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1) Why is this South African girl willing to swim across Lake Geneva for Papua?

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2) Papuan Islamic Community Supports HTI Dissolution
3) Govt to Optimize Infrastructure Development in Papua, S. Sumatra
4) New Caledonia group draws up independence plan
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A google translate. Be-aware google translate can be a bit erratic.
Original bahasa link at

http://tabloidjubi.com/artikel-9132-mengapa-gadis-afrika-selatan-ini-mau-berenang-melintasi-danau-jenewa-demi-papua.html
1) Why is this South African girl willing to swim across Lake Geneva for Papua?
Papua No. 1 News Portal I Jubi,


                                                     Carey Evans, while practicing swimming - IST

Jayapura, Jubi - The 25-year-old South African woman has just completed her Masters degree in 2017. She is an open water swimmer. In fact, he once crossed Midmar Mile, the largest open water in the world.
"I love to swim, it's just a hobby, not to compete," explained Carey Evans about his swimming hobby.
He claimed to learn to swim before attending school. Since then he has fallen in love with swimming sports.
"I am swimming in open water since I was 12 years old," he said.
Then why would he want to swim across Lake Geneva with a swimming team that would deliver a West Papua petition to a United Nations office representative in Geneva?
"I was involved in the Swim for West Papua when Joel (Captain of the swimming team) asked me to do something for West Papua and took the initiative of working with Free West Papua campaign," said Carey.
With this involvement, he claimed to be able to convey his aspirations to the people of West Papua. His hope in becoming part of this initiative is that as a team he and other swimmers can attract the world's attention and lead him to the human rights violations that occurred in West Papua.
"And in turn helps bring freedom to the oppressed people and nations," Carey said.
Living in South Africa with its warm climate has allowed her to enjoy swimming independently from a very young age and she is ready for the challenge of swimming across Lake Geneva.
"The more I see and hear the cruelty that is happening in West Papua, the more excited I am to swim, I hope this is the beginning of a major change in West Papua," Carey said.
On Tuesday morning (29/8/2017) a group of swimmers from several countries will swim across the 70-kilometer cold of Lake Geneva to deliver a petition signed by thousands of West Papuans to the UN. They are led by British Joel Evans.
Joel claimed he was inspired to participate in the Papua Merdeka Campaign after learning about West Papua from friends in Fiji and Papua New Guinea.
"The plan is that we will finish on Wednesday night and then continue with the parade on Thursday morning," Joel said in an e-mail to Jubi on Monday (7/28/2017). (*)
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http://www.en.netralnews.com/news/currentnews/read/10331/papuan.islamic.community.supports.hti.dissolution
2) Papuan Islamic Community Supports HTI Dissolution
Monday, 28 Augst 2017 | 10:17 WIB
JAYAPURA, NETRALNEWS.COM - Nahdlatul Ulama (NU) together with the Papuan Islamic community association fully supports the government's moves to dissolve Hizbut Tahrir Indonesia (HTI) and other mass organizations considered against the Pancasila, through the issuance of Government Regulation in Lieu of Law (Perppu) No. 2 of 2017 on Society Organizations.
Head of NU of Papua Province Region Tonny Wanggai in Jayapura on Monday (8/28/2017) said the Perppu is not to ban the da'wah [lecture] of Muslims as often alleged, but efforts to protect the sovereignty of the Unitary State of the Republic of Indonesia (NKRI) from the threat of those who want to replacement the nation's ideology.
"We must also avoid the threat of community organizations' ideology that divide the unity and cause unrest in the community," he said.
According to Tonny, NU and other Papuan Islamic organizations are also supporting the Ministry of Law and Human Rights to revoke the operational license of HTI previously registered online as an Association Legal Entity in the Directorate General of General Legal Administration at Ministry of Justice and Human Rights.
"With the revocation of the HTI Legal Body Decision Letter, the community organization is declared dissolved and no longer allowed to do its activities, especially in Papua," he said.
He said the association also appealed to the local government and the authorities to socialize Perppu No. 2 of 2017 to the community and take firm action against the Papua HTI mass organization if it is still doing its activities.
"We also appeal to all Papuans, especially Muslims not to follow and provide any facilities for HTI activities in the Land of Papua either in the form of meetings or distribution of leaflets or pamphlets," he said.
He added that if anyone witnessed the meeting or distribution of the leaflets one could report to the authorities, because Papua as a peaceful land consists of various tribes and religions which must be kept together from the influence of the parties that cause division. (*)


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HTTPS://EN.TEMPO.CO/READ/NEWS/2017/08/27/056903616/GOVT-TO-OPTIMIZE-INFRASTRUCTURE-DEVELOPMENT-IN-PAPUA-S-SUMATRA

SUNDAY, 27 AUGUST, 2017 | 15:18 WIB
3) Govt to Optimize Infrastructure Development in Papua, S. Sumatra

TEMPO.COJakarta - Transportation Ministry continues to build infrastructures in marginalized areas, including in Papua and South Sumatra.
As for infrastructure development in Papua, the Minister said that it is done through the sea toll. He added that the Ministry has already had sea toll infrastructures for goods transport that serve 13 routes, as well as air toll as an integration from the sea toll.
“The sea toll and the air toll are aimed to good distribution to the regions,” he said on Saturday (26/8).
Budi also said that sea toll infrastructures in remote and mountainous areas in Papua are aimed at ensuring availability of goods in those areas, as well as to reduce price disparity in Papua.
As for South Sumatra, Budi said that the government is building double railway serving Prabumulih-Kertapati route, the LRT construction project, and Trans Sumatra toll road connecting Palembang–Betung–Jambi, and other infrastructures.
 DANANG FIRMANTO
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http://www.radionz.co.nz/international/pacific-news/338181/new-caledonia-group-draws-up-independence-plan
4) New Caledonia group draws up independence plan
3:38 pm today 
New Caledonia's pro-independence FLNKS movement has firmed up its draft plan on how an independent New Caledonia should be shaped.
A weekend meeting heard back from territory-wide consultations as preparations continue for next year's independence referendum.
The FLNKS said it wanted to create a multi-cultural and democratic nation, which would have as citizens all the people who are inscribed on the restricted rolls for the referendum and the territorial election.
It proposed to rename the putative republic Kanaky-Nouvelle Caledonie, to redefine the Congress as parliament and to set up an electoral college to choose a president.
It also proposed making its flag the country's official flag.
The proposal is to be put out for further discussion and approval by the movement's various components.
It will then to be tabled at the October meeting in Paris of the signatories to the Noumea Accord.
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Punks for West Papua’ film to screen at Nimbin

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https://www.echo.net.au/2017/08/punks-west-papua-letting-music-talking/
 August 28, 2017 | by The Echo

Punks for West Papua’ film to screen at Nimbin


Produce and directed by Ash Brennan and narrated by Basia Bonkowski, Punks for West Papua is a documentary about how the United Nations betrayed the people of West Papua and how one man’s selfless gesture inspired a history making movement to help strangers in a foreign land.
Punks for West Papua is an Australia wide movement, and the brain child of Jody Bartolo. Jody and his band Diggers with Attitude spearhead Punks for West Papua with the aim to raise money and awareness for the Free West Papua cause.
A midnight text message to film maker and friend, Ash Brennan, started the wheels in motion for a small video think piece at the original Punks for West Papua benefit show at Sydney’s Town & Country Hotel.
But Jody and the Australian punk rock community would turn this event into a no holes barred Australia wide benefit, involving over 50 bands in seven cities around the country. Making Punks for West Papua the biggest, and no doubt, loudest punk rock showcase in the nations history. 
The film grew with it. The P4WP film crew travelled around the country, interviewing all the main players of the movement, plus interviews with two time Nobel peace prize nominee, Benny Wenda, journalist Hugh Lunn who was in West Papua for the 1969 vote, rock journalist Stuart Coupe and United Liberation Movement for West Papua leader, Rex Rumikiek.
This film will be screened on Saturday September 2 at the Nimbin Bush Theatre. A $10 entry donation is suggested.
After the Battle of the Bands heat the event will start at 8pm with some songs from notorious quick talker D’Rad MC.
The event will be hosted by director, Ash Brennan and Matthew Jamieson who will do the Q&A after the film.
Shirts, hoodies and information will be available on the night. All proceeds go to the United Liberation Movement of West Papua (ULMWP) to help their executive members attend the UN General Assembly and Decolonisation Committee in September this year.
This film is recommended viewing for not just fans of punk rock but for anybody who believes in justice.
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Media release-Open Letter to Pacific Islands Forum Leaders Re West Papua

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Australia West Papua Association (Sydney)
Media release-Open Letter to Pacific Islands Forum Leaders re West Papua

29 August 2017


AWPA has written an open letter to the PIF leaders (letter below media release).


Joe Collins of AWPA said “we thank the PIF leaders for discussing and raising concerns about the human rights situation in West Papua in the official communiqués’ at the Forum meetings in Port Moresby in 2015 and Pohnpei in 2016 and is encouraged that the Forum Leaders agreed that the issue of West Papua should remain on their agenda”.


AWPA urges the PIF Leaders

To continue to raise concern about the human rights situation in West Papua with the Indonesian Government.



To continue to press Jakarta to allow a PIF fact-finding mission to the territory.  The Indonesian President has said that West Papua is now open and the authorities are saying that the human rights situation is improving. If this is the case why not allow a PIF fact-finding mission to the territory?



Because of the ongoing arrests of peaceful demonstrators in West Papua, AWPA asks the Forum leaders to urge Jakarta to allow the UN Special Rapporteur on the promotion and protection of the right to freedom of opinion and expression to visit West Papua to investigate the situation on the ground in the territory.


We note the large number of non-self governing territories and organizations that have various types of status at the PIF. AWPA believes it would be beneficial if West Papua also had official status at the PIF under the umbrella organization, the United Liberation Movement for West Papua (ULMWP). The West Papuan people have been calling for dialogue with Jakarta for years and AWPA believes the PIF can play an important role in helping facilitate such a dialogue between representatives of the West Papuan leadership and the Indonesian Government.



AWPA also urges the PIF to support the call for the re-inscription of West Papua on the UN Decolonization Committee. The Special Committee on decolonization visited New Caledonia in March 2014 and AWPA urges the PIF leaders to ask the Committee to also visit West Papua on a fact finding mission to investigate how the West Papuan people have fared under Indonesian rule. It is an accepted fact that the so-called act of free choice in 1969 was a farce and the UN has a moral responsibility to the West Papuan people for that tragic event

Ends.




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Australia West Papua Association (Sydney)


OPEN letter to Pacific Islands Forum Leaders

29 August 2017 


Dear Pacific Islands Forum leaders, 


On behalf of the Australia West Papua Association (AWPA) in Sydney, I am writing to you concerning the issue of West Papua and about the ongoing human rights abuses in the territory.  AWPA uses the name “West Papua” to refer to the whole of the western half of the Island of New Guinea.  However, “West Papua” at this time is divided into two provinces, Papua and West Papua.


I would first like to thank the Pacific Islands Forum (PIF) leaders for discussing and raising concerns about the human rights situation in West Papua in the official communiqués’ at the Forum meetings in Port Moresby in 2015 and Pohnpei in 2016. We are very encouraged that the Forum Leaders agreed that the issue of West Papua should remain on their agenda. AWPA also thanks the Pacific Island Nations who raised the issue of human rights abuses in West Papua at the UN General Assembly.


It was also encouraging to see that at the 14thRegional Meeting (Pacific) of the ACP –EU Joint Parliamentary Assembly in Port Vila, that Vanuatu introduced the case of West Papua with the support of Kiribati, Marshall Islands, Nauru, Samoa, Tonga, and on purely humanitarian grounds, by Papua New Guinea. The Port Vila Communiqué mentioned,”Members called for the immediate halt to the brutal and senseless killings of the indigenous people of West Papua and referred the matter to the next JPA meetings”. 


AWPA will not go into great detail about all the human rights abuses that were committed by the Indonesian security forces in West Papua since the last Forum meeting in Pohnpei, as we understand that the PIF Leaders are very aware of all the issues of concerns in West Papua.  However, AWPA believes that there has been no improvement in the human rights situation in West Papua in the past year.


During the month of August alone there were a number of incidents that show the ongoing abuses suffered by the West Papuan people.


1 August.  Security forces open fire on villagers in Deiyai district

One person was killed and up to 17 injured including a number of children when the security forces opened fired on local people when responding to an incident in Deiyai district. The incident occurred when one of a number of men swimming in a river got into difficulty.  The villager asked a group of workers at a company’s construction site to take the person to the hospital. A worker refused the request. This angered the locals, who gathered at the site to confront the workers. The security forces deployed to handle the incident fired at the villagers killing one and injuring others. The National Commission on Human Rights (Komnas HAM) condemned the police shooting of the unarmed civilians in Deiyai.


15 August. Protesting 55 years since the New York Agreement

Demonstrations were held in West Papua and Indonesian protesting the “New York Agreement” when West Papua was handed over to Indonesia by UNTEA. At least 100 people from the Papuan Student Alliance (AMP) and the Indonesian’s Front for West Papua (FRI West Papua) were arrested in Yogyakarta, Semarang and Jakarta during the anniversary to protest 55 years since the signing of the New York Agreement.


20 August. Up to 24 West Papuans arrested in Fak-Fak

24 activists from the West Papua National Committee (KNPB) were arrested simply for attending a meeting, exercising their rights to freedom of expression and peaceful assembly.


These arrests go against the principles laid down in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights which states,


Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers. (Article 19)

Everyone has the right to freedom of peaceful assembly and association. (Article 20)


Since coming to power President Widodo has taken a development approach to the issue of West Papua and said West Papua is now open to journalists.

Below is an extract from a Jakarta Post Editorial  Open Papua to the world” (August 2, 2017) which partially discusses how Papua is still cordoned off.


Extract

“But none of these efforts have been viewed positively by the outside world because the government continues to cordon off Papua. Despite Jokowi’s pledge early in his administration to give foreign journalists greater access to Papua, his government has maintained a policy that makes it difficult for members of the international media to operate in the region. Today, an interagency “clearing house” continues to operate to vet requests from foreign journalists and researchers before they are permitted to travel to the country’s easternmost province. Earlier this year, two French journalists were deported from Timika, Papua, after failing to obtain a reporting permit. By maintaining this restriction, the government is operating like a paranoid regime, afraid the outside world may find the skeletons it hides in its closet. If the government has done much to improve the lives of Papuans, why not show it to the world? Honesty is always the best policy”.



In light of the ongoing human rights abuses in West Papua


AWPA urges the PIF Leaders


To continue to raise concern about the human rights situation in West Papua with the Indonesian Government.



To continue to press Jakarta to allow a PIF fact-finding mission to the territory.  The Indonesian President has said that West Papua is now open and the authorities are saying that the human rights situation is improving. If this is the case why not allow a PIF fact-finding mission to the territory?



Because of the ongoing arrests of peaceful demonstrators in West Papua, AWPA asks the Forum leaders to urge Jakarta to allow the UN Special Rapporteur on the promotion and protection of the right to freedom of opinion and expression to visit West Papua to investigate the situation on the ground in the territory.


We note the large number of non-self governing territories and organizations that have various types of status at the PIF. AWPA believes it would be beneficial if West Papua also had official status at the PIF under the umbrella organization, the United Liberation Movement for West Papua (ULMWP). The West Papuan people have been calling for dialogue with Jakarta for years and AWPA believes the PIF can play an important role in helping facilitate such a dialogue between representatives of the West Papuan leadership and the Indonesian Government.



AWPA also urges the PIF to support the call for the re-inscription of West Papua on the UN Decolonization Committee. The Special Committee on decolonization visited New Caledonia in March 2014 and AWPA urges the PIF leaders to ask the Committee to also visit West Papua on a fact finding mission to investigate how the West Papuan people have fared under Indonesian rule. It is an accepted fact that the so-called act of free choice in 1969 was a farce and the UN has a moral responsibility to the West Papuan people for that tragic event.



Yours sincerely

Joe Collins

Secretary

AWPA (Sydney)





1) Freeport agrees to 51% divestment, other terms: CEO

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2) Korindo strikes back against NGO campaign.

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1) Freeport agrees to 51% divestment, other terms: CEO
Fedina S. Sundaryani The Jakarta Post
Jakarta | Tue, August 29, 2017 | 01:31 pm

Gold and copper miner PT Freeport Indonesia (PTFI) has finally agreed to divest 51 percent of its shares and to other terms related to its contractual extension, after a long tug-of-war negotiation with the Indonesian government.
Freeport Indonesia, a subsidiary of US mining giant Freeport McMoRan, also agreed to convert its contract of work (CoW) into a Special Mining License (IUPK), build a smelter within the next five years and increase its contribution to state revenues from its Grasberg mine in Papua, announced a government-Freeport joint press conference on Tuesday.
In return, Freeport’s contract, originally set to expire in 2021, will be extended to 2041 under the new terms.
Freeport McMoRan CEO Richard Adkerson said the compromise with the government was essential for the firm because although the open mine reserves were depleting, his company had seen large potential in its underground mine.
PTFI plans to invest US$20 billion over the next two decades, with $17 billion to be invested by 2031, he added.
“To reach our objectives meant that we have to be willing to cooperate and build a smelter and divest 51 percent. We are working cooperatively with the government to achieve the objectives,” Adkerson said during the press conference.
“We have agreed to increase Indonesian ownership from 9.36 percent to 51 percent over time in a way that compensates the fair market value. We still have work to do to reach the compromise,” he said. (bbn)
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2) Korindo strikes back against NGO campaign.


The outlook for the plantation industry in Papua has started to show signs of change recently, both because of a sustainability drive in the palm oil supply chain, which has forced many companies to suspend deforestation plans, and better-informed indigenous communities increasingly opposing companies’ attempts to acquire their land. Not all companies are taking these challenges lying down, however.
Korindo is a Korean company which has dominated the Digoel valley in Merauke and Boven Digoel for decades through its logging concessions which supply its plywood factory in Asiki and several oil palm plantations, which have expanded rapidly since 2012. Alarmed by the rate of deforestation it was noticing on satellite images, Mighty Earth, a US-based NGO, produced a report intended to spark a campaign against Korindo. The first target was palm oil traders with sustainability commitments, who were asked to refrain from buying Korindo’s palm oil, citing issues such as deforestation, evidence of illegal burning and abuse of indigenous people’s rights in Papua and on the island of Halmahera, Maluku.
Korindo responded to the pressure by publicly declaring a moratorium on new land-clearing to ensure it didn’t lose customers for its palm oil, but promptly violated this by continuing to clear primary rainforest in its PT Papua Agro Lestari concession. No longer trusting the company to keep its word, Mighty stepped up the pressure, focussing on Korindo’s other business interests, including its wind turbine business in the US. They also successfully persuaded the FSC to investigate Korindo’s certification for its plywood products, by pointing out that by clearing primary forest, the company was violating the conditions of the certification. Most recently they have focussed on pressuring Samsung to abandon a recently-announced joint venture with Korindo.
It seems like the combination of challenges to its various business interests has hurt Korindo significantly. Apparently determined to continue clearing forest, the company has gone on a major propaganda drive, and its strategy has been to portray the NGO as an obstacle to community development. The company’s main argument has focussed on one of the plantations, PT Dongin Prabhawa, on the border of Merauke and Mappi Regencies. Korindo is claiming that it has to continue to deforest to meet its commitment to provide 20% of the plantation area to the local people in the form of small-holdings, known as a plasma scheme, which is an obligation for all plantation companies under Indonesian law.
On 24th July, the company organised a ‘stakeholder meeting’ in Jakarta. However the only stakeholders present were those who supported the company. The company brought several indigenous members of the co-operatives it had formed to manage these plasma schemes to speak at the meeting. Other local people had signed statements opposing what they described as the ‘moratorium from the LSM’. The company also brought the Bupatis of both Merauke and Boven Digoel to the meeting, who spoke in favour of the scheme.
In a sign that this meeting may have been part of a wider backlash against the moves by several major palm oil traders to eliminate deforestation from their supply chain, other speakers included Firman Soebagyo, a member of parliament who is head of the working committee preparing a new law on oil palm plantations, a law which NGOs judge as superfluous and pandering to oil palm industry interests. Nyoto Santoso also spoke, a professor from Bogor Agricultural University who has also recently had to deal with severe criticism from NGOs – they have revealed that he has a history of writing partial, incomplete, biassed or even downright false environmental and social impact assessments, including in Papua for the Noble and Goodhope groups.
While it is totally reasonable for local people to demand the 20% smallholding area they have been promised, the company is not being entirely honest by portraying this as the main issue at stake here. There is no reason, other than possibly the cost, why these schemes could not be developed in areas already cleared. The reason why Korindo felt forced to declare a moratorium is because major palm oil traders have issued policies declaring they will not buy from companies which deforest.
But is this really a clash between the global agenda to halt tropical deforestation and a local desire for economic development? It’s not as simple as that. Another serious problem with Korindo’s operations was highlighted in a press conference held in Merauke on 9th August, the Day of the World’s Indigenous Peoples. Villagers from Nakias, whose customary lands are part of PT Dongin Prabhawa’s concession, alleged that they had never given the company permission to use the land, and that the people who had received compensation money from the company were not the real customary landowners. Korindo did not carry out a participative process to ensure there was consensus on customary land boundaries, or that there was agreement between all members of landowning clans, and this has caused a long running conflict between the indigenous people living in the area.
The upshot is that the land Korindo wants to use for its plasma programme is actually still subject to a land dispute. Opponents of the plantation feel that Korindo is creating divisions by persuading certain individuals to support its side. For example, Melkior Wayoken, the elected village head of Nakias village, alleged that a villager masquerading as the village head had stolen the village seal to sign a document supporting Korindo, and then joined the company’s trip to Jakarta to speak on its behalf.
Linus Omba also spoke on behalf of the Wambon Tekamerob indigenous association, which represents Mandobo people living the Merauke-Boven Digoel border, near to another Korindo concession, PT Berkat Cipta Abadi, as well as Posco Daewoo’s PT Bio Inti Agrindo companies. He stated that there has also been a long running conflict between the Mandobo and Marind ethnic groups who dispute which group holds the customary rights to the land.
Outside the press conference, someone from Salamepe village explained that how company had sought to divide the clans, by choosing individuals who they thought could support them, without waiting for all the clan members to reach a consensus. These individuals were then taken to Merauke city, a day’s journey from the plantation site, to sign the land surrender documents, away from the village where other villagers might object.
These conflicts can be very serious. People in Merauke do not tend to engage in physical violence, but have a strong belief in black magic known locally as suanggi, and some aspects of customary law require the use of such curses. In PT Dongin Prabhawa’s area several local sources have claimed that dozens of people have died as a result of this, but it has not been documented independently, maybe because black magic is not regarded as credible outside indigenous societies. After people started dying, other clan elders felt they had no choice but to sign, to calm the threat of black magic. Most of the elders who signed the land release certificate are now dead, as are some opponents of the company. No independent investigation into these deaths has taken place, and the cultural and spiritual impact of plantation development in Merauke has never been seriously studied by any outside party, even though unexplained deaths have occurred around many new plantations.
Faced with such conflicts, a responsible company would aim to resolve the conflict first, before bringing a group of supporters to lobby on its behalf in Jakarta, a move which is likely to aggravate existing community tensions. However, Korindo has shown no sign of even acknowledging that these conflicts exist. It has also not made public the indigenous land ownership maps which it based its compensation on.
A second ‘stakeholder dialogue’ was organised in the Swissbel Hotel in Merauke on 15th August. Although is meeting also appeared to have been initiated by Korindo, the more accessible location meant that many different stakeholders were able to attend and a broader range of views were represented. Those local residents who felt cheated out of their land had a chance to speak, as did those who wanted their plasma to go ahead. Speakers from the national human rights commission, the Catholic Justice and Peace Secretariat (SKP) and the Regency-level Indigenous Association (LMA) confirmed that there were serious indigenous rights issues that needed to be addressed.
No national politicians were present at this second meeting, but high-ranking officials at the provincial level spoke about their visions of development for Southern Papua, with large plantations as a major component. Most spoke fairly generally, without demonstrating much knowledge of the specific conflicts around Korindo’s plantations. A Korindo spokesperson continued the company’s attempt to portray NGOs as anti-smallholder, and did not acknowledge the complaints about the conflict, even stating as the meeting closed “Korindo feels that we don’t have a problem – maybe there is a difference with the community”.
After almost four hours, many voices had been heard, but time didn’t allow for debate on any of the range of points raised. The discussion’s moderator, Agus Sumule, made his own summary of the meeting, which he condensed into five points:
1. The local governments in Merauke , Boven Digoel and Mappi should take immediate action to resolve issues around administrative and customary land borders.
2. Companies should take immediate action to resolve the problems involving indigenous people in Merauke and Boven Digoel
3. The local government should issue local regulations concerning indigenous land and develop plasma cooperatives within 20% of the HGU area (i.e. the core estate)
4. Government, NGOs and stakeholders (companies and customary rights holders) to engage in intensive dialogue.
5. Investment must respect indigenous land use structures and the environment and be in accordance with the law.
The recommendation for further dialogue appeared to attract murmurs of agreement from different parties, however the process has illustrated a very fundamental reappraisal is necessary to explore if it could ever be possible that large-scale plantation development represents a positive change for indigenous peoples.
This is indeed a challenge which local stakeholders need to explore, but would be a long process involving thorough investigation of the hidden impacts of large-scale development, a strong indigenous movement that can define its own agenda, and a government willing to consider a broader range of development options. It is doubtful that company-sponsored ‘stakeholder dialogues’ are the way to go about it.
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1) Papua aims to cut transmission chain of HIV

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2) Expert Highlights Problems with Latest Freeport Deal
3) Govt Prepares Scheme for State Income from Freeport 
4) Freeport to seek Rio Tinto approval for deal with Indonesia on Grasberg mine
5) Indonesia Reaches Agreement With Freeport on New Mining Permit for Grasberg
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1) Papua aims to cut transmission chain of HIV
Nethy Dharma Somba The Jakarta Post
Jayapura, Papua | Tue, August 29, 2017 | 05:46 pm
The Papua administration is stepping up efforts to prevent the spread of HIV by providing antibody tests to pregnant women seeking healthcare services at hospitals or community health centers.
By finding pregnant women who test positive for HIV, health authorities can take measures to prevent the transmission of the chronic disease to their babies.
“This is one of the ways to cut the HIV transmission chain in Papua,” Papua Health Agency secretary Silwanus Sumule said in a public dialogue in Jayapura on Tuesday.  
The Health Ministry’s HIV sub-directorate official Triya Novita Dinihari said the government was aiming to achieve the “three zeroes” by 2030, during which Indonesia would see no more new HIV/AIDS infections, AIDS-related deaths or stigma and discrimination against people living with HIV/AIDS (ODHA).
Triya said all stakeholders must work together because preventing HIV/AIDS was not the sole responsibility of the Health Ministry.
“All societal elements, including religious and traditional leaders and community figures, must be involved. This is because introducing HIV control and prevention in grassroots communities will be effective only if it involves leaders in society,” said Triya.
Data shows that 97 percent of HIV infections in Papua have been transmitted via sexual intercourse. Around 16,620, 57.57 percent, of total HIV cases in the province affect people at the productive age of between 25 and 49 years. 
The Papua Health Agency records that as of June, it found 27,771 HIV/AIDS cases, which had spread in the province since 1992. Of the total, 10,134 cases are HIV while the remaining cases are AIDS, of which 1,883 patients have died. (ebf)
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WEDNESDAY, 30 AUGUST, 2017 | 01:30 WIB
2) Expert Highlights Problems with Latest Freeport Deal

TEMPO.COJakarta - The Indonesian government and American mining giant Freeport Indonesia finally agreed today on Tuesday, August 29. Despite this, legal mining expert of Universitas Tarumanegara Ahmad Redi argues that the deal has its flaws. 
The first is regarding Freeport’s special mining business permit (IUPK) that he considers is not in accordance with the mineral and coal law (UU Minerba). “According to the law, an IUPK can be given after the state reserve territory has been determined and approved by the House of Representatives. The IUPK itself is prioritized to be given to State Owned Enterprises,” Redi explained.
He also questions Freeport’s commitment in the deal to construct a domestic smelter within the five-year limit after the IUPK is issued. Redi argues that Freeport had long been promising to build one but is yet to be realized. 
He also claims that buying divested shares during the end of a working contract (KK) is a policy that is disadvantageous for Indonesia. "Because without buying out Freeport's divestments in 2021, Freeport could already be owned by the government," he said.
Freeport's stock divestment deal is stated in the extended working contract of 1991, where the company was initially obliged to divest 51 percent of its shares in 2011. But Redi regrets that Freeport has yet to realize the deal in the contract up until this moment. 
“This deal is reinforcing Freeport Indonesia in exploiting Indonesia’s natural resources,” Redi stated.
EGI ADYATAMA
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TUESDAY, 29 AUGUST, 2017 | 17:02 WIB
3) Govt Prepares Scheme for State Income from Freeport  

TEMPO.COJakarta - The government will soon formulate a state revenue scheme from Freeport Indonesia. The scheme will be designed after the government meets and the US-based miner reaches an agreement in the negotiations over its mining contract.
One of the points to agree on is the increase in state revenues contributed by the mining company.
"[Future] state revenue from Freeport Indonesia's operations must be greater than what we received through the Contract of Work," Finance Minister Sri Mulyani said in a press conference in Jakarta, Tuesday, August 29.
Sri Mulyani did not elaborate on the composition, percentage, and amount of state income, saying that there are other elements to be taken into accounts such as Non-Tax State Revenues (PNBP), royalties, and taxes.
Details of the scheme, said Sri Mulyani, will be attached to the Special Mining Business License granted to Freeport Indonesia.
In addition to state revenues, another agreement that needs to be reached is the 51-percent divestment of Freeport Indonesia's shares for national ownership. Energy and Mineral Resources Minister Ignatius Jonan said the government is currently negotiating the details of the stages and timing of the divestment.
Jonan said that the divestment scheme will also be attached to the Special Mining Business License granted to Freeport Indonesia.
The next agreement is related the construction of smelter by Freeport Indonesia within five years after the IUPK is issued, or no later than 2022—unless a force majeure happened within said period.  
CAESAR AKBAR

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AUGUST 29 2017 - 11:28PM
4) Freeport to seek Rio Tinto approval for deal with Indonesia on Grasberg mine
Jakarta: US mining giant Freeport McMoRan has signalled it believes a breakthrough agreement allowing it to continue operating a massive gold and copper mine in Indonesia will win the approval of Rio Tinto.
Indonesian Energy and Minister Resources Minister Ignasius Jonan said on Tuesday that after "tough negotiations" Freeport had agreed to give up its majority stake in the Grasberg mine to Indonesia.
The agreement will require Freeport to cut its ownership of the mine from 90.64 per cent to 49 per cent, provide more state revenue, adopt a special licence and build a second smelter by 2022.
Freeport's chief executive Richard Adkerson said the mining company would need to obtain approval for any changes from Rio Tinto, which has been a partner in the operations in Papua, a restive eastern province of Indonesia, since the mid-1990s.
"We have been working with Rio Tinto on a co-operative basis as Freeport has represented these operations with the government," Mr Adkerson said in Jakarta.
He said his own view was that if Freeport viewed the changes as appropriate and beneficial it would be able to obtain Rio Tinto's agreement.

Fairfax Media sought comment from Rio Tinto.

Grasberg is the world’s second-largest copper mine.

Rio Tinto is entitled to a 40 per cent share of output from Grasberg above specific levels until 2021 and 40 per cent of all production after 2021.
However the company indicated in April it might not take ownership of 40 per cent of copper production after 2021.
"Rio Tinto's participation beyond 2021 is likely to be affected due to the application of force majeure provisions in the joint venture agreement between Rio Tinto and Freeport McMoRan," it said at the time.
The preceding month Rio Tinto Group chief Jean-Sebastien Jacques had flagged it was considering the future of its stake in the Grasberg mine.
The result of the negotiation is in line with President Joko Widodo's instruction to put forward the national interest.
Indonesian minister Ignasius Jonan
The mine was at the centre of violent protests in August after Freeport furloughed thousands of workers earlier this year in response to export restrictions related to the lengthy permit dispute with Indonesia.
Indonesia eventually granted a six-month permit allowing Freeport to temporarily resume copper concentrate exports, but they were at risk of being again halted when the temporary permit expired in October.
The timing and price of the divestment are yet to be resolved, with Mr Adkerson emphasising that the agreement to divest the 51 per cent stake and build a second smelter were "major" concessions.
Mr Jonan said Freeport would be able to immediately apply for a 10-year permit extension.
Its current 30-year contract at Grasberg is due to expire in four years.
"We agreed that the first extension is for 10 years and and the next one will be for 10 years," Mr Jonan said.
"Legally they will not be automatic." 
Freeport is one of Indonesia's largest taxpayers. It had been seeking an agreement that would run until 2041 and provide certainty for a multibillion-dollar underground expansion.
Mr Jonan said the government and Freeport would work together to immediately finalise the documentation of the agreed structure and Freeport would get the necessary corporate approval.
"The result of the negotiation is in line with President Joko Widodo's instruction to put forward the national interest, the interest of the Papuan people, state sovereignty in managing natural resources and providing a conducive investment climate," he said.
With Karuni Rompies
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5) Indonesia Reaches Agreement With Freeport on New Mining Permit for Grasberg
By : Wilda Asmarinia & Hidayat Setiaji | on 11:01 AM August 29, 2017
JakartaIndonesia and Freeport-McMoRan on Tuesday (29/08) reached an agreement to allow the US miner to keep operating its giant Grasberg copper and gold mine, though the timing and price of a 51 percent divestment in the mine still needs to be worked out.
Freeport, the world's biggest publicly traded copper company, can apply for an immediate 10-year permit extension to mine at Grasberg beyond 2021, said Indonesian Energy and Mineral Resources Minister Ignatius Jonan. Grasberg is the world's second-biggest copper mine.
"The mandate of the president, which has been agreed to by Freeport, is that the divestment should reach 51 percent in total," Jonan told a joint news conference, alongside Freeport's Chief Executive Officer Richard Adkerson. "All that is left is to discuss the timing. The price will be negotiated later," said Jonan.
Revised rules in Indonesia require miners to divest a 51 percent stake, relinquish arbitration rights and pay new taxes and royalties. Freeport has insisted on getting the same fiscal and legal protection as in its current contract.
The mining minister said Freeport could "immediately apply" for its first 10-year permit extension and a second extension could be proposed before 2031.
Freeport's copper concentrate exports from Indonesia were at risk of being halted again if the two sides had failed to reach an agreement on a new mining permit before the current temporary permit expired in October. Freeport exports around two-thirds of the copper concentrate it produces at Grasberg and the remainder is processed domestically.
Phoenix, Arizona-based Freeport has held lengthy talks with the Indonesian government over issues such as the amount and valuation of the divestment and the development of a new smelter to extend its 30-year mining contract, which is due to expire in four years time.
Adkerson said the existing contract of work would remain in place until everything was settled, but stressed that the company had given ground.
"We want to emphasize that to divest the 51 percent [stake] and to build a [second] smelter are a major concession," said Adkerson.
Adkerson, who has been personally involved in the negotiations, in April had called the divestment rule "a form of expropriation".
Freeport had said it wanted an agreement that would run to 2041 and provide the fiscal and legal certainty it needed to proceed with a multi-billion dollar underground expansion for Grasberg. The mine is located in Indonesia's eastern province of Papua, on the island of New Guinea.
Reuters
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Media Release: West Papua Action Auckland calls on Pacific Island Forum leaders

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West Papua Action Auckland letter to PIF leaders
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West Papua Action Auckland

PO Box 68-419

Wellesley St

 
30 August 2017

 
Media Release: West Papua Action Auckland calls on Pacific Island Forum leaders to take action on West Papua next week.

 
‘We are pleased that West Papua is on the agenda at this year’s Forum meeting (4-8 September) and we are calling on the leaders to take decisive action to help resolve the region’s most serious human rights crisis, ’ said Maire Leadbeater, West Papua Action Auckland.

 
West Papua Action Auckland has written to each of the Forum leaders, urging that they do more than just express concern, as has happened in the past.  They should follow the lead of the seven Pacific nations who have raised the issue at the UN General Assembly and at the UN Human Rights Council.  Vanuatu, Nauru, Tonga, Solomon Islands, Tuvalu, the Marshall Islands and Palau have called for the UN to take account of the evidence of widespread human rights violations and conduct a systematic investigation with recommendations for actions.

 
We note that the Forum has granted observer status and even full membership to other Pacific nations which are yet to achieve independence.  In the 1980s the Forum was instrumental in having New Caledonia re-inscribed with the UN Committee on Decolonisation.  But the Forum has turned away from addressing self-determination for West Papua, despite the  fact that the people of West Papua were denied any say in the matter when Indonesia took over the territory in the 1960s.  

 
The Forum should grant observer or associate status to the representatives of the West Papuan people, the United Liberation Movement for West Papua (ULMWP).  This would put the Forum in a strong position to mediate dialogue between the ULMWP and Jakarta.  

 
Specifically, West Papua Action Auckland urges the Forum to

·         Establish a regional Fact Finding Team to conduct a Human Rights Assessment in West Papua 

 
·         Support the  seven Pacific Nation call led by Vanuatu at the Human Rights Council for the  UN to investigate  and report on  the alleged human rights abuses in West Papua.

 
·         Call for the re-inscription of West Papua with the UN Committee on Decolonisation, (the Committee of 24). 

 
·         Support observer or associate membership at the Pacific Island Forum for the ULMWP.

 
For further information:  Maire Leadbeater phone 09-815-9000 or 0274-436-957.

 
Letter follows:

West Papua Action Auckland

PO Box 68419

Auckland

New Zealand

 

 

Decisive Action needed on West Papua from the 48th Pacific Islands Forum Meeting

 

Dear Pacific Island Forum leaders,

 

We are pleased to note that the issue of West Papua is on the agenda for the 48th Pacific Island Forum being held this year in Apia, Samoa.

 
The suffering of the indigenous people of West Papua is the most serious human rights crisis in the Pacific region, and Pacific leaders can no longer side-step their responsibilities to their Melanesian neighbours. This year the Forum should resolve on decisive action to support the rights of the people of West Papua, recalling that they have been subject to grave human rights violations ever since 1963 when West Papua first came under Indonesian rule.  The Forum leaders must also take into account the right of the Papuan people to self-determination as it has been well-established that the so-called ‘Act of Free Choice’ of 1969 was a fraudulent exercise carried out under extreme duress. 

 
The Indonesian security forces in West Papua have been responsible for extensive use of torture and killings, but still operate with almost total impunity.  For example, there has been no justice for the well-publicised massacre of  four schoolboys at the end of 2014.  At the beginning of this month Brimob paramilitary police opened live fire on demonstrators in Deiyai, killing one man and injuring many others.  The villagers were protesting against the actions of a local construction firm which had refused to help transport a dying  person to hospital.  In the weeks that have followed a police chief has been transferred but the perpetrators have not been brought to justice.  Instead many young people demonstrating against this police abuse in West Papua and a number of cities in Indonesia have been illegally arrested.

 
International human rights groups repeatedly condemn the unlawful restrictions on the freedom of expression and freedom of assembly in West Papua.  It is outrageous that those who simply want to take part in peaceful protest or express their political aspirations are unable to do so without risking arrest, beatings and worse at the hands of the security forces. Mass detentions following demonstrations have been frequent in 2016 and 2017.

 
It must also be noted that the proportion of indigenous Papuan people as a percentage of the total population continues to decline as a result of migration from other parts of Indonesia. This inward migration poses a threat to the well-being of the people who live in areas targeted for exploitation of minerals and forests, or for the expansion of palm oil and other lucrative agri-business projects.

 
West Papua is effectively off limits to international journalists, with the possible exception of tourism writers.  Access is also denied to most humanitarian and human rights workers. 

 
At the Melanesian Spearhead Group (MSG) Leaders Summit in Honiara, July 2015, the United Liberation Movement for West Papua (ULMWP) was granted Observer status in the MSG.  Since this time political, church and community leaders in the Pacific have been speaking out for West Papua as never before.  However, this up-swell of concern has yet to translate into any action on the part of the Pacific Island Forum. 

 
Role of the Pacific Island Forum

 

Although historically, geographically and culturally there is no doubt that  West Papua belongs to the  Pacific Community, the Pacific Island Forum has so far made only tentative and token statements about the situation there.   This has led some Pacific nations to take the issue up on their own initiative  at the United Nations General Assembly and at the UN Human Rights Council.

 
Earlier this year in Geneva at the Human Rights Council, the Vanuatu Minister of Justice Ronald Warsal spoke for his own country and for six other Pacific nations ( Nauru, Tonga,  Solomon Islands, Tuvalu, the Marshall Islands and Palau).  As a response to the extensive authoritative documentation of state violence against Papuans he called for the UN Human Rights Council to request the High Commissioner for Human Rights to produce a consolidated report on the actual situation in West Papua.

 
The time has come for PIF to take substantive action. Specifically, we urge the leaders of the 48th PIF summit to:

 
 
·         Establish a regional Fact Finding Team to conduct a Human Rights Assessment in West Papua 

 
·         Support,  the  seven Pacific Nation call led by Vanuatu at the Human Rights Council for the  UN to investigate  and report on  the alleged human rights abuses in West Papua.

 
·         Call for the re-inscription of West Papua with the UN Committee on Decolonisation, (the Committee of 24). 

 
·         Support observer or associate membership at the Pacific Island Forum for the ULMWP.

 
We thank you in advance for acknowledging the rights and aspirations of the people of West Papua as a priority issue. 

 
Yours sincerely,

Maire Leadbeater (for West Papua Action Auckland)

1) Indonesia: Papua Leaders Want Say in Copper Mine Negotiations

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2) Papua petition swimming to UN
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1) Indonesia: Papua Leaders Want Say in Copper Mine Negotiations
Victor Mambor Jayapura, Indonesia 2017-08-29
The Indonesian government’s decision to allow one of the world’s largest copper and gold mines to operate in Papua province through 2041 prompted local leaders to remind officials that their people never gave up land ownership and want a role in negotiations.
On Tuesday the U.S.-based firm Freeport McMoran announced it was giving up a majority of its ownership in Papua’s Grasber mining complex in exchange for being allowed to operate there for up to 24 more years.
“We indigenous Papuans, especially from the Amungme and Kamoro tribe communities, have never released our ancestral lands to any party, neither to the government of Indonesia nor Freeport,” John Gobay, a chairman of the Customary Council in Paniai, a district in Papua, told BenarNews on Tuesday. Two weeks ago, he met with Indonesian President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo in Jakarta, where Gobay expressed concerns about issues involving Freeport’s operations at the Grasber complex.
He said neither the Amungme nor Komoro were seeking a share of the mine, but they should be valued as the owners of the mountain where Freeport has been operating for decades.
“We own the mountain and the land and the state has recognized it under the state 1945 Constitution and Law No. 21 of 2001 on Papua Special Autonomy,” Gobay said.
Freeport-McMoran agreed to divest 41.64 percent of its Indonesian subsidiary, PT Freeport Indonesia (PTFI), at a fair market price to allow 51 percent ownership by Indonesian interests. Freeport’s share of the company is 90.64 percent while the Indonesian government holds the other 9.36 percent.
“Reaching this understanding on the structure of the mutual agreement is significant and positive for all stakeholders. Important work remains on documenting this agreement and we are committed to completing the documentation as soon as possible during 2017,” Freeport Chief Executive Richard C. Adkerson said Tuesday in a news release.
As part of the agreement, Freeport agreed to construct a smelter in Indonesia by 2022, thereby lifting a government threat to ban the company from exporting unrefined copper. The smelter is estimated to cost $2 billion and is a major concession for his company, Adkerson told the Wall Street Journal.
The government is not likely to have the financing to buy all of Freeport’s share being put on the market, so the divestment could be spread across many potential buyers, analysts told the Journal.
Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati Energy and Mineral Resources Minister Ignatius Jonan represented the Indonesian government and Adkerson represented Freeport at a Tuesday news conference in Jakarta where both sides announced the agreement.
Ignatius said Indonesia had agreed to extend Freeport’s license, which ends in 2021, by 10 years to 2031, and another 10 years to 2041 if the company met the contract’s requirements, including the smelter.
“The negotiation between the government and Freeport began in early 2017. But in the last three to four (days), the talks got intense and the two sides found an agreement,” Ignatius said.
Adkerson said Freeport would honor the agreement.
“We appreciate the leadership of President Joko Widodo and we have been listening carefully to what the government wants and its objectives,” he told the news conference.
Papuans demand role
But because Papuans own the land in and around the mining complex, they should have a role in the upcoming negotiations involving the purchase of company holdings, said Ruben Magay, a member of the Papuan Regional Legislative Council (DPRP).
“This is the time for the government to involve land owners in determining Freeport’s investments,” he told BenarNews on Tuesday. “There are three parties, the central government/local government, investors and indigenous people.”
He said discussions regarding Freeport should be clear on what percentage is for investors, what percentage is for the government and how much is for the indigenous people.
“During Freeport’s first work contract in 1967, until the second work contract in 1991, and this most recent one, the position of indigenous people has been unclear. The discussion has been between the central government and the investor, in this case, America,” Magay said.
Gobay expressed hope that Jokowi would hold a special negotiation session attended by the government, Freeport and the representatives of Amungme and Komoro tribes.
“If not, we will report it to the United Nations through the indigenous representatives and we will contest Freeport and the central government for not complying with its own regulation,” Gobay said.
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2) Papua petition swimming to UN
35 minutes ago 


Campaigners for improved human rights in West Papua are swimming to the United Nations in Geneva today carrying a petition calling for action in the Indonesian territory.

The document urges the UN to facilitate a legitimate self-determination process for West Papua.

The petition is being delivered by six Britons swimming the length of Lake Geneva.
They are expected to spend over 30 hours in the water, covering 69 kilometres.
The 'Swim for West Papua' team is due to arrive at Geneva's waterfront on Wednesday evening.
The petition carries the signatures of thousands of people from the Papua region and tens of thousands from around the world who backed it online.
Tt will be presented to the United Nations tomorrow.
Signing the petition is illegal for people in Indonesia's Papua region.
The Free West Papua Campaign said the document had to be smuggled out of West Papua to get it to Switzerland.
They said as a direct consequence of the petition, two people had been arrested and 42 people had been tortured.
Campaigners said people faceed up to 15 years in prison for supporting the petition.
In 1969, the United Nations sanctioned the incorporation of the former Dutch New Guinea into Indonesia, a process regarded by Papuans as illegitimate.
Since then, widespread abuses have been reported with human rights groups and academics estimating that over 100,000 Papuans have died.
In the Pacific, support for West Papuan self-determination has been growing.
In March this year, seven Pacific countries called on the UN Human Rights Council to urgently consider the situation in West Papua.
Vanuatu's Justice Minister delivered the call on behalf of his country and Tonga, Nauru, Palau, Tuvalu, the Marshall Islands, and Solomon Islands.
The petition calls on the UN to go further.
Along with the focus on self-determination, it seeks action by the international community to hold ongoing human rights abuses in Papua to account.
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WEST PAPUA: AWPA urges Pacific Forum leaders to continue support

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http://www.pmc.aut.ac.nz/pacific-media-watch/west-papua-awpa-urges-pacific-forum-leaders-continue-support-9987

WEST PAPUA: AWPA urges Pacific Forum leaders to continue support 



After a fatal August crackdown on protesters ... AWPA calls on Pacific Island Forum leaders to continue West Papua support. Image: Unpo
Wednesday, August 30, 2017
Item: 9987
AUCKLAND (Australia West Papua Association/Pacific Media Watch): The Australia West Papua Association has urged leaders of the Pacific Islands Forum to continue their support of West Papua. 
In an open letter, AWPA called on the Forum’s 18 members to keep raising the issue of human rights abuses with Indonesia’s government and continue applying pressure on Jakarta to allow a fact-finding mission to the Indonesian-ruled territory.
AWPA also urged that the UN Special Rapporteur on freedom of expression be allowed to visit West Papua, with the Pacific Islands Forum (PIF) driving this call.
West Papua should also be given an official voice within the PIF itself, under the umbrella organisation of the United Liberation Movement for West Papua (ULMWP), it said.
“The West Papuan people have been calling for dialogue with Jakarta for years and AWPA believes the PIF can play an important role in helping facilitate such a dialogue between representatives of the West Papuan leadership and the Indonesian Government.”
AWPA Sydney secretary Joe Collins said the group was ultimately grateful for the support of the PIF.
“I would first like to thank the PIF leaders for discussing and raising concerns about the human rights situation in West Papua in the official communiqués’ at the Forum meetings in Port Moresby in 2015 and Pohnpei in 2016. We are very encouraged that the Forum Leaders agreed that the issue of West Papua should remain on their agenda.”
Pacific support strong
In March, seven Pacific island nations raised grave concerns at the 34th session of the United Nations Human Rights Council regarding human rights violations in West Papua.
Over the past year, eight Pacific Island states have also joined the Pacific Coalition for West Papua in calling for human rights and self-determination to be upheld in the territory.
AWPA's call comes after a month of crackdowns on peaceful displays of freedom of expression by Indonesian security forces and a fatal shooting. 
Yulianus Pigai died at the hands of security forces earlier this month in a shooting which also left 16 others wounded in the Deiyai district, leaving some to question whether West Papua will ever see an end to violence
AWPA’s call also comes in the same month a petition spearheaded by West Papua Action Auckland asking for similar support from New Zealand’s government was rejected.
A British team are currently swimming across Lake Geneva to deliver a petition calling for self-determination in West Papua.

1) Papua Police to monitor use of village funds

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2) Fairy Meadow man found guilty of making offensive comments over Indonesian PM Facebook posts
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1) Papua Police to monitor use of village funds
Nethy Dharma Somba The Jakarta Post
Jayapura | Wed, August 30, 2017 | 07:15 pm

Less developed: A quay in Yahim village near Sentani Lake, Papua, remains the only access point for people in the village to travel to Sentani, Jayapura regency. (JP/Nethy Dharma Somba)
The Papua Police will monitor the use of village funds amounting to Rp 4.3 trillion (US$322 million) allocated for 5,420 villages in 28 regencies and one municipality across the province.
“The police will monitor the channeling of the village funds in Papua this year. Babinkamtibmas [police officers assigned to villages as advisors on security and public order] in villages will be trained to watch and guard the utilization of the funds,” Papua Police head Insp. Gen. Boy Rafli Amar said on Wednesday.
He said two regencies and one municipality in Papua would pilot the involvement of National Police (Polri) personnel in the supervision and monitoring of village funds in the province.
“The Babinkamtibmas personnel who will receive training are from two regencies, namely Jayapura and Keerom, and Jayapura city,” he said.

Struggle for life: Local women from Hobong village, Sentani, Papua, go fishing. Hobong villagers depend on Sentani Lake for their livelihood. (JP/Nethy Dharma Somba)


Commenting on the alleged misuse of village funds in two regencies, Pegunungan Bintang and Tolikara, Boy said the police were investigating the cases.
Pegunungan Bintang Regent Costan Oktemka said the investigation into the alleged village fund misuse began from a report that a village head in the regency had used some of the funds for his personal purposes.
“He cut the funds by up to Rp 15 million, claiming he would use it to pay taxes. It’s wrong. The village head has been dismissed,” said Costan.
Central Mamberamo Regent Ham Pagawak has dismissed two village heads for allegedly misusing village funds. “They used the funds to buy private houses. We dismissed them because village funds are allocated to develop villages, not for personal purposes,” Ham said. (afr/ebf)
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Illawarra Mercury Thursday August 31, 2017
2) Fairy Meadow man found guilty of making offensive comments over Indonesian PM Facebook posts

A Fairy Meadow man who used Facebook to post threatening comments about the Indonesian prime minister the day before he was due to arrive in Australia has been found guilty of offensive conduct.
New Zealand-born Ekiulu Marukore was initially unaware of the reason NSW counter terrorism and riot squad police pulled his car over at Bellambi on the afternoon of February 25 this year, however police quickly informed him they were concerned about a comment he had posted on the Free West Papua Campaign page on Facebook the previous day.
In the post, directed at Indonesian prime minister Joko Widodo, Marukore wrote “give me a gun and their whereabouts, see how they feel when their lives are threatened and their freedom taken away….doesn’t have to be this [way] but something has to happen for the world to notice and do something about it. Free West Papua”.
Officers arrested Marukore and charged him with using a carriage service to offend. He pleaded not guilty to the charge, with his lawyer, Matthew Ward, arguing Marukore’s comment, when taken in context with other vocal anti-Indonesia comments on the page, was not offensive.
However, Magistrate Les Mabbutt the offence proven.
“Once someone mentions a firearm, once someone mentions locating that person and threatening them, I come to the view that a reasonable person in contemporary society would find this comment offensive,” he said.
Marukore admitted to police his actions were “stupid” and said he never intended to carry out the threat.
Magistrate Mabbutt recorded no conviction in the case, noting Marukore was remorseful and had no record.
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1) PANG West Papua submission to the 48th Pacific Islands Forum Leaders Meeting

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2) West Papuan independence leader to petition UN
3) Papua governor skips police questioning, again
4) Trade Ministry ready to issue export permit for Freeport
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http://www.pina.com.fj/?p=pacnews&m=read&o=31235528959a8535db2d56cd419067
1) PANG West Papua submission to the 48th Pacific Islands Forum Leaders Meeting
1:20 pm GMT+12, 31/08/2017, Fiji
In 2006, Pacific Leaders had expressed concerns about reports of human rights abuses in West Papua, and had called on parties (Indonesia) to uphold human rights and address the root cause of conflict in a peaceful manner. Following this call there had been silence in the region on the issue of West Papua until 2015.   
 
During the 46th Forum Leaders meetings in Papua New Guinea (PNG), Civil Society Organisations (CSOs), churches and social movements representing over 42 organisations and 13 countries and territories called on Forum Leaders to re-engage the sensitive issue of West Papua. Three out of the four regional public policy submissions through the Special Sub-Committee on Regionalism (SSCR) process in 2015 called on the leadership of PNG Prime Minister, Peter O’Neill as Chair of the Forum, to take bold and immediate actions to protect and uphold the human rights of West Papuans.
 
As a result of public pressure, the 2015 Pacific Islands Forum Leaders outcomes recalled the decision of 2006 and requested the Forum Chair to convey the views of the Forum to Indonesia and to consult on a fact finding mission to discuss the situation in West Papua. In 2016, Prime Minister Peter O’Neill had reported that he had written to Indonesian President Widodo, requesting a fact-finding team of Pacific Island leaders to West Papua. Despite talks for a dialogue with Indonesia, there has been no progress on the issue between PIF and Indonesia particularly around human rights violations.  
 
Regional public policy submissions on West Papua topped the listing once again in 2016, with much urgency for the PIF to involve the United Nations to address the ongoing human rights violations. However, Forum leaders recognized the political sensitivity of the issue and agreed to pursue constructive dialogue with Indonesia. The leaders outcome of 2016 also agreed to have West Papua remain on the agenda.
 
In 2017, Forum Leaders are again committed to open and constructive dialogue with Indonesia on alleged human rights violations in West Papua.  The challenge now remains on the incoming PIF Chair, the Samoan Prime Minister, HE Tuilaepa Aiono Sailele Malielegaoi to action what the forum leaders had agreed to in 2015, 2016 and again in 2017. The state of affairs has worsened and it is time the PIF Leaders to call on the United Nations to intervene on behalf of the people of West Papua.  
 
Current State of Affairs
 
Between 2014 and 2016, the political dynamics and recognition of West Papua struggle for political self determination in the region have changed significantly. The West Papuans through the leadership of the Vanuatu Government and its people had unified under the banner of the United Liberation Movement for West Papua (ULMWP) in 2014. The ULMWP’s determination to seek political recognition and support via membership of the sub-regional bloc of the Melanesian Spearhead Group (MSG), the African, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) and at the United Nations General Assembly has given the issue higher standing regionally and internationally.  At the same time the MSG’s platform to encourage peaceful political negotiations between both parties (West Papua and Indonesian) has been challenged.  
 
Political recognition for West Papua’s quest to be self-determined has however been met with aggravated violence and human rights abuse. Pacific CSOs and social movements once again draw Forum Leaders attention to the ongoing gross violation of human rights in West Papua. Such violations have been well documented by recognized international human rights monitoring bodies. Documented violations include the denial of freedom of expression, freedom of assembly, torture, unlawful killings and state violence directed at men, women and children, unequal access to health and education services, and a rising HIV and AIDS epidemic among indigenous people. Furthermore, West Papua still remains ‘closed’ to international journalists despite the recent announcements to the contrary by the Indonesian government.  
 
Aside from these atrocities, there have also been longstanding efforts by the Indonesian authorities to eliminate the compendium of violations that make the West Papua situation an issue warranting urgent and comprehensive resolution. Juan Mendez, the former Special Adviser to the UN Secretary General on genocide prevention aptly concludes that due to such high levels of violence and denials of fundamental human rights West Papua, as a nation, is at risk of extinction.
 
Regardless of repeated reassurances from the Indonesian government that they would resolve human rights violations in West Papua the evidence clearly shows that the human rights situation is rapidly worsening under the leadership of Indonesian President Joko Widodo. The Indonesian state has failed to guarantee West Papuans right to safety and life as well as their right to freely and peacefully express a political opinion.  
 
Call for Action
 
To progress the PIF Leaders decisions of 2006, 2015, 2016 and 2017respectively; We call on our Pacific Leaders under the leadership of Samoa as the chair to:
 
(a) Action a regional Fact Finding Team commissioned to conduct a Human Rights Assessment in West Papua to verify the ongoing gross human rights violations. The regional Fact Finding Team must be independent and should include members from Civil Society Organisations in the Pacific.  
 
(b) Support the call by Vanuatu, Solomon Islands, Republic of Marshall Islands, Tuvalu, Nauru, Palau and Tonga, expressed at the United Nations General Assembly in September, 2016, for a UN Special Rapportuer on Freedom of Expression to visit West Papua to get an objective and independent view of the situation in the region.  
 
The independent assessments will inform dialogue with Indonesia on the status of human rights violations in West Papua.   
 
(c) Support a Pacific Islands led resolution at the UNGA to support an international supervised referendum.

SOURCE: PANG/PACNEWS

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http://www.radionz.co.nz/international/pacific-news/338462/west-papuan-independence-leader-to-petition-un
2) West Papuan independence leader to petition UN
42 minutes ago 
A West Papuan independence leader says he will petition the United Nations General Assembly later this month with the signatures of his people.
The petition calls on the UN to facilitate a legitimate self-determination process for West Papua.
The leader Benny Wenda is in Geneva delivering a symbolic petition to the UN.
Mr Wenda said he would take the actual petition, with authenticated signatures of West Papuans, to the UN in New York.
He said he would present the document to the UN Secretary General and the C24, the special committee on decolonization.
Mr Wenda said he would also announce how many thousands of West Papuans have signed.
“Indonesia's always saying it's just a handful of people that are talking about independence, it's just a dream and fantasy, but now we show that all the minorities are wanting independence and that means Indonesia's presence in West Papua is illegal," he said.
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http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2017/08/31/papua-governor-skips-police-questioning-again.html
3) Papua governor skips police questioning, again
Jakarta | Thu, August 31, 2017 | 06:32 pm
Papua Governor Lukas Enembe said via his legal team that he could not fulfill the National Police’s Criminal Investigation Department’s (Bareskrim) summons for questioning on Thursday.
“He could not come. It is postponed,” Bareskrim’s corruption deputy director, Sr.Comr. Erwanto Kurniadi, said as quoted by Antara in Jakarta on Thursday.
The police were scheduled to question Lukas as a witness in a graft case related to the use of scholarship funds for the 2016 fiscal year. 
Erwanto said Lukas’ legal team had asked to reschedule and ensured  the governor would attend the questioning scheduled for Sept.4.
“He confirmed that he would come next Monday,” the police said.
As of Thursday, the police have questioned 15 witnesses in their investigation into the corruption case. The investigation began on Aug. 16.
Bareskrim has yet to announce the amount of state losses caused by the case. (kuk/ebf)

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4) Trade Ministry ready to issue export permit for Freeport
Jakarta | Thu, August 31, 2017 | 02:56 pm
Trade Minister Enggartiasto “Enggar” Lukita has said his ministry is ready to issue a permit for mineral concentrate exports to gold and copper mining firm PT Freeport Indonesia, after US-based Freeport McMoRan agreed reduce its stake in its Indonesian subsidiary to 49 percent and construct a smelter.

Freeport McMoRan CEO Richard Adkerson told journalists on Tuesday that Freeport Indonesia had also agreed to convert its contract of work (CoW) into a special mining license (IUPK) and to increase its state revenue contribution.

Enggar said in Jakarta on Wednesday that Freeport Indonesia only needed to wait 24 hours to obtain the export permit from the time when the company submitted its proposal.

Read also: Freeport agrees to 51% divestment, other terms: CEO
He also promised to facilitate all companies that needed to export their products by accelerating the issuance of permits.

“Soon after the proposal is submitted, we will process it. It takes only two days at most, but we can do it faster. If the proposal is submitted in the morning, the permit is ready at noon, if the proposal is submitted at noon, the permit is ready in the evening, if the proposal is submitted in the evening, the permit is ready at night,” he added as reported by kompas.com.

Freeport Indonesia is seeking to extend its contract for the operation of the Grasberg mine in Papua, which will expire in 2021, to 2041. (bbn)

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Jokowi Must Bring Justice to Indonesia’s 'The Disappeareds': Rights Groups
By : Dames Alexander Sinaga | on 3:05 PM August 31, 2017
Jakarta. A number of human rights groups on Wednesday (30/08) called on President Joko "Jokowi" Widodo to tell families of "Orang Hilang"— Indonesia's The Disappeareds — the truth about what happened to their loved ones and bring them justice through long-overdue reparations.
The groups urged Jokowi to meet the government’s obligations under international law and fulfill his own promise — announced on Indonesia’s Independence Day in 2015 — to solve past cases of human rights violations, including forced disappearances.
"Several years ago, Jokowi said he wanted to form a search team to be managed by the coordinating political, legal and security affairs minister, but this still hasn't happened," Wanna Yeti, an activist and member of the Indonesian Association of Families of the Disappeared (Ikohi), said in Jakarta on Wednesday.
Wanna's father went missing after the Tanjung Priok massacre, in which at least 24 were killed due to official government estimates, in North Jakarta in 1984.
Wanna said the families of 13 political activists who were "disappeared" in 1997-1998 — Sonny, Yani Afri, Ismail, Abdun Nasser, Dedi Hamdun, Noval Alkatiri, Wiji Thukul, Suyat, Herman Hendrawan, Bimo Petrus Anugrah, Ucok Munandar Siahaan, Yadin Muhidin and Hendra Hambali — continue to demand that the government uncover the truth about what happened to them over 19 years ago.
Meanwhile, victims' groups and Acehnese NGOs also urged Indonesian authorities to reveal what happened to the 1,935 disappeared and missing persons in Aceh during the 29-year bloody conflict in Indonesia’s most westernly province between the military and armed opposition group Gerakan Aceh Merdeka (Free Aceh Movement).
In East Timor, according to a report from the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) for East Timor, at least 18,600 people were disappeared or went missing during the period of Indonesian occupation — from 1975 to 1999 — and during the chaotic period immediately following the 1999 independence referendum.
A National Human Rights Commission (Komnas HAM) report also shows there were at least 32,700 victims of the 1965-1966 anti-Communist pogrom, whose cases have never been brought to trial.
Putri Kanesia, the deputy coordinator of advocacy at KontraS (Commission for the Disappeareds and Victims of Violence), said in 2014 at least five soldiers were arrested in connection with the disappearance of Dedek Khairudin. Dedek's whereabouts remain unknown to this day, while the government has failed to launch an independent investigation into the case.
"If our government is not serious about solving cases of enforced disappearance, cases like Dedek Khairuddin's will continue to happen," Putri said.
These rights groups stressed that families of the victims are still demanding that Jokowi fulfill his pledge to solve past cases of enforced disappearances.
The families themselves said they have been disappointed by the government's official statements and recommendations on the issue, which sounded promising at first but were never followed through.
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1) High Level EU delegation to attend 48th Pacific Islands Forum Meeting

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2) Pacific – French participation in the Post-Forum Dialogue of the Pacific Islands Forum Leaders’ Meetings (5-8 September 2017)
3) Pacific links: New elections for Tonga, PNG’s AG speaks out, Milne Bay and more

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http://www.pina.com.fj/index.php?p=pacnews&m=read&o=97542044559a8a551ed6150ed702db

1) High Level EU delegation to attend 48th Pacific Islands Forum Meeting
7:09 pm GMT+12, 31/08/2017, Fiji

The European Union (EU) Commissioner for International Cooperation and Development, Neven Mimica and other senior EU officials will attend the 48th Pacific Islands Forum Meeting in Apia, Samoa.  

 
Ahead of the visit Commissioner Mimica stated: "I am delighted to attend the 48th Pacific Islands Forum Meeting to reinforce our already excellent relations with Pacific countries. Aside from discussing the post-2020 relationship between the EU and Pacific partners, I will be working with leaders to encourage action on women's empowerment and gender equality, working in partnership with the Pacific Islands Forum Secretariat and Australia."
 
Commissioner Mimica will lead the EU Delegation and will be accompanied by the European Union Ambassador for the Pacific, Andrew Jacobs, the Director for Asia, Central Asia, Middle East/Gulf and the Pacific at the European Commission's Department for International Cooperation and Development, Pierre Amilhat, European External Action Service (EEAS) Deputy Managing Director for Asia and the Pacific, Paola Pampaloni, Head of Unit EU- Africa, Africa Peace Facility , Dominico Rosa, and Head of Cooperation at the EU Delegation for the Pacific, Christoph Wagner.  
 
Commissioner Mimica will hold discussions with Pacific leaders to explore initial ideas for the focus of Pacific-EU relations after 2020 when the Cotonou Agreement expires. This comprehensive agreement was signed in 2000 between the European Union and the African, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) Group of States.
 
Commissioner Mimica and the Honourable Prime Minister of Samoa, Tuilaepa Sailele Malielegaoi, will host an EU-Pacific Gender Conference in the margins of the Pacific Islands Forum Meeting. At that occasion Commissioner Mimica and the Pacific Island Forum Secretariat (PIFS), Secretary General, Dame Meg Taylor, will sign a financing agreement worth EUR 18 million to help tackle the roots causes of gender inequality and violence against women and girls in the Pacific. While in Samoa, Mimica will sign an additional EUR 7 million financing agreement with the Pacific Islands Forum Secretariat focusing on technical cooperation and capacity building at the regional level, as well as a EUR 1.4 million financing agreement in support of the Cook Islands' sanitation sector.
 
During his short stay in Apia,Mimica will hold a number of bilateral meetings with Pacific Island leaders. The Commissioner will also take the opportunity of the 48th Pacific Islands Forum Meeting to strengthen the already excellent partnerships with Australia and New Zealand.

SOURCE: EU PACIFIC/PACNEWS
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http://www.diplomatie.gouv.fr/en/country-files/oceania/events/article/pacific-french-participation-in-the-post-forum-dialogue-of-the-pacific-islands


2) Pacific – French participation in the Post-Forum Dialogue of the Pacific Islands Forum Leaders’ Meetings (5-8 September 2017)

France will participate in the 29th Post-Forum Dialogue of the Pacific Islands Forum as part of the 48th Leaders’ Meetings of this regional organization being held this week in Apia, Samoa, and bringing together heads of state and government from 16 countries of Oceania, as well as – for the first time as full-fledged members – executives from the governments of New Caledonia and French Polynesia.
It will be represented by Sébastien Lecornu, minister of state attached to the Minister for the Ecological and Inclusive Transition.
The main topics of this year’s post-forum dialogue will be strengthening ocean governance in the Pacific and the blue economy, subjects with particular resonance for France, as two-thirds of its 11 million square kilometers of marine territory are in the Pacific. Mr. Lecornu’s speeches will consequently emphasize France’s wish to amplify the dynamic created with the Paris Agreement and to support initiatives promoting sustainable ocean development in a region that is bearing the brunt of the effects of climate disruption.
During his trip, the minister will also discuss climate and environmental issues with the heads of state and government of Oceania, especially the Global Pact for the Environment, which will be presented during the UN General Assembly a few weeks after the New York Ocean Summit and a few months ahead of the COP23, which will be held this year in Bonn and presided over by Fiji.
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30 August 2017
16:31 AEDT
3) Pacific links: New elections for Tonga, PNG’s AG speaks out, Milne Bay and more
By Anna Kirk, Research Associate in the Lowy Institute's Melanesia Program, and Euan Moyle, an intern in the Melanesia Program.
  • Tonga’s King Tupou VI took the unprecedented step of dissolving parliament that was led by PM Samuela ‘Akilisi Pohiva last week, announcing new elections must be held by 16 November. Pohiva was the first commoner to serve as Prime Minister and there had been high hopes for the government of the former democracy activist. However, while some have raised concerns about what the dissolution means for democracy in Tonga, Pohiva’s government has also been heavily criticised and many have welcomed the move. At the time of writing, Pohiva was expected to hold  a press conference on Wednesday to respond.
     
  • The 48th Pacific Islands Forum Leaders Meeting will take place in Samoa next week. Deputy Secretary-General of the Forum Secretariat Cristelle Pratt told Pacific Beat that the gathering's Blue Pacific theme is applicable across shared geography, resources and security concerns and will strengthen collective identity and political action in the region.
     
  • This report from the Forum Secretariat identifies key issues including; rising inequality, an increasingly crowded and complex region, and the depletion of natural resources.
     
  • Following the resignation of New Caledonia’s budget minister Philippe Dunoyer, who has taken up a seat in the French National Assembly, New Caledonia’s political parties have put forward candidates for the election of a new 11-member government on Thursday.
     
  • Majella Hurney from Save the Children writes on the Devpolicy blog on the growing malnutrition crisis in Papua New Guinea and why aid donors including Australia should tackle the problem more directly.
     
  • Last Friday marked the 75th anniversary of the beginning of the Battle of Milne Bay in 1942, which halted the advance of Japanese forces through Papua New Guinea into Australia. ABC’s Thomas Oriti spoke with Dr Lachlan Grant from the Australian War Memorial about the battle and its legacy.
     
  • PNG’s new Attorney-General Davis Steven has criticised the Australian Government’s plans to close the Manus Island detention centre by the end of October, saying it is not clear what will happen to the men detained at the centre, or how PNG will manage Australia’s withdrawal.
     
  • Even though PNG’s parliament has resumed following the national elections, Mendi town is still tense with disputed ballot boxes for the Southern Highlands regional seat still being counted.
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Photos-Beyond the Pacific: West Papua on the World Stage

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Beyond the Pacific: West Papua on the World Stage


A terrific and very informative conference organized by the West Papua Project, Department of Peace and Conflict Studies, University of Sydney and the School of Humanities and Communication Arts, Western Sydney University.


Congratulations to the  conference Facilitator, Ronny Kareni ,  WPP Coordinator, Dr. Cammi Webb-Gannon and WPP Convener, Dr. Jim Elmslie , the speakers and participants  for their contributions and interesting  Q&A sessions. 

The conference also included the Australian launch of International Academics for West Papua.




Over the last two years the West Papuan movement for self-determination has made huge strides in gaining support from the Pacific island nations. This has led to the issue being raised in many regional forums, such as the Melanesian Spearhead group, the Pacific Islands Forum and at the United Nations. The Indonesian government has worked hard to address these developments both through international diplomacy and accelerated development inside West Papua. Currently the issue is being presented to the Africa, Caribbean and Pacific Group of States (ACP) in Europe. This conference will examine these developments, their consequences and how the struggle is likely to evolve.































  The Australian launch of International Academics for West Papua.





































AWPA Terus Dorong PIF Angkat Isu HAM di Papua Barat

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http://suarapapua.com/2017/08/30/awpa-terus-dorong-pif-angkat-isu-ham-di-papua-barat/

AWPA Terus Dorong PIF Angkat Isu HAM di Papua Barat


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JAYAPURA, SUARAPAPUA.com—Asosiasi Papua Barat Australia (AWPA) telah menulis sebuah surat terbuka terhadap pemimpin –pemimpin Pacific Islands Forum. Dalam surat tersebut AWPA meminta agar negara-negara anggota Pasific Islands Forum (PIF) terus angkat dan bicara soal situasi HAM di Papua Barat. 
Joe Collins dari AWPA dalam surat elektronik yang diterima suarapapua.com mengatakan, AWPA mengucapkan terima kasih kepada para pemimpin negara-negara anggota PIF karena telah mengangkat isu HAM di Papua pada tahun 2015 dan 2016.
“Kami mengucapkan terimakasih kepada pemimpin-pemimpin PIF yang telah mendiskusikan dan mengangkat isu tentang situasi HAM di Papua Barat dalam komunike resmi di rapat-rapat PIF di Port Moresby pada tahun 2015 dan di Pohnpei pada tahun 2016 dan ini membuat kami bersemangat, karena pemimpin-pemimpin PIF setuju bahwa isu Papua Barat harus tetap di dalam agenda PIF,” ungkapnya dalam surel yang diterima suarapapua.com pada Selasa (29/8/2017).
Collins mengatakan, AWPA mendorong pemimpin-pemimpin PIF untuk terus mengangkat isu tentang situasi HAM di Papua Barat dalam komunikasi dengan pemerintah Indonesia. Juga mendorong agar terus menekan Jakarta untuk mengizinkan misi pencari fakta PIF untuk datang ke Papua Barat.
Kata Collins, Presiden Indonesia telah menyatakan bahwa Papua Bara terbuka (untuk dunia) dan otoritas Indonesia mengatakan bahwa situasi HAM di Papua Barat telah membaik.  Jika ini benar, mengapa Indonesia tidak membolehkan misi pencari fakta PIF untuk mengunjungi Papua Barat?
Menurutnya, karena terus berlangsungnya penahanan dan penangkapan orang-orang Papua yang terlibat dalam demonstrasi damai di Papua Barat, sehingga AWPA meminta pemimpin-pemimpin PIF untuk mendorong Jakarta untuk mengizinkan kunjungan Pelapor Khusus PBB untuk perlindungan dan peningkatan penghormatan hak atas kebebasan berpendapat dan berekspresi ke Papua Barat untuk menginvestigasi situasi yang terjadi di lapangan.
“Kami mencatat bahwa sejumlah besar wilayah tak berpemerintahan sendiri dan organisasi telah menjadi bagian dari PIF dengan berbagai status. AWPA percaya bahwa akan sangat menguntungkan jika Papua Barat juga memiliki status resmi di dalam PIF, melalui organisasi payung ULMWP,” ungkap Collins.
Lanjut dia, “Rakyat Papua Barat telah meminta dialog dengan Jakarta bertahun-tahun dan AWPA percaya bahwa PIF dapat memainkan peran yang sangat penting dalam membantu kami memfasilitasi dialog antara perwakilan kepemimpinan Papua Barat dan pemerintah Indonesia,” katanya.
Dikatakan, AWPA juga mendorong PIF untuk mendukung dimasukkannya kembali Papua Barat dalam Komite Dekolonisasi PBB. Komite Khusus untuk dekolonisasi telah mengunjungi Kaledonia Barau pada bulan Maret 2014 dan AWPA mendorong pemimpin-pemimpin PIF untuk meminta Komite itu untuk juga mengunjungi Papua Barat dalam sebuah misi pencarian fakta untuk menginvestigasi bagaimana situasi rakyat Papua Barat di bawah kekuasaan Indonesia.
“Fakta bahwa apa yang disebut Pepera pada tahun 1969 adalah kebohongan belaka telah diterima dan PBB memiliki tanggung jawab moral terhadap rakyat Papua Barat atas terjadinya peristiwa menyedihkan itu,” pungkasnya.
Pewarta: Arnold Belau
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Poumako incident: lethal military violence against indigenous fisherfolk defending their livelihood

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https://awasmifee.potager.org/?p=1531

Poumako incident: lethal military violence against indigenous fisherfolk defending their livelihood

On 9th August 2017, a member of the Indonesian armed forces shot dead Theo Kamtar in Poumako Port, Timika. This incident was part of a dispute where indigenous fisherfolk felt their livelihood threatened by better equipped migrants from other islands in Indonesia, who were dominating the catch. Elements of the state appear to have sided with the migrants, and eventually crushed their resistance with lethal violence.


Here is the report of the investigation into the incident carried out by the Justice and Peace Secretariat of the Timika Catholic Diocese.

The situation before the incident.
In recent months a dispute has emerged between traditional indigenous fisherfolk who hold customary rights, and semi-modern fishermen, that come from outside Papua (migrant fishermen), who normally use large nets or seines to trawl for fish. Because they use these large nets, often hundreds of metres long, the indgenous fisherfolk’s catch is starting to decrease dramatically, especially when the semi-modern fishermen are working close to indigenous fishing areas.
In an attempt to find a way out of this situation, the indigenous fisherfolk took the initiative to arrange a meeting. In the meeting they proposed two options: either the migrant fishermen would not be allowed to catch fish in the waters near the river mouth, or the indigenous fisherfolk and migrant fishermen would share out the roles – the indigenous people’s job would be to catch fish in the river and out to sea while the migrants would sell them on. Aside from these two options, a third choice was discussed, that the migrant fishermen could still go out and look for fish, if the area they used was sufficiently far out to sea.
The issue was officially discussed three times in the last three months. The first meeting took place in mid-June at the Poumako port in Mimika. The second discussion in July was at the East Mimika sub-district office and the third on 1st August in the Mimika Marine and Fisheries Agency district office, in the Bupati’s office building. All stakeholders attended all three meetings.
However, on the 7th August, the Head of the Mimika Marine and Fisheries Agency, Leentje A.A. Siwabessy, held a closed meeting in the agency office meeting room, which solely discussed the migrants’ fishing operations.
According to the Meeting Report (document reference 253/435/2017) issued by the Marine and Fisheries Agency (which was later claimed to be the outcome of this meeting), seven village heads from East Mimika sub-district were present (from Hiripau, Tipuka, Poumako, Kaugapu, Mware, Pigapu and Wania villages) and relevant officials, including Captain Rohi King (Operational Section Head from the Timika Naval Base), Ipto Barnabas (Water Police Unit Head from Mimika Police HQ), Kopda Usman (village military representative for Poumako village), Rachel Latuheru (Fisheries and fish farming section head in Mimika Regency), Wesly Simanungkali (Conservation and Monitoring section head) and Lucky. J. Wokas (Section chief or coastal marine and small islands of Mimika Regency). This time local fisherfolk were not invited to the meeting, nor were the Kamoro People’s Institution (Lemasko) or other stakeholders which had been present in the previous three meetings. Local fisherfolk and LEMASKO were not made aware of this meeting or its outcomes.
However, on the evening of the 8th August 2017, one of the migrant fishermen came to the house of the head of neighbourhood association (RT) 9 in Pomako to say that the migrant fisherfolk had been given a permit to catch fish and they were going out to sea.
Then on 9th August 2017, a shooting incident took place in front of the Harbour Police office (KP3 Laut) which left one person dead and two civilians and one soldier wounded.

Chronology

Wednesday, 9th August 2017
03.00-05.00 am
People around Poumako port heard the sound of a fishing boat’s engine. The sound could easily be recognised as coming from the boat of one of the semi-modern fisherman who had been prohibited from going out to sea while the local government was still facilitating an agreement between themselves and the indigenous fisherfolk.
06.00-07.00 am
The indigenous fisherfolk went to the berths used by the migrant fisherfolk. Their suspicions proved correct. They could see for themselves that around 20 motor boats belonging to migrant fisherfolk had gone to sea to catch fish.
07.00 -09.00
The indigenous fisherfolk stated to coordinate amongst themselves and decided to go out and find the migrant fishermen and warn them not to catch fish in the area. However, because the passenger ship KM Tatamailau was scheduled to arrive at around 10 am, and the majority of adult men also worked as baggage porters in the port, they agreed to go and look for the migrant fishermen after KM Tatamailau had left.
However, on the other side of the port, Andreas Kaokapaitiparo (head of Hiripau village) and Jhon Johanis Yakiwur (head of Poumako village) came to ask the head of neighbourhood association 9 Poumako to discuss the issue of the permit issued to migrant fishermen at the Poumako police post. They were accompanied by two on-duty police officers, and several indigenous fisherfolk were also present. The document, which was said to be a permit, was read out so that everybody could hear.
Notwithstanding this, the indigenous fisherfolk were unsatisfied and protested. Their problem was that indigenous fisherfolk, community leaders and LEMASKO had not been invited to speak, find agreement and take the decision together. The issue triggered a quarrel which the police were able to mediate. Once they had left the police station, the neighbourhood association head suggested to the two village heads that they go home so as not to invite trouble. They both left using public transport.
11.30 am
After KM Tatamailau left Poumako port, all the younger indigenous fisherfolk started making towards the river mouth. They used about ten longboats, with an estimated four-to-six people in each boat. They went towards the river mouth which they guessed would be the place the migrant fishermen were looking for a catch. This movement of young people made some of their parents quite worried, including a mother who felt she had to go out to sea to advise the young people about the dangers of trying to settle such issues at sea, especially since the boats they were using were not particularly suitable, given the inclement weather. After hearing this advice, the young fisherfolk called off their plan and chose to wait for the migrant fishermen at the port.
13.00 pm
Several of the longboats that had left to chase the migrant fishing boats started to come back. As they came back, they pulled up alongside the migrant fishermen’s boats. Some of the young people climbed aboard the migrants’ boats. There were around two young indigenous people on each boat.
Around 14.30-15.00 pm
Gradually the migrant fisherfolk’s boats came back to the port, together with their indigenous escorts. Not long afterwards, the head of the migrant fishermen telephoned the head of neighbourhood association 9 Poumako to say that indigenous fisherfolk had confiscated and were holding migrants’ boats. Wanting to ensure the safety of the confiscated equipment, two of the migrant fishermens leaders, Sami Werinusi (a member of the Mimika Regency Guards (Satpol PP) and co-ordinator of the migrant fisherfolk) and Budi (a businessman from boat company Camar Papua), accompanied by some other people, went looking for the neighbourhood association head. Once they had met him, he was asked to discuss the issue at the harbour police office.
At that time, the migrant fishermen had already filled the police office, and even the road leading to it. For this reason, the majority of indigenous fisherfolk chose to remain outside the police post premises, mainly around the long row of kiosks across the street.
For unknown reasons, Sami Werinusi got angry and left the police post without excusing himself. He approached one of the indigenous fisherfolk, snatched the bottle he was holding and struck him on the head with it. Upon seeing this, the indigenous fisherfolk got angry and tensions rose towards Sami Werinusi and the group of migrant fishermen. Push and shove was inevitable. At that moment three shots were heard. Theodorus Camtar, who had been standing near the flagpole, was the target of one of these bullets which left him dying. Meanwhile two other young men, Rudi Safan and Gerardus Namipok were shot in the arm and hand respectively. The shots came from Chief Brigadier Yusuf Salasar (a member of the intelligence unit of Military Command Post 174/ATN). He opened fire whilst concealed behind the outside corner of the police post building.
Seeing this, the indigenous fisherfolk were angry. They chased Sami Werinusi who took refuge in the police station. Inside the station, they tried to get hold of Sami Werinusi and also went looking around the police station for the person who had fired the shots. In their efforts to do this, facilities both inside and outside the police post were destroyed. At the same time, second corporal Andi (a member of the intelligence unit of Mimika District Military Command 1710) was stabbed. Once the situation was under control, the police evacuated Theo’s body and the other victims to the Mimika General Regional Hospital.
16.00 pm
Accompanied by police and family members, Theo’s body and one of the wounded arrived at the Mimika general hospital. Theo’s body was held for several hours to carry out an autopsy, and then brought home by his family to Asmat village, Poumako.
Thursday 10 August 2017
11.00 am
Augustina (a female Papuan community leader) lead the prayers in the deceased’s home. The body was then blessed by the parish priest of St Emanuel Mapurujaya parish, Pastor Yonas Purnama OFM, and taken to the final resting place. At around 12.40 pm, Pastor Yonas Purnama led the burial ceremony in the Kaugapu public ceremony.
Situation after the incident.
The general situation for indigenous people in Poumako is slowly getting back to normal. Everybody has started to go about their daily activities as before, apart from the family of the deceased, Theodorus Camtar. Despite this, an atmosphere of mourning is still the dominant mood.
However the indigenous people are also being haunted by a feeling of anxiety and threat. The cause is a number of attempts to install fear they have received by telephone from different sources, including members of the Water Police Unit of Mimika Police HQ, members of the intelligence unit of Mimika District Military Command and the military police unit. In these telephone conversations they are asked about the whereabouts of fishing boats or equipment which is supposedly missing. They have been ordered to find and return them, if they don’t want to face new problems and further dealings with authority.
It is important to be aware that the principal issue in this bloody incident has not yet been deal with. All parties are urged to show restraint and let the police or competent institutions carry out investigations. The fact that a person was killed should not be obscured by spreading trivial stories concerning manufactured goods which can be replaced. Apart from the issue of the shooting, there is also a need to reveal which actors are involved in the fishing business around Poumako, which has already claimed victims.
This investigative report was compiled by a team from the Timika Diocese Justice and Peace Secretariat
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Problem Dialog Jakarta - Papua, KNPB: ULMWP Not Fighting For Dialogue

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A google translate. Be-aware google translate can be a bit erratic.
Original bahasa link at

http://suarapapua.com/2017/08/30/soal-dialog-jakarta-papua-knpb-ulmwp-tidak-berjuang-untuk-dialog/

Problem Dialog Jakarta - Papua, KNPB: ULMWP Not Fighting For Dialogue
By Arnold Belau - August 30, 2017



Ilustrasi logo Komite Nasional Papua Barat.

JAYAPURA, SUARAPAPUA.com - In response to the ongoing issue of the Jakarta - Papua dialogue, the West Papua National Committee (KNPB) strongly declared the rejected Jakarta - Papua dialogue to be conducted with the ULMP.

This strong rejection came after President Jokowi entrusted Father Dr. Nele Tebay, Pr as the coordinator of the Papua Peace Network to prepare for dialogue between Jakarta and Papua after several Papuan leaders met with President Joko Widodo at the presidential palace some time ago.

Victor Yeimo, chairman of KNPB Pusat to suarapapua.com, said that the KNPB's 7th KNPB meeting discussed the issue of dialogue between Jakarta and Papua.

"In response, we agreed to reject any dialogue with the colonial effort within the framework of NKRI, as the concept pursued by the Papua Peace Network (JDP)," he affirmed to suarapapua.com in Jayapura, Wednesday (08/30/2017).

Yeimo said, it affirmed that United Liberation Movement for West Papua (ULMWP) did not fight for dialogue, as prepared by JDP. However, he said, it remains consistent to solve the problems of Papua and Jakarta through the international mechanism of the struggle for self-determination by referendum.

According to Yeimo, there is no other way to resolve the issue of Papua other than through a referendum which he thinks is more democratic, fair and final.

"We convey that ULMWP does not strive for dialogue, but encourages the right of self-determination. We reject unilateral compromise in the name of conflict and the struggle of the Papuan people. We urge Jakarta and all parties to push for resolution of the West Papua issue through a just, democratic and final referendum, "he said.

Melkias Beanal, chairman of I KNPB Mnukwar region to suarapapua.com added, Papuans are forced into the frame of NKRI brought pressure of the Indonesian Military on
1969. He said, Papuans are aware and understand when they get the entrance to NKRI so that they are also struggling to get out of the exit
Referendum.

"Under the leadership of the Colonial President whoever in the NKRI Papuans will not accept any offer of a referendum kecute in accordance with Indonesia who feel the value
democracy. We Papuan west Papua feel 14 Papuan people who meet with the president of Indonesia and form a team for dialogue Jakarta - Papua need to be aware that
People of Papua are the same as other humans in the World, "said Beanal.

According to Beanal, 14 Papuan Papuans asked for a Jakarta-Papua dialogue to foster human rights abuses and increase injuries to the hearts of the West Papuan masses and to foster new violations for the destruction of ethnic Melanesians in the land of Papua.

"So We the people of west Papua in Manokwari, through the media of West Papuan People, KNPB Mnukwar refused any dialogue in any form and immediately gave the opportunity
To Papuans from Sorong to Merauke to determine the future of Papuan Papuans themselves through a referendum as a democratic solution, "he said.

Pewarta: Arnold Belau

1) Eastern Indonesian KADIN on Freeport 51 Percent Share Divestment

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2) Government praised for successfully dealing with PT Freeport

3) Four Augustinian priests ordained in West Papua’s ‘Bible City’
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1) Eastern Indonesian KADIN on Freeport 51 Percent Share Divestment
Sunday, 03 September 2017 | 08:18 WI
JAKARTA, NETRALNEWS.COM - The government's success in the agreement with PT Freeport Indonesia (PTFI) on 51 percent share divestment was assessed because of strong lobbying.
Vice Chairman of Chamber of Commerce and Industry of Eastern Indonesia Area (KTI) Andi Rukman Karumpa said that by controlling the majority of PT Freeport's shares, the government should encourage the construction of smelters in Papua.
"The position of the government is very strong and persistent to build KTI, it is better for smelter [construction] in Papua," said Andi Rukman in a publication, Saturday (9/2/2017).
Mining Law Number 4 Year 2009 does not mention the location of the smelter has to be at the mine site. However, smelter development in Papua is expected to encourage equity of industry and economic prosperity to the eastern region.
"So, we in the eastern region also need industrialization. So that not all come to the island of Java, "he said.
Furthermore, Andi said by controlling most of Freeport's shares, the government can control the company's strategic policy, including smelter development.
He said that the attention of President Joko Widodo is very big to Papua and eastern Indonesia.
Therefore, he requested that the relevant ministries encourage the Freeport smelter to be built in Papua to stimulate industrialization in the region. The smelter development is also expected to be integrated with infrastructure development in Papua.
"The infrastructure connectivity must be filled with the development of new industrial and economic areas in Papua, so the Freeport smelter is highly relevant."
Currently as much as 40 percent of PT Freeport Indonesia concentrate is shipped and consumed by smelters in Gresik, East Java. (*)


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http://www.antaranews.com/en/news/112479/government-praised-for-successfully-dealing-with-pt-freeport

2) Government praised for successfully dealing with PT Freeport

5 hours ago | 699 Views















Jakarta (ANTARA News) - A parliamentary leader has praised the government of President Joko Widodo for having successfully secured a deal to own 51 percent of shares of US mining giant PT Freeport Indonesia. 

"We praised Jokowi for his policy to successfully secure 51 percent of Freeport shares, while the governments tax receipt would not decline, and to impose a special mining business permit (IUPK) instead working contract on PT Freeport," the deputy chairman of House of Representatives Commission VII on energy and mineral resources, Satya Widya Yudha, said in a press release received here on Saturday.

The politician from the countrys second biggest political party Golkar stated that Freeport has been ready to invest US$20 billion in additional business, including building a smelter.

In view of that, he hoped that all national elements, especially the people of Papua where the mining operation is located, would fight together for an eventual 100 percent shareholding.

Commission VII member Kurtubi shared his view that the government deserved praise for its successful negotiation.

The politician from Nasdem party especially underlined the governments success in persuading Freeport to leave the working contract used so far and switch to IUPK for its operation. 

A member of the Regional Representatives Council (DPD) from Papua, Charles Simare Mare, thanked Jokowi for his success in securing 51 percent of PT Freeport Indonesia shares and hoped that the central government would involve more Papuans in the business.

PT Freeport Indonesia has announced its long-term plan after reaching a deal with the Indonesian government through negotiations so far.

"We would like to gladly announce that an agreement on framework to support the operation and investment has now been implemented in Papua. The achievement for an understanding on the structure of common agreement is significant and positive for all stakeholders," PT Freeport Indonesias president and chief executive officer Richard C Adkerson said in a written statement received by Antara on Wednesday (Aug 30).

According to it, PT Freeport Indonesia would change its working contract into IUPK that will give long-term operation right for the company until 2041.

The Indonesian government would give guarantee on fiscal and legal certainty during the IUPK tenure, while PT FI would be committed to build a new smelter in Indonesia within a five-year period.

Freeport-McMoran has agreed to divest its shares in PT FI based on a reasonable market price to make Indonesias holding of PT FI shares reach 51 percent.(*)
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3) Four Augustinian priests ordained in West Papua’s ‘Bible City’

Sep 02, 2017









The Order of St Augustine (OSA) celebrated four new ordinations in the Diocese of Manokwari-Sorong, West Papua.
SORONG: The Order of St Augustine (OSA) celebrated four new ordinations in the Diocese of Manokwari-Sorong, West Papua.

Given that the number of Augustinians in Indonesia has greatly dropped in the past few years, this represents an extraordinary event for the local congregation, which falls within the Philippines province.

The ordination ceremony took place last Monday, 28 August, feast day of Saint Augustine, in the faraway island region, in the presence of 50 priests, two retired Indonesian bishops, and the provincial superior of the Order.

Archbishop Datus Hilarion Lega, bishop of Manokwari-Sorong, led the service with Mgr Alfred Gonti Pius Datubara, archbishop emeritus of Manado (North Sumatera), and Mgr Joseph Theodorus Suwatan, Bishop Emeritus of Manado (North Sulawesi).

Father Istoto Raharjo, a Java priest in "home mission" in the diocese, told AsiaNews that the four newly ordained priests are Frs Athanasius Bame, Philip Sedik, Stevanus Alo, and Mikael Janggu.

"Fr Atan Bame and Fr Philip Sedik are native to Papua,” said the priest. “Fr Mikael and Fr Stefanus Alo come from Manggarai and Sikka Maumere, East Nusa Tenggara province."

During the homily, Mgr Lega invited the new priests to remain faithful to Christ and his Church in their pastoral mission.

"Remain humble," said the bishop. "Being faithful to the Church means that priests are spiritually linked to their commitment to prayer and the safe-keeping of their consecrated lives, despite their pastoral work and activities."

The prelate reiterated that priests are called to pursue a pastoral, not a political mission. In memory of Saint Augustine, every priest and seminarian in the order is required to follow the path of the saint's life, marked by two aspects: simplicity and consecrated life.

The previous day, a new church dedicated to Saint Augustine was consecrated in Manokwari. The city is known in Indonesia as "Bible City " because the majority of its population is Christian, particularly Catholic.--Asianews
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1) Papuan human rights advocacy association to hold international conference

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2) Forum leaders gather in Samoa
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1) Papuan human rights advocacy association to hold international conference
12 hours ago 
Pewarta: By Libertina Widyamurti Ambari

Bogor, W Java, Sept 2 (ANTARA News) - The Association of Advocacy for Policies and Human Rights (PAK-HAM) of Papua will hold an international conference on human rights on the protection and preservation of natural resources based on local wisdoms.

"It is planned that the conference will be held in March, 2018, in Bali," Chairman of the Organizing Committee, Uten Sutendy, said in Puncak, Bogor District, West Java.

He stated that the committee will invite participants from neighboring and fellow countries, including those who are concerned over the preservation and exploitation of natural resource; spiritual leaders from Tibet, Japan, and Brazil; as well as those representing the largest religion of Islam and Christian.

"We are thinking of inviting Muhammad Yunus as he has been successfully using the local wisdom of Bangladesh as the basis to develop the country, especially in the economic sector, for which he had won the Noble Prize too," Uten noted.

According to him, local wisdoms in Indonesia are the capital of the nation and the world. "We want these wisdoms to be a paradigm of developmental value for the country," he remarked.

He added that at present, natural resources around the world have been exploited by liberalism, capitalism, and socialism-communism, whereas Indonesia has local wisdoms that can be applied to preserve and maintain the resources.

"The indigenous people in Papua and the Baduy tribe in Serang and Banten are the two models of traditional community in which people still hold and apply their local wisdoms to protect and sustain their lands," Uten revealed.

PAK-HAM Papua is headquartered in Jayapura, Papua Province. Its special missions include mapping the customary lands, investigating and solving violence on human rights in Papua through cooperation with the government, as well as speeding up the development program in the easternmost province of Indonesia.(*)

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2) Forum leaders gather in Samoa

Pacific leaders have been arriving in Samoa for a week of regional meetings.
19 minutes ago 
Today the Small Island States Leaders will meet and tomorrow there will be the official opening of the 48th Pacific Islands Forum summit.
Samoa's Prime Minister Tuilaepa Sailele Malielegaoi, who will be taking over the chairmanship of the Forum, highlighted this week's summit theme of 'The Blue Pacific.
He said it aims to ensure a sustainable, secure, resilient and peaceful Pacific.
"Implementing the Blue Pacific will require a whole of Forum commitment to the benefits of acting together as one blue continent. Above all else it will require a different way of working together that prioritises the Blue Pacific as the core driver of foreign policy-making and collective action," he said.
Tuilaepa already held a bilateral meeting with French Polynesia's Edouard Fritch as a precursor to the Polynesian Leaders Group summit which is also due to be held today.
At the Forum summit most countries will be represented by their respective heads of government.

The secretary-general of the Forum Secretariat, Dame Meg Taylor, said she regretted that Fiji wouldn't be represented by its prime minister.
"Fiji has played a very important role in the Oceans Conference. It will play a very important role in COP23 as we go ahead. I would have very much wished that the prime minister woudl have been here and carried the flag with the Pacific going ahead. Now the prime minister will do it the way he wants to."
New Zealand will send a senior minister and New Caledonia will be represented by the caretaker president after last week's failure in Noumea to elect a government.
400 police officers have been assigned to provide security for delegations of the Forum meeting as well as the annual tourism Teuila Festival which is also underway this week.
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1) West Papua advocacy groups urge Forum action

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2) Pacific Islands Forum: at a glance

3) Fatal shooting a military response to Papua fishing dispute

4) Family planning in Lebak makes significant progress
5) Freeport still in charge of Grasberg mine after divestment

6) EDITORIAL: Shaky deal with Freeport

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http://www.radionz.co.nz/international/pacific-news/338676/west-papua-advocacy-groups-urge-forum-action

1) West Papua advocacy groups urge Forum action

5:28 pm today 

West Papua advocacy groups based in Australia and New Zealand have urged the Pacific Islands Forum to act decisively on Papua.
Representatives of the Forum’s 18 members are gathering for their annual leaders summit in Apia this week

Maire Leadbeater presents her petition urging the government to address the ongoing human rights situation in West Papua.  Photo: RNZ / Daniela Maoate - Cox

Two years ago Forum leaders agreed to send a fact finding mission to Papua to investigate ongoing allegations of human rights abuses by Indonesian security forces.
Indonesia's government, however, has not agreed to a mission.
Both the Australia West Papua Association and New Zealand's West Papua Action Auckland group want the Forum to press Jakarta more on the matter.
The two groups cite recent moves by seven Pacific Island nations to raise the issue of human rights in West Papua at the UN General Assembly and UN Human Rights Council.
Vanuatu, Nauru, Tonga, Solomon Islands, Tuvalu, the Marshall Islands and Palau have called for the UN to take account of the evidence of widespread human rights violations and conduct
 a systematic investigation with recommendations for actions.
The two advocacy groups have called on the Forum to support the seven Pacific nations call at the UN to investigate and report on the alleged human rights abuses in West Papua.
The Forum, they said, should establish a regional Fact Finding Team to conduct a Human Rights Assessment in West Papua.
Vanuatu's Justice Mnister Ronald Warsal addresses the 34th regular session of the UN Human Rights Council regarding the human rights situation in West Papua. Photo: webtv.un.org

In its open letter to Forum leaders, the Association said it was encouraged that the leaders previously agreed the issue of West Papua should remain on their agenda. But it suggested the issue should not be left to drift just because Jakarta was unhappy about the idea of a fact-finding mission.
"The Indonesian President has said that West Papua is now open and the authorities are saying that the human rights situation is improving. If this is the case why not allow a PIF fact-finding mission to the territory?" said the open letter.
There was also a call for the re-inscription of West Papua with the UN Committee on Decolonisation.
"The Special Committee on decolonization visited New Caledonia in March 2014 and AWPA urges the PIF leaders to ask the Committee to also visit West Papua on a fact finding mission to investigate how the West Papuan people have fared under Indonesian rule," said the Association.
West Papua Action Auckland said that the Forum had "turned away from addressing self-determination for West Papua, despite the fact that the people of West Papua were denied any say in the matter when Indonesia took over the territory in the 1960s".

Leaders at the Pacific Islands Forum summit in Port Moresby in 2015 (pictured) and in Pohnpei in 2016 raised concerns about the human rights situation in West Papua.  Photo: RNZI / Koro Vaka’uta

The issue of West Papua was raised in Port Vila in July at the 14th Pacific Regional Meeting of the African Carribean and Pacific Group's Joint Parliamentary Assembly with the European Union.
As host, Vanuatu introduced the item on West Papua, which was supported by Kiribati, Marshall Islands, Nauru, Samoa, Tonga, and, "on purely humanitarian grounds", by Papua New Guinea.
The communiqué stated that "members called for the immediate halt to the brutal and senseless killings of the indigenous people of West Papua and referred the matter to the next JPA meetings".
Meanwhile, both Papua advocacy groups urged Forum leaders to give West Papua official status within the organisation, saying there were already many non-self governing territories and organisations that have this.
"The Forum should grant observer or associate status to the representatives of the West Papuan people, the United Liberation Movement for West Papua," said West Papua Action Auckland.
“This would put the Forum in a strong position to mediate dialogue between the ULMWP and Jakarta.”
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http://www.sbs.com.au/news/article/2017/09/04/pacific-islands-forum-glance
2) Pacific Islands Forum: at a glance
Source: AAP 4 HOURS AGO  
Political leaders from Pacific Island nations are gathering in Samoa to debate responses to issues including climate change, trade and global conflict.

What is the Pacific Islands Forum?
* The forum was founded in 1971 and brings together political leaders from 16 states and two territories including Australia, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, Samoa and Fiji.
* It also includes much smaller Pacific nations including Niue, Tuvalu and Kiribati.
* Organisations including the World Bank and the United Nations observe the forum, as do neighbours including Guam, American Samoa and Timor Leste.
Why is it important?
* The forum is an important opportunity for leaders from small island states to voice their ambitions and concerns at the same table as much larger and more powerful neighbours.
* It allows countries to debate and develop regional strategies to tackle issues including climate change, trade and development, regional security and economic growth.
What's on the agenda?
* Maximising incomes from industries including tourism, fisheries and deep-sea mining, and governing how finances are spent.
* Addressing climate change and disaster risks by ensuring development is sustainable and resilient.
* Tackling rising sea levels, especially in light of President Donald Trump's decision to pull the United States out of the Paris Climate Agreement.
* Responding to shifts in global power, conflict and international relations, as China rises and America refocuses its attentions.
* Acting on rising poverty and inequality, food security and the depletion of natural resources.
* Nuclear waste issues in the North Pacific, ongoing conflict in West Papua, and freedom and fairness in regional political elections.

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http://www.radionz.co.nz/international/pacific-news/338652/fatal-shooting-a-military-response-to-papua-fishing-dispute

3) Fatal shooting a military response to Papua fishing dispute

1:12 pm today 

An investigation into a fatal incident on Papua's south coast last month found an Indonesian military officer used gunfire to respond to a melee in a fishing dispute.
The incident on 9 August left one West Papuan dead and three other people injured, according to an investigative report by the Timika Diocese Justice and Peace Secretariat.

Tensions had been brewing in Mimika regency's Port Pomako over a dispute between indigenous fishermen and better-equipped migrants from other parts of Indonesia who were dominating the catch.
In the months leading up to the incident, indigenous fishermen made representations to local authorities on their grievances, and talks had been held on finding a solution in the form of a permit-based system.
However, indigenous fishermen had been excluded from the latest talks and raised issue when a group of migrant fisherman returned to fishing despite the matter being unresolved.
Some of the migrants' boats were apprehended by the indigenous group before the matter ended up in discussions outside the local police station.
According to the Timika Diocese report, a melee broke out when one of the migrant fishers' leaders, a municipal policeman, assaulted one of the indigenous people.
In response to the fracas, a member of the intelligence unit of Military Command, Chief Brigadier Yusuf Salasar, began shooting from the police post.
A Papuan, Theodorus Camtar, was fatally shot and two other citizens were injured by the gunfire.
The indigenous fishermen became angry and searched for the shooter. As they did so, facilities both inside and outside the police post were destroyed.
Another member of the military intelligence unit was stabbed.

When the situation was finally brought under control, police evacuated Theodorus Camtar's body and the other victims to the Mimika General Regional Hospital.
The newspaper Tabloid Jubi reported last month that the head of the local Cendrawasih Military Command, George Elnadus Supit, subsequently apologised to the families of victims in the incident.
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http://www.antaranews.com/en/news/112487/family-planning-in-lebak-makes-significant-progress
4) Family planning in Lebak makes significant progress
18 hours ago
Pewarta: Otniel Tamindael
Jakarta (ANTARA News) - The family planning program through the presence of Family Planning Villages, better known as Kampung KB, in Lebak District, Banten Province, has made a significant progress in improving the welfare of the local community.

Indonesia has launched the Kampung KB as part of its efforts to revitalize the national family planning program that will help improve the health of its citizens.

Family planning program in Indonesia has become a role model for many developing countries after it succeeded in reducing total fertility rates and population growth.

In the past several years, the countrys family planning program did not see any significant progress, and needed to be revitalized through the Kampung KB program. 

According to Lebak Department of Population Control, Family Planning, Women Empowerment and Child Protection (DP2KB-P3A) Chief Muzakir Hakiki Atim, Kampung KB is believed able to generate community participation in realizing village development towards prosperity.

Muzakir remarked in Lebak on Sunday that the local government encouraged the Kampung KB to be the locomotive of development agents in the villages with the aim of overcoming poverty and unemployment.

Moreover, Lebak District still bears the backward areas so it needs hard work to catch up with it.

But Muzakir said the presence of Kampung KB in 28 villages from 28 sub-districts in Lebak is really capable of prospering the community.

According to him, the success of the Kampung KB is inseparable from the high public participation to support the empowerment of various fields of development, such as economic, social, education, health and culture.

Currently, he said, community economic actors in Kampung KB grow with the small and medium business actors (SMEs) in producing various foods, bamboo handicrafts, and even metal industry production.

"We appreciate the presence of Kampung KB in Lebak, because based on the results of field evaluation, the program is capable of prospering the local community," Muzakir said.

Further, he noted that the local government as a public servant, will of course work hard through the work unit of the local area to encourage the welfare of Kampung KB community in Lebak, Banten Province.

In addition, the Indonesian easternmost province of Papua has also made a significant progress with family planning program with an increasing number of Kampung KB in a number of districts.

According to Papua National Demography and Family Planning Office (BKKBN) spokesman Charles Brabar, the number of Kampung KB in Papua continues to grow in line with the Nawacita Program of President Joko Widodo (Jokowi) to build Indonesia from the rural areas.

Charles remarked in Biak, Papua, on Tuesday, that until the end of August 2017, there have been 29 Kampung KB in almost all districts in the province of Papua.

The presence of the family planning villages in some districts in Papua, according to Charles, has provided an understanding for both the pregnant women and those who have just given birth to regularly check their health at the health integrated service posts, or Posyandu.

Kampung KB is a miniscule part of guiding demographic changes in a progressive fashion. Family planning and family development programs must involve all elements in the National Demography and Family Planning Agency.

Through the Kampung KB, the government wants to enhance public awareness about the importance of family planning as its benefits extend beyond just a womans health to her entire well-being and prosperity.

When couples choose to have smaller families, it also ensures that they will enough means to provide for them and build a more prosperous future not only for themselves, but for the entire nation.

Accordingly, all villages need to have Kampung KB to support the success of family planning program. This will result in a better quality of life and will also help underprivileged families.

"Kampung KB is designed to be a model of integrated development pertaining to the population, and will be implemented at the micro level," BKKBN Head Surya Chandra Surapaty said some time ago.

The family planning program is expected to further improve the welfare of the community and to break the chain of poverty.

According to him, the family planning will also result in people paying more attention to aspects such as the ideal age for marriage, ideal distance between child births, the number of children, expenses required for education and health of the entire family.

Moreover, some years down the lane, Indonesia will be able to reap the demographic bonus, a condition where it will have more people in the productive bracket than unproductive citizens, such as the elderly and children.

Of course, even a demographic bonus can turn into a disaster unless it is properly controlled with good planning.

The transmigration program, long out of the spotlight, needs to be revived.

Transmigration is important for Indonesia as the country has a high rate of population explosion.

Transmigration is proven to have made a considerable contribution to the economic growth in various areas that were not too well populated.  

On the other hand, demographic bonus can lead to better economic development and progress in the fields of agriculture and industry.

The government and the younger generation must be prepared for the demographic bonus that Indonesia is predicted to witness after 2020.(*)
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http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2017/09/04/freeport-still-in-charge-of-grasberg-mine-after-divestment.html
5) Freeport still in charge of Grasberg mine after divestment
Jakarta | Mon, September 4, 2017 | 01:51 pm

Freeport McMoran (FCX) has stated that it still controls Grasberg mine in Papau, even after the company divested 51 percent of its shares in its subsidiary, PT Freeport Indonesia, as required by Indonesian law.
“FCX will continue to take control over the operation and management of PTFI,” said FCX in its statement last week.
Freeport McMoran CEO Richard Adkerson said his company would concentrate in underground mining next year because of the depletion of reserves resulting from its open mining activities.
In early the 1980s, the company mined 800,000 to 1 million tons of copper concentrates per day. Currently, it produces 100,000 tons of copper concentrates. The company said the underground mining needed an investment of US$20 billion.
Meanwhile, the Energy and Mineral Resources Ministry’s mineral and coal director general, Gatot Ariyono, confirmed that Freeport would become main operator of the Grasberg mine because Indonesia needed to gradually learn about underground mining.
“It is very technical. We cannot immediately take over,” said Bambang over the weekend as reported by tempo.co.
The divestment agreement with PT Freeport Indonesia was announced by Adkerson during a joint press conference with Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati and Energy and Mineral Resources Minister Ignasius Jonan on Aug. 29.
The company also agreed to convert its contract of work (CoW) into a special mining permit (IUPK), build a smelter within the next five years and increase its contribution to state revenue from its Grasberg mine in Papua. (bbn)  
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http://www.thejakartapost.com/academia/2017/09/04/editorial-shaky-deal-with-freeport.html

6) EDITORIAL: Shaky deal with Freeport

Jakarta | Mon, September 4, 2017 | 07:45 am

The agreement in principle between the government and Freeport-McMoRan last week requiring the American company to increase Indonesian ownership in its gold and copper mining subsidiary PT Freeport Indonesia (FI) in Papua from the current 9.36 percent to 51 percent by no means reflects significant progress in resolving once and for all the dispute over FI.
As “the devil is in the details,” the most difficult issues related to the valuation of the FI shares and the time frame for the divestment have yet to be negotiated. Yet this provisional deal has secured Freeport a license to operate the world’s largest gold and copper mine until 2041.
We don’t think the divestment deal will scare off other mining investors. Nor is it a sign of rising resource nationalism in the country, as several foreign analysts have observed. It instead allows FI to resume copper concentrate exports and gives it fiscal and legal certainty for the next 24 years to recoup the estimated US$20 billion in additional investment needed to expand the mine and shift much of the mining work underground.
Freeport’s commitment to divest is a pledge to no longer play games with Indonesian law. It is simply a long-delayed enforcement of the law for FI, which has operated the giant mine since 1973, generating more than 95 percent of Freeport’s consolidated gold sales and more than a quarter of its revenues.
FI’s contract of work (CoW), which was extended in 1991 by 20 years to 2021, required Freeport to divest at least 51 percent of its shares by 2011.
But this stipulation has never been enforced for various reasons, including the government’s inability and other national interests to finance the acquisition and disagreement on the share valuation.
The absence of clear-cut rules on the divestment time frame and the seemingly different opinions regarding the method of valuation could see negotiations on the divestment details drag on for years. Freeport has insisted that the shares be priced based on fair market value. Earlier reports put Freeport’s estimate of the value of the 41 percent divestment at $6.6 billion, which apparently takes into account the mine’s gold and copper reserves.
But the government valued the 41 percent equity at only $2.46 billion, arguing that the divestment price should not include the value of the reserves that will still be in the ground after the end of the contract in 2041. The share value should be based entirely on the value of the business, which also depends on gold and copper prices.
This argument makes a lot of sense, because after 2041, the whole mine will be returned to the government, and all the remaining reserves or deposits certainly will belong to the government as the owner.
Hopefully, the technical details for implementing the provisional agreement will be completed before the end of 2018. Otherwise inordinate nationalistic sentiment that will likely rise in the run-up to the April 2019 presidential and legislative elections will overshadow the negotiations.


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1) Signs that Jakarta is entering West Papua dialogue process

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2) Government encourages Papua`s youth to become pilots

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http://www.radionz.co.nz/international/pacific-news/338714/signs-that-jakarta-is-entering-west-papua-dialogue-process
1) Signs that Jakarta is entering West Papua dialogue process
9:27 am today 
There are signs of a significant peace dialogue opening up between Indonesia's government and West Papuans.
Various Papuan civil society, church and customary leaders met with Indonesia's president Joko Widodo last month about establishing dialogue over problems in Papua.
Terms of reference for the dialogue are not known yet, but the Jakarta meeting agreed on the Catholic priest, Dr Neles Tebay, taking on a mediator role.
One of the participants at the meeting, Yan Christian Warinussy of the Papua-based Institute of Research, Investigation and Development of Legal Aid, said it was unclear what the next step would be.
"Because after we meet with Jokowi (President Joko Widodo) three weeks ago, we not see what next step to take the peaceful dialogue (forward) after we talked with Jokowi. That is the problem, I think."


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http://www.antaranews.com/en/news/112505/government-encourages-papuas-youth-to-become-pilots

2) Government encourages Papua`s youth to become pilots

8 hours ago | 843 Views
Manokwari, West Papua (ANTARA News) - The central government has encouraged the youth of Papua and West Papua to join the flight education program in order to become pilots.

West Papua Governor Dominggus Mandacan remarked here on Sunday that this year, the central government, through the Ministry of Transportation, has organized an affirmative education program for majoring in the field of aviation.

"The program has been announced, and the online registration process is also open. The government wants the youth of Papua and West Papua to enroll in the program and become pilots," Governor Mandacan remarked.

As part of this program, he said the government of West Papua Province is ready to bear the costs if the number of cadets from West Papua exceeds the quota set by the central government.

"In total, the allotment for Papua and West Papua is 12 students, but if the number is more, the local government is ready to bear the costs for the additional applicants," he revealed.

In the meantime, spokesman of the West Papua Transportation Office Max L. Sabarofex said bright youth, with sound physical and mental fitness, from Papua and West Papua were a prerequisite for the flight education program.

The affirmative program offered by the central government is currently in the registration phase that started on Aug 31 and will end on October 31, 2017, and Sabarofex has already informed all districts and cities in West Papua about it.(*

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Indonesian president looks at West Papua dialogue

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Indonesian president looks at West Papua dialogue
From 3:02 pm today 
There are signs of a significant peace dialogue opening up between Indonesia's government and West Papuans.
Various Papuan civil society, church and customary leaders met with Indonesia's president Joko Widodo last month about establishing dialogue over problems in Papua.
Terms of reference for the dialogue are yet to be confirmed, but Jakarta is reluctant to have talks with the United Liberation Movement for West Papua which broadly represents the indigenous people of Indonesia's Papua region.
One of the participants at the meeting was Yan Christian Warinussy of the Papua-based Institute of Research, Investigation and Development of Legal Aid.
He told Johnny Blades that the Papuans asked the president to recommend a mediator for the dialogue.



TRANSCRIPT

YAN CHRISTIAN WARINUSSY: And then Jokowi asked how about Father Neles Tebay (Catholic priest and coordinator of the Papua Peace Network)? And we agreed. Now he is like a special envoy, or the person in charge to host the dialogue.
JOHNNY BLADES: What is the dialogue going to be about?
YCW: I asked Jokowi (President Joko Widodo) and his government  (if) they can make problem solving to human rights violations in West Papua. But I think the Indonesian government like to make not special dialogue between Jakarta and West Papua about the human rights or military abuses, but they like to make "sectoral" dialogue, like economic development, like infrastructure, you know... But I think the Indonesian government does not like to make peaceful dialogue with the ULMWP (the United Liberation Movement for West Papua).
JB: Jakarta, is it willing to discuss the political status of Papua, or not?
YCW: I think not.
JB: And you're also saying that Jakarta does not want to have discussion with the ULMWP?
YCW: Yeah.
JB: Doesn't the ULMWP broadly represent West Papuans? We know that in the Melanesian Spearhead Group and other fora, that the ULMWP is recognised by the international community?
YCW: Yeah I think the ULMWP already stands by human rights, and stands by self-determination. They (ULMWP) not like to make dialogue about development, economic development, social, cultural development and also infrastructure. But they'd like dialogue with Indonesia about self-determination and about human rights.So I think these are the different issues that the ULMWP like and the Indonesian government like.
JB: What is the next step? Will this dialogue still happen, even without the ULMWP?
YCW: I don't know. Because after we meet with Jokowi three weeks ago, we not see what next step to take the peaceful dialogue (forward) after we talked with Jokowi. That is the problem, I think.
JB: What do people in Papua and West Papua provinces want?
YCW: The majority of the people in West Papua, they'd like to get independence. They not like to discuss another topic from independence and self-determination.
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