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The Nunukan Tragedy Exposes The ASEAN To Serious Rifts

Illegal Indonesian workers struggle for food at a refugee camp in the Indonesian town of Nunukan

By Kazi Mahmood, IOL South Asia Correspondent

KUALA LUMPUR, Sept 15 (IslamOnline) - Nunukan, a remote small island among the 15,000 Islands that constitutes Indonesia, is the site of the latest human tragedy in South East Asia.

It is a region that is becoming as volatile as never before with politics and diplomacy failing to deliver what the Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN) is framed upon, peace, stability and economic progress.

Nunukan, some 1,700 kilometers northeast of Jakarta, in East Kalimantan, off Tawau, is a tiny island -- a mere dot on the map - and has been in the news lately since the arrival there of some 22,000 illegal Indonesian workers expelled from Malaysia.

The island's only health center with its staff of 10, only three of whom are on full-time on duty personnel, is barely equipped to meet the needs of Nunukan's 40,000 inhabitants, let alone those of an additional 22,000 deported migrant workers from East Malaysia who are stranded there at present.

It is not this sad state of affairs that has enraged the Indonesians and embroiled Malaysia in rift with its huge but poor neighbor of 212 million people. It is the fact that several people have died in the camp that is holding the expelled illegal workers from Malaysia.

However, the state of affairs on the island is an indication why Indonesia is unable to feed its own people and why these people are forced to seek refuge in Malaysia, where the grass is definitely greener than their own home.

One of the principles that guide the ASEAN is that members of the grouping should not harm other members. In the wake of Nunukan, there is bound to be a drastic change in the theories that run the politics of the region.

With at least 64 workers and their children who have reportedly died on the Nunukan Island in the past few days of hunger and disease, it is obvious that Jakarta is unable to properly address the plight of the hundreds of thousands of workers deported from Malaysia.

Malaysia became the “enemy” that has to be targeted and the few demonstrations were indications that things were going out of hand between the two Muslim nations. The prompt intervention of the leaders of both countries has so far calmed the tensions but things can flare up anytime since the nerves are impulsive.

Malaysia is also at the center of a terrible political row with the Philippines too, with the unfortunate death of 13 children who succumbed to the avarices of both the detention camps in Sabah, on the Island of Borneo and the rough travel in the ships from Malaysia to the Philippines.

If in Indonesia it is not really the death of the refugees that has aroused the anger of a large section of the people (a majority of Indonesians according to polls on Indonesian websites said they were angered by Malaysia’s new policies), in the Philippines. The sight of the dead children caused a lot of emotions.

Indonesia took a heavy blow in its pride with the caning of its citizens in Malaysia, charged for illegal entry or overstaying in the country of the tallest buildings on earth. Its top politician and ‘king maker’ Amien Rais who is a presidential hopeful for 2004 heavily criticized the Malaysian authorities for “their inhuman” acts of canning, “something which is not of this age,” he added.

In Manila, the tension has prompted senators and congressmen to raise the old issue of Philippine’s claims on the Island of Sabah, which is vastly populated by Filipino descendants. The Filipino regime headed by Gloria Macapagal Arroyo is resistant to the idea of staking its claim back on Sabah; a province it said was its own in the early 60’s.

Sabah has been for long the entry point for Filipino workers, a majority of them are Muslims, sources said, into Malaysia. Many of them were holding forged identity cards (IC) observers in the region added. Forged IC’s were available even at night markets, a government agency reported recently. This shows the degree of tolerance that was reigning in Sabah before the crack down.

The sudden expulsion of the people of all ages from the territory has angered the migrants who felt at home in Sabah. The change of policies in Malaysia did not go down well with the immigrants and many promised to either go back to Malaysia sooner or later or to support all claims to territorial integration of Sabah into the Philippines.

Nunukan in Indonesia has long been the base from which Indonesian workers found their way into East Malaysia, where most of them were employed on the agricultural estates that are the foundation of the region's economy. These workers were important foreign exchange earners for the eastern parts of Indonesia.

The Filipinos in Sabah were altogether a relief to the Manila, since many of them could have become members of the Abu Sayyaf or other militant groups. Their return to the Mindanao could pose serious security problems to Manila, the military feared in the Philippines according to rebel sources.

The Malaysian authorities had no reason to address the situation of illegality of the migrants before September 11th. The advent of the Abu Sayyaf and the kidnapping of foreigners off Sabah, on the island of Pahlawan, did not force the Malaysian authorities to carry a crack down on illegals in the state altogether.

Both Indonesia and the Philippines now have reasons to hold grudges against Malaysia, for not showing solidarity to the two poor nations who apparently dependent largely on Malaysia’s eagerness to allow these workers on its territory in the first place.

Both Indonesia and the Philippines are facing acute economic problems and additional mouths to feed will not help their problems.

A family of illegal Indonesian workers rest at a refugee camp in the Indonesian town of Nunukan

Malaysia on the other hand still needs foreign workers to replenish its lack of workforce in several crucial sectors, including agriculture, manufacturing, construction and other services. Malaysians are not interested in filling these posts, preferring to seek a blue-collar job in government or private sectors. Many Malaysians are unemployed but are engaged in small-scale businesses.

This leaves the economic sectors without manpower, hence the need for foreign workers. All these sectors have drastically suffered since the expulsion of illegal workers and a reverse in the policy was noted in early August to allow the return of thousands of Indonesian workers into Malaysia.

However, the regime of Mahathir Mohamad is currently putting emphasis on security threats that could exist in Malaysia. It has cracked down on Islamic militants during the past two years; it has also tightened the grip on the freedom of information in a bid to prevent the circulation of sensitive news to the mainstream public.

The latest events in Kuala Lumpur clearly indicate that Malaysia is trying to clear

its borders of the excess of foreign workers and of illegals. It will surely tighten the rules on the import of foreign manpower in the coming months. It is also cracking on the Party Islam Se Malaysia (PAS), attacking the growing opposition party on its own platform of Islamization of the country.

Will all this clean-up this lead to further limitation of democracy in Malaysia or is it only a temporary situation that is bound to ensure a safe leadership transition within the ruling National Front (NF) after the much publicized announcement that Mahathir is resigning in October next year?

The most plausible theory is that Malaysia is currently facing a downward slope in the economy, with capital input falling behind in comparison to increased expenditures. This is forcing the authorities to act briskly against all pockets of potential social flare-ups in the country, hence the expulsion of foreign workers and the offensive against the largest opposition party in the country.

 

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