Indonesia
Too xenophobic
When US, Singapore planes help locate missing plane, some
complain that country's sovereignty is compromised. Jakarta
Post.
Jan 16, 2007
By
Harry Bhaskara
Xenophobia in some sectors of society has reached alarming
levels.
Every time there is the slightest hint of the presence of
foreign forces of any kind in the country, the ugly head
of xenophobia pops up.
This
is evident from some of the discussions taking place on
radio, television and the Internet.
Statements
like "foreigners are infringing on our sovereignty"
and "why should the government allow them to come in"
are common.
There
is nothing wrong with being alert, but it is entirely different
to be concerned about something, which is baseless.
For
example, a Singapore plane with search and rescue equipment
and a US naval oceanographic survey ship, the Mary Sears,
are currently in Indonesian territory simply to help Indonesian
authorities locate the missing Adam Air jetliner.
They
are here because Indonesia lacks the technology to locate
the missing Adam Air Boeing 737-400.
It is
exactly because of the country's technological limitations
that President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono asked friendly countries
to help in the search.
It is good to remind alarmists that remote sensing technology
is now so advanced that advanced countries can train their
satellites on any spot in the world. So there is virtually
nothing we can conceal anyway.
In fact,
the US has provided Indonesia with satellite imagery to
help find the Adam Air plane.
The
Singapore Fokker-50 airplane is equipped with sonar technology
to detect objects on the ground as well as on the water's
surface, while objects on the seabed can be detected by
the Mary Sears.
It is simply rude to talk badly about our foreign friends
while they may be working at this very moment with local
forces in the southern Sulawesi waters off Pare-Pare, searching
for the jetliner.
There are worrying signs that xenophobia is here to stay,
judging from recent events.
When
foreign countries scrambled to Aceh after the December 2004
tsunami, the Indonesian Military (TNI) responded by restricting
the movement of international aid workers and foreign military
personnel.
Foreign
military ships and planes also were required to be accompanied
by military liaison officers and to get clearance from the
TNI for all their movements.
Vice President Jusuf Kalla then told foreign troops to leave
Indonesia within three months, amid allegations that the
troops were engaged in espionage on behalf of their governments.
There were also concerns that the largely Western foreign
volunteers were out to convert the mainly Muslim Acehnese
to Christianity.
Fortunately,
voices of reason made themselves heard, protesting the restrictions
and even questioning the true motives of the TNI.
This
ugly xenophobia again appeared after last May's earthquake
in Yogyakarta.
The
government wasted no time in appealing for international
help, but no sooner had foreign medical personnel and volunteers
arrived to help victims than top leaders in Jakarta demanded
to know how long they would be there.
Just
like the volunteers who streamed into Aceh two years ago
and Yogyakarta in May, the crews of the Singapore plane
and the American ship are motivated by a strong sense of
compassion for the 102 people aboard the missing jetliner.
Indonesia
seems to be saying, we will take your money and aid, now
get out.
If we
are unable to overcome our xenophobia, the international
community will be forgiven for perceiving us as an ungrateful
nation.
(The
original headline was “In times of tragedy, xenophobia
rears its ugly head.”)