Australian Alert!
Your neighbor has changed
Telling Australians their
ideas about Indonesia
are out-of-date can be a head-banging exercise.
Ambassador Gary Quinlan knows
this well. The boss of Australia’s
Jakarta Embassy has been back to his homeland five times this year promoting
the positives of his posting and telling listeners to update the software
between their ears.
On one trip to coastal New South Wales where he was raised and educated, Quinlan
spoke to Newcastle
University staff and
students. His message was clear: Their big neighbor was young, dynamic, keen
for investors, and democratic.
His speech wasn’t covered
by the print media though Quinlan is a local lad made good, having won high academic
and national recognition for his long and distinguished public service.
Before starting work in Jakarta last year he was Australia's
chief negotiator with Timor-Leste over the East Timor
maritime boundary dispute. The parties reached agreement.
On future trips to Australia Quinlan hopes to say the same thing,
though louder, to editorial boards of Australia’s major media
organisations. It will be a tough sell
in a scorched earth market of shriveling sales.
In this ill-explored digital landscape bemused managers flounder while trying
to determine directions.
Some overseas newsrooms in
Jakarta, like
Australian Associated Press, have closed.
Others have slashed staff or followed The Australian broadsheet and re-titled their journalists ‘Southeast Asia correspondents’. These busy reporters are expected to cover a
region of ten nations and 640 million people.
To the annoyance of
serious writers Indonesian stories most likely to get a run Down Under are
quirky tales of Aussie teens getting smashed on drugs or motorbikes and finding
Indonesia police react differently to cops in suburban Sydney.
The stories get pushed
higher if the alleged offender / victim is a sporting hero. Laws targeting blasphemers and gays are also
good for a few paragraphs.
Readers might forget
economically important Closer Economic Partnership Agreements for Bilateral Trade,
but they’ll surely remember the ‘bonk bans’, proposed laws to jail unmarried
couples found in the same bed.
The politics of Indonesia
are so complex comment is usually restricted to academic journals. The doings of Washington
and Whitehall
are equally knotty but cut-and-paste copy from the Anglosphere doesn’t need
translating.
In
the past year the Embassy has run more than ‘25 major public diplomacy programs’
plus film, fashion and food festivals.
Seminars have been held on millennials and democracy, artificial
intelligence, and women in business.
Australia’s multiculturalism has been promoted but Quinlan
knows this can be misunderstood as the two countries have different
understandings of the term.
In
Indonesia
it means a mix of citizens from the Republic’s 34 provinces and 300 ethnic
groups. In Australia it refers to settled
migrants. About 30 per cent of Australia’s
26 million people were born overseas.
In this year’s Lowy
Institute survey of Australian public attitudes, 59 per cent disagreed with the
statement that ‘Indonesia
is a democracy’ – which it has been for all this century.
The poll revealed Australians
think their country’s ‘best friend in the world’ is New
Zealand, then the US
and UK. Four per cent reckoned ‘China’, just one per cent ‘Indonesia’.
Against these facts Quinlan’s work is all uphill though he praised
government-to-government dealings. In a
recent speech he said: ‘Politically, our
relations are not fragile; in fact, they're very resilient.
‘Like any countries, especially close neighbours, we can
always be hostage to events, but both countries have a fundamental interest in
strong good relations and both are seriously committed to that.’
Maybe, though not enough – which will
always be the case when Indonesians outnumber Australians more than ten to one.
Here are some more headaches:In 2014 the Australian Government started the New Colombo Plan for young Australians to study in the region. Indonesia tops the list with 7,554 short-term ‘mobility grants’ of up to AUD 7,000; however only 65 have chosen Indonesia in the past six years for the prestigious scholarships worth AUD 69,000. More popular locations are Hong Kong, Singapore and Japan.
Meanwhile Australia has been slashing aid to Indonesia. In
2015 it cut funding by 40 per cent from AUD 542 million to AUD 323 million. Next year the knife will slice deeper to AUD
298 million.
Well over a million
Australians fill Bali’s bars and beaches every
year, yet the Institute says its long-term polling ‘has demonstrated the
wariness with which Australians and Indonesians regard each other.’
Many visitors think Hindu
Bali is a separate state and not a province in predominantly Muslim Indonesia,
just a short ferry ride across the 2.4 kilometer strait, but a formidable
barrier for unadventurous Aussies. Money
changers in Australian airports sometimes advertise ‘Bali Money’.
" We need to tap more of this potential, especially for young Australians.”
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First published in Indonesian Expat 25 November 2019: https://indonesiaexpat.biz/featured/australian-alert-your-neighbor-has-changed/
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