This is the 92nd in a
series of monthly reports that focus on
developments affecting Papuans. This series
is produced by the non-profit West Papua
Advocacy Team (WPAT) drawing on media
accounts, other NGO assessments, and
analysis and reporting from sources within
West Papua. This report is co-published with
the East Timor and Indonesia Action
Network (ETAN). Back issues are posted
online at
http://etan.org/issues/wpapua/default.htm
Questions regarding this report can be
addressed to Edmund McWilliams at
edmcw@msn.com. If you wish to receive
the report via e-mail, send a note to etan@etan.org.
Summary:
A new
operation by security forces in West Papua's central
highland region
has targeted civilians with destruction of a church,
houses and other buildings. Human rights
organizations are calling for an investigation of
security force brutality associated with the October
16-19 Papuan Congress. Continued repression in West
Papua and the Yudhoyono administration's defense of
the perpetrators of that repression as well as the
impunity regularly accorded the perpetrators points
to the Jakarta's ultimate responsibility for the
violence. The decade-old Special Autonomy policy in
West Papua constitutes a strategy for subjugation of
Papuans in their own homeland.
Security Forces Again
Target Civilians in Papuan Central
Highlands
POLRI GEGANA
anti-terrorism troops attacking peaceful
flag raisers, Taokou Village, East Paniai,
December 1 (West Papua Media)
West Papua Media reports that a major offensive by
Indonesian security forces in West Papua's Central Highlands
(Puncak Jaya) was launched on December 1. Special forces of
the militarized police (Brimob) attacked the village of
Wandenggobak on December 3, burned a church, an unknown
number of houses and village guard houses. Initial reports
suggest some civilian casualties, but the number of Papuan
civilians killed and injured is not known.
According to
West Papua Media sources, the assault on the village was
in reprisal for the killing of two Brimob personnel in
earlier fighting with forces of Goliat Tabuni, a local
leader of the Papua independence movement.
The latest "sweeping operation" reportedly coincided with a
December 1 peaceful demonstration by a large number of
Papuans celebrating the 50th anniversary of the first
raising of the Papuan independence flag at the district
center of Tingginambut.
National police spokesman Maj. Gen. Saud Usman Nasution says
hundreds of troops have been deployed in Puncak Jaya.
West Papua Media notes that the Brimob unit involved
(the "anti terrorist" Gegana Brimob) has received Australian
training and weapons.
About 110
residents of Berap and Genyem villages, near Lake Sentani in Papua, have been forced to flee to the forest
after Indonesian Police terrorized the village.
WestPapuaMedia
New Reports on
Security Force Attack on Papuan Congress, Call for
Accountability
The
November 29 Jakarta Globe reported that the Institute
for Human Rights Study and Advocacy (Elsham) and the
Communion of Churches in Papua (PGGP) said that at least 51
people had been tortured by members of the military and
police during and after the October 16-19 Papuan
Congress (see West Papua Report November 2011).
Congress participants testified that they had been "beaten
and kicked repeatedly by security forces both at the
congress site and while being transported to police
headquarters. Some participants said they were beaten at the
police station."
These accounts echoed victim testimony reported elsewhere.
The ELSHAM and PGGP report broke new ground, however, noting
that security forces also looted and vandalized a monastery.
The Rev. Wellem Maury of the PGGP said the National
Commission on Human Rights (Komnas HAM) should assume
responsibility for the investigation and specifically form a
fact-finding team to investigate allegations of human rights
abuses, torture and excessive use of force. "Komnas HAM must
also report its findings to the Coordinating Ministry for
Politics, Legal and Security Affairs so there is an open and
fair trial," he said.
Brutal
Repression in West Papua: A Product of Rogue Security
Forces or Yudhoyono Administration Policy?
The injustice of the brutal assault on peaceful Papuan
civilians at the Papuan Congress on October 19 has been
compounded by exceedingly light sentences for the
perpetrators of the abuses, including the death of at least
three dissenters and the beating/torture of scores of
others. A security force-led investigation
produced official reprimands for 13 district police
officers, four Mobil Brigade (Brimob) officers and one
district police chief, while five Jayapura Police officers
were given seven-day detentions.
The silence of the President regarding the
October 19 assault, the impunity accorded the
perpetrators, and the defense of their actions
by senior Yudhoyono administration officials
underscore the President's direct
responsibility.
Any impact of these minimal sanctions has
been mitigated by comments by key security leaders. National
Police chief Gen. Timur Pradopo
told the House of Representatives that some police
officers had taken the wrong approach during the third
Papuan People's Congress. However, he defended the measures
taken saying "what we did [at Abepura] was part of law
enforcement." Coordinating Political, Legal and Security
Affairs Minister Djoko Suyanto, at the same House hearing
echoed Timur's statement. "I hereby defend my colleague from
the police. I think it's impossible for officers [military
and police] to commit violence for no reason - there must be
a logical explanation for their anarchist deeds." The
spokesman for President Yudhoyono Julian Aldrin Pasha also
has defended the assault,
telling the Jakarta Post: "In principle, we have dealt
with the Papua issue properly." He added that the police
were justified in forcibly dispersing the Third Papuan
People's Congress in Abepura when it found that it was an
act of treason.
Most tellingly, President Yudhoyono himself was dismissive
of concerns about human rights violations arising from the
October 19 assault, even when those concerns are raised by a
foreign Head of State. President Obama, during their
November Bali meeting, according to U.S. government sources,
raised the October 19 assault. Yudhoyono
told media that said he responded to the U.S. leader by
contending that Indonesian forces were conducting legitimate
operations against an ''insurgency'' and that Indonesian
forces came under attack from separatists. ''If there are
members who have violated the laws, gross violations of
human rights, then they will go before the law,'' he said.
''I told him personally, there is no impunity, no
immunity.'' Apparently Yudhoyono public silence
specifically regarding the October 19 extended to his
evasive response to President Obama's direct question.
WPAT Comment: International reaction to the October 19
assault, mostly from human rights organizations, but also
from some international parliamentarians such as U.S.
Representative Eni Faleomavaega (see
West Papua Report November 2011),
condemned the Indonesian security forces as responsible for
violence against peaceful dissenters. Such international
opprobrium directed at security forces abuses over the years
has been strong and often has identified specific units and
officers as perpetrators of these rights violations. But
such criticism may be misdirected. The silence of the
President regarding the October 19 assault, the impunity
accorded the perpetrators, and the defense of their actions
by senior Yudhoyono administration officials
underscore the President's direct responsibility, not only
for the assault, but for the climate of repression that
assures such abuses will continue. The Yudhoyono
administration itself, and President Yudhoyono himself,
should stand in the dock for these crimes.
Where Are Indonesia's Indigenous
Voices in the Climate Change
Debate?
A
November 30 Jakarta Globe article by Andrew D. Kaspar
underscored the importance of annual international climate
change conference now meeting in Durban, South Africa. While
much of the coverage in the run-up to the conference has
focused on the failure of many developed nations, notably
the U.S., to live up to commitments made in this area,
another key issue is the extent to which perspectives of the
indigenous peoples are (and are not) reflected in the
deliberations.
Kaspar writes that a key element of any climate change
strategy is Reduced Emissions from Deforestation and Forest
Degradation (REDD), which is intended to offer payments to
encourage forest preservation to prevent the release of
carbon dioxide stored in the trees. Kaspar points out that
REDD is seen as a particularly potent means of emissions
reductions because the vast majority of Indonesia's
emissions are attributed to deforestation.
United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon
speaking in mid-November at the launch Indonesia's UN
Office for REDD Coordination made point that "Making REDD a
success ...will require the commitment and cooperation of
all stakeholders. We must ensure that all have a voice."
Up to now, Indonesia has accorded indigenous stakeholders
little say in the fate of the forests that provide
sustenance and shelter for many of them. This is
particularly true in West Papua where Papuans' objections to
plans for a
vast commercial plantation in the Manukwari area have
been ignored. Papuan protest over decades of illegal logging
either run by or protected by security forces and
destruction of vast swaths of sago and mangrove by the
Freeport mining operation also have been ignored.
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"Special
Autonomy," the Indonesian Government's strategy for
addressing the myriad problems confronting the Papuan
people, is now ten years old. Inaugurated by then-President
Megawati in 2001, the plan was intended to address decades
of failed development and the absence of critical health,
education and other services which have impoverished and
marginalized the Papuan people since West Papua's coercive
annexation by Indonesia in 1969.
The Papuan people have resoundingly rejected Special
Autonomy, most notably in massive, peaceful demonstrations
in June of 2010 (see
West Papua
Report July 2010).
While most independent analyses have consistently described
"special autonomy" as a failed approach, criticism of the
plan has largely focused on Jakarta's hapless implementation
of the policy. But a closer analysis of Special Autonomy
suggests a more sinister reading of the plan's impact and
real intent.
Over the past decade the plight of Papuans has remained
bleak. The poverty level, especially in non-urban areas
where most Papuan live, is particularly revealing. The
percentage of Papuans identified as living in poverty in the
two West Papuan provinces in 2010 are among the highest in
Southeast Asia.
Special autonomy funds continue to flow into
West Papua in a manner that benefits the
transmigrant population. Special Autonomy has
disadvantaged Papuans systematically and
comprises in effect a strategy for subjugation
of Papuans in their own homeland.
According to the
Indonesian statistical office (see
BPS Nasional), the poverty level
is 36.80% in Papua Province and 34.88% in West Papua
Province.
Most Papuans live in rural areas and when poverty levels for
non-urban populations are separated out the marginalization
and suffering of Papuans emerge as especially acute. In the
villages of Papua Province the poverty level is 46.02%, but
only 5.55% of those living in towns (home to most non-Papuan
migrants), The dichotomy between village dwellers (largely
Papuans) and towns (largely migrants) in West Papua Province
is similar. In villages, 43.38% live in poverty, while in
towns only 5.73%.do so.
One long time observer of developments in West Papua (whose
identity is not revealed for reasons of his security) argues
that the combination of Special Autonomy and Jakarta's
decentralization policy (dividing up the region into
increasing numbers of new administrative entities/districts)
has been a "disaster" leading to ever greater
marginalization of Papuans. He argues: "New districts have
been formed without any real base/guarantee that public
services will be improved or at least consolidated," and
that as a result, "new districts are much worse of than
before."
Many of the staff appointed to administer the new districts
live outside the new districts, "hardly showing up where
they should be working daily," he told the West Papua
Report. Moreover, the Jakarta central government has pressed
the newly created districts to seek their own sources of
financial income "opening the door wide for all kind of
devastating investments without any critical reflection as
to the impact on local indigenous communities such as the
Merauke Integrated Food and Energy Estate."
In reality, a large portion of the Special Autonomy funds
flowing to West Papua has been devoted to infrastructure
development and expansion of services in the towns to meet
the needs of government-sponsored migrants (transmigrants)
from other parts of Indonesia. The Ministry of
Transmigration and Labor announced in late November plans to
build three "new transmigration towns" in West Papua: Senggi
in Keerom District, Muting and Salor in Merauke District
(see p.6 Bintang Papua, November 29).
Special Autonomy funding of projects and services for
migrants appear to have aggravated the marginalization of
Papuans demographically in their own lands. Papuans
constituted only 49.55% of the population of West Papua
according to 2010 Indonesian statistics. Population
growth rates according to these same statistics for dire for
Papuans with at only 1.84% annual growth for Papuans and
10.82 annual growth for non-Papuans.
The reality on the ground in West Papua is grinding poverty
for many Papuans and a persistent dearth of critical
services in rural areas where most Papuans live. Meanwhile,
special autonomy funds continue to flow into West Papua in a
manner that benefits the transmigrant population. Special
Autonomy has disadvantaged Papuans systematically and
comprises in effect a strategy for subjugation of Papuans in
their own homeland.
Peaceful Papuans Celebrate 50th Anniversary of Raising
of Papuan National Flag
Bintang Papua reported that thousands of Papuans
peacefully gathered at the the tomb of Theys Hijo Eluay at
Sentani, District of Jayapura, to celebrate the 50th
anniversary of Papua's independence on 1 December. Theys
Eluay was murdered by Indonesian Special Forces personnel (Kopassus)
in 2001.
At the gathering, the co-coordinator of the 50th anniversary
committee, Jack Wanggai read out a series of demands which
expressed support for international monitored negotiations
on the future of West Papua and a referendum of the Papuan
people who for decades have been denied the right of
self-determination. At the gathering there were also calls
for the Indonesian government to immediately withdraw army
and police troops from Papua and to release political
prisoners in West Papua.
Wanggai also noted the Papuans rejection of the Indonesian
government's latest initiative to evade an internationally
facilitated, senior level dialogue i.e., the creation of the
special organization known as UP4B - Unit for the
Acceleration of Development in Papua and West Papua (see
West Papua Report November
2011 for background on this unit and its leadership).
While the event was under way, troops conducted patrols
along the roads, as well as in the vicinity of residential
houses and shops. These activities by the security forces
failed deter the people who completed their program
peacefully.