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Australias tsunami aid package: neo-colonialism laced
with hypocrisy
By the Socialist Equality Party (Australia)
28 January 2005
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The $A1 billion Australia-Indonesia Partnership for Reconstruction
and Development pact that Prime Minister John Howard announced
with Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono in Jakarta
in early January was motivated by considerations that have nothing
to do with humanitarianism. On the contrary, the Australian government
has seized on the terrible impact of the Asian tsunami as the
pretext for furthering its economic and strategic interests in
Indonesia and throughout South East Asia.
Under the auspices of delivering aid to hundreds
of thousands of tsunami victims, Canberra now has its military
on the ground in Indonesiasomething that would have been
unthinkable just months ago. Some 500 Australian troops are stationed
in Aceh, together with a naval vessel, eight aircraft and four
helicopters, working alongside the Indonesian military (TNI) for
the first time since 1999, when TNI sponsored thugs rampaged through
East Timor, killing thousands of civilians and laying waste to
towns and villages.
The deployment is aimed at cementing ties between the Australian
government, the Indonesian military and the ruling regime, now
headed by Yudhoyono, a former senior general under the bloody
Suharto dictatorship.
It beggars belief that Howard and his ministers have suddenly
developed concern for the well-being of the Acehnese people. According
to the Asian Development Bank, almost 30 percent of Acehs
population of four millionthat is, more than one million
peoplewere living below the poverty line before the tsunami.
Unemployment was estimated at 40 percent and less than half the
province had access to safe drinking water and electricity.
There is no doubt that these impoverished people have suffered
the worst losses as a result of the tsunami. More than 228,000
Acehnese have been officially confirmed dead, while hundreds of
thousands have been made homeless and entire communities wiped
out.
But Howards concern is to secure a foothold in a country
that remains one of the most resource-rich and strategically-located
in the world. Aceh, in particular, possesses huge oil and natural
gas reserves and is located at the top of the Strait of Malacca,
one of the worlds busiest and most strategically vital commercial
and naval sea lanes.
Howard himself described the package as an historic step
in Indonesian-Australian relations. For the first half of
the twentieth century, the Australian ruling elite backed the
continuation of Dutch colonial rule over the archipelago, known
then as the Dutch East Indies. After independence in 1949, it
worked closely with Washington to destabilise the nationalist
government under Sukarno, culminating in the 1965-66 CIA-backed
military coup and anti-communist massacres carried out by General
Suharto.
Less than 10 years ago, Howards predecessor, Labor Prime
Minister Paul Keating signed a strategic pact with Suharto, hailing
his military junta as the best guarantor of Australian strategic
interests in the Asian-Pacific region. While Suhartos dictatorship
collapsed in 1998, little changed as far as the people of Aceh
were concerned. The Indonesian military continued its brutal repression
of the secessionist movement, as well as the local population,
with Canberras complicity.
Since taking office in 1996, the Howard government has consistently
turned a blind eye to Jakartas atrocities in Aceh. Over
the past 20 months, since May 2003, Canberra has made no criticism
of the imposition of martial law, the exclusion of all foreign
journalists and aid workers, and the intensification of military
violence.
When asked at a media conference whether Australias new
commitment to Indonesia was dependent upon any moderation of the
war against the separatists, Howard ruled out placing any conditions
on the TNI. To the extent that pressure is now being brought to
bear on Yudhoyono to end the conflict and enter negotiationsin
particular, by Washingtonthis is solely to create a more
stable environment for foreign investment.
Strategic shift
Howard has cynically attempted to align himself with the spontaneous
outpouring of sympathy and generosity towards the tsunami victims
on the part of millions of ordinary Australians, which has resulted
in more than $180 million donated to relief funds. A spirit
of common humanity had moved his government, he declared.
The response of the world communityand not least Australiato
this heartbreaking tragedy has been swift and generous.
In reality, Canberras response was neither swift nor
generous. Expressing the same indifference and contempt as its
counterparts in Britain and the US, the Howard governments
initial contribution, announced on December 27, was just $10 million.
By that time, it was already clear that tens of thousands of people
had been swept to their deaths in at least six countries.
Two days later, with the official death toll nearing 100,000
and amid mounting international criticism of the callous reaction
of the major powers, the package was expanded to $35 million.
On December 31, five days after the tragedy began, and under mounting
popular pressure, the total was begrudgingly increased to $60
million.
Not coincidentally, Howard announced his Indonesian package
on January 5, just after the Bush administration, in an effort
to appease growing condemnation, belatedly boosted its contribution
tenfold to $350 million. Behind both aid packages lie similar
calculations: to use the opportunityas Bushs
Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice put itafforded by the
tsunami to try to lift the thoroughly discredited profile of the
US government, its military forces and its allies in the eyes
of the worlds oppressed masses. At the same time, both governments
are using the disaster to dispatch military forces to strategically
vital areas.
Almost certainly, Howard discussed his initiative with the
White House before making it public. Since September 11, the Australian
government has aligned itself unconditionally with Washingtons
war on terror and Bushs doctrine of preemptive
war, participating in the military invasions of both Afghanistan
and Iraq. Using the same rhetoric about the threat of terror,
Howard has also embarked on his own neo-colonial campaigndispatching
troops to the Solomon Islands, police to Papua New Guinea and
installing officials in the administrations of Fiji, Vanuatu and
Nauru.
Howard specifically opposed directing Australias aid
to Indonesia through the United Nations or other multilateral
institutions or agencies. Instead, it will be organised under
a bilateral partnership with Yudhoyono. Over the next
five years Canberra has promised to provide $500 million in grants
and $500 million in concessional loans to finance reconstruction
work conducted under the joint supervision of the two governments.
In return, the lions share of the contracts will go to Australian-based
companies and Australian officials will vet and control all construction
and infrastructure projects. With blunt disregard for Indonesian
sovereignty, Canberra will retain a veto over all spending.
No details have been offered as to how the funding will be
allocated. But there is no doubt that, as with the other major
Australian operations in the regionnotably in East Timor,
the Solomon Islands and PNGthe aid will be tied
to the use of Australian-based contractors and materials, and
adherence to so-called open market guidelines.
The Australian Financial Review reported on January
17: Officials confirmed that all contracts associated with
the five-year program to help rebuild Aceh province will be awarded
exclusively to Australian and New Zealand companies, though some
companies will then subcontract to local or Indonesian companies.
In corporate circles, token involvement in humanitarian relief
is regarded as the necessary downpayment on lucrative contracts.
Among those named by the newspaper as joining the scramble are
Clough Engineering, BlueScope Steel (formerly BHP Steel), Leighton
Holdings, Coffey MPW and Veolia Water. We are providing
aid, a combination of money donations and in-kind assistance,
but there will be opportunity to do more major projects down the
track, Clough spokesman Robert Ash commented.
Significantly, while anxious to grandstand on the aid issue,
Howard has resisted all international calls for debt relief to
be extended to Indonesia and the other affected countries. While
insisting that he wishes to ensure that financial assistance is
targeted to those most in need, his position will only intensify
the pressure being placed on these countries for drastic economic
restructuring and the further opening up of their economies to
the demands of global capital.
Media and political complicity
Not one journalist has seriously probed, let alone questioned,
the Howard governments response to the tsunami disaster.
Instead, the entire official establishment has participated in
what can only be described as an orgy of praise. Even commentators
who have, in the past, criticised aspects of the governments
policies have joined in the adulation. Australian Greens leader
Bob Brown, for example, rushed to congratulate the government
for the size of this aid announcement.
The reaction is revealing. Whatever tactical differences have
existed over the Iraq war and the extent of Australias involvement
in Bushs war on terror, there is unanimity on
the question of Australias commercial and strategic agenda
in the Asia-Pacific.
One only needs recall the support of the media, the Labor Party,
the Greens and the entire middle class radical milieu for the
Howard governments military intervention in East Timor,
which was also hailed, at the time, as a mission to help the poor
and oppressed.
The reality was that, after the fall of Suharto, Canberra was
determined to maintain its influence in East Timor, especially
its control over the Timor Sea oil and gas fields. The military
violence, which was orchestrated by the TNI against supporters
of East Timors independence from Indonesia, was used as
the pretext for deploying Australian troops. More than five years
later, the vast majority of Timorese are still living in dire
poverty, Australian troops remain in the country, Australian companies
rule the roost in the Timor Sea, and the tiny statelet is economically
and militarily completely beholden to the major powers.
Once its objectives were achieved, the Howard government ditched
all criticism of the TNI and worked to resume relations. Throughout
the entire sordid saga, Howard has received unfailing support
from the opposition Labor Party.
The bipartisanship between Labor and the coalition government,
which has characterised Labors approach to virtually every
major policy issue since Howard took office in 1996, has now risen
to a new level. Labor has left all reaction to the tsunami disasterone
of the most significant events in the Asian region in decadesentirely
in the hands of the government. The party has issued no statements,
expressed no sympathy, and made no demands. Its only comments
were two cursory press releases praising Howards initiatives
and sentiments. After two weeks of silence, Labor
leader Mark Latham emerged from his alleged illness to state his
full agreement with Howards measures.
Likewise, the Australian Council of Trade Unions (ACTU) and
its affiliates have kept their mouths completely shut. No calls
have been made to their members for teams of nurses, teachers,
skilled trades people or construction workers, to travel to the
affected countries to assist the victims to rebuild their lives.
The indifference is not accidental. The Labor Party and the union
movement have no reason to oppose Howards agenda or the
ravages carried out every day on the lives and conditions of ordinary
peoplein Australia and around the worldat the behest
of global capitalism. Their response to the collapse of national
regulation and the old perspective of national reformism has been
to align themselves with the interests of corporate Australia.
That is why, as far as the vast majority of working people are
concerned, they have become a complete irrelevancy.
But the heartfelt response of ordinary people throughout Australia
and around the world is another expression of the elemental understanding
of the global nature of the economic, political and social issues
raised by the tsunami disaster. Providing genuine support for
the victims of the Indian Ocean tsunami is inseparable from building
an international political movement grounded on the perspective
of socialist internationalism and committed to overturning the
system responsible for the scale of the social catastrophe left
behind by the tidal waves.
See Also:
The social roots of the tsunami disaster
[22 January 2005]
How much "aid" will reach the
tsunami survivors?
[11 January 2005]
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