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dont_go_to_indo
Environment, Travel 7

UK campaign to highlight West Papua plight

By Staff Writer · On January 17, 2013

A reason to think twice before you pack your bags for Indo next time. The little known conflict of West Papua highlights how your money could end up assisting wrong doing.


Off the plane, on the boat, off the boat, on the board… moments later you’re deep inside a turquoise frame, holding your breath as you grind along the reef. Indonesia delivering its promise as surfing heaven on earth.

With 202,080km of coastline, Indonesia has more surfing potential than perhaps anywhere else on the planet. Magnetised by its pull, surfers arrive in droves spending anywhere between US $1000 and $6000+ for two weeks in heaven.

But where is this money going and does it matter? Surfer and activist, Joe Jenkinson, from UK campaign group Don’t Go To Indo thinks it does.

“The Indonesian tourism industry is valued at some US $75.3 million and the burgeoning surf industry contributes a fair proportion of this,” he says. (Source: World Travel & Tourism Council, Economic Impact, 2012, report: Indonesia)

“What people don’t realise is that each trip to Indonesia reinforces an economy driven by oppression and resource grabbing in Indonesian occupied West Papua”.

When the Dutch left the Western half of the island of New Guinea in 1961 they recognised the West Papuans as Melanesian, ethnically and culturally distinct from Indonesia, and West Papua enjoyed a brief spell of independence. Within months however the dream was dead. Indonesia invaded and when United Nation observers turned a blind eye to what was meant to be a free and fair referendum on Papuan independence in 1963, the stage was set for 51 years (and counting) of occupation and brutal oppression of West Papua, orchestrated by the Indonesian government for economic gain.

Today West Papua is out of bounds to journalists and aid organisations alike and traveling there as a tourist is made intentionally difficult. All this helps to sustain the mirage of Indonesia as a heaven-sent tourist (and surfer’s) paradise, whilst keeping its true colours behind closed doors, a continental shelf away, on the island of New Guinea.

Joe appreciates that surfers may not consider this their problem, “Surfers have the freedom to travel and surf wherever they like. At Don’t Go To Indo we are not expecting a complete boycott of Indonesia as a surfing destination. We understand that it is the Indonesian government and military that are responsible for the colonisation and violence in West Papua and not small business owners in Indonesia who are simply trying to make a fair buck from passing surfers.”

“We are however adamant that surfers should be aware of the facts and understand that by traveling to Indonesia they are upholding a government that is responsible for the genocide of hundreds of thousands of West Papuan men, women and children.”

This figure is difficult to determine exactly due to the pervasive restriction on human rights groups from entering the affected areas but estimates range from 100,000 by Amnesty International up to 500,000 by Al Jazeera since Indonesia invaded.

“As a surfer myself I do not want this on my conscience.” Joe confesses. “Plus, why go to crowded Ulu when you can find your own Papuan equivalent on the island of New Guinea with no one else out?”

So what can you do to help?

Raising awareness is the first step, and to spread this message visit Don’t Go To Indo on Facebook, Twitter, or write to your local MP. You can learn more about the independence movement at the Free West Papua Campaign site. You can also email Joe Jenkinson, campaign director.

This is an issue all surfers should know about, so that they can make an informed decision about their travel budget and where it goes.

It is time for surfers to stand up for the oppressed people living in wave paradise.

indonesiaviolencewest papua
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7 Comments

  • Harry Jenkinson says: January 17, 2013 at 5:30 pm

    I am very, very proud of Joseph Leo Thomas Jenkinson :)

    Reply
  • Harry Jenkinson says: January 17, 2013 at 6:37 pm

    This is an excellent article which highlights the truth of what is really happening in West Papua.
    I wholeheartedly support the Don’t Go to Indo Campaign which is raising the plight of the West Papuan people with the Surfing Community.
    twitter.com/FreeWestPapua
    http://www.facebook.com/freewestpapua
    http://www.freewestpapua.org

    The West Papuan people desperately nee your help. Please support them.
    Say NO TO INDO! YES TO WEST PAPUA!

    Reply
  • Toi Jon says: January 17, 2013 at 7:39 pm

    A small step in the right direction is to avoid spending your money in military owned hotels. Don't fly Garuda and use local services which are not owned by Javanese.

    Reply
  • Howard Swanwick says: January 18, 2013 at 3:17 pm

    Bali and Lombok have been ruined by surf tourism. It's a festering shit hole. There's another reason not to go!

    Reply
    • Tim Tanton says: January 18, 2013 at 3:22 pm

      Come to Arugam Bay! (But at the right time of the year!)

      Reply
  • ishmael says: January 21, 2013 at 6:39 pm

    would the figures of 100,000 to 500,000 deaths since 1951 be much different to other islands under the rein of sukarno and suharto? maybe the don’t go to indo campain’s a little late!

    Reply
  • Meredith says: March 1, 2013 at 11:22 pm

    I spent a lot of time in Indonesia (not as a surfer), but someone working and living on Java. And boycotting seems like a horrible way to treat a country of 220 million people.

    Many other ethnic groups in other regions (Aceh for example) have suffered greatly under political/military groups. As Ishmael mentioned, the other island have suffered greatly over Indonesia’s history.

    If you would to actually help people in West Paupa, instead of an isolationist strategy, it would be much more effective to engage Indonesians to take a stance against this. Most Indonesians are not in the military and do not support this type of brutality. It’s like boycotting all of the US for Bush’s Invasion of Iraq. Do something to actually help the people in West Paupa.

    Reply
  • Leave a reply Cancel reply

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