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Responding to the Horror of Bali: a testing time for Australia
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news report
Saturday October 19, 2002 07:40 by Tristan Ewins tristane at bigpond dot net dot au
Australians are hurting. They are angry, and they feel truly vulnerable for the first time in decades. Beyond our pain and our fear, though, we need the clarity of vision to negotiate these painful times, and determine a course of action based upon established fact, and not presumption. Responding to the Horror of Bali: a testing time for Australia
The Washington Post has described the Bali atrocity as ‘Australia’s September 11.’ Reactions to the Bali atrocity have been diverse. Many have responded angrily, condemning Indonesian President Megawati Sukarnoputri for failing to act against the radical Islamic organisation, Jemaah Islamiah (JI), which is suspected of having ties with Osama Bin Laden’s Al-Qaeda, and which has been named by many as the ‘prime suspect’. Others have responded to the atrocity to strengthen the case for or against war with Iraq. In the days following the bombing several callers rang talkback radio to express their fear that Australia was ‘paying the price’ for its unswerving loyalty to the US, both in the ‘War on Terror’, and also on the issue of a potential Iraqi conflict. Some put the case more bluntly and, some would say, insensitively. Lyndon Plummer, writing to Melbourne’s daily broadsheet, ‘The Age’ (15/10/02), stated “To all those who support war on Iraq, look at Bali. That’s what bombs killing innocents looks like. If we as a nation support doing this to others, we can only expect it for ourselves.” Meanwhile, Des Moore, a councilor at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute has responded to the horror of the bombing to argue in favour of an assault on Iraq. Specifically, Moore has argued that while some “suppose Iraq and terrorism pose quite different threats, [in fact] they do not.” Admitting that there is “no evidence that Saddam is deeply involved in directing international terrorism”, Moore has argued, nevertheless, that the Middle East is the “centre of international terrorism, and that this will not change until action is taken. (that is: war) (‘The Age’, 17/1002) Understandably, in these dark times, emotions are flooding over, and Australians are thirsting for justice in much the same way as Americans have since the September 11 terrorist attacks. And yet now, even as Australian hearts are breaking with horror and anguish, the need for cool heads has never been clearer. To begin with. there is the question of the Indonesian government, and of Jemaah Islamiah The radical Islamic network, formed in the mid 90s, has since mobilized, voicing its vision of establishing an Islamic state incorporating Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippines. (http://www.cdi.org/terrorism/ji.cfm) The network is accused of having masterminded attempted terrorist attacks in Singapore, and of co-operating closely with Islamic insurgents and terrorists operating in the Philippines. Pressure has been mounting from the US, and from Australia, for the Indonesian government to take tough action to suppress its activities. Indonesia, however, has changed significantly since the downfall of the Suharto government which, with the assistance of the Indonesian military, held Indonesia in a corrupt ‘iron grip’ from 1966 until 1998. The Suharto regime came to power in a coup which overthrew President Sukarno, the father of current Indonesian president Megawati Sukarnoputri. This coup culminated in the massacre of between half a million and a million communists, leftists and labour movement activists, with the logistical support of the CIA. (http://www.thirdworldtraveler.com/CIA/McGehee_CIA_Indo.html) The overthrow of Suharto in 1998 was a time of joy for many Indonesians, who finally imagined a different future was possible, after decades of repression, phony elections, nepotism and blatant corruption. Since then, Megawati and her predecessor, Wahid, have both strove to reduce the influence of the Indonesian army (TNI) on political life, to introduce civil liberties including previously unprecedented press freedoms, and to clean up the networks of violence and corruption that remain from the decades of Suharto’s rule. And yet both leaders have depended upon the support of Indonesia’s powerful Muslim parties and movements in their drive for reform. Without this support, the task of rooting out remaining networks of corruption, and of furthering democratic reform, would be rendered all but impossible. Westerners may well be correct to identify the dangers posed by Jemaah Islamiah, but in the new Indonesia – an aspiring liberal democracy – the question of repression is not so straight forward as it might once have been. Radical Muslim cleric, and leader of the Jemaah Islamiah, Abu Bakar Bashir, has so far steadfastly denied any link between his organisation and recent terror attacks. Without categorical proof, moves to repress or proscribe the organisation would represent a retrograde step that could irretrievably stunt attempts to democratize the world’s fourth most populous nation. What is more, were Megawati to act without clear proof, this would no doubt alienate the moderate Islamic parties with which she has developed an alliance, in order to marginalize Golkar, the party of the old repressive and corrupt order. Clearly Megawati must act as decisively as possible within the bounds of the new democratic legal order she has sought to build, in rooting out terrorist cells and networks, providing full co-operation to the Australian authorities, including intelligence agencies and Federal Police. Nevertheless, despite our pain, and our thirst for justice, we ought remain sensitive to the difficult balancing act she confronts in holding together her coalition: responding to possible threats, without compromising the process of political liberalisation.
18/10/2002 Tristan Ewins is an Australian Labor Party member, aspiring writer, and a former member of the Victorian branch of the ALP’s Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade Committee.
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