


The mysterious death of popular West Papuan separatist leader Theys Eluay has sparked substantial unrest in the Indonesian-ruled land over the last several days. On Sunday, November 11, Eluay was found, suffocated, inside his car at the bottom of a ravine, after being missing for almost a day. Eluay's supporters have declared that the Indonesian military is to blame; Indonesian leaders have strongly denied involvement. Eluay, leader of the Papuan Presidium Council, a West Papuan separatist group, had been on trial along with three other presidium members, on charges of "subversion." West Papuan separatists are preparing for a difficult week in anticipation of December 1, the day they have chosen as their 'independence day."

Next month the Indonesian government will grant greater autonomy, though not independence, to West Papua, which occupies the western part of New Guinean Island. Many in the province, currently called Irian Jaya, have been struggling for independence from Indonesia for 40 years. U.S.-based Freeport-McMoran Copper & Gold Inc., has owned mines in the province since Indonesia took control in 1969; the controversial corporation operates the world's largest gold mine and one of the world's largest copper mines there; West Papuan separatists have accused Freeport-McMoran of bolstering the Indonesian military's often brutal rule.


 

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