Showing posts with label Papua. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Papua. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

8 traditional miners shot dead in Paniai, Papua

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Wed, 11/16/2011 10:15 AM

Eight civilians were reportedly shot dead at a traditional gold mining site on the Degeuwo River in Paniai regency, Papua.

The shooting allegedly took place at about 10 a.m. on Sunday, Matius Murid, the deputy chief of the Papua office of the National Commission on Human Rights, said Wednesday in Jakarta.

“We’re still investigating what caused the shooting and what actually happened. Some people have given some information, but it’s still not clear yet,” Matius said as quoted by tempointeraktif.com.

“We still don’t know what motivated the shooting or exactly how [the victims] died,” he said.

The eight dead victims were allegedly shot while panning for gold on the river, Matius said.

The victims were Matias Tenouye (30), Simon Adii (35), Yoel Ogetay (30), Petrus Gobay (40), Benyamin Gobay (25), Marius Maday (35), Matias Anoka (40) and Yus Pigome (50).

Matius added that dozens of people near the scene of the incident had fled after being traumatized by the shooting.

Meanwhile, Papua Police spokesman Sr. Comr. Wachyono said his office had not received any reports on the shooting.

Saturday, November 5, 2011

Papua: Not another East Timor or Aceh, please

Aboeprijadi Santoso, Amsterdam | Fri, 11/04/2011 8:27 AM

A dialogue initiated by Jakarta has recently been followed up by massive strikes at the Freeport gold mining site and third Papuan People’s Congress on the rights of the people and the future of Papua. The violence that erupted amid all these, however, is rooted elsewhere — not in Papua.

Papua may be viewed to have been the result of a series of historic fait accompli.

First, it was incorporated into the colonial edifice of Dutch-Indies only in the early last century. Next, it was put under the sovereignty of independent Indonesia, but this only materialized much later than the other parts of the republic.

As a result, like East Timor, Papua was not part of the processes of Indonesia’s nation-building when this reached its height from the 1940s to 1960s.

Lastly, Soeharto’s 30-year militarized state, which was the first to put Papua under Jakarta’s effective control since 1969, was more interested in its economic potential than its impoverished and denigrated people, which made Papua, like Aceh, grow alienated vis-à-vis the central government.

The combination of these faits accomplis has made Papua uniquely different to both East Timor and Aceh. But Papua is now being treated in the same way East Timor and Aceh were during the times of conflict in those regions.

Let’s briefly review the cases. By the late 1990s it was obvious people in Aceh, in towns and the countryside, were harboring resentment toward the central administration, the Mobile Police Brigade and military.

It was similar in East Timor, whose people went through even more painful episodes that resembled Saddam’s “Republic of Fear”.

It took more than two decades for the East Timor conflicts to be resolved and its people to be freed as Soeharto’s regime began to crumble and pushed president B.J. Habibie to offer plebiscite.

At the same time, though, the reformasi helped the Aceh revolt get massive popular support.

At this crucial juncture, we thus “lost” East Timor just as we, with Aceh rebellion at its peak, felt the threat of disintegration.

This resulted in state-nationalism, which desperately defends the old nationhood, facing a few local nationalisms.

As a consequence, despite the drive toward democracy, we either blame our new spring and openness, or strengthen a “blind” nationalism in efforts to maintain the unitary state (NKRI), or both.

The consequences of this can now be seen in Papua as Indonesia becomes “a democracy minus Papua”. Papua thus turns into an anomaly: a “sick man” to be healed, from Jakarta’s perspective, by its classic formula that we used to deal with East Timor and Aceh: “NKRI Harga Mati!”

This state rhetoric means that the “unitary state” has yet again become the deadly bottom line that justifies any means, including violence, to keep Indonesia “united”.

We thus tend to ignore that ongoing violence, no matter how excessive, as the cases of East Timor and Aceh demonstrated, would only breed growing local hatred, which in turn threatens state unity and hurts the existing nationhood.

It is important here to recall that our Founding Fathers’ dream of a unitary state was based on the 1928 Youth Pledge and the principles of, to borrow Sukarno’s phrase, “nationalism within the garden of humanity”. Hence, they called for persatoean Indonesia — a current parlance rather than a doctrine.

By contrast, NKRI has in effect become a slogan-turned-operational doctrine ever since the New Order invented it in an effort to impose a centralized state by using the concept of kesatuan (unit, in a military sense). The militarily inspired doctrine thus becomes a popular discourse that takes the violence-prone phrase “NKRI Harga Mati!” for granted.

One wonders indeed whether this state discourse and method to call for unity can be reconciled with our Constitution that acknowledges the right of every nation and calls to respect its dignity.

While the New Order’s state-building thus expanded at the expense of nation-building, its legacy put our democratic experiment to a serious test. Indeed, it contributed little to the resolution of conflict on East Timor — which we left with a bloody mayhem (1999) — and Aceh, where the war didn’t end until peace was signed (2005).

In the end, it was the foreign mediating role — the United Nations for East Timor and Helsinki peace makers for Aceh — that actually ended the war. It was not the tsunami, which accelerated rather than motivated peace at the latest minutes, but the military stagnation on the ground, the dignity bestowed upon the warring sides, and Jakarta’s agreeing (even if reluctantly) to local party, that led to the Helsinki peace deal.

In short, no military solution would resolve the conflict. Lessons from Aceh peace may hopefully be useful as Jakarta now acts, if somewhat late, by sending a special team led by an Aceh war-veteran and peace delegation member, Lt. Gen. (ret.) Bambang Dharmono, to Papua.

However, Jakarta remains reluctant to involve foreign mediators. The fact that special autonomy has poured trillions of rupiah into Papua may have encouraged not only the growth of a local elite and corruption, but possibly also has empowered local resistance.

Papua needs “a [Jakarta] leader who we can trust,” the late Papua leader Theys Hiyo Eluay, referring to president Abdurrahman “Gus Dur” Wahid, insisted when I met him in 2001.

Whoever would negotiate with Papuans will have to be open, honest and ready to discuss the past methods by which former West New Guinea (West Irian) was incorporated into the republic, which has been Papua’s universal demand ever since the second Papua People Congress in 2000.

No autonomy, no matter how many trillions of rupiah it provides, will recover Papua’s dignity as long as Jakarta refuses to discuss the legitimacy of the genesis of the United Nations-held 1969 plebiscite.

In short, no more “East Timor” and “Aceh” methods can be used to deal with Papua.

The writer is a journalist. He covered East Timor and Aceh throughout the 1990s and 2000s for Radio Netherlands

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Letter: Time for a rethink of the Papua strategy

The threat of the military approach in Papua (The Jakarta Post online, Aug. 4) only further alienates Papuans from the rest of the country and adds fuel to the fire.

If a crime has been committed, then it should be a police matter, not an excuse for more military offensives to antagonize and intimidate more communities. And who is it that always automatically labels perpetrators of any violence as “separatist rebels”?

It is in their interest to justify their continued activities in the province to keep labeling even common criminals as “separatist rebels”. Just like in the 1960s when anyone Soeharto didn’t like was, without any evidence, labeled a “communist” and killed or exiled. Now the TNI labels them “separatist rebels”, often without any evidence.

Papuans have a good reason to feel they are being treated as third-class citizens in a country with so much of its focus and spending in the western half of the archipelago. There are still those in Jakarta that see Papua as a colony to be exploited. Whilst those attitudes persist, Papuans will understandably carry resentment and weigh up their options.

Papuans only need look across the border into what they see as a proud, prosperous and independent Papua New Guinea, where their fellow Papuan traditional landowners share directly in the benefits of the mining boom. No amount of military crackdown in Papua Province will kill off the hopes and aspirations of the Papuan people, rather, only encourage them to “think outside the box” that they find themselves in.

A far better strategy would be to pull the military out of their current provocative role and for the civilian government to pay a lot more attention to building a strong community through genuine sharing in the benefits of development.

Under Indonesian law, Papua’s provinces have a right to autonomy, but they keep saying it is not working and they are still being dictated.

Former president Abdurrahman “Gus Dur” Wahid started a whole new positive mood in Papua. Megawati became captive of the TNI and allowed a reversal of the Gus Dur process and things drifted back to the Soeharto era military strategy. And SBY has allowed things to just drift along as the TNI wishes.

It is time to start treating Papuans and Papua with greater respect and equality, as partners, as brothers and sisters in RI. Building a proud and happy community will be the only way to win over Papuans from thinking greater autonomy or even independence. So why not start now.

Nairdah
Sydney

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Papua community welcomes development acceleration plan

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Wed, 02/16/2011 11:44 AM | Archipelago

Papuan community leader and city councilor Athanasius Allo Rafra has welcomed the government plan to establish a taskforce in March in a bid to accelerate development in Papua and West Papua provinces.

"I support the establishment of the taskforce because the development of Papua and West Papua has progressed at a snail's pace," Allo Rafra said Wednesday as quoted by Antara.

The taskforce (UP4B) would work to make sure the development of the provinces is conducted in line with government and community priorities.

Allo lamented that budget allocations in both provinces had been squandered because of unclear guidelines on development priorities.

“It isn’t clear where the priorities lie, whether it is in infrastructure, education, health or other sectors,” he said.

Allo said he hoped the taskforce would perform a similar function as the taskforce that helped Nanggroe Aceh Darussalam and Nias provinces to recover after the earthquake and tsunami.

He called on the central government to strictly supervise all development activities in Papua and West Papua to avoid misuse of the state budget.

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Housewives account for most HIV/AIDS cases in Papua: Govt

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Mon, 01/24/2011 11:33 AM | Archipelago

Most of the people reporting HIV/AIDS infections in Papua last year were housewives, accounting for 164 individuals, the government says.

Most of these women had contracted HIV from their husbands, Jayapura AIDS Commission secretary Purnomo said Monday in Sentani as reported by kompas.com reported.

“Their husbands were unfaithful,” he said

Official records show there were 609 people living with HIV/AIDS in Papua last year, comprising 242 men and 367 women.

Up to 164 of the women were housewives, and 102 were sex workers. Of the total, 37 were civil servants, 67 were employees of private companies, 41 were high school and college students and 61 were farmers or blue collar or informal workers.

Twelve of the women were under four years old and 44 were between 15 and 19 years of age, while most (285 of them) were in their 20s; 198 were in their 30s and 55 were in their 40s.

Most HIV/AIDS cases were found in the Sentani district, 126 in East Sentani, 26 in Kauran, 20 in Nimboran and 25 in West Sentani.

Four children had contracted HIV from their mothers, seven from blood transfusions and the rest from sexual intercourse.