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Since the fall of President Suharto in 1998, Australia-Indonesia relations have been quite volatile with the Indonesian Ambassador to Australia being withdrawn briefly in 2006, the first time this has ever happened.
Australia and Indonesia: current problems, future prospects
About the author
Jamie Mackie
Jamie Mackie (1924-2011) was the founding head of the Department of Indonesian Studies at the University of Melbourne (1958-67) and the founding research director in the Centre of South-east Asian Studies at Monash University (1968-78).
Indonesia’s democratisation has brought the two neighbours’ political systems more in line with each other. Yet, this has not led to quieter times. Rather, suspicions in Indonesia over Australia's interests towards the provinces of Papua have deepened along with Australian worries about religious developments in Indonesia.
In his Lowy Institute Paper, Professor Jamie Mackie, a very experienced Indonesia analyst who has researched the bilateral relationship for over five decades, evaluates the sources of this volatility and ways the two governments can counteract them and the potential problems if things stay as they are.
The Paper can be downloaded here.