1) Embrace Indonesia, but reject abuses
2) Media Release Bishop must explain conflicting reports of West Papua incident: Greens
3) Papua 'stunt' angers senator
4) NT support for West Papuan activists
5) Letter in SMH  Violence in West Papua


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http://www.theage.com.au/comment/the-age-editorial/culture-of-entitlement-exposes-rank-hypocrisy-20131007-2v4nj.html

The Age Editorial 8 Oct

1) Embrace Indonesia, but reject abuses

If Australia wants a fair and open relationship with Indonesia, as it should, and if Indonesia seeks the same of this nation, then it is incumbent on both countries to keep a firm eye on the issues that matter to their respective peoples. Trade and investment should be ranked highly, being necessary engines for stronger economies, but without proper attention to human rights considerations we risk indulging each other with false smiles.
The Age is concerned about the treatment the Prime Minister, Tony Abbott, has indicated his government will afford to anyone protesting about conditions in the provinces of West Papua. Mr Abbott has said his government takes ''a very dim view indeed of anyone seeking to use our country as a platform for grandstanding against Indonesia [and] we will do everything that we possibly can to discourage this and to prevent this''. He says that ''on the subject of sovereignty, we're fair dinkum about doing what we can to help Indonesia in every way''.
Mr Abbott seems to think, wrongly, that his government is obliged to stifle dissent against a friendly neighbour. He is overreaching on this, and unnecessarily so. It is up to Indonesia to deal with political dissent within its borders, but when its response involves human rights abuses - as has occurred too often in Papua and West Papua - Australia should be strong enough to voice its objection and not pass it over as none of our business. Human rights are an international responsibility. If the Abbott government believes it should remain officially silent on such matters, then it surrenders any right to impose silence on others who do protest.
Successive Australian governments have ignored evidence of human rights abuses in Indonesia, to our shame. Yet a stock check of violence wrought by Indonesian forces on political protesters in West Papua includes multiple shootings, torture, disappearances and detention. Rarely is there any official investigation, let alone accountability.
Indonesia deserves credit for its substantial reforms of recent years, but we cannot measure respect for human rights in relative terms. If Indonesia falls short of our standards, it fails to meet world standards. When we agree to shut down political dissent, we risk being complicit in whatever else might follow.