- Analysis: Yudhoyono Presidency and Cabinet
Hold Mixed Promises for Papuans
- U.S. Government Unwilling to Correct False
Claims of Indonesian Military "Exoneration" in
Killing of American Citizens at Freeport
- Indonesian Military Launches Major
Destabilizing Operation, Killing Three Civilians
and Displacing Thousands in West Papua Highlands
- Papuans Press for Resolution of
Self-Determination Question
- Expected New Indonesian Military Chief Has
Declared Murderers of Papuan Leader "Heroes"
- Pressure on Journalists in West
Papua/Foreign Journalists Barred
- Papuan Protesters Reject Appointment of
Non-Papuans to Key Positions in West Papua
- Foreign Mining Firm Considers West Papua
Project Despite Environmental Concerns
Analysis: Yudhoyono Presidency and Cabinet
Hold Mixed Promises for Papuans
The October 20 inauguration of new Indonesian
president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and his cabinet
appointments on October 21 offer mixed promises for
improving the human rights situation in West Papua.
Yudhoyono campaigned on a promise of acting quickly
to peacefully resolve tensions in the province and
his relatively progressive positions with respect to
Papuansí basic rights won him overwhelming electoral
support in West Papua. That said, the fact that he
lacks a strong political party base suggests that
his ability to move policy initiatives will depend
heavily on civil society support and the organizing
power of NGOs. The Indonesian militaryís recent
escalated violence in West Papua, described in the
third item below, further suggests that elements of
the military will continue to resist strongly any
efforts at effective reform.
Yudhoyonoís appointments to the positions of
Coordinating Minister for Political, Legal and
Security Affairs, Defense Minister, Minister of
Justice and Human Rights, Environment Minister and
Attorney General bode well for good governance and
enhanced government respect for human rights and
environmental protection. One particularly
noteworthy appointment is Abdurrahman Saleh to the
position of Attorney General. Saleh is widely viewed
as a strong and effective human rights advocate and
served previously as director of the Indonesian
Legal Aid (LBH) Instituteís Jakarta branch office.
However, Yudhoyono has appointed to key positions
controversial individuals, with poor records with
respect to respect for Papuans and other minority
groups. Cabinet Minister Sudi Silalahi was
responsible for sending the violent Islamic militant
group Laskar Jihad to West Papua in recent years.
State Secretary Yusril Ihza Mahendra, who served as
Justice Minister in the Megawati Administration,
also is viewed as supporting an extremist Muslim
agenda.
In the meantime, U.S. business interests are
wasting no time in courting the new president and
his administration. ExxonMobil executive and
U.S.-Indonesia Business Council Chairman Robert
Haines will lead a U.S.-ASEAN Business Council
mission to Jakarta December 5-9, 2004, to meet with
Yudhoyono and cabinet members. One hopes for a
similar level of access to Indonesian government
officials for those working on human rights
promotion, good governance and environmental
protection.
U.S. Government Unwilling to Correct False
Claims of Indonesian Military "Exoneration" in
Killing of American Citizens at Freeport
Indonesia's new defense minister, Juwono
Sudarsono, said October 21 that he would resume
efforts to restore military ties with the United
States, which were partially cut in 1999 because of
Indonesian military (TNI) abuses during East Timor's
independence vote. The efforts of the new defense
minister coincide with indications from the U.S.
State Department that it is anxious to resume
cooperation with the Indonesian military, including
provision of military training under the
International Military Education and Training (IMET)
program as well as sale of military equipment
through the Foreign Military Financing (FMF)
program.
The Bush administration is seeking to resume ties
with the TNI, but the U.S. Congress has opposed this
move, insisting that IMET and FMF for Indonesia
should be held in abeyance until there is
accountability for TNI rights violations, notably in
East Timor.
Sudarsono, in remarks to the media, acknowledged
difficulties in realizing this new cooperation due
to Indonesia's failure to meet international demands
for transparent and fair judicial proceedings
against military officers guilty of rights abuses.
Departing U.S. Ambassador to Indonesia Ralph Boyce
appeared to confirm the importance of Indonesia's
failure to hold senior TNI officials accountable,
noting that Jakarta had "missed its opportunity" to
restore military ties by failing to make its
soldiers accountable for abuses in East Timor. In
August, the Indonesian Supreme Court overturned the
convictions of four Indonesian military officers,
meaning that no members of the TNI have been found
guilty of rights abuses in East Timor.
The TNI appears to be making more progress in
efforts to evade widely alleged responsibility for
another crime involving the killing of an Indonesian
and two U.S. schoolteachers working at the New
Orleans-controlled Freeport copper and gold mine in
West Papua in August 2002. Following a statement by
U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft accompanying a
June indictment of one Papuan in that incident, the
TNI declared itself "exonerated."
The new Yudhoyono administration has echoed this
claim: Minister Sudarsono has told the media that he
believes the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation
(FBI) had decided that the TNI was not to blame for
the incident.
Despite senior U.S. Government private assurances
to U.S.-based human rights activists and
Congressional staffers that the FBI investigation of
the murders is ongoing and that the TNI in fact has
not been exonerated, no U.S. Government official has
stepped forward publicly to correct the TNI
misrepresentation of the U.S. Government's
perspective on the murders.
Indonesiaís Special Forces Launches Major
Destabilizing Operation, Killing Three Civilians and
Displacing Thousands in West Papua Highlands
A senior Papuan Christian leader reports that
extensive Indonesian military operations in the
vicinity of Mulia, capital of the Punjak Jaya region
in West Papua's central highlands, has forced
thousands (perhaps as many as 5,000) of local
residents to flee into the forests. The TNI
operations, which began in mid-October, have also
led to the closure of 22 churches in the area. Most
or all of these are Baptist churches, which tend to
predominate in the area. One pastor and two
civilians were killed.
The military operations, which are being carried
out by Kopassus, Indonesiaís notorious Special
Forces, were launched following the mid-October
killing of five people, allegedly by the local OPM
(Free Papua Organization) leader, Goliad Tabuni.
Baptist church leader Socrates Yoman, the principal
source for this report, notes that local people are
suspicious that the culprits in the killings were
not those serving under Tambouni but rather were
from one of two local militia groups organized by
the TNI.
Also, according to this same source, the TNI has
demanded substantial financial support from local
officials to underwrite the military operation now
getting underway.
Analysts believe that the conflict may have been
initiated by the TNI in order to forestall a promise
by newly elected President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono
to resolve tensions in both West Papua and Aceh
through peaceful means within the first 100 days of
his administration. Such a reduction of tensions in
West Papua would undermine the security pretext for
the TNI's continued lucrative deployment in West
Papua, according to analysts.
In a possibly related development, the chief of
police in West Papua, Timbul Silaen (indicted by the
UN Special Crimes Court in East Timor for his role
in the 1999 carnage in East Timor) has refused to
permit a major gathering of three West Papuan
religious organizations, including
the West Papuan Baptist church. The ongoing TNI
operations in the Central Highlands would likely
have been one point of discussion on the agenda of
that meeting.
Papuans Press for Resolution of
Self-Determination Question
Papuans have appealed to the international
community to fulfill broken promises and respond to
long-standing Papuan aspirations for
self-determination.
Traveling in New Zealand, prominent Papuan human
rights advocate John Rumbiak told a regional peace
and security conference in Christchurch in October
that Pacific countries were ignoring the brutality
of Indonesian armed forces against Papuans. Rumbiak
told the assembly that Papuans seek the right of
self-determination of which they were deprived after
the United States and United Nations facilitated
Indonesiaís formal consolidation of its control of
the territory in 1969 through the now-discredited
UN-supervised ìAct of Free Choiceî (AFC).
Rumbiak described Indonesiaís takeover as a
sacrifice made in the name of Pacific security after
the fall of Vietnam and "fear that Indonesia was
heading towards communism." Rumbiak said that since
the takeover, which lacked the consent of Papuans,
Jakarta's rule has meant
systematic brutalization of the Papuan people.
Indeed, a recent study by the Allard K.
Lowenstein International Human Rights Clinic at Yale
Law School concluded that the Indonesian government
and military have carried out crimes against
humanity, possibly constituting genocide, against
West Papuaís indigenous population. An estimated
100,000 people have died as a result of the
conflict.
Rumbiak stated that during the past four years,
the Indonesian military presence in West Papua has
grown from 3,000 troops to about 30,000. He also
noted that the Indonesian government was failing to
protect West Papua's environment and the health of
Papuans. He noted that West Papua suffered the
highest rate of HIV infections and the highest rate
of infant mortality in Indonesia, amongst the
highest in the world. The suffering of the people
was all the more tragic given the fact that West
Papua had the richest mineral resources of any
Indonesian province.
Papuans within Indonesia have echoed Rumbiak's
appeal, calling on newly elected President Susilo
Bambang Yudhoyono to enforce the Special Autonomy
Law for Papua to resolve the prolonged issues in the
province. A meeting of Papuan activists and leaders
in a mid-October conference convened by the National
Forum for Human Rights Concerns in Papua (FNKHP)
urged President Yudhoyono to implement Law No.
21/2001 on special autonomy for West Papua and
reconsider the division of the territory into
several provinces.
Reverend Karel Phil Erari, who co-chairs the
Forum with Yudhoyono, stated that the organization
had "entrusted Susilo to fully enforce the law to
help resolve the issue. Otherwise, the friction
between Jakarta and Papua will only get worse."
(Yudhoyono won majority votes in West Papua during
both rounds of the presidential election.)
Outgoing President Megawati issued Presidential
Instruction No. 1/2003 to implement Law No. 45/1999
on the division of West Papua into three provinces,
effectively undermining the Special Autonomy Law for
that province. The decision to divide the province,
now stalled with only
one disputed new province created, was never vetted
with the Papuan people. Megawati also refused to
establish the Papuan People's Assembly (MRP) as
required by the law as the highest law-making body
in the province.
The Papuan Legislative Council has requested the
Constitutional Court to annul the presidential
instruction.
Erari described the contentious presidential
instruction and the establishment of a new province
as "a betrayal of the Special Autonomy Law, which
stipulates that the formation of new provinces
requires approval from the MRP."
Also in October, in a bolder demand, some 100
people protested in the West Papua provincial
capital, Jayapura, demanding that Yudhoyono hold
another self-determination referendum in West Papua
in order to afford Papuans the opportunity to
exercise their right to self-determination
effectively denied during the 1969 AFC. The
protesters insisted that the AFC, via which
Indonesia formally incorporated West Papua, was not
democratic and should be repeated.
This characterization corresponds with the view of
scores of parliamentarians and non-governmental
organizations that have petitioned UN Secretary
General Kofi Annan to review the UNís role in the
AFC.
Expected New Indonesian Military Chief Has
Declared Murderers of Papuan Leader "Heroes"
In the waning hours of her Administration, former
Indonesian President Megawati Sukarnoputri sought to
replace TNI military chief General Sutarto with TNI
Chief of Staff Ryamazad Ryacudu. Ryacudu is well and
unfavorably known to Papuans. Following the
conviction of TNI personnel in what the Indonesian
court described as the "torture murder" of Papuan
political leader Theys Eluay in November 2001,
Ryacudu described the murderers as "heroes" for
their cold-blooded killing of the peaceful advocate
for Papuan self determination.
Megawatiís action created one of the major
controversies to face incoming President Yudhoyono,
who does not recognize the move while the parliament
has approved it.
Pressure on Journalists in West Papua/Foreign
Journalists Barred
Intimidation takes various forms, including
constant requests from the police to act as
witnesses in trials as well as more direct
intimidation from officials and from TNI-organized
and directed militias. Some journalists have been
victims of suspicious car accidents and often
receive anonymous threatening telephone calls
directed at them or their families. In more blatant
cases, journalists have been followed and sometimes
chased out of towns where they are conducting
investigations.
As a consequence of this pressure, journalists in
West Papua are often hesitant to report concerns
raised by NGOs and other civil society activists.
Similarly, they often fail to report about land
disputes and illicit narcotics activities in which
military, police and civilian officials often are
involved directly.
In addition, it was learned recently that foreign
journalists are barred from going to West Papua (and
Aceh) altogether. The decision to ban their access,
which was made last month by fifteen government
agencies, is supposedly for ìsecurity reasonsî and
will be ìuntil further notice.î
Papuan Protesters Reject Appointment of
Non-Papuans to Key Positions in West Papua
An October review of autonomy issues in West
Papua sparked protests by indigenous Papuans over
the appointment of civil servants hailing from
outside the territory. The protest concerned the
inauguration of the head of the Papua Fisheries
Office and the Finance Bureau at the Papua
Secretariat.
Protesters, during the inauguration ceremony on
October 11, complained that the appointments
contradicted promises of regional autonomy by
failing to make Papuans the masters of their own
land. West Papuaís governor said that the provincial
administration would continue to fill strategic
posts with both Papuans and non-Papuans, based on
their achievements and intellectual criteria.
In additional criticism, Budi Setyanto, director
of the Institute for Civil Society in West Papua,
said the implementation of regional autonomy in West
Papua had not met expectations, noting that the
provincial budget's allocation this year reserved
most funding for payment for civil servant and
councilor expenses (73 percent) leaving only 27
percent for public services.
Foreign Mining Firm Considers West Papua
Project Despite Environmental Concerns
British-Australian mining firm BHP Billiton Ltd.
(BHP) is considering development of a controversial
open-pit nickel mine at Gag Island in West Papua.
Dumping of tailings from the project and other
activities associated with the massive excavations
could threaten one of the world's most important
coral reefs. This potential damage to the local
ecology has sparked intense opposition to the
project from Indonesian environmental groups
and Papuans.
Notwithstanding the environmental issues
involved, BHP may benefit from a decree signed by
former President Sukarnoputri which declared that
mining contracts signed for areas designated as
protected national forests would be allowed to
proceed, despite a 1999 forestry law banning mining
in those areas.