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1) Police Officers Shot by Air Force Troops in Papua

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2) France urged to comply with UN decolonisation process

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1) Police Officers Shot by Air Force Troops in Papua

By : Banjir Ambarita | on 9:19 PM October 02, 2015

Category : NewsCrime

  
Jayapura, Papua. Indonesian Air Force personnel in the early hours of Friday accidentally shot two police officers at Jayapura's Sentani Airport while trying to disband a group of intruders.

Papua Police Chief Insp. Gen. Paulus Waterpauw said the incident happened at around 2.30 a.m. local time, when a group of people, reportedly under the influence of alcohol, was found damaging facilities at the airport.

The two police officers arrived to intervene, but then suddenly members of the Air Force's Special Forces unit (Paskhas) opened fire, injuring the police officers.

First Brig. Riqzan and First Brig. Wahidin, who were wearing their uniforms, had reportedly tried to let the Air Force troops know they were police officers, but to no avail.

Riqzan was shot in his left thigh while Wahidin was shot in the back of his head. Both men survived the shooting, and were taken to the police hospital in Jayapura, Paulus said.

“The Paskhas [troops] saw the incident and they tried to stop it. It was very dark because it was late at night. We only found out that police officers were shot when it was over,” the commander of the Jayapura Air Base at Sentani Airport, Col. Purwoko Aji, said on Friday.

In a press conference on Friday, police chief Paulus confirmed that the shooting was an accident and that he would leave the investigation to the Air Force.

The Indonesian Military (TNI) and the police have in recent years had a series of violent -- and sometimes deadly -- confrontations in various parts of the country, often as part of turf wars.

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2) France urged to comply with UN decolonisation process
Updated at 6:40 am today
The Solomon Islands prime minister, Manasseh Sogavare, has called on France to implement the decolonisation process for French Polynesia approved by the United Nations two years ago.
In 2013, the General Assembly voted for a resolution sponsored by Solomon Islands to re-inscribe the territory on the UN decolonisation list but Paris has all but ignored the decision.
France has said it won’t buy into the UN decolonisation process and also ruled out holding an immediate independence referendum as requested by the territorial assembly.
Speaking at the UN in New York, Mr Sogavare has urged France to change.
"Solomon Islands calls on the administrating power to fully co-operate with the work of the special committee. We note that 30 years of nuclear testing by the administrating power caused widespread atomic radiation and has resulted in considerable health and environmental concern."
Meanwhile, Mr Sogavare also used his address to call on the UN to take immediate action on alleged human rights abuses in Indonesia's Papua region.
He said the Solomon Islands and other Pacific countries were seeking genuine dialogue and cooperation with Indonesia on the situation, but called on the UN Human Rights Council to do more to investigate abuses for itself.
"We appeal to the government of Indonesia to allow free and unrestricted access to this mission in the true spirit of regional cooperation. In the long term however the United Nations can not shy away from the root causes of these violations."
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1) Yurpinus Kalakmabin Chairman Appointed So KNPB Star Mountains

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A google translate of article in Jubi. Be-aware google translate can b e a bit erratic.
Original bahasa link at

1) Yurpinus Kalakmabin Chairman Appointed So KNPB Star Mountains




Folk excitement Star Mountains after the inauguration of the Chairman of the KNPB in Okhika, Thursday (01/10) - Jubi / Ist

Jayapura, Jubi - Governing Body Center West Papua National Committee (BPP-KNPB) officially inaugurated and handed the decree (SK) inauguration of the New Governing Body KNPB Stars in Okhika Pengunugan region. KNPB inauguration Star Mountains region (Pegubin) lively. In the inauguration ceremony was attended by Chairman of the Central KNPB Victor F Yeimo, accompanied by the First Chairman, Agus Kossay.

 
 The inauguration ceremony took place on Thursday (10.01.2015) at Okikha, Star Mountains. Folk present at the airfield Okhika KNPB pick up the presence of the board at the same center enliven the event with cultural dances. Not to forget the people shouting slogans Papua Merdeka.
Chairman of the Central KNPB, Victor Yeimo when contacted Jubi, Friday (02/10), said in front of hundreds of people and board KNPB this region can earnestly carry out the task in order to end the suffering of the people of Papua.
"I am advised that the people in the region remain committed to the fight and not give room for the occupiers to control the area beautiful and natural," said Victor Yeimo through a mobile phone connection, Friday (02/10).
According Yeimo, to the people of the region Star Pengunugan to stop being a traitor of the nation of Papua and fought with dignity.
KNPB chairman-elect, Yurpinus Kalakmabin said he and his colleagues will continue to struggle in accordance with the Free Papua peaceful path.
"We express gratitude for the trust and invite people to jointly fight for the right of self-determination for the people of Papua," said Yurpinus to Jubi through telephone connection, Friday (10/02/2015). (Abeth You)

                                                                      KNPB facebook



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VIDEO NEWS-West Papuans show their gratitude and support to Prime Minister ʻAkilisi Pohiva of Tonga and Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare after both leaders supported West Papua at speeches this week at the United Nations General Assembly.  

Yesterday on 2nd October hundreds of West Papuans gathered in Okikha in the in the Star Mountains region near the Papua New Guinea border to show their gratitude and to welcome Victor Yeimo, the Chairperson of the West Papua National Committee (KNPB). 

KNPB Chairperson Victor Yeimo addressed the crowd and was met with rousing cheers and joy when he told the people of how West Papua was being supported at the United Nations by Tonga and the Solomon Islands. 

All across West Papua our people are watching with great hope and encouragement at the incredible support shown by our fellow Pacific brothers and sisters, including at a UN level by the Solomon Islands, Tonga and Vanuatu.

Thank you so much to all these Pacific leaders and people all around the Pacific and the world for your continuing support and solidarity for our people and struggle which we are sure will one day lead us to freedom!

https://www.facebook.com/video.php?v=10156148517585010

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1) Sogavare urges UN to address West Papua

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2) Regional Leaders Urge Jokowi to Evaluate Security Measures in Papua

3) Security Forces Should Protect People, Not Shot Them, says Human Right Activist
4) Papua Governor Urges Freeport to Act on Government Demands
5) Illegal Hunting Triggers Deer’s Migration from Merauke to PNG
6) Police Shot in Self-defence , Says Chief

7) Wamena Hit by Fuel, Cement Shortages

8) Papuan Councilor Slams Police Killing
9)Violence Against Children in Papua Reaches Emergency Levels, Komnas PA Says
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http://www.solomonstarnews.com/news/national/8589-sogavare-urges-un-to-address-west-papua

1) Sogavare urges UN to address West Papua



Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare has called on the Geneva-based United Nations Human Rights Council to do more in investigating and monitoring allegations of human rights abuse and violations in the Papua and West Papua regions of Indonesia.

Sogavare made the call in New York Thursday in his address at the 70th Session of the United Nations General Assembly.

"All states have a legal duty and moral responsibility to uphold, respect and promote human rights and where necessary take preventive, protective and punitive measures against human rights abuses or violations in accordance with the UN Charter and applicable international laws,” Sogavare said.

“Against the foregoing backdrop, the General Assembly is well aware of the continuing concerns of human rights violations in the Papua and West Papua regions of Indonesia and Solomon Islands further calls on the Geneva based Human Rights Council to do more in investigating and monitoring of allegations of human rights abuse and violence on the ethnic Melanesians there.

"We (Solomon Islands) would like this issue attended to in a timely manner," he added.

Prime Minister Sogavare said Solomon Islands together with the Pacific Islands Forum are seeking genuine dialogue and cooperation with Indonesia to resolve and dissolve the reported allegations of human rights violations.

He said the Pacific Islands Forum Leaders in their recent 'Leaders Summit' in Port Moresby approved the deployment of a fact finding Mission to West Papua to establish the alleged abuse of human rights there.

He said the summit resolved to appeal to the Government of Indonesia to allow free and unrestricted access to this mission 'in the true spirit of regional cooperation.'

Prime Minister Sogavare added that, "In the long term however, the United Nations cannot shy away from the root causes of these violations."
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2) Regional Leaders Urge Jokowi to Evaluate Security Measures in Papua
 

                                                                 Police in West Papua – Jubi-

Jayapura, Jubi – A recent spate of shooting incidents and other violence in Papua since President Joko Widodo assumed office last year should prompt him to evaluate the government’s policy in the region, said a councilor.
A member of Commission I of the Papua Legislative Council for Politics, Government, Legal and Human Right Affairs, Laurenzus Kadepa said Papua local leaders including governor, regents and majors, as well as provincial and regional legislators need to take prompt action and urge the president to reconsider security measures in Papua.
Since the last incident which killed four high school students and wound dozens of civilian at Enarotali, Paniai on 8 December 2014 was occurred, series of violence were respectively happened in Papua, namely in Yahukimo, Dogiyai, Tolikara and twice shooting incidents in Timika in the recent month.
“In the first case, two civilians was shot dead and four others were wounded in the shooting incident allegedly perpetrated by military personnel, while in the second case, the police officers were suspected to shot dead a teenager and injure the other one. If necessary, local legislators and governments in Papua should urge the president to pull the military which the number is excessive out of Papua,” Kadepa told Jubi by phone on Thursday (1/10/2015).
He said the young generation is a national asset, the next generation. The question is why do they becoming target of shooting by the Military/Police over the years? What is the reason behind it?
The security force, he further said, would no longer be counted in tackling and uncovering those cases. Moreover, it has connection with their image. Kadepa doubted those cases could be uncovered transparently. “The local leaders shouldn’t be silent about this situation. This inhuman act must be stopped. State must pay attention and not being silent when civilians in Papua always become a shooting target of Military/Police. Papuans are also the Indonesian citizens,” he said.
The Chairman of Golkar Fraction of Papua Legislative Council, Ignasius W Mimin earlier said Papuans always become victims of injustice. They were chased, shot and killed, though they are part of this country. “Where is the State? If it happens all the time, where are they going? They were chased and killed on their own land. Until when are they going to scarify?” said Mimin on the earlier week.
According to him this situation has made the Papuans feeling not safe on their land. Many stigmas have always been connected with Papuans. Until when are they going to be treated like this? (Arjuna Pademme/rom)

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3) Security Forces Should Protect People, Not Shot Them, says Human Right Activist
 
Wamena, Jubi – A human rights activist in Central Highlands, Pater Jhon Jongga, urged both the military and the police’s top brass to control their personnel with guns.
The weapons are the state’s instruments to protect people and should not be used to shoot them instead.
“I think it’s a mistake if the officers were overpowering in using the weapons. I am going to tell the Military commanders as well as Police chiefs to control their personnel who carrying guns. Because it is for protecting people and not for random shooting,” Jongga said in Wamena on Wednesday to respond two shooting incidents against students in Timika, Mimika Regency.
He said, if those personnel couldn’t be strict by the rule, they shouldn’t carry the weapon all the time. The last shooting incident in Timika was a huge mistake and totally unacceptable by the entire Indonesian citizens. Moreover, the similar case was just occurred in Timika in last August.
“If they could not be discipline, they must not walk to the market or anywhere by carrying weapons. Because if there is a misunderstanding, they could not possibly control their emotion; then they might shot people. Moreover, if those personnel were drunk, carrying weapons could be worst. I just think it’s not right,” he said.
According to him, on Monday evening (28/9/2015), two vocational school students, Kalep Bagau and Fernando Saborefek , were allegedly shot by police officers at Gorong-Gorong, Timika. “The last shooting was perpetrated by Military personel, and now in the same date, the same place, the police officers did the same thing. Well, I think it was happening because the commanders have not yet controlled over their personnel, so they might not regret on what have they done. It is about shooting a human, moreover it was happened in town. So, those institutions must be stricter in taking control or giving legal sanction over their personnel. I insist it,” he said.
Meanwhile, the Papua Police stated it would involve a team of Central Forensic Laboratory to investigate the shooting that allegedly perpetrated by police officers which killed a student and injured the other at Gorong-Gorong Timika, Mimika Regency on Monday evening (28/9/2015). The Papua Police Chief Inspector General Paulus Waterpauw said the involvement of the Central Forensic Laboratory team is needed in order to determine the type of bullet and weapon used that cause fatalities. (Wsai H/rom)
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4) Papua Governor Urges Freeport to Act on Government Demands
 
Jayapura, Jubi – Papua Governor Lukas Enembe urged PT. Freeport Indonesia to immediately act on a 167-point proposal submitted to the provincial government in 2013.
“I told this to Freeport’s EVP Community Development Sonny Prasetyo on Wednesday (30/9/2015) when I accepted him at my office,” Enembe told reporters in Jayapura on Thursday (1/10/2015).
According to him, Freeport’s presence and impact was associated with the welfare of Papua people, thus the company must improve its role in developing the people of Papua as well as in raising the fiscal capacity of Papua Provincial Government and local governments surrounding Freeport’s operation areas.
Further, he said the Provincial Government went to reorganize the mining business in Papua as the elaboration of Law No.21/2001 on Special Autonomy for Papua Province. “In 2013, the Papua Provincial Government has submitted 17 points of request to renegotiate with Freeport,” he said. Of 17 points, he said, 11 points are coming from new Papua Government while other 6 points were part of agenda of former administration of 2009 – 2014 period.
When asked about the plan of visit of the three ministers to Freeport a few times ago, he admitted the Papua Provincial Government disapproved the visit on Sunday because it’s not a working day. “They have inform us about the visit, but it coincides with Sunday, while we have issued the rule for not having activities on that day,” Enembe said. (Alexander Loen/rom)
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5) Illegal Hunting Triggers Deer’s Migration from Merauke to PNG

Merauke, Jubi – Merauke Regent Romanus Mbaraka in his speech on the public consultation of technical working group on low emission development initiative held in Merauke City on Tuesday (1/10/2015) said all the time Merauke Regency is known for many deer. But due to illegal hunting it is now migrating to Papua New Guinea.
“When compared with few years ago, the deer are easy to find around the forest but in the recent years, due to illegal hunting it is hard to find it,” he said. Meanwhile, the deer population in Papua New Guinea from time to time is increasing because its population is protected and well maintained.
“Merauke shares the borderland with Papua New Guinea while the distance is not too far. So it is not surprising if its flora and fauna could migrate to Papua New Guinea, especially deer,” he said.
The Sota Sub-district Chief, Mike Walinaulik, some times ago admitted many Papua New Guineans came to Sota selling fish-oxygen bubbles and deer’ antlers. After getting some money, they use it to buy the primary stuffs such as rice, sugar or soap. (Frans L Kobun/rom)
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6) Police Shot in Self-defence , Says Chief
 
Jayapura, Jubi – Papua Police Chief Inspector General Paulus Waterpauw said three officers who were allegedly involved in the shooting dead of a vocational school student at Kampung Pisang, Gorong-Gorong, Mimika Baru Sub-district, Mimika Regency, acted in self-defense.
Waterpauw expressed regrets over the incident but said the officers’s action was in accordance procedure.
“It should have never happened, but it did happen. So it must be seriously tackled because its impact would be widespread,” he said.
“Three officers came to the scene after getting report from a resident whose the house was stolen and broke by a suspect allegedly friend of the victim. The officers were attacked while the patrol car was damaged. Three officers could be said being in hazard, so they opened an alert shot. But then they found out there are casualties, there’s people hit by bullet on the tight,” the Police Chief Waterpauw said at Papua Police Headquarters on Tuesday evening (30/9/2015).
According to him those officers didn’t act responsively but handled the situation carefully. They acted to not spreading the case. It’s according to procedure; giving an alert. “It had to be done if already disturbed the safety of life. If they did a violence effort, the casualties must be greater. They had to do prevention. If later there are casualties, I think it’s situational because it was night and dark,” he said.
Although he believe the officers were confronted and handled the situation properly, but to clarify this case, the Papua Police deployed a team led by Papua Deputy Police Chief Brigadier General Albert Rudolf Rodja to collect some information and conduct investigation whether the officers have acted properly on procedure base. “I express my condolence to the family. As the believer, I believe we never know the God’s plan. I cannot say too much. Only I apologize to what was happened. But actually they has tried to prevent this to be happened,” he said.
Three police officers who were on the scene are Brigadier Chief H, Brigadier Chief N and First Brigadier IP. Currently Provost has seized their guns for further investigation. Despites the investigation, Waterpauw said the Papua Police is currently prioritizing negotiation with victim’s family to burry the body immediately after the autopsy.
Earlier, on Monday (28/9/2015) at around 19:45 Papua Time, a vocational school student Kalleb Baggau (18 years) was shot on the chest and died, while another student Fernando Saborefek (17 years) was shot on the abdomen. (Arjuna Pademme/rom)
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7) Wamena Hit by Fuel, Cement Shortages

 
Wamena, Jubi – Wamena, the capital of Jayawijaya Regency, have experienced a shortage of fuel, cement and flour for the last four days.
The shortage came after airlines reduced flights as their fleets were undergoing maintenance, source said. Trigana Air, Cardig Air, Jayawijaya Dirgantara and Deraya operate an aircraft each for transporting the gasoline into that area. The airlines normally operate two aircraft each.
Sources told Jubi in Wamena on Tuesday (30/9/2015) that the aircraft only transported rice for poor (raskin).
Currently the Jayawijaya Industry, Trade and Cooperation Office conduct immediate coordination with relevant parties and aviation companies.
“We will also report this situation to the Regional Secretary and the Regent. Therefore, we anticipate this situation to not lasting and critical for us in Wamena, and for the Central Highland area in general,” said the Head of Jayawijaya Industry, Trade and Cooperation Office, Semuel Munua at his office on Tuesday.
“We also struggle that the existing aviation with restricted flying hours could be given clearance to serve three to four times a day,”
According to him, he will find a solution of this problem immediately because Wamena is an axis of the other central highland areas. If this situation could not be immediately solved, the highland areas would experience the similar situation.
He admitted the disturbance experienced by Jayawijaya Dirgantara and Cardig Air also affected Trigana Air, while some aviation companies that serve six regencies of the Central Highland area could not fulfill this need. At least aviation should fly to Wamena three to four times a day. “With the enforcement of flying hour restriction, the stock of all commodities is shortage, but we are trying to fit the supplies for next week. For instance, gasoline has reached 35 thousand rupiahs per litter in Wouma Sub-district, while the stock of diesel also quite rare because only two aircrafts, Trigana and Cardig, are operating,” he said.
“We also appealed to retailer for not taking benefit of this situation by increasing the price. Sanction would be applied to those who violate the standard of price, our stags will monitoring to the field and seize the stuffs,” Munua said.
Person in Charge of an aviation company in Wamena, Michael Bidure, said his company only receives order. “If we got diesel to be transported, we will carry it to Wamena. But related to the lack of gasoline, please ask to suppliers in Jayapura as well as retailers in Wamena, because we are only transporting,” Bidure said.
A gasoline and diesel retailer at Jalan Hom-Hom, Wamena said the increase of gasoline price is occurred due to lack of supplies from Jayapura since three days. Even on Tuesday (29/9/2015) people were queuing at some gasoline retail stalls for their motorcycles. While the retailers only get stock of few drums of gasoline only. (Islami/rom)
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8) Papuan Councilor Slams Police Killing
 
Jayapura, Jubi – A Papuan councilor criticized the shooting allegedly committed by the police that killed Kaleb Bagau and injured Efrando in the area of Gorong – Gorong, Timika, Papua, on Monday (28/09/2015), saying that Papuans have been treated like animals for so long.
The chairman of the faction of Golkar party of Papua Legislative Council (DPRP), Iknasius W Mimin, said Papuans have been victims of injustice, being chased, shot and killed.
“We are also part of this country but why are Papuans always killed. Where is the position of countries now? If this keeps happening, where are Papuans going since the Papuan people since in are their own land, they are chased and killed. For how long Papuans will be sacrificed? “Mimin said via phone when contacted by Jubi on Tuesday (09/29/2015).
According to him, such conditions make the Papuans now feel unsafe in their own land. Various stigma is always associated with the Papuans.
“DPRP, local governments, NGOs, and activists continue to stand for this but these condisitions are not changed. For how long Papuans would be treated like this, “he said.
The same was said by a member of DPRP of Commission I on Politics, Governance, Law and Human Rights, Laurenzus Kadepa. He said that, last August, the military shot six people in Mimika, two of them died and now police took a turn in shooting. Military and police in Papua are”racing” to shoot and kill civilians.
“Military/ police shot and killed native Papuans like a hunted animal. After the military shot people in Timika, members of the police did the same thing as a result two high school students became victims. Papua is in humanitarian crisis, “said Kadepa via phone. (Arjuna Pademme/ Tina)
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9)Violence Against Children in Papua Reaches Emergency Levels, Komnas PA Says
 
Manokwari, Jubi – The head of the National Commission for Child Protection, Arist Merdeka Sirait, said that violence against children in the province of Papua and West Papua is an emergency.
“Based on the reports, the number of violence against children in Papua and West Papua in Indonesia is very high so that the National Commission for Child Protection ( Komnas PA) declared violence against children in Papua as an emergency,” said Sirait in Manokwari on Tuesday (30/9/2015).
He said the brutal murder case of a pregnant woman and two toddlers in Bintuni Bay, West Papua, Papua last week showed emergency child abuse.
“The killing of the two kids and her mother who was four months pregnant by unidentified members of the military, more sadistic than the murder of the boy Angelene in Bali,” he said.
He explained that violence against children in Papua dominated by sexual violence and it is because of the liquor.
“I went to Manokwari Prison, discussed with children inmates who committed sexual violence . The cause they committed the crime was due to alcohol consumption” said Arist Merdeka.
He added that the National Commission for Child Protection will encourage the government of Papua and West Papua to continue the campaign to stop violence against children. (*/Tina)
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1) MSG chair highlight West Papua issue at UNGA

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2) Markus Haluk: Youth is Determinants of Papua Merdeka
3) Information spread by BIN about Warinussy is utterly ridiculous



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1) MSG chair highlight West Papua issue at UNGA
11:36 pm GMT+12, 01/10/2015, United States


The chair of the Melanesian Spearhead Group (MSG) and Solomon Islands Prime Minister, Manasseh Sogavare has raised the issue of West Papua at the United Nations General Assembly in New York.
 
Sogavare's statement is the second statement from the Pacific that has raised concerns of human rights violations in West Papua, with emphasis for the UN to intervene.
 
Tongan Prime Minister this week also highlighted humanrights abuses facing people of West Papua.
 
The Solomon Islands Prime Minister informed  UNGA on the developments at the MSG and the Pacific Islands Forum, including the plea to Indonesia to accept unrestricted access to a possible mission of a fact finding mission to West Papua.
 
He called on the United Nations to not shy away from the root causes of the problem in West Papua.
 
Sogavare called for an end to the human rights abuses in West Papua, and call “for the full and swift implementation of the 1960 declaration on the granting of Independence to colonized countries and peoples.”
 
He spoke of how in the end, the United Nations must address the root cause of the conflict.
 
SOURCE: WIRES/PACNEWS



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A google translate of article in Jubi. Be-aware google translate can be a bit erratc.
Original bahasa lonk at

2) Markus Haluk: Youth is Determinants of Papua Merdeka
Jayapura, Jubi - Work Team United Liberation Movement For West Papua (ULMWP) of the Interior, Markus Haluk asserted, the future of the nation of Papua is determined by the younger generation. Because young people are the future of Papua land belongs to Papua. Therefore, every youth of Papua, both of which still a student, or a student who has completed his education are important factors in realizing a very reliable in the struggle for freedom of the Free Papua.

 
 
"Youth are the backbone of this nation of Papua. Youth is the hope of the nation of Papua. You are the future of this nation of Papua. So important position and role of youth, because parents can only dream of, and the youth can continue the struggle and change the fate of the people of Papua, "said Markus Haluk in the sidelines of public debate and the Conference of Branch Council AMPTPI Jayapura, Saturday (3/10 / 2015).
He said the fighters of the Free Papua earlier, both domestically and abroad have entered the age of the twilight, so the baton must be embraced by the younger generation. "The position and role of youth is very vital in this fight, so the future of the nation is in your hands (youth). On the shoulders you're the hopes and ideals of this nation depend. Thus, the youth demanded an active role and appear in the frontline in the struggle for self-determination for the people of Papua, "urged former Secretary General (Sekjan) AMPTPI Center.
Mark is also the founder of the Association of Students of the Central Mountain Papua Indonesia se is told that he and the leaders of the Free Papua fighters in Honiara in June 2015 at the moment ULMWP is done by old people.
"After the gentlemen had nothing in the world, who continue? Well, this is what we must instill in each of us. You young people is what will determine this nation of Papua holy struggle. Because ULMWP name is now heard by the UN. So must there gereasi that sustains replace the old people, "he said.
Secretary General (Sekjan) AMPTPI Center, Yanuarius Lagoan said, in order to regenerate the land of Papua, the institute has set eight resolutions. Points to eight, it urged the Governor of Papua and West Papua to cover all points of sale of alcoholic liquor and commercial prostitution in Papua.
"Alcohol and places of prostitution in Papua is actually killing our young gerenasi Papua. We are a substitute for our ancestors, but the regional government is slowly continue claimed the lives of us accompanied with shootings, beatings, massacres, rape and so on, "said Lagoan. (Abeth You)
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3) Information spread by BIN about Warinussy is utterly ridiculous
Received from Yan Christian Warinussy on
22 September 2015

  Today when I arrived home late in the afternoon, I discovered a registration list produced by BIN, the State Intelligence Agency of
the Republic of Indonesia written on blue-coloured paper with the heading ‘Religious/Traditional Leaders'. It consisted of eight columns
with personal information about me and my family.   I have no idea where these BIN people got this informationfrom
which, I have to say, is completely wrong. For example, the document had the wrong information for the day of my birth. The information
about my wife, the place and date of her birth was also wrong. .Moreover the names of my children were wrong,

  It was stated that I had been calling for a referendum to be held in the Land of Papua  ???? where ??? when ???? how????  In another column 
it was stated that i had a close relationship with separatists at home and abroad. I have no idea what was meant by
the word 'relationship'.
 Another of my ‘weaknesses' according to BIN is that  I frequently defend separatists. So I have to ask myself why is this a weakness?.
So what is my duty as a lawyer in accordance with Law 18/2003? Does this mean that I am not allowed to defend activists here in the Land of Papua?
 It was also completely wrong to say that i am receiving  wages from the local government. When is that supposed to have happened?

  I have no idea where they got all this information from. They also wrote that I had on some previous occasion helped tourists to go on a
pilgrimage to Jerusalem. I simply do not understand what on earth this is all about. I have never been on such a pilgrimage.  This is quite
clear because I am not a Church leader.
This is all utter nonsense
Peace!
Yan Christian Warinussy.
[Translated by Carmel Budiardjo with my sincere apologies to Yan
Christian Warinussy for not earlier circulating a translation of this
important.statement]
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1) Papua TNI Commander: Defense Equipment in Papua Not Ideal

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2) Video. Minister Seeks Support Of The United States
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MONDAY, 05 OCTOBER, 2015 | 08:42 WIB
1) Papua TNI Commander: Defense Equipment in Papua Not Ideal
TEMPO.COJayapura-Indonesian Armed Forces (TNI) main defense equipment in Indonesia or Papua is generally far from ideal, especially when compared with neighboring countries in Asia.
The statement was made by Regional Military Commander XVII/Cenderawasih Major General Hinsa Siburian when accompanied by Jayapura Airbase Commander Colonel Purwoku Aji Wibowo and Jayapura Military Sea Port X, Vice Commander Colonel Indarto Budiarto in an interactive dialogue at state radio RRI Nusantara V Jayapura, Monday morning, October 5, on the 70th Anniversary of the TNI.
“The armed forces’ defense equipment and well-being are related, in general existing defense equipment are not ideal when compared with other countries in Asia. But the TNI is relying on its identity, because TNI is soldier of the people and the country," said Major General Hinsa Siburian responding to a caller’s question.
Regarding, the welfare of soldiers who served in the interior or outer, he said the government is continuously paying attention to them in accordance with their level.
The military commander encourage the people to activate a neighborhood surveillance system in each housing complex, responding to requests to increasing military posts.  
On the matter of the many Papua New Guinean citizens residing in Moso village, Muara Tami District, Jayapura, General Siburian said that he need to coordinate with relevant parties including the Border and International Cooperation Agency as well as the local government.
"We will see how it goes, things are developing rapidly, there is a market [in the village]. When I visited there last Thursday, the PNG residents were many, they have family relations [with locals]," he said.
ANTARA
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2) Video. Minister Seeks Support Of The United States
 
on Sunday, 04 Oct 2015



By Vanessa Knight – EM TV News
Papua New Guinea’s Minister for Foreign Affairs and Immigration, Rimbink Pato, has sought the support of the United States regarding Pacific Islands State issues, including climate change. 
In lieu of Prime Minister Peter O’Neill, Minister Pato raised the issues during a Pacific Islands Forum Leaders meet with the United States Assistant Secretary of State, Mr Danny Russell in New York on Friday.
Minister Pato stressed the need for United States’ backing at the 21st Conference of Parties (COP21) to be held in Paris in November, where PIF leaders will bring up for discussion climate issues and the severity of its impact on Pacific communities.
The powerful nation responded, saying it is aware of the threat brought about by climate change and extreme weather behaviour in the Pacific. 
Assistant Secretary Russell expressed his concern at the devastation caused by tropical storms in Samoa, Solomon Islands and Vanuatu and highlighted the need for concerted efforts at all levels to assist small island countries in mitigation and resilience efforts. 
Assistant Secretary Russell and his team received a briefing on the Pacific Regionalism framework endorsed by the recent PIF Leaders’ meet in PNG which touches on areas of concern and aspirations of the people of the Pacific, such as fisheries, climate change, cervical cancer and West Papua.
Assistant Secretary Russell told the delegation, that whilst the US Administration wished to do more, the political dynamics in Washington does not always help the Administration's desire in this regard.
However, he adds that the United States is a Pacific State and appreciates the need for solidarity with the PIF countries in advancing issues of common concern.
On the nuclear weapons issue, Pacific Leaders have urged the United States to ratify the Treaty of Rarotonga as well as find just solutions for the people of Marshall Islands as a consequence of nuclear tests in the region.
Assistant Secretary Russell congratulated Papua New Guinea for successfully hosting the 45th PIF Forum, and a copy of the PIF Leaders Joint-Communique was given to the United States contingent.
Minister Mr Pato thanked the United States contingent that also included the United States Ambassador to the United Nations, Ms Samantha Power, and other high ranking officials for hosting the meeting with the PIF Leaders.
While in New York to attend the United Nations General Assembly Meeting, Minister Pato also chaired a meeting between the Pacific Island Forum Leaders with the Secretary-General of the United Nations, H E Mr Ban ki-moon.
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http://www.emtv.com.pg/article.aspx?slug=Minister-Seeks-Support-Of-The-United-States&subcategory=Top-Stories

1) Solomon Islands PM Calls on UN to Address West Papua

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3) Honor 1960s victims, albeit  public’s fuzzy memory -
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1) Solomon Islands PM Calls on UN to Address West Papua
EMTV online
on Monday, 05 Oct 2015. Posted in Home




Prime Minister of Solomon Islands, Manasseh Sogavare, has called on the United Nations Human 
Rights Council to increase 
efforts in carrying out investigations and monitoring allegations of human rights abuse and violations 
in West Papua.
"All states have a legal duty and moral responsibility to uphold, respect and promote human rights 
and where necessary take 
preventive, protective and punitive measures against human rights abuses or violations in accordance 
with the UN Charter 
and applicable international laws,” Sogavare said.
PM Sogavare said that the UN cannot shy away from the root causes of violations against the ethnic
 Melanesians of 
West Papua.  
The head of the Pacific nation made these comments during his address at the 70th session 
of the United Nations 
General Assembly.
He told the summit that Pacific Islands Forum Leaders have approved for a fact finding mission 
to West Papua; this 
decision, he said, was made at the recent Pacific leaders’ summit held last month in Port Moresby.
 He said the summit 
resolved to appeal to the Government of Indonesia to allow free and unrestricted access to this
 mission 'in the true spirit 
of regional cooperation.'
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Solomom Star


2) AWPA condemns Papua shooting






The Australia West Papua Association (AWPA) condemns the shooting of two high 
school students in Timika on Monday the 28 September by the Indonesian security forces.
The incident occurred around 19.30hrs.

Caleb Bagau, aged 18, died while his friend Efrando Sabarofek, aged 17, was wounded in the chest and legs.

He is receiving treatment at the General Hospital in Mimika, Papua. The family, local community and religious leaders 

have condemned the shootings.

At approximately 19.00hrs while the students were sitting in a market culvert with their school friends, dozens of police 

officers armed with weapons and cars surrounded the area.

Because they were afraid the two students ran, however the police shot in their direction killing Caleb Bagau

 and wounding Elfrando who was shot in the chest and leg.

One report said the reason the police arrived was that it was because the students were reported for making a noise.

Another report indicated they were pursued by the police because their fathers are reported to be members of the OPM.

Joe Collins of AWPA said:

“The shooting of the two students by the security forces shows yet again that the Indonesian security forces can act 

with impunity in West Papua.

“AWPA believes that the Indonesian President should ensure that not only is this incident investigated but that all cases 

of human rights violations committed by the security forces in West Papua are investigated and those found guilty of
 human rights abuses prosecuted”.

Minority Rights Group International (MRG) urged Indonesia’s Government to conduct an investigation for this shooting.

MRG, as quoted by rappler.com said perpetrators must be held accountable.

“There is no justification for these senseless murders and the Indonesian government must urgently establish an 

independent inquiry to hold perpetrators to account,” said Claire Thomas, Deputy Director at MRG.

“Extrajudicial killings in West Papua have reached unacceptable proportions, with the indigenous population living in daily 

fear of security forces and for their lives.”

MRG added, “The shooting resurrects concerns about extrajudicial killings and impunity in the conflict-torn region, despite

a pledge by Indonesian President Joko Widodo to address human rights concerns in West Papua.” “It is not enough for
 President Joko Widodo to make bold promises about promoting human rights in Papua unless it is followed up with
 concrete action,” said Thomas.

“This must include addressing the underlying causes of violence and insecurity in West Papua, including endemic impunity

 for state-sponsored violence and the disregard for minority and indigenous rights.” The police chief, Inspector 
General (Pol) Paul Waterpauw apologised and admitted the incident but tried to claim the shooting was in self-defense.

But the families of the students rejected the apology from the Chief of Police Papua, Inspector 

General (Pol) Paul Waterpauw.
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3) Honor 1960s victims, albeit  public’s fuzzy memory -
Maria Pakpahan, Edinburgh, Scotland | Opinion | Mon, October 05 2015, 4:47 PM - See more at: http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2015/10/05/honor-1960s-victims-albeit-public-s-fuzzy-memory.html#sthash.VQeEdzDq.dpuf
At Thursday’s commemoration of the date when 50 years ago six generals and a young officer were killed, President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo put to rest reports that the state would apologize to the millions of victims, survivors and the families of the 1960s tragedy.

I think the refusal to apologize is wrong and holds us hostage to the past, and the history as created by the New Order regime.

An apology is vital to bring the state a step closer to healing society, as it would reach out to victims and their families. We should stand up and speak out when wrongdoing takes place.

In the weeks and months following this week in 1965, scores were murdered, tortured and arrested. It is estimated that between 500,000 to 1 million people were killed during the cleansing of people with any leftist connections, regardless of their age or level of “connection”.

The historical narrative of the banned Indonesian Communist Party (PKI), says that the organization was bad, dangerous, seditious and therefore deserving of its fate — this was the anthem played throughout the General Soeharto regime.

The New Order demonized the leftist movement by dehumanizing anyone associated with the PKI. Civilians — people who were politically ignorant, afraid, confused and possibly had some disagreement with elements or members of PKI at the local level — were co-opted into the killing machine in the crushing operations, as many of these civilians did the dirty work, massacred fellow countrymen and women, without awareness of their wrongdoing, let alone giving them a fair trial.

It is essential that people from all walks of life learn from history. Indonesians need to have a critical perspective about what happened on Sept. 30, 1965 and the following atrocities.

Providing a better understanding and countering the narrative choked down our throats via our schooling, propaganda films, regulations and laws that contradict the spirit of our Constitution, which guarantees human rights, is one way to honor the victims and survivors.

The dehumanizing of the PKI led to a genocide that until today is difficult for us to grapple with. Here it might be useful to use Hannah Arendt‘s The Human Condition.

The political theorist recognized that to retain direction and meaning of such a significant human action, in this case the 1960s violence, another human capacity is required — remembrance.

The present binds the past and future together. As a nation, our present can be the product of the past, so thus our future depends on how we give meaning to the present.

So, what is preventing us from recognizing this wrongdoing in the past?

The present, regardless of how confusing “1965” was, is an opportunity to inspect our memory. A chance to collect more information, to gain better knowledge and evidence about what happened 50 years ago.
This act of remembrance is just one step before we can talk of reconciliation. An act of remembrance will reorient us in the direction of the future.

Public remembrance with counter narratives about post Sept. 30 1965 is one way to honor the victims. Public memory is not singular and may be fuzzy, nonetheless trying to maintain its integrity is a worthwhile attempt. It is not an easy road, as meaningful action requires a public outlet and one such meaningful action is an apology.

Thus, it is still important for the Jokowi administration to apologize unreservedly. We have to accept the tragic reality that the state did not prevent the mass violence following Sept. 30, 1965, and that state institutions were directly involved in the rampant killing and persecution of anyone considered left-wing.

An apology is appropriate given the gravity of the violence and how it affects us a nation-state, and as a reminder of our history. Apologizing to the victims and survivors of the tragedy, and their families, brings us closer to potential reconciliation and closure on the 1965 saga.

It is important for the nation’s leadership to show that the way forward is not to argue about whether to apologize, but to lead by example and do the morally right thing.

We need to see considerable progress toward justice for the victims and their families. Therefore, decisive political action is required. People need to learn about the past atrocities, the escalation of killings, arbitrary arrests and persecution, the decades of stigmatization of many innocent people simply because they were branded as leftist, including the PKI, the Gerwani women’s organization, the CGMI students’ organization and many more — the list is endless.

This 2015 commemoration of these events gives us a chance to pause and reflect, to think about how to guard our future by honoring the victims, by apologizing and educating ourselves so that these atrocities will never, ever happen again. A more balanced narrative is needed, an alternative version of what happened for new generations.

It will most definitely require political will and courage. I do not say it will not be controversial. I simply say the state needs to act, to apologize in honor of the victims, their relatives and survivors — there are so many of them.


We have to accept the tragic reality that the state did not prevent the mass violence ...
_______

The writer is a feminist human rights activist and the Scotland, UK Coordinator of the upcoming International People’s Tribunal 1965, scheduled for November in The Hague, the Netherlands

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1) Maire Leadbeater: A glimmer of hope for West Papua?

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2) Soldier Faces Dismissal over Murder
3) Markus Haluk: Free Papua is Young Generation’s Hands
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1) Maire Leadbeater: A glimmer of hope for West Papua?
2 comments


It is frustrating that serious human rights abuses in Indonesian-controlled West Papua continue to fly below the radar.
This year there has been some good news but it is also going largely unremarked. This is equally frustrating, especially as the positive developments all stem from initiatives taken by courageous Papuans themselves or by our neighbours in the Pacific.
Let me review. First, the five-member Melanesian Spearhead Group (MSG) granted the United Liberation Movement for West Papua (ULMWP) umbrella group official observer status at its June summit. To the Papuans this was a huge step as they have been excluded from Pacific regional bodies for over 50 years.
Second, the 16-nation Pacific Island Forum meeting in September, not only named the issue of human rights in West Papua as one of its five major agenda items, it also resolved to ask Papua New Guinea's Prime Minister to consult with Indonesia about accepting a Pacific fact-finding mission to the territory.

Third, West Papua now has new friends speaking out for it on the world stage. Most recently both Tongan Prime Minister, Akolisi Pohiva, and Solomon Islands Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare took to the UN General Assembly podium to remind the world body of its duty towards West Papua in the face of ongoing human rights abuses and brutality. Sogavare, who recently appoint a special West Papua envoy, urged Indonesia to allow free and unrestricted access for a regional fact finding mission.
None of these positive developments would have come about without taro-roots work. Activists in West Papua face almighty obstacles but they were determined to ensure that the Melanesian leaders knew of their support for West Papua to be included in the regional body. So they organised a petition, a proper paper one with ID-card validated signatures, and somehow they defied military and police to get that petition distributed across the rugged and mountainous territory.
Hundreds of activists were arrested for campaigning to support the ULMWP, but still the final tally in the packages couriered to the Honiara MSG meeting was 55,555. Many Indonesian migrants signed on alongside Church and tribal leaders. Thousands more signatures did not make the deadline.
In the months leading up to the two regional Pacific meetings there were a whole series of amazing marches and colourful events in several Pacific capitals in which the Churches were prominent participants. Honiara, site of the MSG summit, was awash with the West Papuan independence Morning Star flag and posters with the slogan 'Bring West Papua back to the family.' Popular bands brought out West Papuan songs. Aotearoa's Maori and Pasifika performance group Oceania Interrupted circulated a catchy YouTube video in support of the fact-finding mission.
The bad news is that New Zealand's political leaders are not on board. Foreign Minister Murray McCully dismissed the value of a regional West Papua fact-finding mission even before he arrived at the Pacific Forum summit. Apparently good relations with Indonesia and our defence and trade ties trump human rights. It was not always so. In the 1950s and early 60s when the Dutch were preparing West Papua for self-government New Zealand politicians and diplomats gave their plans whole-hearted support in the UN.
Indigenous Papuan leaders were welcomed when they attended South Pacific Commission conferences. New Zealand sent a delegation along when a democratic legislature, the New Guinea Council, was inaugurated in April 1961. The delegation included the then Minister of Island Affairs and a high-ranked representative of almost-independent Samoa. He was Malietoa Tanumafili II, later Samoan Head of State.
West Papua has been largely closed to outside media ever since Indonesia assumed control in 1963. But there is some good news on this front too. After years of trying Maori TV's Native Affairs team was allowed in. The documentary did not shy away from detailing past human rights abuses or the issue of military impunity and they also offered a tantalising glimpse of the Dani - a tribe with a 40,000 year history of highlands habitation. The Dani have been working on a project supported by OXFAM Aotearoa to ensure that their traditional kumara is revived as a staple food and favoured over expensive imported rice.
West Papuans believe the UN and the international community let them down 50 years ago when it agreed to Indonesian control so now it must be an international responsibility to help support negotiations towards a fair and peaceful solution.
Pacific Island leaders are listening to their people and taking up the cause with great dignity, so when will New Zealand follow suit?
Maire Leadbeater is a member of West Papua Action Auckland and author of Negligent Neighbour; New Zealand's Complicity in the Invasion and Occupation of Timor-Leste, published by Craig Potton in 2006.
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2) Soldier Faces Dismissal over Murder
 

Jayapura, Jubi – A soldier in West Papua Province, identified as could face a long jail term and dismissal from the military if found guilty of murdering a pregnant mother Freli Dian Sari (26) and her children Cicilia Putri Natalia (6) and Andhika (2).
“If he was found guilty by court, he would not only be fired from the Military but also be punished by civilian law. Though he is Military personnel, he is also the Indonesian citizen who the law is applied against him,” he said Military Information Chief Colonel Infantry Teguh Pudji Raharjo told Jubi on Monday (5/10/2015).
The soldier, identified as SJ, is a member of iInfantry Batalion 752 Teluk Bintuni.
He also added the suspect go through an investigation which includes examination of witnesses and evidence.
“There must the witness and evidence to conduct the legal process according to the existing law. So, the process is still long because it’s not just over once the investigation is completed,” he said.
He also said the Military is also taking this case seriously.
“The process is almost leading to find the suspect, but now we are still examining the witness and evidence. The National Human Right Commission for Children also has come to ensure the process of investigation and they are satisfy because we have worked to the maximum,” he said.
Earlier, the Cenderawasih XVII Commander Major General Hinsa Siburian said SJ was detained by Jayapura Military Police. “Currently it is still pointing at him. We can develop the process after questioning him. He is now secured and transferred to Jayapura Military Police for intensive investigation,” Major General Siburian said at Papua Police Headquarters on Monday (21/9/2015).
According to him, applying the presumption of innocence, the Military would investigate and process this murder case in collaboration with the Police. “We will process it in collaboration with the Police. We will reveal it once we get the result of laboratory,” he said. He also said the initial information received by Military said before the incident; this culprit was drinking alcohol with five civilians until dawn. He was concerned commit the murder under the influence of alcohol. (Roy Ratumakin/rom)
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3) Markus Haluk: Free Papua is Young Generation’s Hands
 

Jayapura, Jubi – The future of the Papua nation is in the hands of the young generation as they are the inheritors of the land, said a member of the working team of the United Liberation Movement of West Papua’s Internal Affairs, Markus Haluk.
Papuan youths – be they pupils, students or graduates—are valuable and reliable actors in realizing a free Papua.
“Young people are the backbone of the Papua nation. They are the hope of this nation. You are the future of this nation,” Haluk told reporter on the sidelines of a Public Conference of AMPTPI Board of Jayapura Municipality on Saturday (03/10/2015).
“The young generation plays the important role in this struggle because the old generation could only dream while the youngsters could continue the struggle and change the faith of this nation,” he said.
Haluk who is also the founder of the Papua Central Highland Student Association in Indonesia described what he has done along with Free Papua leaders in Honiara in June 2015 was something done by old generation.
“When those leaders were passed away, who will continue their struggle? It should be remained in our mind that young generation will continue their mission. Since ULMWP is currently known by the UN, this young generation must stand to change the old men,” he said.
The Secretary General of Central AMPTPI Yanuarius Lagoan said in order to regenerating young activists in Papua, his organization has determined eight resolutions, in which the point of eight urges the Papua Governor to terminate all alcoholic stores and commercial prostitute in Papua. “Alcohol and prostitution in Papua would actually kill Papua young generation. We are the successors of our ancestors, but the Local Government is gradually killing us through shootings, beatings, massacres, rapes, and so on, “ Lagoan said. (Abeth You/rom)
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Summary of events in West Papua for September

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Australia West Papua Association (Sydney)

PO Box 28, Spit Junction, NSW 2088


Summary of events in West Papua for September  - (7 Oct.2015)

 Pacific Islands Forum
The 46th Pacific Islands Forum was held in Port Moresby during the week of the 7th- 11th September.  Civil society organizations and church groups in the region had written to the PIF leaders urging that West Papua be put back on the agenda at the PIF.  West Papuan representatives lobbied the PIF leaders on the issue urging that the PIF leaders go on a fact finding mission to West Papua to investigate the human rights situation in the territory.  The Secretary General of the Pacific Islands Forum Secretariat, Dame Meg Taylor and the PIF leaders are to be congratulated for discussing the issue of West Papua at the Forum (a contentious issue for some of the leaders). The Indonesian Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs Abdurrahman Mohammad Fachir tried to block West Papua being an issue at the PIF saying the PIF is not the place to discuss West Papuan issues. In an interview with regional journalist, Fachir says it is irrelevant to the main objective and the purpose of the establishment of the PIF.  However, after an absence of nearly 10 years West Papua was back in the official communiqué. 


From PIF Communiqué in relation to West Papua (Papua)
16. Leaders recalled their decisions and concerns expressed at their meeting in 2006 about reports of violence in Papua, in which they also called on all parties to protect and uphold the human rights of all residents in Papua and to work to address the root causes of such conflicts by peaceful means.
17. Leaders recognised Indonesia’s sovereignty over the Papuan provinces but noted concerns about the human rights situation, calling on all parties to protect and uphold the human rights of all residents in Papua. Leaders requested the Forum Chair to convey the views of the Forum to the Indonesian Government, and to consult on a fact-finding mission to discuss the situation in Papua with the parties involved. The full PIF Communiqué at http://www.forumsec.org/pages.cfm/newsroom/press-statements/2015-media-releases/46th-pacific-islands-forum-communique.html


The Pacific leaders and in particular the MSG leaders have put West Papua on the agenda in international fora. The Solomon Islands and Tongan Prime Ministers raised the human rights situation in West Papua at the 70th Session of the United Nations General Assembly in New York. The Solomon Islands Prime Minister, Manasseh Sogavare said
"All states have a legal duty and moral responsibility to uphold, respect and promote human rights and where necessary take preventive, protective and punitive measures against human rights abuses or violations in accordance with the UN Charter and applicable international laws,” and  “Against the foregoing backdrop, the General Assembly is well aware of the continuing concerns of human rights violations in the Papua and West Papua regions of Indonesia and Solomon Islands further calls on the Geneva based Human Rights Council to do more in investigating and monitoring of allegations of human rights abuse and violence on the ethnic Melanesians there. " http://www.solomonstarnews.com/news/national/8589-sogavare-urges-un-to-address-west-papua



Tonga's Prime Minister Akilisi Pohiva also told the UN general assembly that the world community has a moral obligation to get involved. “United Nations has a duty to closely follow up this West Papua case and necessary action be taken to stop these brutal and inhumane activities.”
RNZI reported that the Solomon Islands prime minister also called on France to implement the decolonisation process for French Polynesia approved by the United Nations two years ago. In 2013, the General Assembly voted for a resolution sponsored by Solomon Islands to re-inscribe the territory on the UN decolonisation list but Paris has all but ignored the decision. France has said it won’t buy into the UN decolonisation process and also ruled out holding an immediate independence referendum as requested by the territorial assembly. Speaking at the UN in New York, Mr Sogavare has urged France to change. "Solomon Islands calls on the administrating power to fully co-operate with the work of the special committee. We note that 30 years of nuclear testing by the administrating power caused widespread atomic radiation and has resulted in considerable health and environmental concern."


Shooting in Timika
Two high school students were shot by the Indonesian security forces in Timika on Monday the 28 September. The incident occurred around 19.30hrs. 

Caleb Bagau, aged 18, died while his friend Efrando Sabarofek, aged 17, was wounded in the chest and legs. At approximately 19.00hrs while the students were sitting in a market culvert with their school friends, dozens of police officers armed with weapons and cars surrounded the area. 

Because they were afraid the two students ran, however the police shot in their direction killing Caleb Bagau and wounding Elfrando who was shot in the chest and leg. 

The family, local community and religious leaders condemned the shootings as did 
overseas NGOs. AWPA release at http://awpasydneynews.blogspot.com.au/2015/09/awpa-condemns-shooting-of-two-high.html First reports were a bit unclear on how the incident occurred however West Papua Media released an updated report on the incident at http://westpapuamedia.info/2015/10/03/sorrow-yet-again-in-the-city-of-gold-aka-dollar-city-timikas-drains-flowing-with-spilt-papuan-blood/ The police chief, Inspector General (Pol) Paul Waterpauw apologised and admitted the incident but tried to claim the shooting was in self-defense. 

The families of the students rejected the apology from the Chief of Police.



Information spread by BIN about Warinussy is utterly ridiculous
Received from Yan Christian Warinussy on 22 September 2015
Today when I arrived home late in the afternoon, I discovered a registration list produced by BIN, the State Intelligence Agency of the Republic of Indonesia written on blue-coloured paper with the heading ‘Religious/Traditional Leaders'. It consisted of eight columns with personal information about me and my family.   I have no idea where these BIN people got this information from which, I have to say, is completely wrong. For example, the document had the wrong information for the day of my birth. The information about my wife, the place and date of her birth was also wrong. . Moreover the names of my children were wrong, It was stated that I had been calling for a referendum to be held in the Land of Papua???? where ??? when ???? how????  In another column  it was stated that I had a close relationship with separatists at home and abroad. I have no idea what was meant by the word 'relationship'.  Another of my ‘weaknesses' according to BIN is that I frequently defend separatists. So I have to ask myself why is this a weakness?. So what is my duty as a lawyer in accordance with Law 18/2003? Does this mean that I am not allowed to defend activists here in the Land of Papua?  It was also completely wrong to say that I am receiving wages from the local government. When is that supposed to have happened?   I have no idea where they got all this information from. They also wrote that I had on some previous occasion helped tourists to go on a pilgrimage to Jerusalem. I simply do not understand what on earth this is all about. I have never been on such a pilgrimage.  This is quite clear because I am not a Church leader. This is all utter nonsense Peace! Yan Christian Warinussy. [Translated by Carmel Budiardjo with my sincere apologies to Yan Christian Warinussy for not earlier circulating a translation of this important.statement]




Police Officers Shot by Air Force Troops in Papua

Jakarta globe By : Banjir Ambarita | October 02, 2015

Jayapura, Papua. Indonesian Air Force personnel in the early hours of Friday accidentally shot two police officers at Jayapura's Sentani Airport while trying to disband a group of intruders. Papua Police Chief Insp. Gen. Paulus Waterpauw said the incident happened at around 2.30 a.m. local time, when a group of people, reportedly under the influence of alcohol, was found damaging facilities at the airport. The two police officers arrived to intervene, but then suddenly members of the Air Force's Special Forces unit (Paskhas) opened fire, injuring the police officers. First Brig. Riqzan and First Brig. Wahidin, who were wearing their uniforms, had reportedly tried to let the Air Force troops know they were police officers, but to no avail. Riqzan was shot in his left thigh while Wahidin was shot in the back of his head. Both men survived the shooting, and were taken to the police hospital in Jayapura, Paulus said. “The Paskhas [troops] saw the incident and they tried to stop it. It was very dark because it was late at night. We only found out that police officers were shot when it was over,” the commander of the Jayapura Air Base at Sentani Airport, Col. Purwoko Aji, said on Friday. In a press conference on Friday, police chief Paulus confirmed that the shooting was an accident and that he would leave the investigation to the Air Force. The Indonesian Military (TNI) and the police have in recent years had a series of violent -- and sometimes deadly -- confrontations in various parts of the country, often as part of turf wars.



News in brief
Human Rights Activist Urges Troop Pullout from Papua
Semarang, Jubi – A Papuan human rights activist, Yones Douw, urged the central government to withdraw troops from Papua. He said he was very disappointed with a series of attacks against civilians in Papua, such as the shooting in Timika last August, the shooting in Paniai in December 2014 and the shooting of two vocational school students in Timika on Monday night, 28 September 2015 at around 19:00 pm. “The actions of security forces were very inhumane. It caused one person, named Kaleb Zera Bagau (18) died and Efrando Sabarofek (17) badly injured and now in the hospital. The character of law enforcement officials, especially the police and Task Forces (TNI) lately showed their misbehavior. I as observers and human rights activists in Papua condemned the perpetrators, ” said Yones when contacting Jubi, on Tuesday (09/29/2015). “We, Papuans continue to be killed and we are like animal in the eyes of Indonesia. I demand President Jokowi to pull out the military from Papua because there is no benefit at all for Papua,” he said. Member of Papua Legislative Council, Laurenzus Kadepa to Jubi said, it seems like military and police officials in Papua are racing to kill Papuans. ” Military and police are in a race to kill Papuan people like a hunted animal. Last time two military members shot two Kamoro people in Koperapoka, Timika. And then the police shot two vocational school students in Timika. The shooting of two students was happening at Gorong – Gorong market in Timika, Papua, ” said Kadepa. (Arnold Belau/ Tina) (Jubi September 30 2015_



West Papuan leader denied PNG visa again
The West Papua independence activist, Benny Wenda, has been denied entry into Papua New Guinea. Mr Wenda was invited to Port Moresby by the city's governor, Powes Parkop, to attend a conference and other events, including next week's Pacific Islands Forum Summit. But he says his visa application was denied with no explanation, and his lawyers say there was nothing wrong with the application. The denial follows Mr Wenda's deportation from PNG last year when it emerged he did not have a required visa. Mr Wenda says he received assurances he was clear to enter PNG again, but he suspects he may be on some immigration blacklist.” The Prime Minister of Papua New Guinea has already stated in a media interview that 'if Benny applied for a visa, he's free to come in'. So I tried to apply for a visa to enter the country, but again [I was] rejected for the second time. So I don't know whether it's a country decision to not allow me to enter."  A call has been made to Papua New Guinea's Immigration Department, but they are yet to respond. (RNZI 4 Sept.) 




Trans-Papuan road to be constructed
Officials in Indonesia's Papua province have indicated that around US$70 million is being made available for an initial phase of the construction of the Trans Papua road. The road, for which planning has been at the conceptual phase for years, would link a number of regions and hubs in Papua, including Sorong, Manokwari, Nabire, Enarotali, Korowai and Merauke. It will be around 4,325 kilometres long. Tabloid Jubi reports that the road has become a major priority for Papua and West Papua provinces, according to the Head of the Roads and Bridges in Papua, Oesman Marbun. Mr Marbun says that construction of the road must contend with rugged, mountainous, and heavily forested terrain but that engineers would figure out the most direct paths. He conceded the most fundamental problem for the planned highway was securing consent for construction where customary land rights must be adhered to. Mr Marbun said local government would therefore play a role in addressing related issues, in order for the road to proceed. (RNZI 9 Sept.)




Minister Marwan Contradicts Jokowi, Call Merauke is the “Heaven for Trans-Migrants”  (Jubi 11 Sept)
Jayapura, Jubi – Indonesian Minister of Rural and Underdeveloped Region and Transmigration, Marwan Jafar, contradicted President Joko Widodo’s pledge to terminate the transmigration program in Papua. Despite giving support to Jokowi’s statement, the minister said he would expand the program of transmigration in Papua. In an interview in Jakarta on last week, he said the current program is intended to move residents from densely populated areas to less-populated ones. Those people also would be provided with cash and land property if they “succeed” in Merauke. “Merauke could be considered as the borderland area that was succeed in executing the transmigration program and development of farming area in the eastern Indonesia,” said the minister to reporters in Jakarta as cited by Jakarta Globe. He further said Merauke is the “heaven for trans-migrants”. He predicted about 275 thousand people have moved to Merauke since the annexation over West Papua by Indonesia in 1969. Those migrants were often said to harm the indigenous people. They were accused ignoring the sense, habitude and tradition of the indigenous people, destroying the environment and taking the economic opportunity of indigenous people. In the meeting with public figures in Jakarta on last week, Jokowi renounced that his government will terminate the transmigration program to Papua. “The government will end the transmigration to Papua because it has caused social gaps,” through the statement conveyed by the President Spokesperson, Teten Masduki. The president, Teten said, has asked the Papua Governor to terminate the transmigration program. However, the Minister Marwan Jafar seems not paying attention to Jokowi’s statement. He said the transmigration program will accelerate the production as well to support the government’s plan to develop 1.2 million hectares of rice field in Merauke under the Merauke Integrated Rice Estate (MIRE) Project. “If the program is succeed, will bring more benefits for this district,” he said. (Victor Mambor/rom)




Violence, Arrests Fail to Extinguish Separatism
(Jubi Sept 24, 2015) Jayapura, Jubi – Violence and arrests targeting activists and those accused of being members of the Free Papua Movement (OPM) have failed to extinguish the issue of separatism, a councilor said. A member of Commission I of Papua Legislative Council for Politic, Government, Law and Human Right Affairs, Laurenzus Kadepa, said the government should adopt a humane approach instead of militarism towards the people of Papua. He said in order to restore the people’s trust; the government must dare admit mistakes in Papua in the past, because it has become a worldwide issue.
“The arrests and shootings against the activists or those accused of being OPM members have strengthened the movement for a free Papua. I speak from the humane side, not representing those who support Indonesia or a free Papua. Too many lives have been taken due to conflicts of interests,” Kadepa told Jubi by phone on Wednesday (23/9/2015). In addition, he said, the regional authorities and Military/Police leaders should act as Statesmen. They must prioritize the public interest than personal or group interest. Do not let personal interest give a negative impact on the country.
“For example, logging business and so on. It’s not possible if there are culprits involved or standing behind the logging businessmen. This is an example of personal interest, but affecting the country,” he said. In the last mid-September, Papua legislator who also the Chairman of Coordination Forum of Indonesian Retired Military Personnel Youngsters, Yan Ayomi, said currently it is no need to talk about Free Papua. The people of Papua must think about how to attach the attention of Central Government to improve Papua through Special Autonomy funds. “Papuans must have a dream that one day they could lead this country. Now forget the thought of being ‘independence’,” Ayomi said at that time. (Arjuna Pademme/rom)



Soldier Killed in Jayapura Stabbing Incident
Jakarta Globe By : Banjir Ambarita September 16, 2015

Jayapura. Security forces in Jayapura have launched a manhunt for an unknown assailant who stabbed to death a soldier outside the main military base in the Papuan capital in the early hours of Wednesday. The incident occurred at around 1:25 a.m. as the soldier, identified as Master Pvt. Langgeng, was carrying out a routine patrol of the base’s perimeter. A lone assailant is believed to have jumped him and stabbed him repeatedly with a knife, just 300 meters from the base’s main guard post, out of sight of the other soldiers gathered there. The assailant fled into the dense residential area behind the base, according to Lt. Col. Teguh Pudji Raharjo, a spokesman for the base. “We can confirm that there has been a stabbing against a member of the Jayapura military base that left the victim dead,” he told the Jakarta Globe. “There were a number of other soldiers on duty at the guard post, but because the incident took place some 300 meters away, the assailant was able to get away.” Teguh said the military and police had launched a joint force to hunt down the perpetrator. He refused to speculate on the identity of the perpetrator. Similar attacks on the armed forces in Papua have typically been blamed on separatists, who have been waging a low-level insurgency since the 1960s.



One Resident Shot Near Indonesia-Papua New Guinea Border
TEMPO.CO, Jayapura - A resident of Skopron, Keerom Regency, Papua, was shot by an unidentified person near the Indonesian border with Papua New Guinea (PNG) on Wednesday, September 9, around 10 am local time (1 am GMT) Keerom Police Grand Commissioner Adjutant (AKBP) Tober Sirait told Antara that the victim was shot while cutting wood in the forest area of Kampung Skopron, Keerom, about an hour away by road towards PNG. The shooting victim had been
taken to the hospital in Arso, Keerom, and according to police was headed to the scene to investigate the shooting. "I have not received a report about a complete chronological and identity of the victims,” said Tober Sirait. ANTARA (9 SEPTEMBER 2015)
  

Papuan Muslims Celebrate Eid With Stone Burning Festival

Tempo. 24 Sept. 2015. TEMPO.COJayapura - Muslim community in Wamena, North Jayapura District, Papua, held an age old Papuan stone burning (bakar batu) festival to celebrate Eid al-Adha. "Our tradition is bakar batu, both during last Eid ul-Fitri. This practice is not new, we conduct it every year,” said Kahar Yalipele, the local Muslim community leader, in Jayapura on Thursday, September 24. Bakar batu is part of tradition of the Papuan people. It is a ritual of cooking together, started by burning stones until it simmers. Red hot stones then laid in a hole and covered with foliage and tubers and meat on it. The pile of meat and tuber will then be covered again with smoldering rocks and foliage. Kahar explained, Papuans are generally used to burn pig but the Muslim community replace it with chicken. He also explained that this year's Eid ul-Adha, the Jayapura Municipal Government donated a cow to Paradise Asso Mushalla, their place of worship. "We will distribute these sacrificial animals to the those in need,” he said. ANTARA


s few times ago. “PNG must reveal who did it, as well as Indonesia,” he told Jubi on Sunday (20/9/2015). He further said public in Indonesia, in particular in Papua are already assuming. And the hostage over two Indonesian citizens gives an impress of being plotted. “Public are already assuming that it’s been plotted, since within this month, both countries are facing the recommendation of Pacific Islands Forum about fact finding mission on human right violation in Papua and the supports on Papua issue to be submitted to Commission 24 about decolonization in the UN list,” said Erari who was also the former Chairman of PGI. (Arnold Belau/rom)


Military to Tighten Security on Border after Hostage-Taking Incident
Jubi SEPTEMBER 22, 2015

Jayapura, Jubi – The military will tighten security on the border with Papua New Guinea following the hostage taking of two Indonesians in the neighboring country, the regional military chief said. Relations between Indonesia and Papua New Guinea have been good and are getting better as demonstrated in efforts to rescue the hostage from armed men, Regional Commander XVII / Cenderawasih Maj Hinsa Siburian said on last week . “The border security will be tightened so that the similar incidents will not occur in the future. However, there will be no additional troops, ” Siburian said during an function to deploy Special Forces Command in Rindam. He said besides tightening the security at the border, the territorial approach will be also improved by urging the community in order to increase its own security in the region. Related to the process of the release of the two hostages without any request on the part of the perpetrator, military commander said, in an effort to free hostages are always put forward a persuasive approach but also prepared other alternatives. Earlier, head of Border and Foreign Cooperation Relations Papua, Susana Wanggai said the acquisition process by means of persuasive conducted by the Army PNG against the perpetrator. “For that, of course we will maintain this relationship. As proof we have the same look that the liberation efforts and negotiations went well. The most important is the two of our citizens in good shape and healthy, “she said. (Roy Ratumakin/ Tina)




Government Signals to Extend Freeport Deal
TEMPO.COJakarta - Energy and Mineral Resource Minister Sudirman Said said Monday, September 21, he supports PT Freeport Indonesia’s step to continue investing in the country. The government is seeking a way so that a decision can be taken without violating regulations and without causing turmoil in society. “What is most needed and awaited by Freeport is the decision on the investment which we have not currently decided due to the constraint of Government Regulation,” Sudirman said when visiting Freeport mine on Monday. The regulation referred by Sudirman is Government Regulation No.77 Year 2014 that regulates the quickest time limit for contract extension is two years and no later than six months before the deal expires.   Evidently, in the temporary study by the ministry, the time hampers investment, especially the ones with great value including Freeport’s underground mining. This revision of the regulation is included in the Energy and Mineral Resource version of economic policy package. The changes plans to extend the deadline contract of mineral metal mines to become 10 years at the longest and two years at the quickest. Meanwhile non-metal minerals deals will be five years at the quickest and two years at the latest. After 30 years, Freeport contract will expire in 2021. Its the second agreement since the company first operated in Indonesia in 1967. Freeport is currently building a processing and refining facility, as set in the Constitution No.4 Year 2009 on Mineral and Coal. The company based in United States (US) has also confirmed its capability to switch cooperation plans from Work Contract to Special Construction Permit. Sudirman said his effort is backed by President Joko Widodo. “Freeport is not an exception, Freeport must be supported in order for its operation to continue,” he said. ROBBY IRFANY (Tempo  21 Sept. 2015)



Police Arrest Two KNPB Activists in Yahukimo

Yogyakarta, Jubi – Two activists of the West Papua National Committee (KNPB), Hariel Luluk and Arpius Magayong, were arrested by the local police in Yahukimo while distributing flyers announcing the results of the Pacific Islands Forum meeting on the West Papua issue. The chairman of KNPB in Yahukimo, Erius Suhun, said armed police officers in a patrol car came, stopped in front of a store and immediately arrested the two activists who were distributing the flyers. Then both were taken to the local police station. “But, when we went to the police station and talked with the officers, they had been released since this afternoon. They were beaten by the police but currently they are already with us,” Suhun said on Wednesday (16/9/2015). The Central KNPB spokesperson Bazoka Logo confirmed to Jubi about the arrest of their two activists in Yahukimo. He said the political matter of the Papuan people is not final yet. Papua issue is currently being worldwide. “Now, we warned the police to behave and maintain their attitude. Because the Papua issue is not merely a domestic matter but also get attention from the worldwide,” he said. Meanwhile, the Papua Police spokesperson Senior Commissionaire Patrige Renwarin has not yet being confirm. (Arnold Belau/rom) (Jubi Sept.18 2015)



Comments/opinion pieces/press releases/reports etc.

ULMWP Acknowledges Pacific Leaders for Supporting West Papua Aspirations at UN



West Papuan teenager beaten, tortured and electrocuted by the Indonesian police



Papua now on Pacific radar


  
Native Affairs – Inside West Papua – Part 1

 Part 2



Search for truth continues 50 years after Indonesias purge

                        




Indigenous Communities and Biodiversity



Aust/NZ should support a fact-finding mission to West Papuan 


Indonesian food project violates local rights: activists



Maire Leadbeater: A glimmer of hope for West Papua?


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1) Papua Allots Rp13.5bn for Health Services

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2) Indonesia, Australia on Joint Sea Patrol to Combat Poachers
3) Two New Species of Narrow-Mouthed Frogs Discovered in Western New Guinea
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EDNESDAY, 07 OCTOBER, 2015 | 14:38 WIB
1) Papua Allots Rp13.5bn for Health Services
                         A mother bringing her child to the clinic. Sorong, Papua, June 3, 2015. TEMPO/Wisnu Agung Prasetyo
TEMPO.COJayapura-The provincial government of Papua has earmarked an autonomy fund of about Rp13.5 billion for the health care of its residents. The fund will be used to, among others, rent four aircraft to fly patients from remote areas to health facilities in bigger cities.
Dr. Silvanus Sumule, secretary of Papua's Health Department, said in Jayapura, Wednesday, October 7, that in 2015 the Province has issued a governor's regulation on social assistances for patients registered in the Papua Health Card program (PPP).
The regulation allows the provincial government to collaborate with several religious-group airlines: the Associated Mission Aviation (AMA), the Mission Aviation Fellowship (MAF), Yajazi, and Heli Mission.
"Total fund allocated to finance the four religious airlines is around Rp3.5 billion, prepared in 2015," he said.
The collaboration allows Papuans to receive flight services when they need to get treatment at referred hospitals in Papua or national hospitals in other areas.
"With this service, we aim to reduce mortality for infants, toddlers, and mothers," he said.
Silvanus added that the service is also expected to help solve the number of health and medical problems in Papua caused by geographical constraints.
ANTARA | RR


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WEDNESDAY, 07 OCTOBER, 2015 | 20:00 WIB
2) Indonesia, Australia on Joint Sea Patrol to Combat Poachers
TEMPO.COJakarta-The Ministry of Maritime Affairs and Fisheries has signed a cooperation agreement with the Australian Agriculture and Water Resources Department to combat illegal fishing through a joint patrol. Through the cooperation, Indonesia is hoping to put a stop on foreign vessels stealing fish in Indonesian waters.
"Without Australia's assistance, Indonesia will find difficulties to monitor everything happening in the eastern waters, especially around the borders of Papua New Guinea and East Timor," Minister of Marine and Fisheries Susi Pudjiastuti said in news conference on Wednesday, October 7, which was also attended by Australia's
Minister for Agriculture and Water Resources Barnaby Joyce.
Susi said the collaboration is expected to prevent illegal fishing in Indonesian waters bordering with Papua New Guinea, East Timor, and Australia. So far, Australia has provided sufficient help in preventing illegal fishing activities in Indonesia.
Indonesia and Australia have for the last nine years conducted annual work group meetings on maritime affairs and fisheries.
In last year's meeting in Perth in October, the two nations put illegal fishing and eco-marine collaborations on top of their agendas.
Susi said Indonesia wants to increase marine cooperation with Australia, hoping that the latter would sign a declaration to combat illegal fishing in Asia and the Pacific. Indonesia also encourages Australia to provide all assistance needed in the fight against illegal fishing.
Bernaby Joyce said Australia is pleased with the cooperation. "We are very happy with this partnership to ensure the eradication of illegal fishing," Bernaby said.
AMIRULLAH

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3) Two New Species of Narrow-Mouthed Frogs Discovered in Western New Guinea

Oct 7, 2015 by Sci-News.com

Dr Rainer Günther, a German herpetologist at the Museum für Naturkunde Berlin, and his colleagues from Australia and Indonesia have described two new species of the microhylid frog genus Cophixalus from the Raja Ampat Islands off the western tip of New Guinea. The scientists have documented their discovery in a paper published in the journal Zoosystematics and Evolution.


The newly discovered frogs are characterized by small and slender bodies, measuring less than 0.9 inches (2.3 cm) in length.
They are members of the narrow-mouthed frog genus Cophixalus that occurs mainly in New Guinea and northern Australia.
Dr Günther and co-authors decided to name these new frogs Cophixalus rajampatensis and C. salawatiensis.
Their description brings the total number of Cophixalus frogs known from New Guinea and surrounding islands to 46, and the total number from western New Guinea (Papua and West Papua Provinces including the Raja Ampat Islands) to 10.

The specimens of Cophixalus rajampatensis and C. salawatiensis were collected from lowland rainforests. There the scientists noted that after heavy rains at night the males perched on leaves of bushes and produced sounds, characteristic for each species.
“Curious enough, when dissected one of the male specimens, assigned to Cophixalus salawatiensis, revealed a female reproductive system with well-developed eggs,” the researchers said.
“Simultaneously, neither its sound-producing organs, nor its calls differed in any way from the rest of the observed males from the same species. Therefore, it is to be considered a hermaphrodite,” they said.
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Günther R et al. 2015. Two new species of the genus Cophixalus from the Raja Ampat Islands west of New Guinea (Amphibia, Anura, Microhylidae). Zoosystematics and Evolution 91 (2): 199-213; doi: 10.3897/zse.91.5411
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West Papua on ABC Radio

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West Papua ABC Radio (30min approx)
Thursday, September 24, 2015
West Papua is a neighbouring country that we don't know much about. It's been part of Indonesia since the Dutch left in 1969, yet there's been a long running pro-independence movement and accusations of human rights abuses against the Indonesian military. What is the situation today? Michael Pavlich discussed this with Keith Suter, who is Managing Director of the Global Directions Think Tank. 


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1) Papua Women Entrepreneurs Demand Jokowi’s Promise to Build Market

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2) Military Chief Skirts Questions on Task Force Plans
3) Apology Is Just Not Enough, People Need Real Action, says Papua Activist
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1) Papua Women Entrepreneurs Demand Jokowi’s Promise to Build Market
 


 
                             Jigibama rraditional market in Wamena, Jayawijaya District – Jubi


Jayapura, Jubi – “We have our vegetable garden, but if it has not yet ready to be harvested, we must go to Youtefa market every 3 am to buy some vegetables and take it home. Then at 3 pm we bring it to the market for reselling,” Yuliana Pigai told BeritaBenar at temporary traditional market for Papuan women entrepreneurs. Mama Yuli, as she is often called by her colleagues at Papua Traditional Market, said after buying some vegetables at Youteva market, she will do other domestic works and then go to her vegetable garden. She will take care of her plantation until 12 pm. Then she will go home and prepare going to the market for selling vegetables. While other Papuan women who sell local commodities at Temporary Traditional Market for Papuan Women said they only get a few for daily income. “We can earn between a hundred to three hundred thousand rupiahs everyday, but everyday we need about 150 thousand rupiahs or more. We all know that the living cost in Papua is the most expensive,” said a woman trader Hermina Hubi. Backbone of the Family and Papua Economy Most of these tough women are married. But some had abandoned by their husbands and should bear the family’s burden alone. Some are married to the husbands who have no regular job or work as civil servant, but none of those husbands gave their income to the wives. “If they got paid, they never gave us their salary. We don’t know what do they do with it. If we are not selling vegetables at the market, who’s going to pay our children’s school fee? Who’s going to feed our children?” said Mama Hermina whose husband works as civil servant at the Papua Governor Office. She further admitted the Temporary Traditional Market for Papua Women is the only place she could access since in other market places she must compete with non-Papuan traders and certainly defeated. She also cannot trade at a town street of Jayapura City because it’s already full with other traders. 

There are thousands of Papuan women who are struggling to support their family such as Yuliana Pigay and Hermina Hubi. At the Temporary Traditional Market for Papua Women located at the central of Jayapura City, there are dozens of women selling vegetables, fishes, fruits and other local commodities. And hundreds of those women sell their commodities on the roadside along the road to Jayapura to Sentani. There are many Papua women in other regencies who undergo the daily cycle of life just like these two women at the Traditional Market for Papua Women. Demand the President’s Promise to Build A Market During his visit at the Temporary Traditional Market for Papua Women when doing campaign in June 2014, the President Joko Widodo promised to build a permanent market for Papua women. In front of hundreds of Papua indigenous traders, Jokowi mentioned to build a market for Papua women is one of is priority program if he was elected as president. “I personally gave the letter to Jokowi when he did his campaign in the market. He promised to build a market for us. He invited me to come to Jakarta at his inauguration day as president. I reminded him about his promise once again at that time. But until now, there is no sign that our market would be built,” Mama Yuli, who received a rice cone from President Jokowi in People’s Celebration to celebrate the inauguration of Jokowi-JK in Jakarta in October last year. Papua women have done their struggle to materialize a market for them since 2003. Their demand is not exaggerated because it is according to the Law No.1/2001 on Special Autonomy for Papua Province in which includes three key words of Empowerment, 

Protection and Alignment towards Papua Indigenous People. Assisted by the Solidary of Papua Indigenous Trader (Solpap) that is consisting of civil society, professional and journalists, Papua women traders never stop to voice retheir aspiration on having a traditional market. “The issue on market development has been politicalized. Local politicians used it for their own interest. The President of Indonesia has instructed the development of this market, but the Provincial and Municipal Government and Papua Legislative Council point each other,” Solpap Coordinator Robert Jitmau told BeritaBenar. “We fought since 2003, the result is the Provincial Government could only provide the temporary market. While the permanent market as promised by Jokowi has not yet come in realization,” he added. It’s Still A Promise In the separate place, the Chairman of Commission IV of Papua Legislative Council for Infrastructure, Boy Markus Dawir said the initial budget had allocated in the revised Regional Budget of Papua Province 2015 amounted Rp 4.3 billion. “The construction might be start in October and the entire work would be full implemented in 2016. It’s expected complete in 2017 and Papuan women would have a market. The Commission IV who’s responsible on the building of this market would keep it on track. So, Papuan women to pray it would be running smoothly as expected and could be finish immediately,” Boy Dawir said. The planning of market development takes time due to the land issue. The Head of Development and Fresh Water of Public Work Office of Papua Province, Yan Ukago, told BeritaBenar that the market would be built in the location of current Damri (State Bus Office) terminal. Thus it should be reallocated first. “What I should deal is how to reallocated Damri terminal to new location at Pasir II that is currently a main workshop. It causes a delay for the market development for Papua women,” Ukago said. However, both Yuliana Pigai and Hermina Hubi do not want to know the reason used by bureaucrats and legislators. They only knew that Jokowi, the President of the Republic of Indonesia, gave them a promise of a market so they will able to support their family, and that’s they want. (Victor Mambor/rom)

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2) Military Chief Skirts Questions on Task Force Plans
 


Jayapura, Jubi – Papua Military Chief Maj General Hinsa Siburian declined to disclose details on proposal to form of a task force on peace in Papua by the State Intelligence Agency (BIN).
“What I heard the word ‘ peace’ it is so obvious that we TNI want to create peace in Papua by inviting all parties to respect indigenous peoples rights,” said Siburian said on Tuesday 06/10/2015.
He emphasized that all parties and communities in Papua to appreciate the people of Papua and continue to create peace in Papua.
Students in Papua have strongly rejected BIN’s task force plans consisting of elements of the Regional BIN, police and Special Task Force Command.
“Papuan Students strongly rejected the formation of the task force,” said Pontius Omoldoman, Chairman of the People’s Consultative Assembly (MPM) at Cendrawasih University in Abepura, Jayapura, Papua, on Tuesday (29/09/2015).
He further said the formation of the task force is just to hide some cases on human rights violations who have never completed accordingly.
He said the task force is also potentially create new case of human rights violations in Papua. “It is not in accordance with Papua situation today because the number of human right abuses cases increasingly grow up. While, the military apparatus Indonesia is only capable of throwing stones to hide the hand, “he said.
He said, it is good that the government will work to complete the previous cases “Prosecute the perpetrators is a wise action and formation of Papua Peace task force is not the right choice for the people of Papua at this time, “he said. (Eveerth/Tina)
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3) Apology Is Just Not Enough, People Need Real Action, says Papua Activist
 
Jayapura, Jubi – Human right activist said the apology conveyed by Cenderawasih XVII Regional Military Commander in the 70th Anniversary of Indonesian Military on Monday (5/10/2015) should be followed up in real action not only the pseudo words.
“Papuans do not simply accept this apology. Go ahead to do that but the Papuans need more,” Peneas Lokbere, the Coordinator of the Victim of Papua Human Right Violation Solidarity in Abepura on Tuesday (6/10/2015).
Lokbere said the Papuans today prefer the real action. At first, the security institutions in Papua, through both Military Regional Commander and Papua Police Chief must conduct official evaluation on security situation in Papua. The evaluation is urgent due to the increasingly cases of shooting against civilians in Papua. All these cases must be revealed in order to protect the people.
Secondly, the Papuans want the Military and Police to change their approach method towards the people. People want the Military and Police to respect on human rights and not act repressive.
Thirdly, the Military Regional Commander and Papua Police Chief to announce the result of investigation over Paniai case. Papuans are mostly waiting for this than an apology that would not heal the Papuans’ hurt feeling.
Meanwhile, the Secretary General of Papua Central Highland Student Association in Indonesia (AMPTPI), Yanuarius Lagowan, said the Military Regional Commander should not only apology but also provide justice to the victims.
Lagowan said the Military Regional Commander already knew the personnel who did the brutal action against Papuans. Therefore, the naughty personnel must be punished. “The apology is not enough. If the Commander has already knew about misleading action among his personnel, it should be revealed and prosecuted, therefore those who experienced violence by military could get the justice,” he said. (Mawel Benny/rom)
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Smuggler Suspected as an International Drugs Dealer from Africa

 
Jayapura, Jubi – Customs officers have seized 4 kilograms of crystal of methamphetamine and arrested an Indonesian woman on suspicion of smuggling the drugs through at the border between Indonesia and Papua New Guinea last month.
The head of Papua Police Public Relations Department, commissioner (Pol) Patrige Renwarin said the 40-year-old suspect, identified by her initials Mzn, is suspected to be a member of an international drug ring from Africa.
“This was the result of coordination with the National Police Headquarters, city police, and the National Narcotics Agency (BNN). Based on Police data, Mzs has been twice to Ghana,” Patrige Renwarin said on Tuesday evening (06/10/2015).
According to him, the Directorate of Drugs of Papua Police investigators have checked five witnesses in the case. They are Customs officers who arrested the suspect when crossing the border on Tuesday (15/9/2015)
“Now the investigators are still awaiting the results of the drug test sample sent to the Forensic Laboratory in Makassar. Currently, Mzs is still detained at Papua police. The legal process is also still handled by Police Papua until the trial,” he said.
He said, Papua Police will also continue to coordinate with Jakarta Police to uncover the International Drug syndicate.
Papua police chief, Inspector General (Pol) Paul Waterpauw also confirmed that allegedly the suspect is a network international drug trafficker.
He added based on information given by Mzs that she traveled from Piliphina to Port Moresbey, the capital of PNG, Vanimo (PNG), and entered the territory of Indonesia. The suspect admitted to depart from Jakarta to Manila, the capital of Philippines, then to Ghana, return to Manila, get into PNG, and enter Indonesia through Skow, Wutung, Jayapura city.
“The suspect is charged of Act 35 of 2009 on Narcotics Article 112 paragraph 2 with minimum of five years in prison, 20 years or lifetime,” said Waterpauw at the time. (Arjuna Pademme/Tina)
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1) Liput Demo, police Rampas Reporters and camera Removing all Photos

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1) Liput Demo, police Rampas Reporters and camera Removing all Photos
2) Freeport is greedy, says  Rizal Ramli
3) Press Disclosure Means to Build Mutual Trust

4) Health Service in Intan Jaya Disappointing

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A google translate of article in suarapapua.com Be-aware google translate can be a bit erratic.
Original bahasa link at
http://suarapapua.com//read/2013/10/08/2850/liput-demo-polisi-rampas-kamera-wartawan-dan-menghapus-seluruh-foto

1) Liput Demo, police Rampas Reporters and camera Removing all Photos
By: Oktovianus Pogau | Tuesday, October 8, 2013 - 19:00 pm | Read: 320 times


                                                Mass action when negotiating with the police (Photo: Ist)


JAYAPURA, SUARAPAPUA.com --- City Police Officers (Police) Jayapura seize reporter's camera and delete the entire contents of the photo, when disperse a peaceful demonstration held Solidarity with Victims of Human Rights Violations (SKP HAM) Papua, Thursday (8/10 / 2015) this afternoon.
Suarapapua.com watchlist, approximately at 14:40 CEST, when the mass action and negotiations are being held in Abepura police chief, suddenly from the direction Circle Abepura, emerging one police trucks with sirens were very strong, and pushed into the ranks of the masses and forcibly dismiss the action.

Some Brother and Pastor are seen holding posters and banners was almost hit by a truck police; Dozens of members of the police in a swift jump from the truck and disperse the mob action, and arrested dozens of students, Brother-brothers, and transported to the police truck.

Indiscriminately, some of the journalists who were in the place of action and trying to take photos too intimidated by police and banned from taking photographs of the dissolution of the action by the police.
 
Several police then approached Abeth You, journalists majalahselangkah.com, and gunpoint and stole his camera and roughly delete the entire contents of the photos and videos were taken.
 
You since the beginning has tried to show a press card, and stated that he was a journalist, and was covering the action, but the police officers ignored, even three members of the police tried to transport you into the police truck parked not far from where the action.
 
"When the Brothers beaten and will be transported into the truck, I attempted taking photographs from the side, suddenly some officials approached me and confiscated my camera used to photograph, but I have to show a press card," said You.
 
According to You, it is not transported into the truck because some reporters approached the police and declared himself a journalist, and is being run reporting tasks.
 
"I have spoken directly to Wakapolresta Jayapura, Commissioner Albertus Adreana and Abepura police chief Commissioner Marthen Asmuruf, but the police seem no attention to my voice, and kept trying to delete the entire contents of the picture," said You.
 
See the behavior of the police, co-Abeth You are in place for direct action called Papua Police Chief, Inspector General Paul Waterpauw, and hold his men.
 
"I'm sorry for this incident, I hope my friends can report the action to the members of the Papua police Propam that the report can be processed," said Waterpauw, when contacted by reporters.
 
According Waterpauw, he also has spoken directly to Jayapura Wakapolresta the lead in the field, in order to apologize to the reporter on the treatment.
 
"I've asked Wakapolresta apologize to journalist friends to this act," he said.
 
Meanwhile, Victor Mambor, one expert certificate holder press the Press Council said that such a practice is common in Papua indigenous journalists.
 
During this time, said Mambor, if Papuans journalists covering the demo, always regarded as demonstrators and treated harshly, even when identity cards of their journalism.
 
"It's discrimination. Police is the law enforcement officers. But really do not know the law? "Asked Mambor as written tabloidjubi.com.
 
According Mambor, Basic Press Law of 1999 Article 4 paragraph three clearly states "To ensure the independence of the press, the national press has the right to seek, obtain, and disseminate ideas and information".
 
"And article 8, paragraph 1 reads: Any person who unlawfully intentionally perform actions that result in delay or impede the implementation of the provisions of Article 4 paragraph (2) and (3) shall be punished with imprisonment of 2 (two) years or fine Rp. 500,000,000.00 (five hundred million rupiah), "added Mambor.
 
According to him, the police should be more professional in handling mass demonstrations. Do not disperse as good heart, persecuting and arresting people.
 
"In this case, the police are the ones who knowingly perform actions that result impede or obstruct the practice of journalism. That law enforcement should know the law, "he repeated again.
 
Separately, Wakapolresta Jayapura, Commissioner Albertus Andreana, convey permohongan apology to reporters on his child's behavior in the field.
 
"We apologize to journalist friends for the actions of my members in the field, but of course since there is cause and effect," he said.
 
Oktovianus POGAU




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http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2015/10/08/freeport-greedy-says-rizal-ramli.html
2) Freeport is greedy, says  Rizal Ramli
thejakartapost.com, Jakarta | National | Thu, October 08 2015, 8:50 PM - 

Coordinating Maritime Affairs Minister Rizal Ramli dished out a sharp critique once more, and this time it was directed against foreign companies controlling Indonesia's mineral wealth. For example, the gold mine controlled by giant gold and copper miner Freeport in Papua. He also lambasted the mentality of the country’s state officials in the mineral sector.
Rizal said Indonesia was blessed with abundant mineral resources such as copper, gold, coal, nickel and tin. Unfortunately, all of those resources, except coal, are controlled by foreign powers through a work contract.
The minister said a mining site currently controlled by PT Freeport Indonesia, a subsidiary of US-based mining giant Freeport – McMoRan Inc., in Papua was one of the three biggest copper and gold mines in the world.
“However, people in Papua are very poor because Freeport pays only 1 percent in royalties for the gold it exploits. Across the world, gold royalties are around 6-7 percent,” Rizal said as quoted by tempo.co in his remarks during a general lecture to celebrate the 57th anniversary of the Jayabaya University in Jakarta on Thursday.
The minister said gold and copper reserves in the mine currently controlled by Freeport could be exploited for the next 30-40 years. Meanwhile, the company’s contract would expire within the next 5 to 10 years.
“There is now a chance for our country to be able to repeat our previous history, during which our mineral resources gave much benefit to all Indonesian people and the nation,” said Rizal.
Based on existing laws, he said, a contract could be renegotiated only 2 or 3 years before it expired. However, there were state officials who wanted Freeport’s contract to be renegotiated 10 years before it expired.
“They don’t understand negotiation techniques. We have to understand that the closer we get to the expiry of a contract, the bigger our bargaining position is. So, we can push forward much better contract terms for this nation,” said Rizal.
The minister also criticized Freeport’s poor environmental management, saying it threw mining waste, which contained mercury, into rivers in the surrounding areas, damaging the ecosystem.
Rizal said if Freeport implemented good corporate governance, it would not be that difficult for the company to handle mining waste, preventing it from polluting the environment.
“But because it [Freeport] is greedy, it doesn't want to pay compensation to victims of environmental damage. Our weak law enforcement has aggravated the situation. Ironically, in its home country, any company found guilty of damaging the environment, such as the incident that happened in the Gulf of Mexico, must pay billions of dollars in fines,” said Rizal. (ags/ebf)
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http://tabloidjubi.com/en/2015/10/08/press-disclosure-means-to-build-mutual-trust/
3) Press Disclosure Means to Build Mutual Trust

 
Jayapura, Jubi – “Conflict should not be equated with violence. A conflict occurs when there are differences in needs or interests, whether it was in small or large scales. The conflict management conflict will allow us to find the solution,” said a resource person of Papua Openness for Foreign Journalist Seminar, Jimmy Deminianus Ijie at Grand Abe Hotel, Jayapura City on Tuesday (06/10/2015).
“When the president opened the access for foreign journalist in Papua just like other provinces in Indonesia. The decision was not apart of the awareness to build mutual trust that should be started from the openness. Peace can not be existed if all parties are still infected by mutual suspicion,” he said.
According to him, the opening access for foreign journalist has doubted the electivity to close the access for mass media in today’s sophisticated multimedia.
“The president’s policy is right, because prohibiting the foreign journalist to come to Papua would raise an impression that the government cover the current issues occurred in Papua,” he said.
In mid of May 2015 when visiting Papua, the President Jokowi said he will open free access to foreign journalist to do coverage in Papua. On that occasion, the president explained it’s important to think positive in building a trust that has been missing for long time.
Earlier, the Chairman of AJI Kota Jayapura, Victor Mambor, said it’s important to open access to foreign journalist to Papua to avoid misinterpretation about Papua. Mambor gave this statement in the interview with AJI Indonesia in Jakarta in the World Press Freedom Day 2015 some times ago. He explained currently media in Papua is still growing, as well as its challenges, such as human resources, ethic to journalist positioning. In Papua, as the media is growing, the number of journalist is also increased.
“But those who are professional in skill and ethic could be said not growing in parallel. About the challenges, there’s no significant different. Journalist is still facing the terror of violence similar with what had happened in the early years,” he said. (Roy Ratumakin/rom)
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http://tabloidjubi.com/en/2015/10/08/health-service-in-intan-jaya-disappointing/

4) Health Service in Intan Jaya Disappointing

 

Jayapura, Jubi – Many residents in Intan Jaya were disappointed with poor health care service at public clinics.
Locals said they did not receive appropriate services in a timely manner and had to put up with long lines.
Facilities are poor and there are too few health workers, they said.
“Because there’s a shortage of facilities and medical personnel in Intan Jaya, many patients who come and go home disappointed because queuing up long, “chairman of Intan Jaya Student Association, Melianus Duwitau said in Abepura, Jayapura on Tuesday (06/10/2015).
He further said patients are then referred to outside Intan Jaya like Timika and Nabire and use their own money. Yet, for patients who are unable, finally treated in Intan Jaya.
Yanuarius Lagowan, General Secretary of Central Mountain Student Association in Indonesia said the condition of health care in the regency is very worrying.
He said he hoped the government will give serious attention to this case. (Mawel Benny/Tina)
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Media release -AWPA letter to Foreign Minister Julie Bishop

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Australia West Papua Association (Sydney)

PO Box 28, Spit Junction, NSW 208


Media release -9 October 2015

AWPA has written to Foreign Minister Julie Bishop concerning the crackdown on the peaceful rally on the 8 October and on other incidents of human rights abuses abuses in West Papua 

AWPA is urging Julie Bishop to

raise AWPA's concerns about the grave human rights situation in West Papua with the Indonesian Government, the crackdown on peaceful civil society groups, the intimidation of journalists simply doing their job and the tragic killing of civilians including school children by the security forces.


to encourage the Indonesian Government to allow a PIF  fact-finding mission to investigate the human rights situation in the territory. 


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The Hon Julie Bishop MP

Foreign Minister

House of Representatives


Parliament House


Canberra  ACT 2600



9 October 2015


Dear Foreign Minister,


I am writing to you on behalf of the Australia West Papua Association in Sydney concerning a number of recent incidents in West Papua which raise grave concerns for human rights defenders and peaceful activists trying to bring the ongoing human rights abuses in West Papua to international attention.


On Thursday the 8 October, 18 peaceful activists (6 who were priests) were arrested for holding a peaceful rally in front of a Catholic Church in Abepura, Jayapura.  The Rally was organised by  SKP-HAM  (Solidarity with Victims of Human Rights Violations Papua). The purpose of the rally was to bring attention to the Indonesian authorities that so far nobody has been held accountable for the killing of four students in Paniai on the 8 December 2014 by the security forces.  As the rally progressed a police truck arrived with sirens blaring driving into the demonstrators nearly hitting a number of them.   A large number of police jumped of the truck breaking up the rally and arresting 18 demonstrators.  A number of journalists who were reporting on the rally were intimidated by police and banned from taking photographs. One journalist had his camera stolen (at gunpoint) and the entire contents of photos and videos were deleted.  Although the demonstrators were eventually released, during the arrests the Police acted in a brutal and heavy-handed way. 



Other incidents.

Two high school students were shot by the Indonesian security forces in Timika on Monday the 28 September. 

Caleb Bagau, aged 18, died while his friend Efrando Sabarofek, aged 17, was wounded in the chest and legs. At approximately 19.00hrs while the students were sitting in a market culvert with their school friends, dozens of police officers armed with weapons and cars surrounded the area. 

Because they were afraid the two students ran, however the police shot in their direction killing Caleb Bagau and wounding Elfrando who was shot in the chest and leg.  Another shooting occurred when the local community went to the police station after hearing the news that a student had been shot dead at the water channel. Although the local people were angry with the police,  the police basically refused to listen and responded by firing at them wounding three.


Also on Monday 28th Levi Gebze a 16-year-old West Papuan boy was arrested and tortured by the Indonesian police in Merauke. According to a report received, the incident occurred at at 13:30hrs as Levi was on the way home on the Muli Road. He was suddenly followed by an Avanza car with 4 members of  the Indonesian police/intelligence inside. He was stopped and forced to get inside the car and with no questions asked was beaten by the police. He was then brought to the police station where he was interrogated and tortured again. He was beaten and also electrocuted. The police arrested him under charges of stealing a bag and laptop on the Yobar beach but when he denied the charge the police continued to beat and electrocute him. Levi is still suffering the effects of this brutal torture and there has been no investigation into the actions of the police whatsoever.


We urge you to raise our concerns about the grave human rights situation in West Papua with the Indonesian Government, the crackdown on peaceful civil society groups, the intimidation of journalists simply doing their job and the tragic killing of civilians including school children by the security forces.


We note that in the Communiqué from the 46thPacific Islands Forum meeting in Port Moresby, that the PIF Leaders requested the Forum Chair to consult on a PIF fact-finding mission to West Papua to discuss the situation in Papua with the parties involved. WE urge you to encourage the Indonesian Government to allow such a fact-finding mission to investigate the human rights situation in the territory. 


Yours sincerely

 

Joe Collins

 

AWPA (Sydney)


-------------------------------------------
                                               photos from suarapapua.com


                                 Mass action when negotiating with the police (Photo: Ist)

               Police trucks used during disperse and arrested a number of mass action (Photo: Ist).


                              Police officers arrested dozens of mass action (Photo: Ist).



 (From Majalahselangkah.com) Step Magazine reporter, Abraham Abeth Yow (right), accompanied by Papuan human rights lawyer,  Olga Hamadi (left) when negotiating with Wakapolresta Jayapura. Photo: Benny Mawel / Jubi



                              (FromTabloidjubi) One Catholic monk of the Franciscan Province of Papua, 
                              Julian Pawika when intimidated police in Abepura, Thursday - Jubi / Beny Mawel


                           (From Tabloidjubi) Monks currently protesting in front of the Post Office Abepura-Jubi-Abeth You





1) Indonesia Plans New Mining Contract Renewal Rules by Year-End

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2) Indonesia promises Freeport to extend Grasberg contract 
3) Indonesia, PT Freeport Indonesia agree on developing world’s largest underground mining site
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http://jakartaglobe.beritasatu.com/business/indonesia-plans-new-mining-contract-renewal-rules-year-end/
1) Indonesia Plans New Mining Contract Renewal Rules by Year-End
By : Wilda Asmarini | on 2:36 PM October 09, 2015

Indonesia is set to revise its regulations on mining contracts at the end of the year. (Antara Photo/Muhammad Adimaja)
Jakarta. Indonesia plans to amend its rules on mining contracts by the end of the year, a government official said, allowing US miner Freeport-McMoRan to apply for an extension of its contract at the Grasberg copper and gold mine.
Freeport has for years been seeking contract certainty from the Indonesian government. Its existing mining contract ends in 2021, but present rules only allows talks on an extension to start two years before a contract is due to end.
"A revision to the government regulation on the time of a contract extension proposal, is now being processed in the economics ministry," Bambang Gatot, director general of coal and mineral at the mines ministry told reporters on Friday.
"We expect it can be released soon, this year," he said.
The new rules may allow companies to propose an extension 10 years before their contracts expire.
Freeport said on Thursday it had been assured by the government of Indonesia that the contract for its Grasberg mine in the eastern province of Papua would be extended beyond 2021.
The government has been rolling out new measures to re-energise Southeast Asia's largest economy after growth cooled in the second quarter to 4.67 percent, the slowest pace in six years.
President Joko Widodo has shown signs that the government is trying to mend fences with wary investors following a series of nationalistic policies by the previous administration.
Freeport plans to invest $18 billion to transition the Grasberg complex from an open pit to underground mining in late 2017. The company currently produces about 220,000 tons of copper ore per day, which is then converted to copper concentrate.
The move on a contract extension comes after the US miner previously reached agreements on higher royalties, an export tax and domestic processing and divestment.
Reuters
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http://www.mining.com/indonesia-promises-freeport-to-extend-grasberg-contract/
2) Indonesia promises Freeport to extend Grasberg contract 
Cecilia Jamasmie | October 8, 2015
Copper and gold giant Freeport-McMoRan (NYSE:FCX) was trading higher Thursday afternoon after the company announced that Indonesia has promised the company to extent the mining contract for its giant Grasberg mine beyond 2021.
The approval will include “the same rights and the same level of legal and fiscal certainty provided under its contract of work,” the Phoenix-based company said in the statement.
Shares were up 2.61% to $13.35, after climbing more than 10% on Wednesday, when miner said two appointees by billionaire activist investor Carl Icahn were added to the board of directors.
Freeport, the largest listed copper producer, added that the Indonesian government is working on economic stimulus measures, including revisions to mining regulations.
The company, which is under pressure from Icahn and weak commodity prices, said in January it planned to invest $17 billion to build a smelter and for long-term development of its underground gold and copper deposits in Papua province. But in today’s release Freeport didn’t mention any proposal for making companies build a copper smelter in Indonesia or the prospect of Freeport’s local unit selling shares.

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http://www.rappler.com/world/regions/asia-pacific/indonesia/bahasa/englishedition/108649-mining-freeport-investment
3) Indonesia, PT Freeport Indonesia agree on developing world’s largest underground mining site
The long-term investment plan focuses on continuing operations of the Grasberg Mining Complex past 2021
Rappler.com Published 11:46 AM, October 09, 2015 Updated 11:46 AM, October 09, 2015

JAKARTA, Indonesia – The government of Indonesia and PT Freeport Indonesia, a premier US-based natural resources company, have reached an agreement to develop the world’s largest underground mining site.
The long-term investment plan focuses on continuing operations of the Grasberg Mining Complex past 2021.
“Following intensive communications and consultations with the country’s highest leaders, we agreed to provide assurances and prepare for a continuation of a $18 billion long-term investment,” said Sudirman Said, the Minister of Energy and Mineral Resources of the Republic of Indonesia.
Since 2014, PT Freeport Indonesia and the Government have been in negotiations to secure operations in the Province of Papua.
The points of negotiation included 11 points on the aspirations of the communities and local government of Papua. Those have been settled.
The remaining 6 points relate to the central Government, including the release of parts of the operations, principles of divestment, increased local components, development of a smelter, increased state royalties, and the legal status of ongoing operations.
“Following intensive communications and consultations with the country’s highest leaders, we agreed to provide assurances and prepare for a continuation of a USD 18 billion long-term investment.,” said Sudirman Said, the Minister of Energy and Mineral Resources of the Republic of Indonesia.
The government lauds the agreement as beneficial for the economic development of Papua and in the West Papua regions.
James R. Moffett, Chairman of Freeport McMoRan Inc, agreed.
“We are pleased with the Government assurances of legal and fiscal certainty and look forward to continuing our long term partnership and investment plans to advance the economy, jobs and economic velocity in Papua,” he said.
Since 2014, PT Freeport Indonesia and the Government have been in negotiations to secure operations in the Province of Papua.
From the 17 points of negotiation, 11 concern the aspirations of the communities and local government of Papua which now have been settled. While the remaining 6 points relate to the central Government, including: the release of parts of the operations, principles of divestment, increased local components, development of a smelter, increased state royalties, and the legal status of on-going operations.
Said said President Joko Widodo emphasized that 4 points be maintained for the agreement to take place: the benefits of the on-going operations of PT Freeport Indonesia need to be maximized as much as possible for the development of the metal industry in the Papua and West Papua region; PT Freeport Indonesia must continue in its efforts to involve local industry and develop human resources; yhe development of a smelter must be accelerated in accordance with agreements reached; and Indonesia must accelerate the improvement of the investment climate to attract new investors and to expand the investment already in the country.
The agreement comes as the government introduces stimulus measures to woo desperately needed investment, in its latest bid to boost the sliding rupiah and breathe new life into the slowing economy.
Freeport-McMoRan is the world’s largest publicly traded copper producer, and boasts an industry-leading global portfolio of mineral assets. Among its assets is the Grasberg minerals district in Indonesia, one of the largest copper and gold deposits in the world. – Rappler.com
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1) LBH Pers condemns police action Abuses Against Journalists

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2) Police in Papua use violence to disperse a peacful demonstration
3) Police Tighten Security at Freeport’s Explosive Warehouse

4) Papua Signs Declaration on Melanesian Brotherhood

5) Air Force Involved in Probe into Shooting Case

6) PNG Residents Dominate Kina Currency Exchange in Jayapura
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A google translate of article in suarapapua.com. Be-aware google translate can be a bit erratic.
Original bahasa link at

1) LBH Pers condemns police action Abuses Against Journalists
By: Oktovianus Pogau | Friday, October 9, 2015 - 19:30 pm | Read: 163 times

LBH Pers condemns police action Abuses Against Journalists



Demo SKP Papuan human rights that led intimidation against journalists (Photo: Oktovianus Pogau / SP)

JAKARTA, SUARAPAPUA.com --- Legal Aid Institute (LBH) Jakarta Press denounced the arbitrariness of Jayapura City Police officers, who guns, and seizing the reporter's camera Step Magazine, Abeth You, on Thursday (10/08/2015) yesterday in Jayapura, Papua.
"The actions of the police officers had been injured members of press freedom and freedom of expression in Indonesia are already guaranteed in the constitution," said Asep Komarudin from Jakarta LBH Pers, in a press release sent to the editor suarapapua.com, this afternoon.

According to Asep, the actions of individual members of the police resort city of Jayapura is a form of blockage or inhibiting freedom of the press, and the act is a criminal offense in accordance with law number 40 of 1999 on the Press Article 18, paragraph 1, which reads: "Any person who unlawfully intentionally perform actions that result in delay or hinder the freedom of the press shall be punished by a maximum imprisonment of 2 years or a maximum fine of Rp. 500.000.000, - (five hundred million rupiah). "

Asep said, pointing a gun, and throttled committed by police officers resort to Abeth You Jayapura City and of demonstrations is considered a crime of persecution in accordance with Article 352 of the Criminal Code.

"The city of Jayapura Police have violated human rights because it has been forcibly dispersed demonstrations in accordance with article 25 of Law No. 39 of 1999 on human rights states that every person has the right to express opinions in public."

"The act of Jayapura City Police officers are very contrary to the spirit of President Joko Widodo that open access to information, especially for press freedom in Papua," he said.

Press LBH Jakarta also asks, first, national police chief ordered the police chief to investigate Papua Jayapura City police officers who have committed abuses and press freedom insurmountable barrier to the Criminal Code and the Press Law.
 
Second, the National Police Commission and the National Human Rights Commission to immediately conduct investigations related to violations of freedom of the press and of expression in public.
 
Third, the Press Council immediately urged the police to investigate cases of obstruction and inhibition of press freedom in Papua.

Fourth, the police of the Republic of Indonesia, especially in Papua to guarantee freedom of the press and protect journalists who are running their journalistic activities in Papua. And ensure that similar incidents do not recur.
 
Oktovianus POGAU

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2) Police in Papua use violence to disperse a peacful demonstration
Statement by the LP3BH Executive-Director on
8th October 2015

  The action by the police (Polres) in Jayapura and the police (Polsek) in Abepura in forcibly dispersing a peaceful demonstration,
arresting several monks from the Catholic Church and a number of activists in Abepura-Jayapura on 8th October was a serious violation
of their basic human rights. It was a serious violation of their right to freedom of expression.   The demonstrators were calling on the 
Government of Indonesia under President Ir H. Widodo to resolve a number of cases of human rights violations, in particular the incident 
in Paniai 8 when four school children were killed.

  The police have perpetrated many acts of repression against peaceful actions in the Land of Papua. They always failing to handle
such actions in accordance with democratic principles.  These demonstrations are all too often occasions when civil society
actions are handled by the police with acts of violence that seriously violate basic human rights.

   As the Executive-Director of the LP3BH-Manokwari, I call on human rights activists in the Land of Papua to work together for an action
against the  local and regional police for what they have committed against human rights activists and the Catholic Church monks.

   What the Chief of Police should now do is to dismiss the chiefs of police in the City of Jayapura and in Abepura who have so blatantly
engaged in very harmful operations which have clearly violated the basic human rights of all the people who were involved in the peaceful
demonstration that were held yesterday.
Peace!
[Translated by Carmel Budiardjo, Recipient of the Right Livelihood Award 1995

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3) Police Tighten Security at Freeport’s Explosive Warehouse
 

Timika, Jubi – Mimika Police working with PT Freeport Security personnel have tightened security at the company’s explosive warehouse located at the Light Industrial Park (LIP).
Mimika Police Deputy Chief Commissioner Wirasto Adi Nugroho told reporters in Timika on Wednesday (7/10/2015) that the action was taken after an unknown person reportedly entered the warehouse days ago.
“In the future, we will coordinate with Freeport’s security guards to improve the security on Freeport’s explosive warehouse because the location is quite remote,” he said.
In this context, he said, a troop of Mobile Brigade has been deployed to provide security assistance to the company that earlier only have a unit of security guard.
Wirasto admitted there are thousands of magnum-type explosive stored at the warehouse for the purpose of mining operation.
On Monday (5/10), the security guard found a padlock attached on the warehouse was broken. He also found the perpetrator who ‘s not identified yet broke the wire fence behind the warehouse. Some stuffs were found scattered outside of the warehouse.
So far the police assumed the perpetrator came in the warehouse searching for food that might be stored. “We will evaluate the warehouse’s security system, why could the perpetrator easily enter it. We will also ask the management to install a camera to help identify people who enter the warehouse,” he said.
Until now the Mimika Police is still doing the investigation related to the destruction of Freeport’s facility. PT Freeport use the magnum-type explosive to crush the stones at the Grasberg open mining area and at several underground mining areas in Tembagapura. Those stones contain the copper and gold minerals to be further processed by PT. Freeport. (*/rom)


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4) Papua Signs Declaration on Melanesian Brotherhood

Ambon, Jubi – Papua and four other Indonesian provinces signed the ‘Declaration on Melanesian Brotherhood’ in Ambon, Maluku province on Wednesday (7/10/2015) during an event attended by the President Joko Widodo.
The former Papua Vice Governor and Regional Secretary Constan Carma represented Papua Governor Lukas Enembe and put an initial-sign on the paper. “Papua Governor Lukas Enembe was not able to attend the event, so he gave me a mandate to put an initial-sign as a sign of approval.
According to Karma, although he was not able to attend the event, the Governor Lukas Enembe will later sign the Declaration of Melanesian Brotherhood. “In addition to Papua, four other provinces participated in the signing of declaration are East Nusa Tenggara (NTT), Maluku, North Maluku and West Papua,” he said.
He explained in addition to Papua Governor, the governors of North Maluku and West Papua also were not able to attend the event. “The Declaration of Indonesian Melanesian Brotherhood has connection with the internal political interest in the eastern Indonesia,” he said.
Further he said this is because people in the five provinces who agreed to sign the declaration are part of or group of Melanesian race.
“This political agreement is excellent and important to maintain the unity and brotherhood of Melanesia and Indonesia,” he said.
He further said this agreement is important in political relation because the five provinces have different custom and culture, this could be a mediator or unifier. (*/rom)
Oktovianus POGAU
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5) Air Force Involved in Probe into Shooting Case


 

Jayapura, Jubi – Air Force officers joined an investigation into the alleged shooting of police officers by members of the Air Force Special Forces (Paskhas) at Sentani Airport, Jayapura regency.
Air Base Commander Colonel Purwoko to reporters after attending a ceremony of the 70th anniversary of the military at Makodam on this week that the investigation team had arrived from Jakarta.
“I have not had time to see them for attending this ceremony,” he said.
He if his personnel made a mistake then it must be processed in accordance with the applicable laws of the military.
He continued up to now he did not know how many members who did the shooting and is still deepening in the case. “ I don’t know yet. It will be proven and a special team is deepening this case,” he said.
Previously, chief of Papua Police, Inspector General (Pol) Paulus Waterpauw said there was no intention of this case. “It was a rapid series of events where our members and Paskhas were in the field together to overcome the attack of the community,” said Waterpauw.
He said the two victims are now undergoing treatment at Bhayangkara hospital in Kotaraja, Jayapura city. They are in stable condition. “Both members of the police and members of Paskhas were there when they received a complaint from the securitity and it was in the night. I think it is appropriate regulations or SOPs. It means the community need to not entry into the airport area, “he said.
In addition, he said there were groups of people who vandalized are now detained at Jayapura police station for further question.
“It will be seen in the effort of gathering information. So there is no intention or any other purpose. We’re coordinating to the level leadership to immediately work together, “he said. (Roy Ratumakin/Tina)
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6) PNG Residents Dominate Kina Currency Exchange in Jayapura
 
Jayapura, Jubi – People from Papua New Guinea dominate foreign currency trade in Jayapura, a foreign currency trader said.
Syahbar said PNG residents who exchange money had come to Jayapura for holiday or studying.
“They come for holiday or family visits. They most often come to exchange the kina to the rupiah and students who study in Jayapura also exchange money here,” Syahbar told Jubi in Jayapura on last week.
At money exchange counters , one kina is worth Rp 4,500.
“I bought 1 Kina for Rp 4,500. I resell for Rp 4,800, “he said.
He added that residents of Jayapura who sell in the border area also often exchange money in its place.
“On weekend, traders usually sell at the border of RI-PNG and they exchange money there, “he said. As reported earlier, Foreign Exchange Business activities (KUPV) stated according to data obtained from the activities of traders Foreign exchange buying and selling currency in Jayapura is dominated by PNG money.
Sumi, currency trader of PT Buma Jaya Abadi, in Jayapura said foreign currency exchange currency is dominated by PNG Kina to Rupiah.
“For currency exchange of PNG Kina, many residents come exchanged for shopping and a variety of other purposes, ” he said. (Munir)
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Island in focus: Soldier detained for killing woman, children

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http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2015/10/09/island-focus-soldier-detained-killing-woman-children.html
Island in focus: Soldier  detained for killing woman,  children 

The Jakarta Post, Jayapura | Archipelago | Fri, October 09 2015, 3:18 PM
Papua Cenderawasih Military Police have detained a soldier, identified only as SJ, for allegedly killing a pregnant woman and her two children in Bintuni, West Papua in August.

“Yes, the officer has been detained and is under investigation by the military police and will soon face trial,” Papua Military Commander Maj. Gen. Hinsa Siburian told The Jakarta Post on Thursday.

Hinsa said the military command had cooperated with police from when the case emerged until the officer was detained. 

The potential motive behind the murder and how many people were involved in the killing is not yet clear. 

Frelly Dian Sari, 26, who was four-months pregnant, and her daughter Cicilia Putri Natalia, 4, and son Andhika, 2, were found dead at their house with stab wounds on their bodies on Aug. 27. Frelly’s husband was working out of town on that day. - 
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1) Indonesia could change law on Papua mine contract

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2) Police Commit serious human rightsviolatios in Abepura
3) TELL OBAMA TO SUPPORT HUMAN RIGHTS IN WEST PAPUA
4) Letter to the Dutch Minister of Foreign Affairs
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1) Indonesia could change law on Papua mine contract
Updated at 7:23 am today
Indonesia's government is planning to amend its rules on mining contracts to allow the United States company, Freeport-McMoRan, to extend its contract at the Grasberg mine in West Papua.
Freeport's contract for the world's largest copper and gold mine ends in 2021, but present rules only allow talks on an extension to end two years before a contract is due to expire.
Reuters reports a mines ministry official, Bambang Gatot, saying a revision to the government's regulations is being processed by the economics ministry, and should be released by the end of the year.
The new rules may allow companies to propose an extension 10 years before their contracts expire.
Freeport says it has been assured by the Indonesian government that its Grasberg contract would be extended beyond 2021.
The company plans to invest 18 billion dollars to transition the mine from an open pit to underground mining in late 2017.
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2) Police Commit serious human rightsviolatios in Abepura
Statement by the Executive-Director of the LP3BH on 11 October, 2015

  The Security Forces of the regional police in Jayapura have yet again committed serious human rights violations/illegal acts by
resorting to violence  against six  monks from the Catholic Church on Thursday 8th October in Abepura-Jayapura.

   The names of the monks are: Sofer Pangguem, OSA, Fr Freddy Y.Pawika, OFM, Fr Dorman Skukubun OFM, Fr Benyamin Tanang, OFM, Fr
Gaspar Bahala, OFM, and Fr Didimus, OFM. According to reports circulated on online media in the Land of
Papua, it is clear that these were anarchistic and destructive actions that were perpetrated by members of the Security Forces from the
Police Resort, Jayapura against people who were taking part in a demonstration.

   The actions taken by members of Polresta Jayapura  were in violation of  the principles set out in Law 39/1999 on Basic Human
Rights and the Indonesian Constitution of 1945 which guarantees the right to freedom of expression and opinion. They were moreover against
the Principles laid down for handling demonstrations, Law 9/1998 on Freedom of Expression.

  There were no negotiations between the Jayapura Police and the Coordinator of the mass of people involved in the action. All of
sudden without warning, the police turned up and arrested a number of monks and some members of the public who were involved in a peaceful
action demanding that those who perpetrated these actions should be brought to justice for carrying out grave  human rights violations in
Enarotali-Paniai, in December last year.    Bearing all this in mind,  we feel that we are perfectly entitled
to call for the Chief of Police as well as the Head of Reskrim of the Police of Jayapura  to be replaced because they showed no willingness
to talk to the people involved in the peaceful demonstration.

   The acts taken by  several members of the police Jayapura to arrest and mal-treat one of the monks, Father Yulianus Pawika are
serious violations of his rights. Photographs of all this  have been sent to the Human Rights Council of the United Nations in Geneva,
Switzerland. These documents are evidence of the human rights violations being perpetrated  by the Indonesian Military and Police
against people who were giving expression to their aspirations in accordance with democratic principles as guaranteed in the Indonesian
Constitution-1945 and Law 39/1999.    It is extremely regrettable that Father Yulianus Pawika OFM was
severely maltreated which shows yet again that the police forces in the Land of Papua continue to behave very arrogantly and completely
fail to abide by the principles of democracy and  basic human rights which guarantee protection for people who are involved in peaceful
demonstrations.   Moreover, apart from the fact that such actions should be handled before a court of law, these actions incur  the anger of the Lord
Almighty, whose monks of the Cathoic Church were treated in such a way here in the Land of Papua.

  This means that the Catholic Church via the intermediary of the Fransiskan Order and civil society  as well as BP Am Synode GKI
organisation are fully entitled to take legal action against  the Chief of Police of Jayappura in the appropriate court, here in the Land of Papua.
Peace
Yan Christian Warinussy, Executive-Director of the LP3BH (Institution
of Research, Analysis and Development for Legal Aid.
Translated by Carmel Budiardjo, Recipient of the Right Livelihood Award, 1995.
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3) TELL OBAMA TO SUPPORT HUMAN RIGHTS IN WEST PAPUA

sign here: 
http://diy.rootsaction.org/petitions/tell-obama-to-support-human-rights-in-west-papua

On October 26, 2015, President Obama will meet with Indonesia's 
President Joko "Jokowi" Widodo.

Beginning in May 1963, West Papua was occupied by Indonesia with U.S.  government support and encouragement. By 1969, Indonesia had annexed 
the territory. Over the course of five decades, West Papuans have  suffered mass killings, torture, rape, and the loss of their culture 
and lands. U.S. corporations like the mining giant Freeport McMoRan  have devastated the environment. At least 100,000 Papuans are 
estimated to have died as a result of Indonesian rule. In addition,  the region has been so inundated with migrants that indigenous 
Papuans are no longer a majority in their own land.

The U.S. continues to arm and train the security forces that repress  the West Papuan people. The Indonesian government's attempts to 
conceal the truth about West Papua include banning foreign  journalists and UN Special Rapporteurs on human rights from visiting 
the territory. While President Widodo has announced several positive  initiatives, elements in his government, including the security 
forces, are resisting change and the human rights violations continue.

The West Papuans continue to resist Indonesian rule. Groups  supporting self-determination recently came together in the United 
Liberation Movement for West Papua (ULMWP) in a broad coalition to  press their case within West Papua and internationally.

Restrictions on security assistance from the United States were  important in Timor-Leste (East Timor) gaining their independence from 
Indonesia. The U.S. should again restrict training and weapons to  Indonesia in support of the rights of West Papuans.
This is a petition of the East Timor and Indonesia Action Network (ETAN).
etanetanetanetanetanetanetanetanetanetanetanetan
Urge Obama to support human rights in West Papua when he meets 
Indonesia President Jokowi Widodo. Sign ETAN's petition. 
http://diy.rootsaction.org/p/papua
Help us shatter the 50 years of silence concerning US complicity in
Indonesian mass violence, murder. Sign, share http://chn.ge/1v50Edj
ETAN needs your support. Please donate today. Go to http://etan.org/Donate.htm
John M. Miller, National Coordinator
East Timor & Indonesia Action Network (ETAN)


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3) Letter to the Dutch Minister of Foreign Affairs

Minister of Foreign Affairs
Drs. A.G. Koenders
Postbus 20061
2500 EA Den Haag

10 October 2015
subject: Papua

Dear Mr. Koenders,

I am writing to you on behalf of Foundation Pro Papua concerning a number of recent incidents in West Papua which raise grave concerns for human rights defenders and peaceful activists trying to bring the ongoing human rights abuses in West Papua to international attention.

On Thursday the 8 October, 18 peaceful activists (6 who were priests) were arrested for holding a peaceful rally in front of a Catholic Church in Abepura, Jayapura.  The Rally was organised by  SKP-HAM  (Solidarity with Victims of Human Rights Violations Papua). The purpose of the rally was to bring attention to the Indonesian authorities that so far nobody has been held accountable for the killing of four students in Paniai on the 8 December 2014 by the security forces*.  As the rally progressed a police truck arrived with sirens blaring driving into the demonstrators nearly hitting a number of them.   A large number of police jumped of the truck breaking up the rally and arresting 18 demonstrators.  A number of journalists who were reporting on the rally were intimidated by police and banned from taking photographs. One journalist had his camera stolen (at gunpoint) and the entire contents of photos and videos were deleted.  Although the demonstrators were eventually released, during the arrests the Police acted in a brutal and heavy-handed way. 

Other incidents.
Two high school students were shot by the Indonesian security forces in Timika on Monday the 28 September. Caleb Bagau, aged 18, died while his friend Efrando Sabarofek, aged 17, was wounded in the chest and legs. At approximately 19.00 hrs while the students were sitting in a market culvert with their school friends, dozens of police officers armed with weapons and cars surrounded the area. Because they were afraid the two students ran, however the police shot in their direction killing Caleb Bagau and wounding Elfrando who was shot in the chest and leg.  Another shooting occurred when the local community went to the police station after hearing the news that a student had been shot dead at the water channel. Although the local people were angry with the police,  the police basically refused to listen and responded by firing at them wounding three.

Also on Monday 28th Levi Gebze a 16-year-old West Papuan boy was arrested and tortured by the Indonesian police in Merauke. According to a report received, the incident occurred at 13:30 hrs as Levi was on the way home on the Muli Road. He was suddenly followed by an Avanza car with 4 members of  the Indonesian police/intelligence inside. He was stopped and forced to get inside the car and with no questions asked was beaten by the police. He was then brought to the police station where he was interrogated and tortured again. He was beaten and also electrocuted. The police arrested him under charges of stealing a bag and laptop on the Yobar beach but when he denied the charge the police continued to beat and electrocute him. Levi is still suffering the effects of this brutal torture and there has been no investigation into the actions of the police whatsoever.

We urge you to raise our concerns again about the grave human rights situation in West Papua with the Indonesian Government, the crackdown on peaceful civil society groups, the intimidation of journalists simply doing their job and the tragic killing of civilians including school children by the security forces.

We note that in the Communiqué from the 46th Pacific Islands Forum meeting in Port Moresby, that the PIF Leaders requested the Forum Chair to consult on a PIF fact-finding mission to West Papua to discuss the situation in Papua with the parties involved. We urge you to encourage the Indonesian Government to allow such a fact-finding mission to investigate the human rights situation in the territory. 

Yours sincerely
Foundation Pro Papua
Koen J. de Jager

*  Questions to the Min. of FA – ref. MINBUZA-2014.722164

CC: Australian West Papua Association
       West Papua Action Auckland 
       Tapol (UK)
       ETAN (US)
       ICP (Germany)
       West Papua Netzwerk (Germany)
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1) Papua: release of Franciscans and Augustinians arrested during a peaceful protest

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1) Papua: release of Franciscans and Augustinians arrested during a peaceful protest

2) Report about Police Shooting in Gorong-GHorong, Timika

3) West Papua: High school student assassinated by Indonesian police 

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» 10/12/2015
INDONESIA
1) Papua: release of Franciscans and Augustinians arrested during a peaceful protest
by Mathias Hariyadi
About ten religious were detained by police in front of the Good Shepherd Catholic Church. They were demanding justice for a young student murder victim. Their action “was designed to give a voice to our heart and conscience,” a clergyman said. “The Franciscans came to Papua in 1936 out of love for the people, not the state." A few hours after their arrest, they were released.


Jakarta (AsiaNews) – The authorities released a group of Franciscan and Augustinian monks detained last Friday (9 Oct) at a peaceful protest in Abepura, Papua. The religious had been taken into custody at 2.40 pm in front of town’s Good Shepherd Catholic Church.
Scores of religious as well as human rights advocates were demonstrating to demand justice for a student from Painai, whose murder on 8 December 2014 remains unsolved. When police intervened, they took away a dozen people.
Abeth You, a Catholic journalist who was covering the protest, said that police seized his camera when he was taking pictures of Fr Dorman Skukubun OFM’s arrest.
In addition to Fr Skukubun, police took into custody Fr Sorefus Pangguem OSA as well as other Franciscan novices, namely Frs Benyamin Tanang, Gaspar Bahala and Didimus.
The protest took place because the demands made to the government by the Justice and Peace Commission and human rights lawyers had fallen on deaf ears.
A few hours after the arrest, all the religious were released. Fr Yulianus Pawika OFM told journalists that protesters came from many walks of life, and had no "political intentions”. Instead, their action “was designed to give a voice to our heart and conscience. The Franciscans came to Papua in 1936,” he added, “out of love for the people, not the state."
Indonesia proclaimed its independence from the Netherlands on 17 August 1945. Papua was the only province to remain under Dutch control. In 1969, Indonesia annexed it following a referendum.
Although acknowledged by the United Nations, the referendum remains controversial among Papuans with many convinced that the voting process was rigged by the Indonesians. Local separatist movements do not recognise the result.
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2) Report about Police Shooting in Gorong-GHorong, Timika

Chronological Report by Pastor Honoratus and Patrus Wetipo

Bloody Incidents in Timika

Two Shooting Incidents

1. The First Incident

  On Monday, 28 September 2015 at 7pm, there was a shooting incident against two students  and a friend by the Police in Mimika-Baru,
Mimika at the Gorong-Gorong Market in Timika. This occurred at the Muara Complex, Biak.

  Three people were shot: The first was Kalep Bagau, 18 years old, a student at SMK Harapan, Timika, Second Grade who was hit in the chest
and later died at the General Hospital, Timika The second was Efrando Sabarofek, seventeen years old, who was studying at the SMK, Patra,
Timika, Second Grade. who was hit in his chest and leg and is now being treated at the General Hospital, Timika. The third was Bastian Korwa, 
seventeen years old, a graduate from the Middle School who was
hit by a rubber bullet.

2. Second Incident

  On the same day at 8pm. a vehicle owned by  the TNI.[Indonesian Army] was involved in a crash. When this occurred, a soldier got out
and immediately shot  Niko Bedes, twenty-one years ol, who was hit on the knee of his left leg on Jalan  Yos Sudarso, close to the post
office in Timika Papua. After being shot, he was forcibly moved to a prison cell of the Police Force, Mimika.

The following is a description by the victims:

 First Incident:

 Before the shootings that involved these three young people, something else had happened. According to several witnesses, an
unknown person started throwing missiles at the home of Harol Yoku, as a result of which, several windows were broken.

Chronology according to the Victims:

  It started at 6pm when Kaleb Bagau, Elfrando I.S. Sabarofek and Bastian Korwa were sitting chatting under the Tian Tower,
Gorong-Gorong, Timika.  About an hour later, a mobile patrol belonging to the Mimika Police
with police officers in the vehicle drove passed. When they noticed the three friends sitting there, they reversed their vehicle and
stopped in front of them. The police shouted: ‘Get from there, you lot, otherwise we will shoot you.' The three friends said: ‘We are only 
having a chat, we are not doing anything.' The police then drove away.

  The three friends then decided to go to Complex Biak. While they were walking there, they saw the mobile patrol vehicle  which was now
parked in front of a house where there had been a problem which they knew nothing about.

  They did nothing more  but even so, the police returned and opened fire from about 6 -7 metres away. 'The police started shooting as us,
We were amazed.'  Without knowing anything about any previous problem, they strarted
shooting us.'

  The first one to be hit was Efrando, who was hit in the chest. At first he didn’t feel anything, but because the situation had become
very tense, they decided to run away. But even so, they were shot and wounded.   Hoping to find somewhere safe, they stopped in front of the
nearest house to ask for help. When they were able to get into the front garden, they all fell down.  When the police started shooting again, Kalep was hit again and
fell down. This time, the police were using rubber bullets.. Bastian was hit in the chest as a result of which he fell unconscious. Kaleb and 
Efrando were  taken to a hospital nearby by people there who had witnessed the incident

  Later at about 8.30pm that evening, Bastian noticed a Provos vehicle, a Dalmas vehicle and a Black Avansa vehicle and number of
motor-cars that were all parked near where the incident has occurred.  According to the latest information we have received,  one of the
victims hdied, another one was seriously wounded and is now being treated in hospital. The third man was slightly wounded.
.
Identity of the victims:
Kaleb Bagau, 17 years old,  who died.

Efrando I.S. Sabarofekho is also 17 years old, is still in hospital
where he is being treated for his wounds while the third victim was helped by people nearby.

The Perpetrator:

A member of the Mimika Baru police force.
We think that they are:
Brip N. and Bribka IP
The photographs of the victims are attached to this document.
This is the end of the first document received
[The second part of the document will be translated and distributed soon. Carmel Budiardjo]


——
This is the second part of the  document received from Pastor Honoratus Pigau.

This information iwas received from the Victims.

   On 28 September at 8.00pm, Nico Bedes (21 years old) was given a lift on a motor-bike by a friend  to go  to Pasar Lama to buy some
pinang [betel nuts]. On their way home in Kebun Sirih Lama, they drove along Yos Sudarso Road. On the way, they stopped for a moment outside
the Post Office which is on Yos Sudarso Road, Nico realised that he had forgotten to put in his (false) teeth, because they had left  home
in such a hurry..

   As a result, he had almost been left behind. He became rather confused. As they later drove home, they tried hard to avoid a number
of vehicles, some of which were parked at Mobile Avansa Putih. while others were moving along the road rather slowly. As a result they
bumped into one of the Mobile Avansas and as a result, they both fell to the ground.

  The Avansa Mobile that was travelling along the road was moving rather slowly. As a result, they bumped into the Avansa.Two men who
were both soldiers got down from the Avansa. The friend who was driving the motor-bike fled. As two members of the armed forces
approached Nico who was quite shaken by what had happened so he was unable to say anything. The soldiers opened fire and hit him on his left thigh.

   Half an hour later, a Mobile Patrol arrived on the scene  The Mobile Avansa that they had bumped into belonged to a member of the
Indonesian Army. A  soldier pulled Nico up, pushed him into his Mobile Patrol and took him to the police command centre They then pushed him
into a police cell so he was now a prisoner of the police.   He later said that he was not questioned. He was kept apart from
the other people who were being held in the police cells. Throughout the night, he was shouting for help  because of a wound he had
sustained on his left thigh which was bleeding heavily.  But his efforts to seek help were ignored.

   By 9pm, the bleeding had become so heavy that he asked a picket who was on duty for help, but the picket took no notice of this call
for help.   On the following day, 29 September as 8am, they  told him to go home but no one did anything about his wound.

  That morning, when he was ordered to leave the police station, they had still done nothing about his wound although it was still bleeding
heavily .Because of the wound, he was unable to stand up. This was when another policeman helped him to stand up and said he would take
him home. But before they reached his home, the policeman gave him Rp. 20,000 and told him to make his way home himself on an ojek.

   When he arrived home, his wife was very concerned about the heavily bleeding wound and took him to the Timika Hospital to have it
properly treated.
Translated by Carmel Budiardjo, Recipient of the Right Livelihood Award, 1995
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https://www.greenleft.org.au/node/60309

3) West Papua: High school student assassinated by Indonesian police 

Monday, October 12, 2015


Indonesian police shot two senior high school students in Gorong Gorong, Timika, West Papua on September 28, the Institute for Papuan Advocacy and Human Rights (IPAHR) said the next day.
The IPAHR said 17-year-old Kaleb Bogau was shot in the chest and died on the scene. Efrando Sabarofek, also 17, was shot in the chest and leg and is in a critical condition in the Timika hospital.
The family of Bogau is treating the case as a political assassination. He was the son of National Committee for West Papua (KNPB) activist Reverend Obed Bogau.
Obed Bogau was reported to have received an apology via text message from the regional chief of police Paulus Waterpau. It was reported that Bogau refused the apology, saying Indonesia had killed too many Papuans and was treating them like animals. 
He asked the police to properly investigate this case, as well as the recent killing of Kamoro students by the military at a traditional ceremony in the Catholic Church in Timika last month.
The KNPB is a non-violent movement seeking independence from Indonesia. It is made up of mostly youth and students who are active in all major centres across Papua. Indonesian military intelligence has identified the KNPB as the prime target for counterinsurgency operations.
Within the past year, there have been at least five cases of civilian shootings in Papua by soldiers or police force. Eight people have died as a result.
The IPAHR's Paula Makabory said: “This Indonesian police assassination is directed against Papuan youth and the KNPB in an attempt to quell political protest by a new generation of Papuans.
“This political assassination of a West Papuan youth should draw international condemnation.
“The Pacific Island Forum this month has talked about sending a human rights fact finding mission to West Papua. The Indonesian foreign minister had said it was wrong for the Pacific Island Forum to speak about the internal affairs of Indonesia. 
“The Australian and New Zealand government appear to have sided with Indonesia to attempt to sideline attempts for international access and attention to the human rights situation.
“It is clearly time that our brothers and sisters in the Pacific and wider international community condemn Indonesia for its callous and vicious State control over the West Papuan people.” 

1) Tonga hints at visit to Papua over human rights concerns

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2) Police surrounded OFFICE KNPB SENTANI
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1) Tonga hints at visit to Papua over human rights concerns
Updated at 9:23 am today
Tonga's Government has responded to Indonesia's accusation that claims by Tonga's Prime Minister at the United Nations were misleading.
'Akilisa Pohiva told the UN General Assembly in New York that the UN should investigate allegations of human rights abuses in the provinces of Papua and West Papua.
He said the UN has the moral obligation to follow up the issue and take any necessary action to stop the "brutal and inhumane activities".
However Indonesia responded saying it strongly rejects the references and the comments by Mr Pohiva as well as the Solomon Islands Prime Minister, Manasseh Sogavare.
The Secretary for Foreign Affairs and Trade, Va'inga Tone, told Radio Tonga the government wants to work together with Indonesia to seek clarification bilaterally or through a joint visit to the country on a fact finding mission.
He says it’s the joint concern of Pacific countries not to leave anyone behind and it is within the power of leaders to take action.

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A google translate. Be-aware google translate can be a bit erratic. 
Original bahasa link at
2) Police surrounded OFFICE KNPB SENTANI

Written By WEST PAPUA on Rabu, 14 Oktober 2015 | Rabu, Oktober 14, 2015



Office page secretariat controlled Sentani Indonesian Police
KNPBNews Sentani ---- Office of the Secretariat of the National Committee of West Papua (KNPB) Region Sentani Kepung by Member Dozens of Indonesian Police Chief Upon command, Jayapura, Sondra Siagian, on (10/13/2015).
Police surrounded the initial start since morning, the Secretariat met KNPB Sentani Indonesian police for no apparent reason.
The police came since 8.30 WPB, until this afternoon continue to exist around the office addition of members of the police controlled by the police and Intelligence.
For the response, the Chairman of the KNPB Region Sentani, Allen Halitopo, saying, "no action was nothing in the office KNPB, and we are not madmen or those unofficial, we struggled to open peace and dignity, we also know the laws of Indonesia and International Law ". specifically
Further Hilitopo, Jayapura Police Chief Adjunct Senior Commissioner ordered dozens Sondra Siagian this colonial police to surround the office of the secretariat that no activity KNPB activists there.
Meanwhile, Chairman of the KNPB Sentani Allen Halitopo and all activists still in office KNPB KNPB Sentani.
KNPB ask for solidarity for human rights and democracy, as well as supporting the struggle of the Free Papua Movement to urge the police to stop this terrorist action by calling the police chief in the Siagian Sondra; Allen 081240080404 and 085197514348 Halitopo in

1) Indonesia Wants More Royalties From Freeport for Longer Contract

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2) Indonesia: 50 Years After the Coup and the CIA Sponsored Terrorist Massacre. 

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1) Indonesia Wants More Royalties From Freeport for Longer Contract
By : Agustinus Beo Da Costa | on 9:20 AM October 14, 2015
Jakarta. Freeport-McMoRan Inc should significantly increase the amount it pays in royalty payments to the Indonesian government if it wants to extend a contract to operate one of the world's biggest copper mines, a cabinet minister said on Tuesday.
The US firm last week said it received assurances from Indonesian mining minister Sudirman Said that Freeport's contract for its giant Grasberg copper and gold mine would be extended beyond 2021.
But comments this week from Sudirman's boss, chief Natural Resources Minister Rizal Ramli, have raised questions as to whether contract renegotiations between Freeport and the Indonesian government will be that straightforward.
Rizal, who oversees mining and energy, sharply criticized Freeport's history in Indonesia, telling parliament that the government had not shared enough in the company's profits over the past few decades.
"It is time to rewrite our history," Rizal said. "[Freeport] has to pay 6-7 percent royalty."
"If Indonesia's government shows its persistence and it won't easily be lobbied by Freeport, I think that Freeport will give up in the negotiation process and follow what we want."
Freeport agreed in July 2014 to start paying 4 percent in royalties on copper sales, up from 1.5-3.5 percent previously.
Freeport spokesman Riza Pratama said a royalty payment increase was one of the issues being discussed with the government.
"[The mines ministry] and Freeport are working hard to finalize the contract extension," Riza said.
Freeport, the biggest listed US copper producer and one of Indonesia's largest taxpayers, has been trying for years to obtain a contract extension but the government says legally it cannot start talks until 2019.
An Indonesian government official said on Friday it planned to amend rules on mining contracts by the end of this year, allowing Freeport to apply for an extension immediately.
Freeport plans to invest $18 billion to transition the Grasberg complex from an open pit to underground mining in late 2017. The company currently produces about 220,000 metric tons of copper ore per day, which is then converted to copper concentrate.
Reuters
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2) Indonesia: 50 Years After the Coup and the CIA Sponsored Terrorist Massacre. 
The Ruin of Indonesian Society
By Andre Vltchek  Global Research, October 13, 2015
Last year, I stopped travelling to Indonesia. I simply did… I just could not bear being there, anymore. It was making me unwell. I felt psychologically and physically sick.
Indonesia has matured into perhaps the most corrupt country on Earth, and possibly into the most indoctrinated and compassionless place anywhere under the sun. Here, even the victims were not aware of their own conditions anymore. The victims felt shame, while the mass murderers were proudly bragging about all those horrendous killings and rapes they had committed. Genocidal cadres are all over the government.
Don’t get me wrong: there is really nothing wrong with maturity. But instead of maturing elegantly into something noble, like a precious wine, Indonesia just decayed into disgusting vinegar, or spoiled milk, or most likely into something much, much more sinister – a monstrous decomposing carcass in the middle of a once socialist, progressive and anti-imperialist Asia.
After the 1965 coup backed by the US, Australia and Europe, some 2-3 million Indonesians died, in fact were slaughtered mercilessly in an unbridled orgy of terror: teachers, intellectuals, artists, unionists, and Communists vanished. The US Embassy in Jakarta provided a detailed list of those who were supposed to be liquidated. The army, which was generously paid by the West and backed by the countless brainwashed religious cadres of all faiths, showed unprecedented zeal, killing and imprisoning almost everyone capable of thinking. Books were burned and film studios and theatres closed down.
Women from the left-wing organizations, after being savagely raped, had their breasts amputated. They were labeled as witches, atheists, sexual maniacs and perverts.
Professional militant Christian cadres from Holland and other Western countries landed in Indonesia well before the coup. They were entrusted with the radicalization of Muslims, Hindus, Protestants, Catholics and the Indonesian military. They labeled Communists and other leftists as “dangerous atheists” and began an indoctrination and training campaign aimed to liquidate them.
The right-wing Chinese individuals, mostly traitors who just escaped from their Communist revolutionary homeland, happily joined the fascist putsch-nick clique and later the murderous, whoring and treasonous regime of General Suharto. They joined it as snitches and “preachers”. The Chinese minority in Indonesia, while undoubtedly suffering from certain discrimination, had joined the most oppressive domestic and foreign forces, shamelessly collaborating with military fascism, Western imperialism and the savage capitalist system, which it itself had helped to establish. Because of its control over the crucial part of the local “economy” (read: plunder of the natural resources) and its ownership of the countless brainwashing media outlets and private educational facilities, the Chinese minority in Indonesia has been playing a decisive and devastating role in the spectacular collapse of post-1965 Indonesia.
After the slaughters of 1965/66, everything resembling the Revolution and the People’s Republic of China was banned and obliterated in Indonesia, including red color, the Chinese language, and the word “Communism” itself. Some of it was “inconvenient”, but overall, the Chinese right-wing anti-Communist émigrés in Indonesia finally had it their way! Suharto’s fascism was definitely closer to their hearts than the anti-Western-imperialism and the power sharing between the progressive Muslim leader Sukarno and his “golden child”, the Communist Party of Indonesia (PKI).
After the genocide, the great selling of Indonesia began. Corruption and privatization went hand in hand. Ideological and intellectual blindness were administered to the population.
The murder and rape of millions, theft of everything that used to belong to the nation…
Thus was committed the greatest treason of the 20th century.
Roughly 50 years after this disaster took place, I broke my self-imposed ban and visited Indonesia once again.
*
This time, I did not come to Indonesia for academic work. In fact, I have fully divorced myself from academia, now considering it as prostituted and defunct as journalism. Philosophy has to break itself free from academia and its institutions. Philosophy deals with life, while contemporary academia represents intellectual death.
My damning book, “Indonesia: Archipelago of Fear”, was published more than 3 years ago by Pluto in London, then translated and published by Badak Merah into the Indonesian language. Other translations followed. Enough of theory!
I came back once again to breathe polluted air and to see the ruins of Indonesian society – ruins visible all over the capital. I came to observe the uninspired expressions on people’s faces, to once again experience the totally collapsed infrastructure. I came to face the society that had liquidated almost all science, philosophy and arts, and where local workers are now unable to even put two simple tiles together in a matching manner, much less construct a spaceship or passenger jet.
I returned to shout and to curse, and to write this as a warning to those who still think that a savage capitalism could actually work, that a country that would allow its “elites” to turn it into a doormat (or worse) of the West, could simply survive, let alone thrive.
I came to say what is clear but “forbidden” to say: “Indonesia died! It is finished. It was murdered some time between 1965 and now. It will never get back to its feet. People living there do not really live in a country, but inside a horrific, decaying cadaver.”
The only way forward would be a revolution, as Pramoedya Ananta Toer used to say. A total revolution, a reset! Return to what was destroyed in 1965. Bury the corpse, put on trial all those who have been committing treason, and start from zero, from the beginning!
This is reality, and it does not require footnotes or quotations!
*
But back to the deal between Empire and local “elites”:
The deal was clear: the West allowed the putsch-nicks and their religious and “educationalist” lackeys to rob the nation, tolerating the lowest forms of corruption. But, in exchange, they had to guarantee that the Indonesian people would to be kept thoroughly brainwashed and uneducated, never demanding the return of the Communist Party, never striving for great patriotic ideals and never questioning market fundamentalism and the indiscriminate looting of Indonesia’s natural resources.
The Christians that were put “in charge” were those from the most deranged evangelical sects, braced by the imported army of North American and Australian intelligence/religious cadres. “Prosperity Gospel” and “Pentecostals” were the most successful implants. The preachers listening to Voice of America and reading Western economic journals were suddenly in control.
Saudi-style Wahhabi Western allies shamelessly sidelined almost all socialist brands of local Islam, and the most militant and intolerant varieties of otherwise progressive and socialist Muslim religion began their destructive, totalitarian and intellectually ruinous activities.
The West, its media and academia, started unashamedly backing all fascist cultural dogmas: including regressive religious and family structures.
Not only that – they kept spreading the most grotesque lies: about “how tolerant Indonesia became”, and “how moderate” it is. “Third largest democracy” was how the Western demagogues have constantly described the country without one single pro-people or anti-imperialist political party. Indonesia is called “the largest economy of Southeast Asia”, a totally misleading definition, considering that Indonesia has more than three times more people that any other nation in the region. And could it really be called an “economy”, something that produces hardly anything and lives predominately from the unbridled plunder of its natural resources, as well as from the resources of colonized Papua, where Indonesia has been committing horrific and silent genocide?
The local media has continuously quoted all this propaganda and disinformation, quite logically, considering that corrupt business interests own virtually all of it.
After the regime murdered around 40% of teachers in Java alone, the education system fell to the hands of totally ignorant but zealous morons: themselves collaborators with the West. These people were nothing more than cynical and money hungry businessmen and businesswomen, but definitely not educators. Spreading ignorance and stupidity was not only their mission; it was a natural way of expressing themselves, their method of interacting with the world.
After years of the horrid plunder of the resources, of incongruous religious gaga, of censuring of everything deep and creative, and after preventing Indonesian youth from getting real knowledge about the world, the country of Indonesia began eventually resembling what it is not: a nation of 300 million people (the government lies about the numbers, too, as I was told by several leading UN statisticians while I was working on my book) without one single thinker (now that people from the PKI and Sukarno era, like Pramoedya Ananta Toer, passed away), without one single internationally recognizable scientist or a musician or  public intellectual…
Dirt everywhere, horrendous immoral social contrasts on every corner… Range Rovers and Gucci boutiques right next to open sewers and children showing clear signs of malnutrition. There are hardly any parks in Indonesia, no waste treatment plants, and hardly any sidewalks or public playgrounds for children. There are no public educational television channels, while public libraries are almost-not existent – a shocking contrast to Malaysia. Water is, of course, privatized.
The nation stopped reading. One bookstore after another is closing down. It only translates a few hundred titles each year, most of them commercial. Translations are of horrendous quality.
Nothing, almost nothing, works. There are constant blackouts, and the roads are uneven and narrow. Even trans-Java “highways” are two-lane, narrow potholed tracks, of a worse quality than some village roads in Thailand or Malaysia. Traffic jams are all over, in the cities and countryside, as even poor people have to rely on private vehicles and infrastructure that has already collapsed many years ago.
Internet and phone signals are so bad that when I was editing my films, I was forced to fly to Singapore in order to upload some larger files.
Old ferries are sinking, airplanes are falling from the sky, and trains keep derailing.
No forests are left intact. The entire nation is logged out, mined out – ruined, screwed!
And the West is dancing on that horrid Indonesian carcass, celebrating! Yes, celebrating! It loves, it adores this “democratic”, “tolerant” nation which is in ruins. Instead of thinking, Indonesia is listening to some repulsive pop, grinning idiotically, producing incomprehensible squeaks and giggles befitting a mental institution, sacrificing itself oh-so-generously to the wellbeing of Western corporations and governments!
*
And so I came again, for just a few days, to show my feature documentary film at a small, new film club at TIM in Jakarta… the only film club, with 45 seats for an entire nation of 300 million inhabitants. I came to show my film about the 1965 Coup, called “Terlena – Breaking of A Nation”, which I produced some 11 years ago. It was the first feature documentary film ever made about the 1965 “events”.
I watched my own film and suddenly felt devastated, because my old friends had “departed” several years ago, and I missed them… Abdurrahman Wahid, a former President of Indonesia, a progressive Muslim leader and a closet socialist, who was “discreetly” overthrown by the “elites”…  Pramoedya Ananta Toer, the greatest Indonesian thinker and paramount Southeast Asian writer…
I looked as their faces on the screen, faces so dear to me, and I thought: “How alive you were! Even when you were old and ill, how strong and determined was your will. How alive was your generation that grew up on the socialist fervor of great President Sukarno, father of the non-aligned movement… how alive you were compared to this cynical, greedy, brainwashed “young generation” of the corporate whores, of covetous nitwits, of the pathetic, emotionless, selfish and empty moral and intellectual degenerates!”
After the screening, predictable questions came from the audience: “what is to be done?” and later: “what do you think about the young generation in Indonesia?”
I thought about some of those young social media damsels, who had come to me in the past, begging to be ‘educated’ and ‘brainwashed back into reality’… They ‘wanted to work for humanity’, they said. I thought about how they were faking and lying, and how they betrayed and ran away, always, at the slightest sign of danger… How they ran back to their fascist clans whenever they were whistled for, how they dove immediately and directly into the rectums of their corrupt and venomous parents and grandparents… I also thought about the students at the University of Indonesia – arrogant, disinterested, banging into their phones and eating shit food during the lectures, even when presented with some tiny bits of essential information.
“Young generation?” I wondered. In Indonesia, they felt like some old nomenclature, even at the age of 15: endless idiotic Barbie dolls on thin legs… Those of the “elites”, I mean… the rest were just slaves, exploited, humiliated and fully conditioned not to ask and not to know. “Young elites” – embarrassing parodies of the movers and shakers from Wall Street. So pathetic! No individuality, dreams, talent, hard work; no revolutionary and rebellious spirit! The same crappy, sugary pop music and Hollywood films, the same Starbucks lattes…  While outside, the nation was burning, choking on its own smoke and excrements, collapsing and murdering in some of the most horrendous genocides in the modern history – East Timor before, and Papua now.
Damned collaborators with the Western fascism! Bloody ass-lickers of the colonialists! And nobody thinks about shaving their head as punishment for selling themselves and the country to the Empire! That Indonesian boo-boo, coo-coo, absurd “young” (really, young?) generation!
I spoke. They listened. Then they went home. I think my shouting provided some entertainment. Nothing more. I was not shouting in Quito or Caracas. I was shouting in Jakarta. Most likely, nothing could be revolutionized here anymore.
*
The next day, I wanted to see a rhino at “Safari Park”, outside the city of Bogor, but police decided to torture people and it blocked, for no apparent reason, the highway exit. They did it for several hours, just to show that it could… This way the thugs were able to sell their junk, and ‘guides’ could take motorists through back roads. Booty was shared with the police, of course. Everything was corrupted: even a motorway could be blocked so police and gangs could make extra cash! I somehow managed to leave the highway, after my lungs began threatening to collapse from pollution.
I tried to make it to Bogor, to those old and famous Botanic Gardens, that were until recently one of the very few public places in Indonesia. But when I arrived, I saw devastation: the gardens were now systematically destroyed by some horrid construction project. Ancient trees have been cut down to give way to yet another revolting sprawl of parking lots. A historic bridge had been torn down and a new one was being built, obviously in order to change a predominately pedestrian area into a driveway. Instead of serenity, there was loud pop junk music, coming from all directions.
Then I was going on yet another stretch of clogged highway… and then I witnessed and smelled a mountain of garbage burning in the middle of Jakarta.
There were some deformed, gangrenous beggars in the middle of the highway and at several major intersections…
In Jakarta, a former bookstore that I used to frequent was now converted into a fruit shop. For dinner, I ate disgusting food at overpriced restaurants, where the waiters were clearly “somewhere else”, unable to even keep their eyes open, or to concentrate on what they were being told.
Several Ferraris were in between all this, and also a few Prada stores… and those enormous, monstrous advertisement billboards promoting cigarettes as something cool and hip.
There was no beauty in sight. No beauty at all. All gone.
While in the traffic jams, I tried to work. But how could I? The Internet was collapsing, and mobile phones hardly functioned. I’d written about it so many times, so why was I surprised?
*
50 years since the coup. A real anniversary – what many Indonesians are genuinely proud of! Their moment in the limelight! Their betrayal of all great ideals and their submission and surrender to the West.
Again, I wanted to run away. I felt physically sick here: a revolutionary, a rebel, and a philosopher in this land of obedience and intellectual collapse.
So, I ran. From canals clogged with unimaginable filth, garbage… from deformities of children and adults, but with Louis Vuitton boutiques in the background… from sickening betrayals, and from constant lies, from long uninterrupted silences, from the inability to rely on almost anyone, from the absolute and total lack of poetry, and from joylessness, from bleakness, from the absence of love. Yes, above all, from the absence of love.
During the 72 hours that I spent in the place that I consider to be the closest to hell (and I have seen more than 150 countries on this Earth), I suddenly recalled so many things that I tried to bury and forget: from the stench of the mutilated bodies of gang raped women in Ermera, East Timor, to those hundreds of poor animals slaughtered in the Surabaya zoo, so that some corrupt “international” project could go on.
I recalled how, after the tsunami in Aceh, the Indonesian soldiers and police, instead of helping traumatized victims, were blackmailing the volunteers, demanding money and threatening to cut with their knives those precious barrels of drinking water if the bribes were not forthcoming. I remembered bodies decomposing in the pits, because no government worker would lift his finger and operate heavy equipment without being “greased”.
Oh Indonesia, you are a true daughter of turbo-capitalism, of the lowest religious aspirations, of senseless obedience, notorious lack of education and knowledge, and unimaginable brutality and lack of compassion!
I saw so much shit during the 20 years that I tried to document your downfall!
I saw deranged Christian preachers, their sadistic and fanatic eyes popping in ISIL-style zeal, locking up, for years, their adult daughters, simply because they wanted to marry non-Christian men.
I witnessed Christian religious services in Surabaya malls, where totally molded idiots preachers were declaring with absolute conviction: “God loves the rich, and that is why they are rich!” I observed some English-language church services performed by US and Australian intelligence apparatchiks… complete with bizarre and repulsive pop gospels, accompanied by ass wiggling of thrilled matrons and young girls. I saw racist, bigoted extremist Sunni Muslims, paid and conditioned by the Saudi Wahhabis, destroying Shi’a villages in the middle of backward and desperate island of Madura.
I saw a little girl running away from a burning mosque in Ambon, and a Christian boy trying to escape from a gang of Wahhabi youth. They cut him to pieces, at the end, with their machetes…
I saw so many fires and ashes, and so much intolerance, stupidity and hate! I saw what replaced a once great and proud nation governed by a progressive Muslim President who trusted and relied upon the great and democratic Communist Party of Indonesia (PKI).
I saw clearly what capitalism, what imperialism, ignorance and fascist indoctrination can do!
*
And deep inside I swore: “I will re-edit Terlena! I will re-edit that film of mine, damn it!”
I swore, and it made me feel much better.
Indonesia is the greatest untold story that I know – the story about what imperialism is capable of doing!
Entire islands deforested, robbed: enormous Borneo and Sumatra… Tortured elephants and great apes… Corruption and theft… Filth everywhere, on the surface of the earth, and inside people’s brains.
The collapse of humanism… the collapse of humanity. The persistent ruin of intellectualism, creativity, compassion and tenderness…
I ran, but as I did, I felt those millions and millions of hands trying to hold me, trying to slow me down. “We are alone, we are forgotten” I heard voices. “Stay little bit longer… Write a few more books, write a few more essays, and make films… Do not abandon us!”
I knew I would do what they were asking. I would leave and come back again. For those slaughtered and defenseless creatures, for the ruined rainforest, for the millions of interrupted lives…
I would come back out of spite for those who ruined Indonesia.
I would come back to warn the world.
I would come back, so I could call murderers by their real names, and give collaborators the titles that they deserve.
As I was leaving, I knew I would soon return and expose the full horrors of the Indonesian experiment that has been conducted on the local people by the sadistic Western regime, by its religions and its capitalist dogmas.
I knew that I would expose local collaborators. That is how revolutions begin!
I would give back, years and decades after they passed away, at least some dignity to those Indonesians who lived and fought and were killed. To those Indonesians who knew how to love passionately and desperately, fully and selfishly, each other and their Nation, and who were therefore eternally alive!
I knew one day soon I would return and re-make my film. For “them”! And my film would be, with some luck, damn good!
But as I was leaving, it was all smoke, stench and rubbish.
Indonesia died. Silently.
No more lies! Right now, the Indonesian people have no country. It was taken away from them by Western imperialists, by their own corrupt and treasonous “elites” and by the military. Only after they realize what has been done, they will be able to struggle and build their new motherland.
Andre Vltchek is a philosopher, novelist, filmmaker and investigative journalist. He covered wars and conflicts in dozens of countries. His latest books are: “Exposing Lies Of The Empire” and  Fighting Against Western Imperialism Discussion with Noam Chomsky: On Western TerrorismPoint of No Return is his critically acclaimed political novel. Oceania - a book on Western imperialism in the South Pacific. His provocative book about Indonesia: “Indonesia – The Archipelago of Fear”. Andre is making films for teleSUR and Press TV. After living for many years in Latin America and Oceania, Vltchek presently resides and works in East Asia and the Middle East. He can be reached through his websiteor his Twitter.

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