http://insideindonesia.org/content/view/1261/47/



A violation of international law   
Indonesia's claim to sovereignty over West Papua rests upon an unsound legal 
basis
Melinda Janki

Between 14 July and 2 August 1969, the Indonesian government held what it 
called the 'Act of Free Choice' in West Papua. It gathered 1022 Papuan tribal 
representatives into eight locations - one for each region of West Papua: 
Merauke, Jayawijaya, Paniai, Fak-Fak, Sorong, Manokwari, Cenderawasih and 
Jayapura. Some of these Papuans had to walk three days to their designated 
location. Some had to leave behind their wives and children in the 'care of the 
Indonesian government'. These 1022 Papuans were asked to choose between two 
alternatives, either to remain with Indonesia or to sever ties with Indonesia 
and become an independent state separate from Indonesia, like Papua New Guinea. 

In each region the decision-making process was the same. The head of the West 
Irian provincial government informed the Papuan group that the peoples of West 
Papua had already expressed their desire not to be separated from Indonesia and 
that the right answer was for Papua to remain a part of Indonesia. The 
Indonesian Minister of Home Affairs informed them that this 'Act of Free 
Choice' would finally safeguard the unity of the Indonesian nation and there 
was no alternative but to 'remain within the Republic of Indonesia'. The 
Papuans were not permitted to vote. They had to reach a decision through the 
Indonesian system of musyawarah (mutual deliberation) in which discussion 
continues until everybody agrees. All of this took place under the watchful 
gaze of the Chair of the West Irian Provincial House of Representatives, the 
Chief of the Indonesian Information Service, as well as a Brigadier-General in 
the Indonesian army. One by one each Papuan group declared in favour of 
remaining with Indonesia. 

Ever since that time, Indonesia has represented this 'Act of Free Choice' as 
West Papua's exercise of its right to self-determination. This is its 
justification for the integration of West Papua into the Republic of Indonesia. 

Self-determination in international law

>From its origins as a political principle championed by Lenin and then by 
>Woodrow Wilson, self-determination has evolved into a fundamental human right 
>and a rule of international law. In its 1960 'Declaration on the Granting of 
>Independence to Colonial Countries and Peoples', the UN General Assembly 
>stated that 'the subjection of peoples to alien subjugation, domination and 
>exploitation constitutes a denial of fundamental human rights, is contrary to 
>the Charter of the United Nations and is an impediment to world peace and 
>cooperation'. Since then the principle of self-determination has attained 
>quasi-constitutional status within the United Nations and has been reinforced 
>by state practice throughout the world. As a result, millions of people have 
>gained their freedom from the former colonial powers. Self-determination has 
>been entrenched in treaty law and in the International Covenant on Economic, 
>Social and Cultural Rights. 

The 'Act of Free Choice' was an egregious violation of West Papua's legal right 
to self-determination

In early 2008, the chair of the UN special committee on decolonisation, who was 
also the UN representative for Indonesia, H.E. Mr R. M. Marty M Natalegawa (now 
Indonesia's foreign minister), declared that 'decolonisation remains an 
unfinished business of the United Nations. We must therefore continue to give 
decolonisation a high priority and seek effective ways to accelerate the 
process of decolonisation in the remaining Non-Self-Governing Territories'. If 
he is really serious, His Excellency need look no further than across the Afar 
Sea to West Papua. 

The situation in 1969

In 1969, Indonesia did not have sovereignty over West Papua. It had exercised 
administration responsibilities over the territory under UN supervision since 
1963, after assuming responsibilities from the United Nations Temporary 
Executive Authority, which had in turn taken over administration from the 
Netherlands, the original colonial power. Indonesia's obligations towards West 
Papua were governed by two separate treaties. The first and more important was 
the UN Charter, Article 73 of which imposed on Indonesia a 'sacred trust' to 
bring West Papua to self-government. The second treaty was the 'Agreement 
Concerning West New Guinea (West Irian)' made on 15 August 1962 between the 
Kingdom of the Netherlands and the Republic of Indonesia and commonly referred 
to as the New York Agreement. This treaty imposed on Indonesia an obligation, 
as the administering power, to hold an act of self-determination in West Papua 
in accordance with international practice. 
In 1969 'international practice' was well-established. Under Resolution 1541 
(XV) 'Principles which should guide Members in determining whether or not an 
obligation exists to transmit the information called for under Article 73e of 
the Charter', an historic resolution passed by the UN General Assembly in 1960, 
there were two fundamental conditions that had to be met before a 
non-self-governing territory (such as West Papua) could be integrated into 
another state (such as Indonesia). 
Legal commentators have been scathing about the vote ever since, dismissing it 
as an empty and formalistic exercise, a pseudo-choice and a betrayal of the 
principle of self-determination

Firstly, the territory should have already attained 'an advanced stage of 
self-government with free political institutions'. This was necessary, to give 
its people 'the capacity to make a responsible choice through informed and 
democratic processes'. Secondly, integration should only proceed once all the 
people of the territory, fully informed about the consequences, had expressed 
their wishes through 'informed and democratic processes, impartially conducted 
and based on universal adult suffrage'. These requirements were set out in 
Principle IX of Resolution 1541 (XV). 
No justification in law
Clearly, in the 1969 'Act of Free Choice' these conditions were ignored. Legal 
commentators have been scathing about the vote ever since, dismissing it as an 
empty and formalistic exercise, a pseudo-choice and a betrayal of the principle 
of self-determination. 

The 'Act of Free Choice' was an egregious violation of West Papua's legal right 
to self-determination, a violation of the 'sacred trust' under Article 73 of 
the UN Charter and a breach of Indonesia's treaty obligations under the UN 
Charter and the New York Agreement. It cannot justify Indonesian sovereignty 
over West Papua. The justification for such sovereignty, if it exists, must lie 
elsewhere in the legal rules governing the acquisition of sovereignty. 
Otherwise West Papua is a territory that is under alien domination - a status 
forbidden by international law.
   
  ii 
Melinda Janki (mmja...@yahoo.co.uk) is an international lawyer specialising in 
the environment and human rights, providing legal advice to conservation 
organisations and to aboriginal and tribal peoples in Asia, Africa and South 
America. She is also a founding member of International Lawyers for West Papua. 

This article is part of our series on the fortieth anniversary of the Act of 
Free Choice 

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