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Asia Society AustralAsia
Centre
Asia Foreign Policy Update Luncheon
Melbourne , 22 August 2003
Keynote address by
H E DR N HASSAN WIRAJUDA
Minister for Foreign Affairs
Republic of Indonesia
Your Excellencies, Consuls General, Business Leaders and Founding
Director of the Asia Society Ambassador Richard Woolcott,
Distinguished Guests,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
It is a great honour and pleasure
for me to address this gathering of some of the most eminent minds
of the Australian nation. For this unique privilege I wish to thank
Mr. Richard Woolcott and his colleagues in the Asia Society AustralAsia
Centre.
At the same time I should like to
commend them for the splendid job they are doing of promoting understanding
and goodwill between and among nations of the Asia-Pacific region
by organizing events such as the one we are holding today. In that
spirit of promoting understanding and goodwill, let me therefore
seize this opportunity to share with you a few considered thoughts
on the relations between our two countries and their respective
roles in our dynamically changing region.
To my mind, the relationship between
Australia and Indonesia today must be viewed in the light of a totality
that embraces important events in our intertwined post-World War
II history, including profound changes that took place in both nations
in recent times, and the endeavours that we are undertaking today.
It is by no means a simple relationship.
It is complicated by stark differences in our earlier historical
backgrounds, and in our respective cultures, traditions and sociopolitical
systems. Indonesia, an Asian developing country with the world’s
largest Muslim population, a country that is totally identified
with non-alignment in global politics, cannot possibly hold views
that are always perfectly compatible with those of Australia, a
highly developed country with a society of European origin and a
political tradition steeped in Westminster-type democracy.
And yet this is not to say that the
two cannot work together. There is ample proof in history that we
can collaborate with remarkably positive results.
In late 1947, when the fledgling Indonesian
Republic was fighting a revolutionary war against the former colonial
power, the Australian representative on the United Nations Security
Council submitted the Dutch-Indonesian conflict as a case of decolonization.
Consequently, a Three-Power Commission was formed to settle the
issue and Indonesia requested Australia to be its representative
on the Commission. As we all know, that eventually led, after a
long diplomatic struggle, to the international recognition of the
sovereignty of the Republic of Indonesia.
That started a friendship that has
already survived for more than half a century. Over the years, our
cooperation in the fields of trade and investment has been mutually
beneficial and a significant factor in our respective national development.
We have worked effectively together
in many and various multilateral forums. These include APEC, the
ASEAN Dialogue process and the ASEAN Regional Forum, and the Southwest
Pacific Dialogue forum. In the process we have contributed to the
stability and prosperity not only of the Asia-Pacific region but
also the world at large.
Having served as Co-chair of the 19-nation
Conference on Cambodia in 1991, Indonesia cannot forget that it
was an Australian proposal that was key in contributing to the success
of the peace process. This is no small contribution to peace in
Southeast Asia.
But ours has not always been a smooth
friendship; it has had many peaks and valleys and its share of irritants,
misunderstandings and even disputes. This may be expected of two
countries with hefty differences in background, orientation and
perception of issues. And precisely because of these differences,
our friendship needs a great deal more of careful nurturing than
normally required.
In view of this, I do think that both
Australia and Indonesia are called upon to cushion this friendship
against the often-harsh dynamics of domestic political debate. For
these dynamics have a great impact on the perceptions and attitudes
not only of governments but also of peoples. Thus, the state of
the relationship between Australia and Indonesia today must be assessed
in the light of the far-reaching changes that have taken place in
both countries in recent years.
It is a perception that is shared
by probably all Asian governments that when the Labour Party took
over the reins of state in Australia, there was a shift in the approach
to the country’s foreign policy.
The Labour Party had stood on a platform
that was “unapologetically committed to (Australia’s)
future with Asia.” It held that there was no foreign
policy issue facing Australia that was more important than advancing
its engagement with Asia. And the initiatives of the Labour Government
had left no doubt in the minds of its Asian counterparts that it
was truly and deeply committed to such an approach to foreign policy.
When the Liberal Party took over,
it was immediately perceived that the Government tended to associate
itself with the West, usually with Europe, but in recent times more
and more with the United States. This perception did not lose any
strength when reports circulated that Prime Minister Howard had
voiced Australia’s aspiration to be the sheriff’s deputy
of the United States in this part of the world.
In fact, that perception gained force
in recent months when the Prime Minister was understood as having
intimated that Australia was considering preemptive strikes against
terrorist networks in other countries, these countries being probably
Asian or Southeast Asian. This is the kind of assertion that Asian
nations have come to expect from the United States, but not from
a close regional neighbour that is usually more considerate of their
sensitivities.
This perception of a fundamental change
in approach to Australia’s foreign policy has created a great
deal of negative vibrations all over the Asian region, including
the Indonesian Government and people.
Indonesia, too, has undergone fundamental
change. In the midst of the turmoil of the Asian financial and economic
crisis, Indonesia began a process of massive transformation from
being a three-decade old military dominated government to being
the world’s third largest democracy. The process began with
the ascendancy of then Vice President B.J. Habibie to the presidency
of the Republic, and we hope to see its full attainment during the
tenure of President Megawati Soekarnoputri.
It has not been a comfortable process.
We have had to wrestle with an array of formidable challenges, not
the least of which was the need to recover fully from the devastation
of our national economy. And it was at a time when we were in the
grip of economic chaos that we had to suffer another political shock—the
separation of East Timor from Indonesia.
Ironically, the East Timor crisis
was triggered by a letter that was by no means intended to place
us in such a predicament. This was the letter of Prime Minister
Howard to President Habibie, which was taken to be a prod toward
giving the East Timorese the option of separating from Indonesia.
From that point on, a series of events took place, a good number
of them involving Australia, leading to the separation of East Timor
from Indonesia.
The East Timor crisis has had a deleterious
effect on the bilateral relations between the two Governments. It
has also eroded the fund of goodwill between the Australian and
Indonesian societies in general. So much negative emotion was generated
by the crisis that the Security Treaty between the two countries
was promptly abrogated and the Fifth Indonesia-Australia Ministerial
Forum was considerably delayed.
Australia’s place in the Asian
region was also adversely affected. In fact, in the aftermath of
the crisis, a number of Asian colleagues were telling me, “I
told you so.” Indeed, there had been occasions when they raised
eyebrows at our enthusiasm for Australia’s engagement with
Asia. And now they saw themselves vindicated in their skepticism.
For until 1999, Indonesia was playing
a bridging role for Australia not only in APEC but also in other
forums where Australia was keen to associate itself with Asia. I
personally know that Indonesia did its best to help Australia join
the Asian Regional Conference on Human Rights of 1993. I know also
that Indonesia strongly advocated some kind of participation for
Australia and New Zealand in the first Asia-Europe Meeting of 1995.
In both cases, Indonesia did not succeed
but left little room for doubt among its Asian friends how ardently
we supported Australia’s engagement with Asia.
It will take time, but I am confident
that all the damaged bridges between Australia and Indonesia, between
Australia and Asia, will be repaired. I say this in the light of
a more recent experience that almost turned out to be another full-blown
crisis.
On the eve of Australian federal elections
in 2001, there arose the issue of illegal migrants from Afghanistan
and Iraq making their way in large numbers to Australia through
Indonesian territorial waters and through Indonesia itself.
Allegations were rife that Indonesia
was not doing enough to stem the flow of these illegal migrants
to Australia and that Indonesia was to a large extent responsible
for so many of them pouring into Australia. Public debate on this
concern, billed in the Australian media as the Tampa Crisis, was
fiery as it became an election issue at the expense of the bilateral
relations between the two countries.
In Indonesia, the reaction was just
as emotional, even irrational, with some circles in Parliament and
among the public demanding that the Government severe relations
with Australia.
There was, of course, a rational approach
to solving this problem and fortunately both Governments were alive
to it and adopted it as basis for cooperative action. The way out
was for us to see the problem of illegal migrants not as a bilateral
issue but as one that involves countries of origin, countries of
transit and countries of destination. It is therefore an international
issue that demands international cooperation for its solution.
Australia and Indonesia then took
the logical step: to work closely together with other countries
also involved in the problem. Thus we co-sponsored a Regional Ministerial
Conference on People Smuggling, Trafficking in Persons and Related
Transnational Crimes in February 2002.
By taking this approach, we were able
to achieve so much more than we could have done if we had tried
to solve it individually. The success of this effort was not only
terms of the participation of more than 30 ministers from the Asia-Pacific
region, but also in terms of actions taken after the meeting by
the countries concerned. These greatly helped in stemming of new
flows of illegal migrants.
We co-sponsored a second Regional
Ministerial Conference on People Smuggling only last April. During
this second conference, it was decided that this effort become a
continuing regional activity.
In the course of addressing this issue,
Australia approached Indonesia about resuming and elevating military
relations. Australia proposed joint naval patrols, and the placement
of Indonesian officers on Australian naval ships. To us in Indonesia,
this has been a very welcome development in the light of the abrogation
of the Security Treaty at the height of the East Timor crisis. This
is an unmistakable sign of new strength in our bilateral relations.
Another global issue that has brought
Australia and Indonesia closer together is the violence being wreaked
upon our societies by international terrorism and the impact of
its brutality. The Bali tragedy of 12 October 2002, in which more
than 200 innocent individuals, mostly Australians, lost their lives,
was still fresh in our minds when, early this month, terrorists
carried out another dastardly carnage in which ten persons died.
We commiserate with the families and
friends of all victims of these terrorist attacks. Some of the perpetrators
of these heinous crimes have been brought to justice. We are seeing
to it that all of them will have their day in court. And we are
grateful to the Government of Australia for its support, its assistance
and its cooperation in the fight against terrorism.
Thus, together we are struggling against
a formidable enemy that is wily and without compunction. There is
no easy way to defeat this threat against the entire human race,
but I do believe that Australia and Indonesia are doing the right
thing by committing ourselves to work not only with each other but
also with all countries, societies, cultures and religions to crush
this foe.
In carrying out this fight, Australia
and Indonesia co-sponsored a successful Regional Conference on Combating
Money Laundering and Terrorist Financing late last year. We have
also cooperated in high-level meetings on counter-terrorism.
The MoU signed between our two countries
during Prime Minister Howard’s visit to Jakarta in February
last year provides a strong basis for joint efforts against terrorism
while minimizing the possibility of misunderstanding and disagreements
that can affect bilateral relations. That MoU now serves as an excellent
model for countries that would similarly cooperate with in combating
this threat.
We in Indonesia are now looking forward
to the opportunity of working closely with Australia in organizing
a Conference on Combating Terrorism.
I am of course aware of the extreme
sensitivity of this issue and its potential for misunderstanding,
not only between our two Governments but also between our societies.
We have to keep in mind that the population
of Indonesia is overwhelmingly Muslim and many Muslim circles all
over the world tend to view strong measures in the global fight
against terrorism as a ploy of the West against the Islamic world.
Australia is culturally Western, to start with, and the more it
identifies itself with the West, the more it is subject to suspicion
in militant Muslim circles.
Hence, we could have been on a collision
course on the issue of terrorism because of differences in perceptions
and cultural-religious backgrounds but, as in the case of our cooperation
on people smuggling, we were able to transcend our differences and
engage in effective cooperation.
There is a positive lesson that can
be derived from these experiences: our differences are not so enormous
that they cannot be transformed into complementary strengths. If
we keep on doing that, we can achieve synergy enough to reach our
shared goals and fulfill our common aspirations. All that is needed
is for both sides to take a sober, rational approach whenever there
is an issue that confronts both of us.
Sometimes that is not so easy to do
considering the fact that there are bigots and demagogues in every
country, and both Australia and Indonesia now have freewheeling
mass media that sometimes produce more fire than light. And in Indonesia
there is the added difficulty of our being in a state of transition
since 1998.
In this state we have to do so many
things at once with so little resources in so short a time. Thus,
people become irritable and emotional. They get rattled by conflicting
urgent demands. In that state, they can respond to developments
and issues with more passion than wisdom. Still, I think that the
Government of President Megawati Soekarnoputri has done a good job
of remaining rational in spite of the mind-boggling pressures that
it has had to contend with.
For example, at a critical time when
there is an obvious need for Indonesia to have a strong central
government, it was decided that considerable powers be delegated
to the local governments at district and provincial levels. By definition,
such wholesale grant of local autonomy, effective in 2001, weakened
the central government at a time when it needed every ounce of its
strength to manage our immense diversity. Nevertheless, we made
a strategic choice in the name of democratic transition and we are
sticking to that choice.
Our fight against terrorism at the
national level requires strong measures—strong enough to seize
the initiative from the terrorists, but no so strong as to be seen
as backsliding to the repressive system of the past.
In the same way, we have to walk a
tightrope between the demands of nationalism and liberalization,
between vigorous law enforcement and respect for human rights, between
the elimination of inefficient subsidies and coming to the rescue
of the impoverished consumers, between the need to reform the military
establishment and the imperative of strengthening it so that it
can defend our territorial integrity from separatist movements and
contain various communal conflicts with dangerous religious overtones.
These contradictory pressures may
be what democracy is all about, but this is a field in which Indonesia
does not have much experience: we need a learning curve.
At the same time we have to stimulate
the economy, attract foreign investors, reform corporate governance,
revise the legal system, cleanse the bureaucracy and the judiciary
of corruption and protect our environment with the little technology
that we have at our disposal.
The point is that our friends should
understand the complex process that we are going through, the constraints
we are contending with, and the limits of our resources. To press
for results without looking at the process is not only unfair—it
is also counterproductive.
We do need the help of our friends,
and in this regard we deeply appreciate the solicitude that Australia
has been demonstrating to Indonesia. We also need and welcome a
show of understanding and patience, just as we feel called upon
to understand and exercise patience with friends who do not happen
to be a mirror image of ourselves.
Above all, both sides need to acquire
the habit of rationality that will enable us to see our way to a
stable, long-term relationship. For ideally a bilateral relationship
is not characterized by surges and plunges. It is not a manic-depressive
affair. It is a steady growth, a comfortable process of learning
more of one another—through exchange of visits, training programmes,
people-to-people contacts, and by carrying out practicable undertakings
that are likely to succeed and bring about worthwhile benefits.
And this should especially be the
case between two next-door neighbours like Australia and Indonesia.
We should strive for stability rather than spectacular success.
In this regard, we have time on our
side: if we are neighbours by dictate of geography, then we are
neighbours forever. There is no divorce between countries with common
borders.
As two democracies, we cannot walk
away from each other in a moment of spite.
The only rational choice is
to engage each other in a stable, mutually beneficial and equitable,
long-term relationship—to become true and dependable friends.
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