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1) Raja Ampat Coral Reefs Destroyed by Foreign Tour Vessel

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1) Raja Ampat Coral Reefs Destroyed by Foreign Tour Vessel
2) ANALYSIS: Jokowi’s visit heralds new optimism for bilateral trade with Australia
3) US vice president to visit Indonesia
4) Plane skids off runway in Papua
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MONDAY, 13 MARCH, 2017 | 21:52 WIB
1) Raja Ampat Coral Reefs Destroyed by Foreign Tour Vessel

TEMPO.COJakarta - The Indonesian Forum for the Environment (Walhi) has urged the Government and the Regional Government to increase their maritime supervision in social and ecological aspects following the destruction of coral reefs in Raja Ampat, West Papua. The destruction was allegedly caused by the body of the Caledonian Sky cruise ship from the Bahamas that rammed into a large number of coral reefs in shallow waters under a low tide March 4, 2017.
Sea Coast and Small Islands Campaign Manager from Walhi, Ony Mahadika, stated that the government does, in fact, focusing on maritime development. “But unfortunately their focus is based on its economy and coastal industrialization, which makes their focus on social and ecological matters very minimal,” he said on Sunday, March 12, 2017.
The 90-meter long cruise ship operated by tour company Noble Caledonia hit the shallow water after completing their bird-watching at Waigeo 4 Island. The evaluation result from the Pacific Water Resources Research Center from Papua University shows that the Caledonian Sky had left a vast trail of coral reef destruction of 1,600 square meters. This coral damage took place in a diving site known as the Crossover Reef.
Ony regrets about the tragedy happened in Raja Ampat, considering that healing the damaged coral reefs would need another 10-20 years to recover. He urged the government to conduct an investigation and hand over a form of punishment for the owner of the vessel. “This is essential as a deterrent effect,” he said.
The Ministry of Maritime Affairs and Fishery has already dispatched a team to investigate the level of damage endured by coral reefs in Raja Ampat. The team involves the Directorate General of Marine Space Management and the Directorate General and the Directorate General of Marine Resources and Fisheries.
A local team in Sorong have already observed the location of the incident for the past few days.
EGI ADYATAMA| MITRA TARIGAN

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2) ANALYSIS: Jokowi’s visit heralds new optimism for bilateral trade with Australia
10:03 pm GMT+12, 09/03/2017, Australia
By  Dr Greta Nabbs-Keller
 
After worrying delays, Indonesian President Widodo has finally met with Prime Minister Turnbull in Sydney. In spite of the countries’ past animosities, Australia-Indonesia trade cooperation may now finally live up to its potential.
 
The last visit by an Indonesian president to Australia was characterised as a missed opportunity by the Indonesian side. Commenting on then Prime Minister Julia Gillard’s Darwin meeting with then President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono in 2012, Indonesian vice-presidential advisor and foreign policy expert Dewi Fortuna Anwar observed that the leaders were talking at “cross purposes”. She noted that whilst Gillard “focused on security issues, the strategic environment and the asylum seeker problem,” President Yudhoyono “promoted Indonesia as a land of market opportunities for trade and investment”.
 
Five years on, one sees a welcome shift in policy emphasis with trade and investment priorities front and centre of bilateral discussions during President Joko Widodo’s (Jokowi) Sydney visit last week. No doubt this emphasis reflected the priorities of both countries, but the visit’s style and substance were different in a number of ways.
 
First, Australia’s preoccupation with threats emanating from Indonesia was less apparent. With uncertainty around the United States’ Asia policy under President Trump, the ongoing need to counter youth radicalisation and China’s continuing militarisation of islands in the South China Sea, security issues were, of course, still on the agenda of the bilateral talks in Sydney.
 
Agreement was reached on a joint declaration enhancing maritime cooperation with an associated Plan of Action. The talks also reaffirmed the cooperation undertaken by both the ‘2+2 Meetings’ of foreign and defence ministers and the recent Ministerial Council on Law and Security —with commitments to enhance cooperation on counter-terrorism, cyber security, transnational organised crime, and illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing.
 
Finally, the lingering uncertainty over the status of the defence relationship ended with the statement made by the two leaders’ joint declaration on the “full restoration of defence cooperation, training exchanges and activities”.
 
Economic cooperation
 
Although security issues were still on the agenda for Jokowi’s visit to Australia, they did not dominate the discussions as in previous years. Rather, Jokowi’s points of discussion suggested greater policy attention to the trade and investment potential of the bilateral relationship and recognition of the importance of non-government actors in bilateral engagement.
 
It is widely recognised that Australia’s trade and investment relationship with Indonesia is relatively weak given the market significance of Indonesia’s consumer class (estimated to grown to 85 million by 2020) and the size of Indonesia’s economy relative to others in Southeast Asia (more than double the other economies combined in Southeast Asia). There are a number of causal factors explaining this weakness, apart from Canberra’s previous preoccupation with security issues.
 
Indonesia’s bureaucratic red tape, corruption and lack of legal certainty has long made Australian companies wary of investing in the country. For years Indonesia had ranked poorly by world standards on both the World Banks’s Ease of Doing Business surveys and Transparency International’s (TI) Corruption Perception Index. Moreover, economic nationalism and suspicions about ‘exploitative’ foreign capital remains an enduring part of the Indonesian national psyche.
 
Since his inauguration in 2014, however, Indonesia’s ‘infrastructure president’ has worked to improve the investment climate for foreign capital. Bureaucratic red tape has been reduced, business licensing has been expedited and the need to continually renew company registration certificates has been ameliorated. Partly as a result of such policy changes, Indonesia has risen in both the World Bank and TI indices. Certainly, Australian business has taken note, with leaders from the mining, retail, tourism and healthcare sectors meeting directly with President Widodo and his senior delegation in Sydney.
 
Formalising trade
 
The Indonesia-Australia Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (IA-CEPA) formed the centrepiece of bilateral discussions in Sydney. In essence a comprehensive free trade agreement, it provides for improved market access for Australian and Indonesian goods and services, relaxed visa provisions and reductions in both tariff and non-tariff barriers. Early announcements—just prior to and during President Widodo’s visit—included a reduction in Indonesian tariffs on imported Australian sugar, a move by the Indonesian Ministry of Agriculture from quarterly to annual live cattle import quotas and the abolition of tariffs on pesticides and herbicides from Indonesian suppliers.
 
Both governments have committed to finalising the IA-CEPA by the end of this year, which builds on the foundations of the ASEAN Australia New Zealand Free Trade Agreement signed in 2010. Australia’s announcement that it will host the ASEAN-Australia Special Summit Meeting in 2018 is further recognition of Australia’s common economic and strategic interests with the Southeast Asian sub-grouping.
 
Personalising relations
 
Inherent in preparations surrounding Jokowi’s visit was greater sensitivity to the cultural and people-to-people dimensions of the relationship. Jokowi’s programme included a visit to Darling Harbour International Convention Centre where he met with hundreds of excited members of the Indonesian expatriate community. Whilst in recognition of Indonesians’ embrace of social media, Australia’s ambassador to Indonesia posted a heart-warming Twitter video featuring suggestions by Australian school children on what Indonesia’s president should do and eat whilst in Australia.
 
Jokowi and his wife Iriana also enjoyed a private dinner held at Malcolm and Lucy Turnbull’s Point Piper residence—a noticeable departure from the fussier state dinner format. Dinner was followed by an early morning walk in Sydney’s Botanical Gardens where members of the public warmly greeted both leaders.
 
There is little doubt that the personal rapport between Jokowi and Turnbull, combined with their entrepreneurial backgrounds, has seen renewed commitment by both countries to capitalise on the economic potential of the relationship. Moreover, since Turnbull’s tenure as prime minister, bilateral interactions have been characterised by a more informal, contemporary style congruent with the personalities of both leaders.
 
Indeed, personal rapport between leaders is a critical variable in determining the stability of Australia-Indonesia relations. This is due to the frequency of bilateral political tensions based often on sovereignty concerns and differences in cultural values. In Sydney it also became apparent, however, that Jokowi’s lack of interest in international political issues, in this instance at least, was a distinct advantage to Australia. As he explained to an adoring crowd at Darling Harbour: “I don’t want to talk much about politics, it’s confusing. Let’s just talk about the economy.
Dr Greta Nabbs-Keller is an adjunct lecturer at the University of Queensland’s School of Political Science and International Studies (POLSIS-UQ) and director of Dragonminster Consulting.
 
 
SOURCE: POLSIS-UQ/PACNEWS


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3) US vice president to visit Indonesia
Jakarta | Mon, March 13, 2017 | 08:32 pm

Indonesia and the United States are preparing for a visit by US Vice President Mike Pence to Indonesia, believed to be scheduled for next month.
 US Ambassador to Indonesia Joseph R. Donovan paid a visit to Coordinating Political, Legal and Security Affairs Minister Wiranto at his office in Jakarta on Monday to discuss what Wiranto deemed as “strategic issues” that might be on the discussion table for Pence and President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo.
“We discussed matters that might be used for President Jokowi as a reference [in his upcoming meeting with Pence],” Wiranto said, as quoted from a press release.
In Monday’s meeting, Wiranto also expressed Jakarta’s hope for the two countries to continue forging the bilateral partnership enhanced under the leadership of US President Donald Trump’s predecessor, Barack Obama, in 2015 when Jokowi visited Obama. At that time, the two countries, which have cooperated under a comprehensive partnership since 2010, agreed to forge a strategic partnership.
"Under Trump’s leadership, we hope the partnership will continue,” Wiranto said.
Wiranto did not reveal the dates of Pence’s visit, but, reportedly Pence will be heading to Asia next month.
Pence’s Asian tour will include Japan, amid concerns the Trump administration is rolling back Obama's “pivot to Asia”, says Reuters.
Trump has withdrawn from the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) trade agreement, which was seen as an economic pillar of the strategy.
Reuters also reported Pence would visit South Korea and Australia, with North Korea’s missiles, which has sparked tensions on the Korean Peninsula, likely be among topics of discussion. (ipa)



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4) Plane skids off runway in Papua
Nethy Dharma Somba The Jakarta Post
Jayapura | Mon, March 13, 2017 | 05:35 pm

A Grand Caravan aircraft operated by Alda Air, skidded off the runway as it attempted to land at Kenyam Airport, Nduga district, Papua on Monday, apparently as a result of a burst tire.
The airplane, piloted by Capt. Paulus Kayadu and co-pilot Darsono, departed from Moses Kilangin Airport, Mimika, Papua, at 11:30 a.m. bound for Kenyam at 12:15 p.m.. The plane carried 1,090 kilograms of cargo and five passengers.
''There were no casualties in the incident, the plane was successfully evacuated,” Jayawijaya Police chief Adj. Sr. Comr. Yan Piet Reba told The Jakarta Post on Monday.
“The airplane was in a good condition, but the tire burst and so it went off the runway,” Yan said.
Kenyam Airport was temporary closed after the incident. (hol/wit)
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1) Hundreds of people take to street in Papua

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2) Freeport Bosses Visit Energy Ministry

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http://www.antaranews.com/en/news/109914/hundreds-of-people-take-to-street-in-papua

1) Hundreds of people take to street in Papua

3 hours ago | 602 Views
Timika, Papua (ANTARA News) - Hundreds of people from Solidaritas Peduli Bangsa (Nation Care Solidarity) took to the street at the Timika Indah Traffic Roundabout, Tuesday, voicing their opposition to Freeport Indonesia and affirming their support to the government.

The people thronged the street around the roundabout since around 9 a.m. local time and brought along an Indonesian flag and pamphlets bearing messages in support of the government.

Tanzil Azharie, the coordinator of the movement, stated that the peaceful demonstration was held as a mark of support to the government for its efforts in handling the complex situation involving Freeport Indonesia and the local government.

The demonstrators also voiced eight points of action regarding the issue, including urging Freeport Indonesia to abide by the rules in Indonesia, especially Law Number 4 of 2009 and Government Regulation Number 1 of 2017 that necessitates the company to change its status into a Special Mining Permit and divesting as much as 51 percent of its shares.

The masses also urged Freeport to build a smelter and pay water tax worth Rp3.5 trillion to the Papua government.

Another demand made was that Freeport should give greater attention to the seven tribes in the Mimika Sub-district where the mine is located. Freeport should also take responsibility of the generated waste that has lead to environmental damage.

They also demanded that Freeport should be held accountable for its selfish acts when it fired its employees without giving prior notice.

The masses took to the street for around two hours until around 11 a.m. local time. The activity proceeded peacefully, with around 20 police personnel guarding the masses.(*)
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TUESDAY, 14 MARCH, 2017 | 16:08 WIB
2) Freeport Bosses Visit Energy Ministry

TEMPO.COJakarta - PT Freeport Indonesia executive director Celementino Lamury and executive vice president Tony Wenas visited the Energy and Mineral Resources Ministry on Tuesday, March 14, 2017.
The two high-ranking officers were scheduled to meet Energy and Mineral Resources Minister Ignasius Jonan and deputy minister Arcandra Tahar.
"I'll give a comment after the meeting. I can't talk yet," Tony told journalist at the Ministry' s office in Jakarta on Tuesday, March 14, 2017.
Earlier, it was confirmed that the US Vice President Mike Pence will visit Indonesia to discuss various topics, including Freeport.
"There are two topics to be discussed, namely terrorism and Freeport," Hikmahanto Juwana, international law professor at the University of Indonesia, said in a press release in Jakarta on Monday, March 13, 2017. Hikmahanto suggested that the government should tell Pence that Indonesia had provided Freeport with options.
"The government is not oppressing Freeport," Hikmahanto added.
Among the options are letting Freeport to stick with the Contract of Works (CoW), with a condition that the company must purify its minerals in Indonesia; or shifting to a special mining permit and continue exporting minerals.
Hikmahanto added that the United States should not pressure the Indonesian government for practicing democracy. Hikmahanto argued that Indonesia must consider aspirations voiced by its people. Therefore, Freeport should not challenge Indonesia’s sovereignty and force the country to submit to the pressure from the US government.
DESTRIANITA | GHOIDA RAHMAH
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1) West Papua gives indigenous communities control over forests

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2) In a big step for indigenous rights and the environment, the gov’t has given a rainforest in Papua back to the people
3) Local miners ready to operate Grasberg mine, says lawmaker
4) Removal of West Papuan mural ‘clandestine’
5) Tito Calls for Closer Ties Between Police Forces in Asia-Pacific Region
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1) West Papua gives indigenous communities control over forests
By Vaidehi Shah Tuesday 14 March 2017
West Papua's government has handed over more than 3,000 hectares of forest to indigenous communities, who say they intend to keep big agribusiness out, and instead harvest forest products that help them prosper without clearing forests.
In an unprecedented move for Indonesia’s Papua province, the district government on Thursday gave indigenous communities control of state forests, which grants villagers the right to reject the advances of palm oil, logging and pulpwood companies in favour of pursuing alternative, deforestation-free livelihoods.
In a ceremony performed in West Papua’s capital Teminabuan, representatives from the Province of West Papua handed over a 3,545 hectare area of rainforest to leaders from Manggroholo and Sira villages, in an area known as the Knasaimos indigenous territory.

This is the first time Indonesia’s national ‘Village Forest’ scheme, where governments hand over state forest to the control of indigenous communities, has been implemented in Papua. The programme, which gives communities rights over forest areas, has been implemented in other provinces such as Sulawesi since 2009.
The scheme in Papua will see Manggroholo and Sira villagers managing 1,695 hectares and 1,850 hectares of land respectively, for an initial lease period of 35 years.

The land under the villagers’ control sits in the wider Knasaimos indigenous territory, an 81,646 ha swathe of land in Papua that has historically been exploited by illegal loggers and is now being eyed by oil palm companies.
The move by the West Papua government comes about three years after Indonesian President Joko Widodo in 2014 promised to hand over 12.7 million hectares of forest land for community forestry uses.
Papua’s forests have also made global headlines recently when campaigners exposed the destructive practices of Korean-Indonesian conglomerate Korindo and Korean palm oil firm Posco Daewoo in the region. More recently, the Province of Papua pledged to protect 83 per cent of its land areas as natural habitat.
Manggroholo and Sira community leaders welcomed the handover of control, and said they intended to protect the forest from deforestation by logging, palm oil, and pulpwood activities.
Fredrick Sagisolo, head of the Knasaimos Tribal Council, said in a statement that “this is a victory not just for residents of Sira and Manggroholo villages, but for everyone, especially here in Papua where much forest remains”.
This is a victory not just for residents of Sira and Manggroholo villages, but for everyone, especially here in Papua where much forest remains.
 Fredrick Sagisolo, head, Knasaimos Tribal Council
Illegal loggers exploited the Knasaimos landscape in the early 2000s and exported hundreds of thousands of tonnes of Merbau, a valuable timber species, which was made into luxury flooring for overseas markets. The campaign group Environmental Investigation Agency estimates that for every dollar of flooring sold, communities which collaborated with the industry to clear trees received less than half a cent.
More recently, plantation companies have also secured concession rights to clear forest within the Knasaimos landscape.
But rather than allowing their land to be developed by agribusiness, the Sira and Manggroholo villages approached environmental campaigners Greenpeace Indonesia and local NGO Bentara Papua, who have since 2008 advocated for them to have control of the land under a Forest Village scheme.
The NGOs also helped the villagers set up an indigenous association, and worked with them to develop a plan for how to use the land, analyse the forest landscape, and identify deforestation-free but profitable products that the community can harvest.
These include damar resin, which is obtained from trees of the Dipterocarpaceae species, and used to glaze or varnish products; rotan, woody stems of palm trees that are used to make cane furniture and baskets; and gaharu or agarwood, a resin that forms in some evergreen trees when they are infected with mould. It is used to make incense and perfumes.
Kiki Taufik, head of Greenpeace Indonesia’s Forests Campaign, said in a statement that Papuan forests are increasingly succumbing to the palm oil industry’s expansion, and must be protected.
“Greenpeace supports community-based forest management which recognises sovereignty is in the hands of the local people,” said Kiki. “The commitment of the Manggroholo-Sira community is an inspiration to others resisting deforestation in Papua”.
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2) In a big step for indigenous rights and the environment, the gov’t has given a rainforest in Papua back to the people
 
The government of Indonesia has officially handed over control of a large swath of Papua’s rainforest to the area’s indigenous people, establishing Papua’s first Village Forest and giving the local community the power to stop the threat of deforestation from illegal logging, palm oil and pulpwood plantations.
It’s the kind of action that would’ve seemed unthinkable on the part of the government not so long ago. But in 2014, President Joko Widodo promised to give forest-dwelling communities control over 12.7 million hectares of forest estate through community forestry schemes including Village Forest areas. 

The Sira-Manggroholo Village Forest is the first to begin the fulfillment of that promise in Papua.
Representatives of the Province of West Papua officially handed over Village Forest management rights of a 3,545-hectare slice of rainforest to the indigenous people of the Knasaimos landscape in West Papua’s Bird’s Head Peninsula at a ceremony last Friday.
Possession of those rights will allow the communities of Manggroholo and Sira villages, situated in South Sorong district, to protect and manage the rainforest as they see fit.  
Those management rights, initially valid for 35 years, were presented to representatives of the two villages at an event in Teminabuan, the district capital. Traditional dances were performed to greet participants in the ceremony, which was attended by around sixty members of the roughly 400-strong forest community.
“This is a victory not just for we residents of Sira and Manggroholo villages, but for everyone, especially here in Papua where much forest remains. Forest protection is vital to secure the future of our communities,” said Fredrick Sagisolo, head of the Knasaimos Tribal Council, as quoted by a release from environmental NGO Greenpeace. 
“Our target is to extend the right to Village Forest to every village in the Knasaimos traditional domain.”
During the 2000s, illegal loggers targeted merbau timber species in the Knasaimos area, and elsewhere in coastal Papua. Exported at a rate of 300,000 cubic meters per month from Papua to factories making luxury flooring in China, the trade earned Papuans who collaborated with the industry less than half a cent per dollar’s worth of flooring sold in the west.
Sira and Manggroholo village leaders say they have rejected recent advances from palm oil companies seeking to secure concession rights in their territories. Instead, they have been working with local NGO Bentara Papua and Greenpeace Indonesia to establish their own indigenous association to map the forests, conduct surveys, and find non-destructive ways to create products from the forest, such as resin.
“Greenpeace supports community-based forest management which recognizes sovereignty is in the hands of the local people. Papuan forests, increasingly succumbing to the expansion of oil palm, must be protected. The commitment of the Manggroholo-Sira community is an inspiration to others resisting deforestation in Papua,” said Kiki Taufik, Head of Greenpeace’s Indonesia Forests Campaign.  
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3) Local miners ready to operate Grasberg mine, says lawmaker
Viriya P. Singgih The Jakarta Post
Jakarta | Tue, March 14, 2017 | 05:37 pm
A lawmaker has urged the government to give local mining companies the chance to manage Papua’s Grasberg mine, the world's biggest gold mine and second-largest copper mine, if it fails to reach a settlement with PT Freeport Indonesia over a contractual dispute.
“The mine could be operated by state-owned mining firms like PT Aneka Tambang [Antam], for instance, which already has a lot of experience in the mining sector,” Mukhtar Tompo, a member of the House of Representatives Commission VII overseeing natural mineral resources and the environment, from the Hanura Party, said on Monday.
Freeport, Indonesia’s oldest foreign investor, is in a deadlock over its future operations in the country, as the government requires the company to convert its contract of work (CoW) signed in 1991 into a special mining license (IUPK) in return for an export permit extension.
The subsidiary of the United States-based Freeport McMoRan has repeatedly rejected the idea of contract conversion and stated that if the dispute was prolonged, it may take the case to international arbitration, a move that many deem would be costly for both parties.
Coordinating Maritime Affairs Minister Luhut Binsar Pandjaitan has also previously stated that state-owned aluminum producer PT Indonesia Asahan Aluminium (Inalum) was capable of managing the Grasberg mine.
“We can manage [the Grasberg mine]. We have Inalum. It is up to the State-Owned Enterprises Ministry, but we are ready,” Luhut said recently. (bbn)
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4) Removal of West Papuan mural ‘clandestine’
11:52 am on 14 March 2017 
An Aboriginal elder and artist says she's upset a mural she created in support of West Papua has been destroyed but it won't stop her, or her community, from advocating for the region's independence cause.
Artwork by June Mills supporting the plight of West Papuans. Photo: June Mills
The art work, which was painted onto a wall in Darwin in 2015 and represents the solidarity between indigenous Australians and West Papuan people, was painted over on Sunday.
June Mills said it was not clear who was responsible for removing the mural and she's surprised by the clandestine approach.

June Mills surrounded by supporters in front of her mural that was later painted over.  Photo: June Mills
She said she was very worried about the volatile situation in West Papua and she intends to create more murals, despite the setback.
"There's incredible violence going on as we speak. Until that is resolved, we are not going to stop bringing this to the attention of the world community...whether that's posters, whether that's murals, whether that's talks, whether that's forums, we are going to continue."



"The mural was well-loved in the Darwin community," she said.West Papuan Friendship Mural in Darwin, Australia, being painted over. Photo: Free West Papua Campaign

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5) Tito Calls for Closer Ties Between Police Forces in Asia-Pacific RegionBy : Gardi Gazarin | on 6:18 PM March 13, 2017
Jakarta. Partnerships between the law enforcement agencies of Asia-Pacific countries should improve in the coming years, National Police chief Gen. Tito Karnavian said during a meeting of police commissioners of Melanesian Spearhead Group countries in Jakarta on Monday (13/03).
The meeting is aimed at exploring ways of enhancing security collaboration between the police forces of Papua New Guinea, the Solomon Islands and Fiji.
Representatives from Vanuatu and the French Territory of New Caledonia, both part of the MSG, were not present at the gathering.

"The regional partnerships of Asia-Pacific countries need to improve with a specific focus on combating transnational crimes and conducting comparative studies," Tito said.
Indonesia, as an associated member country of the MSG, is hosting this year's gathering to help develop closer ties between regional police forces.
Tito is also scheduled to attend several bilateral meetings with the police chiefs of MSG member countries.
"The Indonesian National Police will meet with the minister of police of Papua New Guinea, the Honorable Robert Atiyafa MP and also with the minister for police, national security and correctional service of the Solomon Islands, the Honorable Peter Shanel Agovaka," Tito said.
A bilateral meeting will take place between Tito and Fiji's commissioner of police, Brig. Gen. Sitiveni T. Qiliho on Tuesday.
The MSG meeting will focus on developing solutions to mitigate transnational crime, including terrorism, human trafficking and drug smuggling.
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1) Government refuses to step back in Freeport dispute

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2) Kontras Lists Human Rights Violations in Indonesia
3) Author praised for opening readers’ eyes to West Papua’s repression
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1) Government refuses to step back in Freeport dispute
Viriya P. Singgih The Jakarta Post
Jakarta | Wed, March 15, 2017 | 07:29 am



Members of National University Student Movement (GMNI) hold a rally in front of Freeport Indonesia's office on Jalan Rasuna Said, Jakarta, on Feb. 24. (JP/Dhoni Setiawan)


The government has stated that it will not take a step back in its dispute with gold and copper miner PT Freeport Indonesia, reiterating that the company must abide by the rules on contract conversion and share divestment.
Both parties officially started negotiations to find a settlement on March 8, in which the government is represented by officials from the Energy and Mineral Resources Ministry, including secretary-general Teguh Pamudji, while Freeport Indonesia is represented by directors Clementino Lamury and Tony Wenas.
“Today, we have clearly explained our stance to them [Freeport] that we are still in a position that demands they convert the contract of work [CoW] into a special mining license [IUPK],” Hadi Djuraid, Energy and Mineral Resources Ministry spokesperson, said following a two-hour meeting with Clementino and Tony on Tuesday in Jakarta.
Hadi also said the company must divest 51 percent of its shares as mandated in Government Regulation (PP) No. 1/2017. “It is clearly stated in the PP. Hence, we can’t take a step back. We have to move forward with it,” he said.
Freeport Indonesia has rejected the idea of contract conversion and divesting 51 percent. The company has also stated that it might take the case to international arbitration if it cannot reach an agreement with the government within 120 days, starting from Feb. 17.
The United States-based mining giant Freeport McMoRan currently owns 90.64 percent of the company, while 9.36 percent is owned by the government. (ags)

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WEDNESDAY, 15 MARCH, 2017 | 11:34 WIB
2) Kontras Lists Human Rights Violations in Indonesia

TEMPO.COJakarta - The Commission for Missing Persons and Victims of Violence, Kontras, in short, drawn up a list of 19 human rights issues in Indonesia. The list was drafted ahead to Kontras' 19th birthday on March 20, 2017.
Kontras coordinator Yati Andriyani said that the list reflects the current state of human rights issue in Indonesia.
"Ahead of Kontras' 19th birthday, we found a thesis that the state is not yet mature. Why? We have some yardsticks, the current state of human rights is a far cry from the ideal image of human rights," Yati said in Jakarta on Tuesday, March 14, 2017.
According to Yati, Kontras asserted that the government has been very lenient to human rights violators. Yati said that the government seemed to have somewhat collaborated or compromised with them.
Yati also named various human rights violators. "[The violators] used to be security officials, now its corporations," Yati said. Local governments, under special autonomy law, could violate human rights as well, according to Yati.
"For example, the government is stepping up its crackdown on narcotics and terrorism, but the measures were not followed by fair trials and law enforcement agencies reforms and [upholding of] human rights principles," Yati said.
 
Below is the list of human rights issues drawn up by Kontras:
1. Reconciliation and ambiguity of justice agenda. (For 19 years, the government has yet to provide legal certainty over accountability for gross, serious human rights violations). 2. The faces of revived New Order (Orba/Soeharto administration) in Indonesia. (Kontras has seen growing influence of Orba principles and the rise of figures who once considered as bastions of the 1998 reform agendas and ideas). 3. Long and winding roads to Aceh Truth and Reconciliation Commission. 4. The search for social justice for Indonesia's outer islands. (Kontras' findings during investigations in Romang Island and Barat Daya Island in Maluku). 5. Land grabbing by a cement company in Rembang. 6. Reclamation projects in Bali, Romang and Jakarta. 7. Regional elections and artificial voters. (Kontras sees that the public's participation in simultaneous regional elections is dropping.) 8. Evictions and negligence of collective rights of residents. 9. Indigenous people and social justice. 10. Torture by law enforcement agencies. 11. Munir murder case. 12. Yusman and politicization of death penalty. 13. Repressions of freedom of belief and religion. 14. Repression of freedom of association. 15. Expressions and challenges in the protection of vulnerable groups. 16. Law and terrorism. (Kontras found that security officers failed to restore order in terror-ridden areas.) 17. The future of justice in Papua. 18. The future of human rights, anti-graft and environmental movements in Indonesia. 19. Indonesia's ambiguous human rights reputation in the eyes of international society. REZKI ALVIONITASARI
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3) Author praised for opening readers’ eyes to West Papua’s repression
  

By Pacific Media Watch editor Kendall Hutt 

Bookstore owners, writers, authors, family, friends and a group hopeful of West Papuan independence squeezed into the Women’s Bookshop in Ponsonby last night to celebrate the work of young New Zealand author Bonnie Etherington and her novel The Earth Cries Out.
Not only is the novel being celebrated and praised for Etherington’s mastery of the written word, but because of its ability to make the public more aware of life in West Papua, a region controversially ruled by Indonesia since the 1960s.

Plagued by media freedom and human rights violations, many media freedom and human rights organisations and several Pacific nations have condemned the widespread arrests and imprisonment of West Papuans for non-violent expression of their political views.
These are issues Etherington herself acknowledged speaking with Asia Pacific Report earlier this week, saying she wanted to show readers West Papua’s rich and diverse history, not only its complex political situation.
“I really wanted to show multiple sides of West Papua because it is so often forgotten or stereotyped by the rest of the world.”
This is something those who have already read The Earth Cries Out praise.

Harriet Allan, fiction publisher for Penguin Books New Zealand, commended Etherington in a speech on her ability to provide insight into West Papua through the eyes of a child, that of female protagonist Ruth.
“As Ruth bears witness to what she sees, we too start to hear the voices that have been silenced by politics, sickness, violence and poverty.”
Like Ruth, we come away with a greater understanding of this country and its diverse people and also of ourselves and the bonds of love and friendship.”
‘Shed some light’Although she has not had the chance to read her sister’s entire novel, Etherington’s younger sister, Aimee, says what she has read is very similar to how she and her sister experienced West Papua.
“With the descriptions, I felt like I was back there. She’s done a really good job of capturing how it feels, I guess.”
Aimee Etherington says she hopes her sister’s novel spreads awareness of West Papua.
“Most people that I’ve spoken to don’t really know that it exists, so it will be good to shed some light as to what’s going on there and, I guess, giving a bit of insight on how as New Zealanders and Australians we can actually do something about it.”
‘Almost experiencing it’Like Harriet Allan, Women’s Bookshop owner Carol Beu loved Ruth’s voice.
“I think becoming aware of the situation in Papua through the eyes of this child, Ruth, is really quite special”, Beu told the audience.
“The way it’s revealed, it’s fascinating.”
Beu admits this was also “quite shocking”, due to Etherington’s ability to place the reader in the moment.
“You’re almost experiencing it.”

Bea also acknowledged those in the audience who were supporting the book on more of a political level, such as West Papua Action Auckland spokesperson Maire Leadbeater.
Bea told those gathered she found the politics of The Earth Cries Out “quite astonishing and wonderful”.
“It’s a book that makes you angry in many ways on a political level.”
Leadbeater herself, however, says she is looking forward to reading the novel.
Mister Pip comparisons“I think looking at countries through a literary perspective can be very helpful at times. I can’t help thinking of the book Mister Pip, about Bougainville and how amazingly helpful that was I think in terms of people understanding the conflict.
“It’s done in a fictionalised way but it’s true to the situation, so I’m picking from what I’ve heard about the book it may achieve that as well.”
Leadbeater is not the only one to draw comparisons with Lloyd Jones’ Mister Pip, however.
Tony Moores, owner of bookstore Poppies in Remuera, reached a similar conclusion.
“This is not Mister Pip, but the issues it deals with are quite similar, from a different perspective.”
Powerful, shockingThe Creative Hub founder, John Cranna, who also noted ties with Mister Pip, praised Etherington on her talent after listening to several excerpts read by Allan and Etherington herself.
“For such a young writer to be writing about such dramatic and shocking events, and to be pulling it off, is quite an achievement.
To write about violent death is … very hard in a reserved, powerful way, but she certainly did that very well.

1) Political risk of neglecting inequality in Papua

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2) Govt Forms Team to Handle Coral Reef Damage in Raja Ampat
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1) Political risk of neglecting inequality in Papua

Hipolitus Yolisandry Ringgi Wangge 
Jakarta | Thu, March 16, 2017 | 08:31 am
Researcher at the Marthinus Academy, Jakarta

In early 2017, two much-discussed issues about Papua have been the investigation of corruption in fictitious road projects involving high-level officials in its Public Works Agency office and the Freeport case, which is a battle between the government and the United States-based mining company PT Freeport McMoran in Mimika regency over a contractual issue. In the first case, the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) alleges graft in the Jayapura road construction project worth Rp 89 billion (US$6.6 million), implicating a high-level bureaucrat, Michael Kambuaya.
The second case concerns a prolonged contractual issue. The government wants to change the contract of work into a special mining license through which the government wants the company to divest 51 percent of its shares, to which Freeport objects.
The cases share one obvious, but often neglected issue — inequality for the indigenous Papuans. Corruption has been highly pervasive in Indonesia, particularly in Papua.
For years, local aspirations are too easily branded as political ideas about the independence movement. Neglect of the two current cases would bring two consequences.
First, the relative neglect of the grassroots voice will result in more deep grievances toward the local and national governments, as well as multinational companies in Papua.
Corruption involving officials and politicians generates popular belief among Papuans that those elites are oblivious of the grassroots’ misery.
Since 2012, some regents and local politicians in Papua have been involved in abuse of public expenditures. In 2013, the regent of Sarmi was involved in a corruption case related to the use of the local budget to renovate his house. Reports in 2014 highlighted alleged misuse of Rp 22 billion of the local budget for personal interest by 44 West Papua provincial legislative council members.
Furthermore, although Freeport contributes to local communities through taxes and surrounding infrastructure, its operation has displaced many locals, particularly the Amungme (highlanders) and the Kamoro (lowlanders) tribes, apart from harming the environment.
Mining disputes should not only focus on the company’s increased contribution to Jakarta and to the growing nationalistic sentiment among Indonesians. It should seriously consider views from the indigenous Papuans.
As a result of being relatively neglected, the corruption and corporate practices have turned into the main narrative among Papuans, leading them to express their grievances politically. As scholars note, such grievances have become part of their identity since Papua became part of Indonesia in 1967.
As the Indonesianist Edward Aspinall notes, abuse of public authority also leads to a discourse of deprivation, a singular narrative of Papuans being neglected in all spheres. This discourse is further used by political actors, local activists, cultural leaders and society figures to pursue various agendas in Papua.
Based on my fieldwork, the stories of being sidelined by the local and national elites are the main topics shared in indigenous Papuans’ daily conversations, such as in daily jokes (mops Papua).
Second, the absence of indigenous Papuans’ perceptions on pivotal issues, such as corruption and the mining company’s operations, cast the conflicts into political terms: the grassroots against the local elites, national elites and the mining company.
Historically, three collective actions have been used, namely public protest, international campaigning and military campaigning. These collective frames have gained different levels of public support as the main driving force for mobilizing indigenous Papuans.
Since the downfall of Soeharto in 1998, public protest has been the prominent instrument for expressing local aspirations in Papua’s coastal and highland areas.
Intensive international campaigning on Papuan independence is another instrument for political entrepreneurs to channel local discontent about the relative lack of inclusion by the government. Military campaigning by the Free Papua Movement (OPM), which was the prominent means of collective action during Soeharto’s authoritarian regime, is a less likely option for expressing Papuans’ discontent today.
Apparently the continuous neglect of the local perception regarding inequality will remain in coming years — given the lack of an effective mechanism to oversee abuse of authority for personal interest while corruption in the local government cannot be tackled instantly.
The dispute between the central government and Freeport may not be resolved soon, while other disputes may emerge.
As usual, indigenous Papuans are likely to continue to be spectators in such cases.
Without serious efforts to bridge the grassroots perception as part of national concerns, the discourse of deprivation will be the main narrative for the indigenous Papuans, to be used by political actors in the form of collective action frames. The narrative will be used to continually mobilize local sentiment against local and national governments and against multinational companies as well.
***
The writer, a researcher at the Marthinus Academy Jakarta, conducted fieldwork in Papua in 2016.

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THURSDAY, 16 MARCH, 2017 | 06:24 WIB
2) Govt Forms Team to Handle Coral Reef Damage in Raja Ampat

TEMPO.COJakarta - The central government has formed an integrated team to handle the coral reef damage in Raja Ampat District, West Papua Province, according to Raja Ampat Tourism Office Chief Yusdi Lamatenggo.
According to Lamatenggo, the coral reefs in Raja Ampat were severely damaged by MV Caledonian Sky, a British-owned cruise liner, which ran aground on March 4, 2017, at low tide.
The cruise ship rammed into the coral reefs and damaged approximately 1.3 hectares of them at a diving site known as the Crossover Reef in Raja Ampat.
Lamatenggo remarked here on Wednesday that the team was formed by the Coordinating Ministry of Maritime Affairs with the involvement of the Maritime and Fisheries Ministry, Environment and Forestry Ministry, Transportation Ministry, Tourism Ministry, and the Police. 
The integrated team will seek accountability from the owners of the cruise ship for the damage caused to the coral reefs in Raja Ampat as a result of the incident.
"In addition, the Raja Ampat district government has formed an assessment team to conduct studies and to calculate the amount of losses incurred due to the damage caused to the coral reefs," he added.
 ANTARA
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MSG Chair Dubs Meeting With PNG Prime Minister As ‘Very Fruitful’

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MSG Chair Dubs Meeting With PNG Prime Minister As ‘Very Fruitful’





             The MSG Chair, Prime Minister Hon Manasseh Sogavare and the PNG Prime Minister, Hon Peter O’Neill.

The Melanesian Spearhead Group (MSG) Chair, Prime Minister Hon Manasseh Sogavare of Solomon Islands has described his dialogue with the Papua New Guinea (PNG) Prime Minister, Hon Peter O’Neill as ‘very fruitful.’
The MSG Chair met with Hon O’Neill in the PNG Capital, Port Moresby yesterday, concluding his second and final round of consultations with MSG leaders since taking up the chairmanship of the Melanesian sub-regional grouping in June 2015.
The key issues of discussion included the following:
  • MSG Special Leaders’ Summit;
  • Outcome of the Meeting of the MSG sub-committee on Legal and Institutional Issues {SCLII) in Port Vila in December 2016. SCLII is the MSG sub-committee that makes recommendations to the MSG Governing Bodies- Senior Officials Meeting, Foreign Ministers’ Meeting and Leaders’ Summit;
  • West Papua;
  • MSG Free Trade Agreement;
  • MSG Labour Mobility, Independent Review of the MSG Secretariat; and
  • MSG Chairmanship Handover from Solomon Islands to Papua New Guinea.
Speaking after his meeting with Prime Minister O’Neill, the MSG Chair said “I had a very fruitful meeting with the PNG Prime Minister on the agendas of discussion as I also had with Prime Minister Charlot Salwai of Vanuatu, Victor Tutugoro of the FLNKS and Prime Minister Frank Bainimarama of Fiji earlier on in February.”
On the issue of Special Leaders’ Summit, the MSG Chair said he expressed regret over his inability to convene any Special Leaders’ Summit in December 2016 due to the non-availability of colleague leaders.
He said a Special Leaders’ Summit was supposed to be held to approve the recommendations from various bodies of MSG including SCLII.
However, the MSG Chair said the various bodies of the MSG- SCLII and Senior Officials Meeting (SOM)- did meet and made a number of recommendations to the Foreign Ministers Meeting (FMM) for submission to the Leaders’ Summit for final approval.
He said the MSG Capitals’ visit was therefore important to consult with colleague leaders on various recommendations from the various MSG Bodies for final approval
“I have met with both Prime Minister Charlot Salwai of Vanuatu and Victor Tutugoro of the FLNKS in Port Vila and Prime Minister Frank Bainimarama of Fiji in Suva as part of this second and final round of consultations earlier in February this year. I was supposed to travel on to Port Moresby to meet with Prime Minister Peter O’Neill but had to postpone the Port Moresby leg of the trip because the PNG Parliament was in session.
“I am now pleased that I finally met with Prime Minister O’Neill yesterday and my meeting with the PNG Prime Minister like my previous meetings with my other colleague leaders was very fruitful.”
On the Outcome of the Meeting of SCLII in Port Vila in September last year, the MSG Chair said he informed Prime Minister O’Neill that the meeting endorsed the proposed Revised MSG Membership Guidelines and was brought to the attention of the SOM and FMM in their meeting which immediately followed the SCLII meeting and were endorsed by the Governing Bodies in December 2016.
He said he informed the PNG Prime Minister that Prime Minister Salwai, FLNKS Spokesman, Mr Tutugoro and Prime Minister Bainimarama have all agreed in principle to the Revised MSG Membership Guidelines and during his consultations with them.
The revised guidelines provide a very transparent process for Leaders to deliberate on an application for membership whereby they enhance and protect the decision-making process and respect the reporting structure of the MSG at the Summit level as stipulated under Articles 7 (1) and (2) of the MSG Agreement.
The MSG Chair said Prime Minister O’Neill in turn expressed support for the Revised MSG Membership Guidelines and as such, Leaders will meet and formally approve them at the next MSG Leaders’ Summit.
On the issue of West Papua, the MSG Chair said he told Prime Minister O’Neill that the United Liberation Movement of West Papua’s (ULMWP’s) application for membership of the MSG will be dealt with under the Revised MSG Membership Criteria.
He said Prime Minister O’Neill expressed the ULMWP’s membership of the MSG is not an issue to PNG but rather the ULMWP proving that it is a united body that represents the collective views of the people of West Papua just as the FLNKS is evidently a united body representing the collective views of the Kanaks of New Caledonia.
The MSG Chair said the PNG Prime Minister further stated that any discussion on the issue of sovereignty should be taken up appropriately with the United Nations Decolonisation Committee (C24) in New York and the Human Rights Commission in Geneva.
On the issue of MSG Free Trade Agreement, the MSG Chair said Prime Minister O’Neill stated that PNG will be signing up the agreement after sorting out some issues of concern with Fiji.
On the issue of MSG Labour Mobility, the MSG Chair said Prime Minister O’Neill has expressed desire to see this opened up so that Melanesians from other Melanesian countries do not have to apply for work permit to work in PNG and vice versa.
On the issue of Independent Review of the MSG Secretariat, the MSG Chair told Prime Minister O’Neill that the purpose of the review, which started since January pursuant to the Governing Body decision in December for the review to be undertaken. Its bold objective is to ensure a wholly functional, resilient and robust secretariat that delivers on the mandates of leaders.
He said the PNG Prime Minister conveyed PNG’s firm support for the review and offered assistance to the secretariat to ensure the reform is undertaken smoothly and swiftly.
On the issue of MSG Chairmanship Handover, the MSG Chair said he had sought the view of Prime Minister O’Neill as to when should Solomon Islands hand over the chairmanship to PNG this year and the PNG Prime Minister said Solomon Islands should hold on to the position until after the PNG General Elections in June.
The MSG Chair and his delegation will return to Honiara tomorrow, Friday 17th March.
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1) Indonesia’s long relationship with Freeport at crossroads

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2) Freeport negotiations with government continue
3) HEALTHS AND TRANSMIGRATIONS ISSUES OF WEST PAPUA DELIVERED IN UNHRC
4) Indonesia To Summon British Ambassador Over Papua Coral Reef Destruction
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1) Indonesia’s long relationship with Freeport at crossroads

By Asian Correspondent Staff | 16th March 2017
AMERICAN mining giant Freeport-McRoRan Copper & Gold may soon pull out of Indonesia after more than four decades due to prolonged conflict with the government.

The company, which is the country’s oldest international investor and largest taxpayer, has been embroiled in a battle with President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo’s administration over new national mining regulation.
Legislation introduced in January 2017 requires Freeport to convert its business contract into a special mining licence, dictating the company must divest 51 percent of shares in its local subsidiary within a decade and build a new US$2 billion smelter.

Economic nationalism
With economic nationalism a key aspect of Jokowi’s agenda, the government is also demanding higher royalties, land relinquishments and more materials to be procured from local suppliers.
Freeport McMoRan’s current contract was set to expire in 2021 and CEO Richard C. Adkerson has insisted the company will not meet Jakarta’s demands to change its contract, threatening international arbitration.
It was signed in 1991 under the New Order dictatorship, long before Indonesia’s transition to democracy began in 1998.

Meanwhile, the government has been preparing state-owned aluminium company PT Indonesia Asahan Aluminium to take over management of the gold and copper mining site.
Last week, the Energy and Mineral Resources Minister Ignatius Jonan met with several of his predecessors to discuss the continuation of Freeport Indonesia’s business – even including the minister who served under Suharto between 1978 and 1988.
Protesters across Indonesia have called for the government to nationalise PT Freeport Indonesia, framing American ownership of the company as a form of colonialism.
The company, meanwhile, claim to have injected US$16 billion into Indonesian coffers between 1992 and 2015, and that divesting would impact Indonesia’s foreign investment climate.

Impact on local communities
Whilst negotiations might be taking place in office towers in Jakarta, a temporary suspension of Freeport’s operations is having significant consequences 3000km away in Indonesia’s easternmost Papua province where the mine is located.
Indonesia’s central bank reports the local economy has significantly slowed since Freeport’s decision to indefinitely shut down production. PT Freeport Indonesia has laid off more than 1500 workers in the past two months as negotiations have dragged on.
Natalius Pigai of the national human rights commission, Komnas HAM, told The Jakarta Post “it is not fair to just think about nationalism while letting many people suffer. The government should protect the rights of Papuans, including their job rights.”
Papua has a relatively high GDP compared with other Indonesian provinces despite its small population. Less than four million of Indonesia’s 250 million people live there.
Nevertheless, Papua had the highest rate of poverty of any province at 27.8 percent in 2014, compared with 11 percent nationwide.
Papuan tribal leaders visited the offices of human rights group Imparsial in Jakarta this month, pleading with the government to allow participation from local people in the decision-making process.
Meegabo Traditional Papua Council chairman John Gobai asked Jokowi’s administration to allow Freeport to “operate while the government, Freeport and the Papuan customary councils meet to negotiate the company’s contract. We do not care who will own the company’s shares later.”

Earlier in March, roughly 100 Freeport employees protested outside the Energy and Mineral Resources Ministry in Jakarta to demand a swift resolution to the dispute.
Layoffs at the company were “a result of regulations issued by the government without giving much attention to the fate of 32,000 employees and Timika residents,” PT Freeport Indonesia Employees Solidarity group member Nathalia Nauw said.
Amungme tribal council Lemasa director Odizeus Beanal said: “We simply want the government and Freeport to think about the fate of Papuans, whose land has been damaged.”
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2) Freeport negotiations with government continue
Fedina S. Sundaryani The Jakarta Post
Jakarta | Thu, March 16, 2017 | 06:01 pm

Negotiations between the government and gold and copper mining company PT Freeport Indonesia continue almost one month after the firm submitted its complaints and threatened to take the case to international arbitration.
Tony Wenas, who takes part in the negotiations as Freeport Indonesia executive vice president, said no solution had been reached since negotiations started.
"The discussions are still ongoing, and we are trying to find the best resolution for the future," he said on Thursday.
Tony declined to disclose what exactly was the deadlock keeping the two parties from concluding their negotiations.
(Read also: Freeport representatives visit ministry to find solution)
Freeport has refused to accept the government’s demand to convert its contract of work (CoW) agreement into a special mining license (IUPK). The company argues that an IUPK would effectively annul its CoW signed in 1991.
Freeport says it does not want to give up the rights listed in its CoW, including protection of its long-term investments.
Under new government regulations, Freeport is required to gradually divest 51 percent of its shares to Indonesian entities.
Tony met with Coordinating Political, Legal and Security Affairs Minister Wiranto on Thursday, a day after visiting the Energy and Mineral Resources Ministry to discuss the issue with officials there. (bbn)
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3) HEALTHS AND TRANSMIGRATIONS ISSUES OF WEST PAPUA DELIVERED IN UNHRC

Jayapura, Jubi – Some organisation delivered a joint statement to draw Human Right Council’s attention to the human rights situation in West Papua in particular regarding the rights of the indigenous people, including their right to health.
Vivat International, Franciscans International, the World Council of Churches and Geneva for Human Rights with support of the International Coalition for Papua (ICP) , Tapol and Westpapua-Netzwerk, on Wednesday (15/3/2017) at the 34th regular session of the United Nations Human Right Council in Geneva said they acknowledge and appreciate the invitation from the government of Indonesia for the visit of the UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Health to Indonesia, including West Papua, in March 2017.
“We see this visit as a sign of hope and a step towards having more confidence for the future of the indigenous West Papuans,” said Andrzej Owca, who delivered the joint statement.

However, those organisation are deeply concerned by the continuing decline of the population of indigenous Melanesians in West Papua. Since the annexation of West Papua by Indonesia in 1969, the number of West Papuans has decreased from 96% in 1971 to 48% in 2010, with current estimates being less than 42%.
“At this rate, the population of indigenous Melanesians in West Papua could disappear within the next 40 years. Violence against indigenous West Papuans has been the result of an unresolved, long-standing conflict over the political status of West Papua,”
Mr Owca said the situation for the indigenous West Papuans has been further exacerbated by a low standard of physical and mental health that the State has failed to address, in comparison with other ethnic groups in Indonesia. Governement health intitutions are not providing and delivering effective health and medical services for indigenous West Papuans, especially in remote regions.
Therefore, those organisation recommend that the government of Indonesia to establish a strong policy and take appropriate measures toward stopping and reversing the depopulation of indigenous Melanesians in West Papua, by controlling the transmigration flow into West Papua and by respecting the rights to development for indigenous Melansians in West Papua, including rights to customary lands.
“We also urges Indonesia government to monitor and ensure effective implementation of health and medical services in remote areas, and stop the engagement of military personnel in the implementation health care programs in West Papua,” said Mr Owca in the end of joint statement. (*)

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4) Indonesia To Summon British Ambassador Over Papua Coral Reef Destruction
Details Published on Thursday, 16 March 2017 13:39

JAKARTA -- Coordinating Minister for Maritime Affairs Luhut Binsar Panjaitan will summon the ambassador of the UK, Thursday, in connection with the destruction of coral reefs in Raja Ampat, Papua, by British cruise ship MV Caledonian Sky, Indonesia's Antara news agency reported.

"Tomorrow (Thursday), I will summon him," he stated at his office here on Wednesday. 

The former chief minister for political, security, and legal affairs said a regulation in place in the Great Britain stipulates that strong administrative sanctions can be imposed on a seaman or ship's captain found conducting violations that caused destruction in the sea.

Panjaitan remarked that he will also send a team to investigate the destruction caused by the Bahamas-flagged ship.

The Indonesian government has formed a joint team with officials from his office, the environment minister's office, the transportation ministry, the tourism ministry, the ministry of justice and human rights, the Attorney General's Office, the police, and local governments in connection with the incident.

"We will send the team there tomorrow (Thursday). Officials from other ministries have also been sent there," he pointed out.

Panjaitan stated that his office will investigate how a 90-meter-long cruise ship of 4,200 gross tonnage was allowed to sail in the area.

The ship has caused destruction in "the heart" of Raja Ampat and damaged the exotic coral reefs.

"It was said that the ship carrying tourists had entered the area several times. It should have been prohibited. Investigation must be conducted to unearth how the ship was allowed to sail in that area during low tide," he noted.

Panjaitan remarked that his office will review the existing regulations that might have lead to the incident.

"This should serve as a lesson. We will conduct a thorough investigation to prevent recurrence of a similar incident in future," he emphasised.

Arif Havas Oegroseno, the first deputy for maritime sovereignty, has expressed willingness to cooperate with the foreign ministry to deal with the destruction.

Although MV Caledonian Sky is a cruise ship belonging to a British company, but based on the international law, the country, whose flag was flown on the ship in question, must be held responsible.

"The ship carried the flag of the Bahamas. According to the international law, the country, whose flag the ship is bearing, is held responsible. The company that operates it may be from another country," he explained.

Oegroseno said he has communicated with the foreign ministry on efforts to be taken to settle the case, including seeking help from the Great Britain.

Oegroseno said Indonesia has no diplomatic relations with the Bahamas, which is a British Commonwealth member country in the Caribbean.

"In the morning, just now, I met with friends from the foreign ministry, as we have no representative in the Bahamas. We also do not have an embassy there," he revealed.

As the problem is linked to navigation safety, the Indonesian government will also cooperate with the International Maritime Organisation in dealing with the incident.

-- BERNAMA
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1) Freeport Indonesia stops sponsorship for Persipura

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2) Australia, RI strengthen renewed defense ties
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1) Freeport Indonesia stops sponsorship for Persipura
Jayapura, Papua | Fri, March 17, 2017 | 01:03 pm

Nethy Dharma Somba The Jakarta Post
The unresolved friction between the Indonesian government and gold and copper miner PT Freeport Indonesia has had a negative impact on the Persipura Jayapura soccer club, the pride of many Papuan soccer fans.
 “PT Freeport has stopped its sponsorship of the Persipura team. It has sent an official email to the group’s management, highlighting problems related to its operational permit from the Indonesian government as the main cause of the decision,” Persipura chairman Benhur Tommy Mano told The Jakarta Post in Jayapura on Friday.
He said Persipura Jayapura was now facing difficulties covering its activities as there was no more funding from Freeport, which had long been its sponsor.
Persipura is now striving to attract new sponsors so the team can continue to participate in competitions. “If we get sponsors, we will continue to operate as per usual. In a worst-case scenario, we will have to stop taking part in competitions,” said Benhur.
He further said Persipura was approaching state-owned oil and gas company Pertamina, MNC Group owner Hary Tanoesoedibjo and the Tangguh liquefied natural gas (LNG) plant in West Papua to ask them to become sponsors.
“Pak Hary Tanoe seems interested in becoming our sponsor,” said Benhur.
Pertamina MOR VIII spokesperson Taufiqurahman admitted Persipura had sent a sponsorship proposal to his company. “But there is no decision yet,” he told the Post.
Freeport has been Persipura’s main sponsor since 2015.  The company disbursed Rp 11 billion (US$ 824,650.20) in funds for the soccer team in 2016, up from Rp 9 billion in the previous year. (ebf)
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2) Australia, RI strengthen renewed defense ties

Jakarta | Fri, March 17, 2017 | 09:52 am
Defense Minister Ryamizard Ryucudu met with his Australian counterpart Marise Payne in Sydney on Thursday, taking further steps forward since mending ties over a military spat that prompted the suspension of military cooperation.
The two met during the annual Defense Ministers’ Meeting.
Ryamizard conveyed his appreciation for Australia’s efforts to resolve an incident that involved one of its military language facilities in November that led to postponed cooperation between the Indonesian Military (TNI) and the Australian Defense Force for two months.
He expressed “happiness over the resumption of military cooperation between the two countries,” according to a Defense Ministry statement.
President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo agreed with Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull to fully restore defense cooperation, training exchange and activities during a state visit to Australia in February.
Putting behind past troubles, Ryamizard and Payne discussed, among other things, strengthening defense cooperation in the field of science and technology. Ryamizard particularly emphasized Indonesia’s efforts to develop its defense cybersecurity.
“Science and technology cooperation has great potential to build the depth and resilience of our bilateral relationship and we agreed to greater cooperation and engagement,” Payne said in a statement.
The two countries also are set to strengthen bilateral defense cooperation in the areas of maritime and defense industries.
In the regional context, Ryamizard conveyed strengthening relations between Indonesia and Fiji, while also expressing hope that Australia could push countries in the South Pacific to support Indonesia’s sovereignty.
Payne gave a nod to the “longstanding and productive bilateral defense relationship” between the two countries that are carried out in support of mutual interests in security and stability in the Indo-Pacific region.
The neighboring countries are set to co-chair the next cycle of the ASEAN Defense Ministers’ Meeting-Plus (ADMM+) Experts’ Working Group on peacekeeping operations later this year.
“This represents a great opportunity to strengthen regional peacekeeping efforts and build upon existing bilateral peacekeeping cooperation,” Payne said.
The ministers noted the importance of ASEAN security frameworks to build regional trust, transparency and cooperation while discussing regional security dynamics. Payne also invited Ryamizard to Darwin in the near future to view the United States Force Posture Initiatives, a cooperation between the US and Australia that came into force in 2015. “The Force Posture Initiatives provide new opportunities for regional defense engagement, including with Indonesia, to build mutual trust and contribute to regional peace and security,” she said.
The initiatives were part of US president Barack Obama’s “pivot to Asia” policy to counter China, a policy likely to be abandoned by his successor President Donald Trump.
Separately, Institute for Defense and Security Studies (IDSS) executive director Mufti Makarim said new plans discussed between Indonesia and Australia on both bilateral and regional levels would only complement the already established ties between the two countries, where cooperation such as information-sharing has long been intensive since the 2002 Bali bombings.
It would be additional in nature, Mufti said, to add new plans associated with advanced developments on the field.
“In the context of the defense industry, of course it would advance toward information exchange on weaponry technology development, since as we know, Australia is not a country that is a major producer of weapons, so it would be further opportunity for Indonesia to introduce locally made products,” Mufti told The Jakarta Post over the phone.
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1) Expanding Red Fruit Crops in Papua

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2) Indonesia: 8,000 Islands in a Sea of Trouble?
3) New Bali Process Forum to Combat Modern Slavery: Australian FM
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FRIDAY, 17 MARCH, 2017 | 11:04 WIB
1) Expanding Red Fruit Crops in Papua
                                    Papua Red Fruit (Buah Merah) or Pandanus conoideus. ANTARA/Anang Budiono

TEMPO.COJakarta - The Papua provincial government has made every effort to expand the crops of red fruit tree, found very effective for curing various diseases.
Papua and West Papua provinces are known to have abundant biodiversity which include a lot of medicinal plants that can be developed for the local peoples welfare.
Among the medicinal plants growing in the regions are Rhododendron Macgregoriae which is effective in fighting bacteria, Myrmecodia Aureospinosa that can cure cancer and other diseases, and Pandanus Conoideus which is popularly known as Red Fruit.
The Red Fruit grows well in all Papua regions, especially in the Jayawijaya mountain area of Wamena and Tolikara, Jayapura, Manokwari, and Nabire, in addition to Timika, and Ayamaru in Sorong.
Hence, the Food Crops and Horticulture Department in Papua Province has set up a land area of 546 hectares for the development of red fruit in numerous districts.
Food Crops and Horticulture Department Chief Semuel Siriwa remarked in the provincial city of Jayapura on Thursday that in addition to preparing the land, the department has also provided 11 units of red fruit processing machines.
"The red fruit processing machines will be distributed to the red fruit development centers in the districts of Jayapura, Wamena, Tolikara, Puncak Jaya, Yahukimo, Timika, and Nabire," Siriwa remarked.
From the production sector, he expressed hope that there would be a cross-sector cooperation of relevant Regional Working Wnits (SKPD) in the province.
According to him, all production sectors require the cooperation of the Department of Industry, Department of Transportation and Trade and the Department of Cooperatives in terms of promotion.
Siriwa explained that the development of red fruit is expected to increase the income of people who manage these commodities.
"In addition, red fruit is also one of the commodities whose planting is encouraged by the governor of Papua," he said, adding that red fruit will have a great potential if it is developed in Papua like that of coffee or cocoa.
The red fruit is traditionally prepared by splitting it, wrapping it in leaves, and then cooking it in an earthen oven to produce juice, which is used as skin and eye medicine, and for worm treatment.
Based on the analysis conducted by Bogor Institute of Agriculture (IPB), Red Fruit actually contains high degrees of carotenoids and tocopherol, which is rich in Vitamin E supplements.
There are over 600 known carotenoids divided into two classes, xanthophyll which contains oxygen, and carotenes which are purely hydrocarbons and contain no oxygen.
People consuming diets rich in Carotenoids from natural foods such as fruits and vegetables are healthier and have lower mortality from a number of chronic illnesses.
The total amount of Carotenoids in a fresh Red Fruit is 34,000 ppm, and in its Red Fruit extract it is 8,600 ppm. The total amount of Tocopherol in a fresh Red Fruit is 133,000 ppm, while in its Red Fruit extract it is 17,000 ppm.
Beside Carotenoids and Tocopherol, Red Fruit extract also contains overfull fatty acids, such as Lauric, Palmitate, Stearate Acids, and non-full fatty acids, such as Palmitoleat, Oleat, Linoleate Acids, Omega-3, etc.
From the high compound ingredients of antioxidants as well as fatty acids within the Red Fruit, it was rationally understood that its extract is used as an alternative food supplement to enhance physical endurance.
The endurance is caused by the chemical ingredients from the oil of the Red Fruit such as Beta-carotene, Tocopherol, an active compound of fully fatty acids and non-fatty acids.
The antioxidants contained in the Red Fruit extract will neutralize the free radicals which is believed to cause diseases such as diabetes, hypertension, stroke, cancer, leukemia, HIV-AIDS, etc.
Red Fruit is also useful for healthy people to help step up their stamina and body endurance.
Besides containing antioxidants and antiviral compounds in high doses, Red Fruit also contains fairly complete essential vitamins and minerals.
Red Fruit is known as the traditional medicine of Papua, which has been empirically proven as an alternative medicine to cure diseases like cancer, HIV/AIDS, tumors and hypertension.
Besides Red Fruit, Papua is also rich in "ant nest" medicine that has been used by the public for several years in Asia and Europe.
Since early 2005, ant nest from Papua has been introduced to the public and to date a lot of people are still busily discussing its effectiveness to cure various diseases ranging from the mild ones such as headaches, rheumatism, nosebleeds, and ulcers, apart from gout and hemorrhoids, to severe diseases such as tumors, cancer, liver, and lung tuberculosis, in addition to kidney disorders, prostate, and coronary heart disease.
In addition, these anthill plants can enhance and accelerate the production of breast milk and restore the health of women after childbirth, increase stamina and be used as an aphrodisiac (increases sexual desire). Some even say that the content of flavonoids may control the development of herpes and HIV-AIDS.
 
ANTARA
 
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2) Indonesia: 8,000 Islands in a Sea of Trouble?
By James Durso March 17, 2017
The Indonesian archipelago is a place of relative calm in a restive neighborhood. To its north, China and its neighbors are disputing Beijing’s man-made islands in the South China Sea, North Korea is developing nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles, and democracy is on the wane in Thailand; to the west, India and Pakistan are glowering at each other, and Afghanistan is, well, Afghanistan.
Indonesia is the world’s fourth-largest country, its third-largest democracy, and its largest Muslim-majority country, so it is important that the Trump administration make an early approach to Indonesia to confirm Washington’s long-standing relationship with Jakarta and to seek new opportunities for cooperation and commerce.

Indonesia’s most visible characteristic is its position astride the Strait of Malacca, which connects the Pacific Ocean to the Indian Ocean and offers the shortest sea route from China to India. The strait is the world’s busiest shipping lane, hosting more than 80,000 passages in 2016 alone.  And the strait isn’t just busy: its daily traffic includes a significant amount of liquefied natural gas shipments and 15 million barrels of oil, a quarter of the world’s seaborne oil, mostly bound for China, Indonesia, and Japan. More than 40 percent of the world’s seaborne trade traverses the strait each year.   
All that cargo traffic attracts the attention of two parties: pirates and China. In the early 2000s, piracy increased to a point where the strait was the site of 40 percent of piracy worldwide by 2004. A concerted effort in 2005 by Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore to increase patrolling and coordination reduced the incidence of piracy.  
China views Indonesia through the lens of what it calls “the Malacca Dilemma”: Beijing is over-reliant on the strait, and it has few alternatives. Though China and Indonesia have a territorial dispute in the South China Sea, there are opportunities for cooperation on maritime security. The strait is one of the reasons China intends to develop a blue-water navy. Beijing fears a blockade of oil from the Persian Gulf and of its manufactured goods headed west.  
Indonesia is seeking more foreign direct investment from China, which is Indonesia’s largest trading partner and recently displaced the United States as Indonesia’s third-largest foreign investor. The administration of President Joko Widodo forwarded an economic stimulus package that aims to increase FDI by opening 35 industrial sectors to 100 percent foreign ownership. Indonesia is now ranked as the world’s 41st most competitive economy. It has slipped recently because of the need for improvements in health and education, as well as rigidities in the labor market such as the low labor force participation rate of women.
Indonesia’s steady progress as an attractive destination for investment has been validated in internationally recognized league tables. It climbed 15 places in the World Bank’s ease of doing business index for 2017, from 106 to 91, but political and business leaders must stay focused as the country has demonstrated only incremental progress fighting corruption over the past five years.
Indonesia is a growing destination for Western and Asian FDI, but it hasn’t fully leveraged cultural ties through its Islamic faith to attract investment from Gulf Cooperation Council countries, and it has even lagged its Muslim-majority neighbor Malaysia in this regard. Saudi King Salman’s month-long trip to Asia is emphasizing the kingdom’s non-oil exports, and Saudi Aramco has already notched a $6 billion agreement with Indonesia’s state-owned oil and gas concern, PT Pertamina, for refinery projects.  However, Indonesia’s uneven application of sharia in resource-rich but corruption-prone Aceh Province may prove off-putting even for Islamic investors and institutions.   
As a country that is reconciling Islam and modernity, Indonesia can be a leader in the Muslim world. The country is over 80 percent Muslim, with a small ethnic Chinese population that is active in business and controls much of the country’s wealth, leading to tensions with the majority Javanese population. Basuki Tjahaja Purnama, a popular corruption-fighting Chinese-Christian politician, is running for re-election as governor of the capital, Jakarta, while on trial for blasphemy in a process that will illustrate whether minorities are susceptible to public pressure over religious issues.  
As its wealth and political heft increase, Indonesia is taking an interest in regional security issues. Closest to home, Indonesia and Papua New Guinea share a 470-mile border which is a source of conflict between Indonesian security forces and refugees from Indonesia’s West Papua province seeking safety in Papua New Guinea. Indonesia supports U.N. peacekeeping efforts, where it is the largest troop contributor of the ASEAN nations. Indonesia and Australia formalized their security relationship in the 2006 Lombok Treaty and followed with a defense cooperation agreement in 2012, which will facilitate their keen interest in counterterrorism. Indonesia has mooted the possibility of Indonesian-Australian joint naval patrols of the South China Sea in the wake of China’s assertion of overlapping claims to waters close to Indonesia’s Natuna Islands.
Indonesia and the United States have historically had friendly relations, and the United States is viewed positively by the Indonesian public. The U.S. Agency for International Development has provided development assistance to Indonesia since 1950, and recently the United States and Indonesia have expanded military cooperation to improve Indonesia's defense readiness.
This recent cooperation, along diplomatic engagement, intelligence sharing, and ongoing U.S. upgrades to Indonesia’s stock of defense equipment, will lay the foundation for a solid working relationship between the new Trump administration and a friendly country in a region critical to regional security and the world’s economy.

Lest We Forget

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Lest We Forget


As ANZAC Day approaches a little bit of history.

John Collins, pictured speaking at rally in Hyde Park Sydney in 2006 in support of the 43 West Papuan Asylum seekers. He served in Merauke in the war. He did the two sketches below while there. An  Xmas card and one of the main street in Merauke in 1944.






























Names below on the Honour Roll for peace at Addison Rd Community Centre, Marrickville.
John Collins
Dr Norman Lee, who was Jeffersons father. Jefferson  spoke at some of theWP  rallies.
and Anne's father Alan Noonan who also was in Merauke.















                         Anne Noonan and Liz Biok adding flowers to honour roll.



                 Also two plaques for Arnold Ap and John Ondawame  are also on honour roll



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1) Timika immigration office deports two French nationals

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2) At least 115 expatriates leave Freeport

3) UN RIGHT TO HEALTH EXPERT TO MAKE FIRST VISIT TO WEST PAPUA

4) Promoting tourism attractions of Biak


5) Indonesia, Australia harbor interests in security, stability in Indo-Pacific region


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http://www.antaranews.com/en/news/109999/timika-immigration-office-deports-two-french-nationals

1) Timika immigration office deports two French nationals

8 hours ago | 978 Views
Timika, Papua (ANTARA News) - The Tembagapura Immigration Office in Papua province deported two French nationals on Friday for violating their Indonesian visa.

The two French citizens, identified as Frank Jean Piere Escudie and Basile Marie Longchamp, violated their visa to make a documentary film under the project "The Explorers" in several places in the easternmost Indonesian province of Papua, Head of the Tembagapura Immigration Office Jesaja Samuel Enock said here on Friday.

"Based on the results of the interrogation, the two French nationals used visit visas to make a documentary film on nature, culture, and other attractions in Papua, without holding necessary permits from the authorized agencies," he stated.

They were deported to their country by Garuda Indonesia flight from Mozes Kilangin Airport in Timika en route to Soekarno-Hatta Airport in Banten province on Friday evening.

They would be flown to their country on Friday night or early on Saturday, he noted. (*)




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2) At least 115 expatriates leave Freeport

8 hours ago | 462 Views
Timika, Papua (ANTARA News) - The Immigration Office in Tembagapura, Timika, said at least 115 expatriate workers have left PT Freeport Indonesia and its sub-contractors after the US mining company stopped operation.

Freeport Indonesia abruptly stopped production on February 10, 2017 and started to dismiss thousands of workers. It already laid off 10 percent of its foreign workers. 

The subsidiary of the mining giant McMoRun Copper & GoldIt employs 32,000 people in Indonesia, about 12,000 of whom are full-time employees. 

The freeze was a reaction to a shakeup in Freeport's 30-year contract with the Indonesian government, signed in 1991. Indonesia has tried to levy additional obligations from Freeport in an attempt to increase domestic revenue from its natural resources. 

An official of the Tembagapura Immigration Office Dede Sulaiman said here on Saturday , most of the 115 expatriates are from Australia and the United States. 

The 115 expatriates returned with members of their families . There worked for PT Freeport Indonesia, PT Redpath, PT RUC and PT JDA, Dede said .

Until now there are still more than 700 expatriates working in Mimika mainly for the sub-contractors of PT Freeport.

Coordinating Minister of Maritime Affairs Luhut Binsar Panjaitan has asked PT Freeport Indonesia to respect the Indonesian regulations that changed the status after the expiration of contract of work.

The government gave the company6 an option - to keep its contract of work but build a smelter to process it copper concentrate in the country as the government has banned export of unprocessed minerals.  

Luhut said that the government has taken a clear stance in the situation and will not step back from the regulations.

"Freeport needs to realize that this is B to B (Business to Business). Freeport has been operating here for almost 50 years. They need to respect our constitutions," he said.

Freeport, which operates the countrys largest copper and gold mines in Papua, have been in disagreement over new status of contract and a number of contract terms.

Freeport has threatened to bring the case to an international arbitrary court and the government said it was ready to meet the challenge.(*)
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http://tabloidjubi.com/eng/un-right-health-expert-make-first-visit-west-papua/

3) UN RIGHT TO HEALTH EXPERT TO MAKE FIRST VISIT TO WEST PAPUA

Jayapura, Jubi –  United Nations Special Rapporteur Dainius Pûras will visit Indonesia from 22 March to 3 April 2017 to assess the realisation of the right to health in the country.
“The purpose of this visit is to learn how Indonesia endeavours to implement the right to health, including the measures the country has taken to date and the challenges it faces,” Mr. Pûras wrote in his press statement.
His visit will be the first to Indonesia by an independent expert of the UN Human Rights Council entrusted to monitor the realisation of the right of everyone to the enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of physical and mental health.

He also scheduled to visit West Papua during his visit. It will be the third visit by UN Special Rapporteur after Hina Jilani on 2008 and Manfred Nowak on 2010. Mr. Puras will examine achievements and challenges related to the enjoyment of the right to health, including the availability, accessibility, acceptability and quality of health services, goods and facilities.
Mr. Pûras will also assess factors that affect the right to health in the country, including poverty, discrimination, and social exclusion.
“I will be particularly interested in addressing specific issues during this visit, especially within the framework of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development,” Mr. Puras said.
Among these issues are: universal health coverage; maternal and children’s health; sexual and reproductive health; mental health; HIV/AIDS; and drug/ substance use and dependency.
The Special Rapporteur will examine the situation of key populations and groups, such as women, children, people with disabilities, and indigenous peoples/ Adat communities (Masyarakat Hukum Adat).
Mr. Pûras will present a comprehensive report on his visit to Indonesia to the UN Human Rights Council in June 2018. (*)

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http://www.antaranews.com/en/news/109998/promoting-tourism-attractions-of-biak

4) Promoting tourism attractions of Biak

8 hours ago | 426 Views
Jakarta (ANTARA News) - Biak Numfor District was a popular tourist destination in Papua in 1990s, before Raja Ampat was "discovered."

The district offers several types of tourist attractions from the beauty of nature, historical wreckage of World War (WW) II, and eco-tourism of biodiversity-rich forests of Papua, as well as the unique traditional art and culture of Papuan tribes.

These attractions will be promoted in the annual Biak Munara Wampasi (BMW) to be organized in Biak from July 1 to 4, 2017.  

Held for the first time in 2012, the BMW festival has been included in the national tourism calendar. Other festivals in Papua that have been included in the tourism calendar include Baliem Valley Festival and Asmat Festival.

The festival will be officially launched in the Jakarta Convention Center here on March 30.

The launch, to be organized by the Tourism Ministry and the Biak Numfor District Administration, would coincide with Deep & Extreme Indonesia event and is meant to promote the festival, particularly among divers, adventurers, underwater sports lovers, and e-tourism tourists, Biak District Head Thomas Ondy stated recently. 

Ondy hoped that the festival would be able to attract both domestic and foreign tourists. For that purpose, the Biak tourism office is promoting the festival on social media.

"Social media platforms, such as WhatsApp, Facebook, Instagram, and Line, have been used to promote Biaks tourist attractions," Turbey Ony Dangeubun, head of the Biak tourism office, stated on March 18.

All information concerning the festival, in particular, will be disseminated on social media, he added.

The Biak administration will rope in an event organizer to ensure punctuality and smooth implementation of the festival.

The Biak Numfor district government has allocated funds worth Rp1 billion through the local Tourism Office to ensure the success of the cultural festival.

Last year, the festival was held from July 1 to 4 to showcase traditional Japanese "katana" vintage samurai swords from World War II.

This year, the administration believes the festival needs innovations to attract more domestic and foreign tourists.

He is optimistic that the festival would be a success, as the event is already included in the national tourism agenda set by the tourism ministry.

The BMW festival will feature the traditional snap mor fishing, Mansusui/wairon boat race, a visit to the Padaido/Aimando islands, Biak 10-kilometer marathon, and a traditional art and cultural expo.

Meanwhile, the Papua administration has focused on developing tourism in the districts of Biak Numfor and Supiori since 2016.

"So far, two regions have become a priority for tourism development, notably the districts of Biak Numfor and Supiori," Ysh Is Matutina, head of the tourism office of Papua Province, stated in Jayapura.

In Biak Numfor, the priority is to develop the Sausapor Beach. Several other tourist attractions and destinations are also being developed.

In fact, the number of foreign tourists visiting Biak Numfor District, Papua Province, increased to 3,399 people in 2016, as compared to 1,779 in the previous year.  

The increase was the result of intensified tourism promotion activities carried out by the Biak District administration, Enias Rumbewas, spokesman of the Biak Numfor district government, noted recently.

Foreign tourists from Japan, the Netherlands, Australia, China, and several European countries, among others, visit Biak.

The number of domestic tourist arrivals also surged from some 28 thousand in 2015 to 30 thousand in 2016.

As for West Papua and Papua Provinces as a whole, the number of foreign tourist arrivals in 2016 totaled some 3.5 million.

"Among the favorite tourist destinations in Papua Province are Wamena, Biak, Jayapura, Mimika, Merauke, and Asmat as well as several districts in the central mountainous area," Hans Menanti of the Papua Tourism Office stated.

In West Papua Province, most foreign tourists visited Raja Ampat District, Sorong, Bintuni Bay, and Manokwari, he revealed.

Menanti is optimistic that the number of foreign tourists visiting Papua will increase significantly following the Indonesian governments policy to provide visa-free facility to several countries.

Papua is popular among foreign tourists due to its maritime scenery, unique culture and traditions, as well as historical remnants and sites.  

As for domestic tourists visiting Papua and West Papua, the number reached some five million last year.

Indonesias easternmost island of Papua is one of the worlds largest and highest tropical islands and is incredibly diverse and different from any other on Earth.

Papua Island, which comprises West Papua and Papua, is home to some 250 tribes that retain the ancient traditional cultures and over 250 indigenous languages and dialects.(*)


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http://www.antaranews.com/en/news/110002/indonesia-australia-harbor-interests-in-security-stability-in-indo-pacific-region

5) Indonesia, Australia harbor interests in security, stability in Indo-Pacific region

7 hours ago | 474 Views
Jakarta (ANTARA News) - Australian Minister for Defense Marise Payne met his Indonesian counterpart Ryamizard Ryacudu in Sydney on Friday for the annual Indonesia-Australia Defense Ministers meeting.

Minister Payne affirmed that Australia and Indonesia have enjoyed a long-standing and productive bilateral defense relationship that supports mutual interests in ensuring security and stability in the Indo-Pacific region, according to a statement of the Australian Department of Defense published on its website, Saturday.

The ministers discussed the regional security dynamics and the importance of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) security frameworks to build regional trust, transparency, and cooperation. 

The ministers also reinforced their support for the recently signed Joint Declaration on Maritime Cooperation.

Minister Payne noted that Australia and Indonesia were co-chairs of the next cycle of the ASEAN Defense Ministers Meeting-Plus Experts Working Group on peacekeeping operations.

"This represents a great opportunity to strengthen regional peacekeeping efforts and build upon the existing bilateral peacekeeping cooperation," he said.

During the bilateral meeting, the ministers discussed strengthening cooperation in the fields of defense, science, and technology.

"Cooperation in science and technology has great potential to build the depth and resilience of our bilateral relationship, and we agreed to greater cooperation and engagement," Minister Payne remarked.

The Australian Department of Defense is looking forward to welcoming Indonesias Head of Defense Ministry Research and Development Agency Dr Anne Kusmayati in Australia in 2017.

Minister Payne invited Minister Ryacudu to Darwin in the near future to view the US Force Posture Initiatives. 

"The Force Posture Initiatives provide new opportunities for regional defense engagement, including with Indonesia, in order to build mutual trust and contribute to regional peace and security," she added.(*)
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1) Two French journalists deported from Papua over alleged immigration violations

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2) Deportation of French journalists, AJI Jayapura: The President has not implemented good policies
3) Indonesia deports journalists from Papua
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1) Two French journalists deported from Papua over alleged immigration violations
Nethy Dharma Somba

On alert: An Immigration official (right) explains how to input data into the newly launched Foreigner Reporting Application (APOA) at the Medan Immigration Office, North Sumatra, on Feb. 28. (Antara/Irsan Mulyadi)

Jayapura, Papua | Sun, March 19, 2017 | 10:27 am
The Tembagapura Immigration Office has banned two French journalists, Jean Frank Pierre, 45, and Basille Marie Longhamp, 42, from entering Indonesia for the next six months for allegedly violating the 2011 Immigration Law.   
“The activities of these two journalists were basically good. However, there was a lack of coordination with related institutions,” said Tembagapura Immigration Office head Samuel Enock in Timika, Papua, on Friday.
He further explained that the two French journalists were sponsored by Garuda to carry out journalistic investigation in Indonesia.
“However, they started their work before obtaining the necessary documents, which were still being processed. As a consequence, they are banned from entering Indonesia for the next six months,” Samuel said.
Pierre and Longhamp were deported from Timika to France via Jakarta on a Garuda flight on Friday.
Samuel said the two journalists had not yet obtained journalist visas from the Indonesian Embassy in Paris before they started working. “They took pictures while on a tourist visa. They also had not yet obtained a reporting permit, although both of them already had a permit from the Tourism Ministry and their activities were sponsored by Garuda,” said Samuel.  They were charged with violating Article 75 (1) of the 2011 Immigration Law.
The French journalists were taken into custody when they were about to take pictures of Cartenz areas using a helicopter rented from Happi Live Aviation. They also planned to take pictures in Asmat, Wamena, and Raja Ampat and Sorong in West Papua.
In 2014, Thomas Dandois, 40, and Valentine Bourrat, 29, were deported for carrying out journalistic activities during a tourist visit. (ebf)
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A google translate. Be-aware google translate can be a bit erratic.
Original bahasa link at

2) Deportation of French journalists, AJI Jayapura: The President has not implemented good policies
Sabtu, 18 Maret 2017 — 19:40
Jayapura, Jubi - Two French citizen, Jean Pierre Escudie Frank and Marie Basille Longhamp of The Explorer Network immigration authorities deported Timika on Friday (17/03/2017).

Both were deported by plane from airport Moses Kilangin to France via Jakarta at 14:33 CEST for alleged violations of immigration rules Indonesia.

The Alliance of Independent Journalists Kota Jayapura immigration deplore this action. Told by Fabio Lopez, coordinator of Advocacy AJI Jayapura, there has been no implementation, spacious and open on the policies of President Joko Widodo opening up access for foreign journalists reporting in Papua since May 10, 2015 last.

"President Jokowi optimistically say the policy during a visit to Papua. AJI Jayapura see there are still international isolation for the public information about the actual condition of Papua, "said Fabio, Saturday (18/03/2017).

As a result, continued Fabio, information about infrastructure development, improvement of the social economy, the protection of human rights and a number of other issues for the international public sangst minimal exposure.

AJI Jayapura, he added, urges the government to be open, transparent information related to the issues in Papua for all members of the press at local, national, and international.

"The goal for the coverage related to all the problems in Papua could be a correction and a reference for the government as policy makers," said Fabio.

From the description of the local immigration authorities, both French citizens who work as journalists assessed have yet to permit filming although it has been coordinated with the Ministry of Tourism and sponsored by the government-owned airline Garuda Indonesia. Immigration authorities also stated Jean and Basille only a tourist visa.

Both plan to conduct journalistic investigations in Papua, including, Asmat, Wamena, and Raja Ampat and Sorong in West Papua.

"The activities of these two journalists are basically good. However, lack of coordination with relevant agencies. As a result, they were barred from entering Indonesia for six months," said Chief Samuel Enock Tembagapura Immigration Office in Timika, Papua, on Friday (17/03/2017 ).

Samuel continued, they began their work before obtaining the necessary documents, which are still being processed.

Jean and Basille taken into custody when they want to take pictures of the area using helicopter charter Cartenz of Happi Life Aviation, before being flown to Jakarta.

In 2014, two other French journalists Thomas Dandois and Valentine Bourrat also deported from Indonesia on the same offense. Both are even undergoing trial and was sentenced to several months in immigration detention Jayapura. (*)

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3) Indonesia deports journalists from Papua
Associated Press MARCH 19, 20175:01PM
Indonesia has deported two French journalists for committing visa violations while shooting a documentary film in Indonesia's easternmost province of Papua.
Immigration office spokesman Agung Sampurno said the journalists, Jean Frank Pierre and Basille Marie Longhamp, were sent home on Friday through Mozes Kilangin airport in Timika.
The journalists carried out coverage from the air but had ordinary visas without necessary documents from related institutions, Sampurno said on Sunday.
He quoted local immigration chief Jesaya Samuel Enock as saying the journalists' activities were appropriate as they were sponsored by the national flag carrier Garuda Indonesia but lacked co-ordination with related institutions.
Local media reported Pierre and Longhamp were taken into custody when they were about to take pictures of Cartenz areas using a helicopter.
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1) Raja Ampat indigenous communities saddened by damaged coral reefs

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2) Novelist Bonnie Etherington remembers her childhood in West Papua
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1) Raja Ampat indigenous communities saddened by damaged coral reefs
Jakarta | Sat, March 18, 2017 | 07:02 pm




Fighting for rights: Raja Ampat Customary Council head Kristian Thebu (center) gives a press statement at Conservation International in Sorong, West Papua, on March 17. (Antara/Olha Mulalinda)
Indigenous communities from Yembuba village in Raja Ampat regency, West Papua, were saddened by the damage to the coral reefs after British cruise vessel MV Caledonian Sky ran aground in shallow waters in the area last week.
“For decades, we have been preserving the coral reefs, which were even protected by our ancestors. But within hours, a cruise ship destroyed the 1.3-hectare area,” Yembuba village head Habel Sawiyai said as quoted by Antara in Sorong, on Friday.  
He further said waters in Yembuba village were protected by a customary law local people called sasiSasi, which had been passed down generations, prohibited people from catching fish illegally and destroying coral reefs in the area.  
The customary law also supported local administrations to conserve sea ecosystems for the development of tourism in Raja Ampat, he explained.
“Frankly, we, as traditional communities, feel sad to see damage to the coral reefs. Moreover, we have not been included by the government in the process to claim compensation for the damage,” said Habel.
Meanwhile, Raja Ampat Customary Council head Kristian Thebu said separately that the council fully entrusted the governmental process to claim compensation for the damaged coral reefs.
However, it would be ideal if the government could involve the residents of Yembuba village, who had lived in the area for generations watching over the conserved coral reefs that were destroyed by the cruise ship.
“Local people must be involved in the settlement of tourism problems in Raja Ampat,” said Kristian. (mrc/ebf)
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2) Novelist Bonnie Etherington remembers her childhood in West Papua
From Standing Room Only, 2:38 pm on 19 March 2017 
There's been precious little fiction set in the Papua region, though Lloyd Jones' Mr Pip offered an insight into the islands' recent past. Short story and travel-writer Bonnie Etherington grew up in West Papua, and she's poured some of her memories into her first novel The Earth Cries Out. She tells Lynn Freeman that it follows the fortunes of a missionary family trying to escape the pain of a tragedy. But it also tells stories of moments in West Papua’s history - from plane-crashes to the introduction of flora and fauna pests.

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Pacific islands monthly ( PIM) has been digitised

Mama Yosepha Alomang - Told by Vera Loy


1) Students Freeport Papua Request Closed

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2) Freeport threatens action over copper mine dispute
3) First Papuan appointed police chief outside region
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A google translate.Be-aware google translate can be a bit erratic. 
Original bahasa link at
1) Students Freeport Papua Request Closed

Around 400 students from various universities in Jayapura, Papua, today held a peaceful demonstration asking the government to immediately shut down operations of PT Freeport Indonesia. The reason is because it does not provide a profit for the people of Earth Cenderawasih.
Hundreds of students came and gathered in front of the Post Office across the street Territory of Papua and West Papua, then unfurled large banners with the inscription "Close Freeport".
"Close Freeport, Freeport does not have a significant impact to Papua," said one protester as reported by Antara on Monday (20/3).
After the title speech in front of the Post Office Territory of Papua and West Papua, hundreds of students were joined by hundreds of other students who came from the Campus of the University of Cenderawasih (Uncen) aboard eight trucks and two-wheelers. They moved to continue the demo to the center of the city of Jayapura.
Police officers from the police and Sabhara Abepura Jayapura Police escorted the march to the center of Jayapura.
Along the road into the center of the city of Jayapura, the protesters, who boarded the truck continued to shout slogans lid Freeport. The action is to invite the attention of road users and the surrounding community.
"Already last week, many residents of similar action titles," said Popi, a resident of Abepura.
Earlier, at the weekend about 300 residents, coordinated by GP Ansor Papua and West Papua, Miners Association Rakyat Indonesia's Papua province and the Indonesian Islamic Students Movement and representatives of indigenous Papuans staged the same.
This action firmly supports the government, of which asked the company to build a smelter in Papua, Freeport must pay taxes of surface water that reached Rp 3.5 trillion, and the divestiture of up to 51 percent.
"Freeport must obey and submit to the Government of Indonesia. Freeport to pay taxes, smelter, and provide benefits for the people of Papua," said the representative of the indigenous Papuans Oktovianus Wally.
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2) Freeport threatens action over copper mine dispute
SARA SCHONHARDTThe Australian12:00AM March 20, 2017
Freeport-McMoRan’s standoff with Indonesia over the giant Grasberg copper and gold mine is entering a new phase, as the company scales back operations while trying to force a resolution to the dispute.
Last month, the US miner threatened to take Indonesia to arbitration, saying new rules the country imposed on miners in January violated the terms of an operating agreement struck in 1991 that runs to 2021.
The rules are part of a broad ­effort to gather more revenue from the mining sector. Under the rules, Freeport is banned from ­exporting a form of unrefined copper until it agrees to new operating rights that would eventually force it to cede control of Grasberg, the second-largest copper mine in the world, to Indonesian entities.
With the two sides at loggerheads, the miner lowered its output target for Grasberg, shelved investment plans and began laying off workers.
The showdown has reached a critical juncture. A prolonged standoff would be a financial blow to Freeport, which derives about one-third of its copper output from Indonesia. The mine is re­adjusting its operations to 40 per cent of its normal capacity.
Indonesia stands to lose hundreds of millions of dollars in annual payments, and its demands for greater control could further imperil already dwindling investment in its resources sector, experts warned. The dispute also could undercut Indonesian President Joko Widodo’s campaign to attract foreign investment for infrastructure in a nation stretched across 18,000 islands. The wrangling over Grasberg has already contributed to a rise in global copper prices, which could experience even more upward pressure if the conflict drags on.
“In this current controversy … we’re either going to all win, or we’re all going to lose,” said Freeport chief executive Richard Adkerson. “And unfortunately we’re on a path right now of where we’re all potentially going to lose.”
As part of its push to earn more from the mining sector, Indonesia banned ore exports and placed restrictions on exports of mineral concentrates in 2014 to push companies to invest in domestic smelting.
Now, Indonesian officials say the operating agreement for Grasberg needs to be updated to reflect changes in the country’s legal landscape. Indonesia has ­asserted more control over foreign investment with the aim of redistributing economic benefits in a more equitable manner, an ­effort that began after the fall of dictator Suharto.
Freeport has set a deadline of mid-June to start arbitration proceedings and seek damages if it can’t come to a deal with Jakarta. Indonesian is standing firm.
“Nobody wants to play hardball,’’ said Luhut Pandjaitan, Co-ordinating Minister for Maritime Affairs, which oversees the min­istry of energy and mineral resources. “But of course we also feel that after 50 years we also have to consider the people of Indonesia.” Freeport has operated in Indonesia since the 1960s.
In a statement on March 7, the ministry said it supported foreign and domestic investment and respected existing agreements. It said the divestment obligation was meant to “facilitate” mining companies to join with the government and “bring justice” for the people of Indonesia as the ­“absolute” owners of the country’s resource wealth.
Sitting atop a mountain in western New Guinea island, Grasberg has been a windfall for Indonesia and Freeport. The company’s success at Grasberg ­allowed Freeport to grow to become the world’s largest publicly listed copper miner — and Indonesia’s largest taxpayer.
Indonesia is requiring that Freeport agree to divest enough shares so that the company has only a minority stake in its Indonesian unit as part of new rules that will allow Freeport to resume the export of copper concentrates. Freeport currently has a 90.64 per cent stake and has agreed to divest up to 30 per cent. The new rules would also require Freeport to build a new smelter by 2022 and pay higher taxes.
Indonesian officials have signalled some willingness to be flexible about the terms and timing of the divestment. It can be done in stages over several years, Mr Pandjaitan said.
Freeport said the rules violated its operating contract and it would not give up its rights to a mine in which it has invested $US12 billion.
Freeport is holding on while other miners have left Indonesia. Last year, Newmont Mining and BHP Billiton sold off interests in their Indonesian units to local firms and exited the country, citing heavier regulation as a factor.
Mining revenue as a share of economic growth in Indonesia has dropped since exports were restricted. Companies now are more wary of investing in countries where the risks are perceived to be high amid economic uncertainty. That has raised concerns about the prospects for Indonesia’s mining industry.
“The more these sort of stories come about and the more political risk is created from arguments with Freeport, the less new investment will come in,” said David Manley, a senior analyst at the National Resource Governance Institute, a not-for-profit that monitors global energy sectors.

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3) First Papuan appointed police chief outside region
Nethy Dharma Somba The Jakarta Post
Jayapura | Mon, March 20, 2017 | 08:59 am
Papuans have praised National Police chief Gen. Tito Karnavian for appointing a native to the country's eastermost region as a police chief in Java.
Tito has appointed Adj. Sr. Comr. Semmy Ronny Thabaa, former Nabire Police chief in Papua, as the new chief of Tegal Police in Central Java.
“This is the first such appointment. We give our highest appreciation to General Tito,” chairman of Meepago customs council John NR Gobay, who is also a secretary of the Papuan Customary Council, told The Jakarta Post.
The assignment given to Semmy by Gen. Tito – who was once a Papua Police chief, as he saw it, shows a changing perspective on the way Javanese people see Papuans, who are often considered behind in education and development.
He said now people from other parts of Indonesia could learn that Papuans were well-educated, had good achievements and could perform well in the tasks entrusted to them.
Semmy is a 1995 graduate of the Police Academy. Before he was assigned in Tegal, he was a police chief in Paniai, Jayawijaya and Nabire, all in Papua.
John said Semmy was assertive but a populist, proactive in handling cases and had good communication skills with all walks of life, including those holding different opinions.
Papua Police chief Insp. Gen. Paulus Waterpauw also appreciated the police chief's move, saying that he hoped Semmy could become a role model for young Papuan police officers. (wit)
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1) Students in Papua asks government to close Freeport

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2) Freeport “brains” all human rights violations in Papua
3) 300 students of health care will raise funds Korowai
4) Indonesia Steamrolls Media Freedom in Papua, Again
5) Papuans urge Indonesia to shut down Freeport mine

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http://www.antaranews.com/en/news/110036/students-in-papua-asks-government-to-close-freeport

1) Students in Papua asks government to close Freeport

3 hours ago | 327 Views
Jayapura (ANTARA News) - Around 400 students from a number of campuses took to the street here on Monday asking the government to close PT Freeport Indonesia, which has big copper and gold mines in Papua. 

The students, carrying banner reading "Close Freeport", said the local people have no significant gain from the operation of the company after around 50 years here. 

"Close Freeport. Freeport has caused extensive damage to the environment in Papua," one of the students said. 

The students rallied in front of the citys Post Office before they moved to the city center with police on guard.

"Over the past week , there have always been people rallying in the street demanding the same thing," Popi, a local man watching the rally said. 

Earlier on Monday, a group of 50 people calling themselves Independent Traditional Community rallied around the Timika Indah Circle calling for the termination of Freeports contract in Papua . 

Vinsen Oniyoma, a spokesman of the group, said the local people had never been involved and their interest had not been considered since Freeport started operation here in 1967.

The traditional rights of major tribal communities , Amungme and Kamoro over land used by Freeport, had never been respected , he said. 

In addition Freeport has caused extensive damage to the environment and the ones to suffer are the local people, he said. 

Last week around 300 people organized by Papua GP Ansor Papua, the Association of Indonesian Miners and the Indonesian Islam Student Movement, staged similar protest against Freeport. 

The protesters expressed support for the government in the dispute and demanded that Freeport, if wanting to continue operation, it should build a smelter in Papua, pay taxes and comply with the share divestment regulation. 

"Freeport should comply with the government regulation. Freeport should pay taxes , build the smelters as required by the regulation," the spokesman of the protesters, Oktovianus Wally said. (*)

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

2) Freeport “brains” all human rights violations in Papua
Jubi | News Portal Papua No. 1,



             Papuan students held rallies gave a press statement to reporters at the House DPRP - Jubi / Victor Mambor


Jayapura, Jubi - Papua Students accused PT Freeport Indonesia as the main actors violators of Human Rights (HAM) in Papua. Freeport steal Papua's natural wealth and
revoke the right to life of the Papuan people.

"Freeport become perpetrators of human rights violations The Papua," said Nelius Wenda, president of the Students of the University of Technology and Science Jayapura in the speeches of the students with the agenda demanded "Close Freeport" in front of the Papuan Legislative Council (DPRP), Monday (20/03 / 2017).

Teko Kogoya, president of the Independent Student Forum (FIM) said history records declaratory Indonesia, Sukarno fell from his position as president in the interest of securing America Freeport. Up to Papua, Kelly Kwalik murder, and murder of Papuan People also for the sake of Freeport.

"The state kills its own people, the people who sacrificed for the sake of securing Freeport ,," said the man who actively support the return of the land rights of indigenous communities over land Yeresiam
Oil palm plantations PT Nabire Nabire New to this.

Looked several parliamentarians were receiving about 500s were students. Among them are Ruben Magay and Yakoba Lokbere.

Responding to the demands of these students, Ruben Magay said the DPRP agreed with the student. DPRP said Magay will form a special committee as a follow-up of these demands.

"Demands" Close Freeport "and the" Self-Determination "was a package deal. Because in the history of the Land of Papua Freeport above this, there is manipulation of the rights of the Papuan people on this land. Freeport is the forerunner to the bank's human rights violations in Papua, "said Magay.

Students march was finally disbanded in an orderly manner around 16:00 Papua time. They left the DPRP office after submitting the statement to parliamentarians and giving press statements to reporters. (*)




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

3) 300 students of health care will raise funds Korowai
Monday, March 20, 2017 - 18:45

parsnip | News Portal Papua No. 1
 
Jayapura, Jubi - Student health care community will take action Korowai fundraising in Jayapura on Tuesday (03.21.2017) starting at 08.00 CET.

Chairman of the Health Care and Education Rimba (TPKP Rimba) Norbert K. Bobi explains, action which will involve 300 students were conducted at a number of points as seputaran Housing Taxi 2, Terminal Expo, and the red light Abe and Kamkey.
 
"This action is purely a concern of students to the Korowai people," he told Jubi, Monday (03/20/2017).
 
Norbeert who is also chairman of the Student Executive Board (BEM) Faculty of Medicine, University of Cenderawasih said Korowai public health problem among elephantiasis (flariasis), skin diseases, malaria, and malnutrition.
 
"This is a top priority that must be resolved, because other areas of advanced in terms of health and education, why not with us in Korowai society," he said.
 
And the lives of people who almost all live in the jungle, he added, it is difficult to get decent health care for the local community.
 
"Almost every day they suffer in the jungle, where the postal service is already open but the medical staff has not been properly prepared, even once assigned, but by reason of the lack of lighting equipment and other facilities do not want to live there," he said.
 
Korowai communities living in the middle of the four districts, Yahukimo, Bintang Mountains, Digoel, and Asmat, and had been a disputed territory. The impact hurled the four districts of responsibility. Plus the distance to the capital of the fourth district of 200 to 300 km.
 
Representatives of the Remote Area Community Humanitarian Care (Kopkedat) Papua, Yohame Yoris said that his team had been formed during one and a half years in the Korowai and started having difficulty health workers. (*)


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4) Indonesia Steamrolls Media Freedom in Papua, Again
MARCH 20, 2017 1:43PM EDT
Phelim Kine Deputy Director, Asia Division
French journalists Jean Frank Pierre and Basille Marie Longhamp learned firsthand last week the Indonesian authorities’ contempt for media freedom in its “Forbidden Island” provinces of Papua and West Papua (commonly referred to as “Papua”).

Indonesian police detained and then deportedthe two reporters, who were filming a documentary for Indonesia’s Garuda Airlines, for lacking “necessary documents from related institutions,” without elaborating. The authorities have barred the two journalists from returning to Indonesia for at least six months to ensure they get the message.
The message is that there’s a glaring gap between the rhetoric of Indonesian President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo’s announced opening of Papua to foreign media, and the grim reality that journalists are still blocked from reporting there. In May 2015, President Jokowi said he would be lifting of the 25-year de facto ban on foreign media access to Papua. That policy change was supposed to end the farce of placing foreign journalists in legal limbo by denying or failing to approve their reporting applications for Papua.
But abuses of media freedom for foreign journalists in Papua, along with visa denial and blacklisting of reporters who challenge the official chokehold on Papua access, has continued unabated. That’s mainly because Jokowi has singularly failed to issue a formal written directive instructing Indonesia’s bureaucracy and security forces to lift these restrictions. But it’s also due to the deeply rooted perception among many government and security agency officials that foreign media access to Papua is a recipe for instability in a region already troubled by widespread public dissatisfaction with Jakarta, and a small but persistent armed independence movement.
That reflexive official paranoia extends beyond journalists and also impedes access to Papua for international development agencies, United Nations officials and foreign academics that Indonesian authorities perceive as hostile.
The government needs to understand that blocking media access on overbroad security grounds doesn’t just deter foreign news reporting about Papua, it raises troubling questions about what the government might be hiding there. It’s time for Jokowi to issue his long-delayed written directive lifting restrictions on foreign media access to Papua, and appropriately punish government officials who refuse to comply.
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5) Papuans urge Indonesia to shut down Freeport mine
US mining giant has laid off thousands since stopped operation at world's 2nd biggest copper mine amid contractual dispute

By Ainur Rohmah
TUBAN, Indonesia 
Papuans across Indonesia held demonstrations Monday against an American mining giant involved in a contract dispute with the government that has halted operations at the world's second biggest copper mine.
Protest coordinator Samsi Mahmud said hundreds of members of the Indonesian People’s Front for West Papua and the Alliance of Papuan Students held protests in 16 cities, including in front of the Freeport office in Jakarta and the United States consulate in Bali.
"Our demand is only one, Freeport should be closed down and leave Papua," Mahmud said in a statement.
He described the signing of the first contract between the government and Freeport in 1967 as an “illegal act” as the eastern Papua region had been an area of conflict between Indonesia and the Netherlands.
Mahmud, a Front member, accused Freeport of continuing to illegally exploit mines and seizing people's lands. 
Locals consider Freeport-McMoRan to be closely linked to the military presence and its operations in the mineral-rich territory since 1967. 
"It has caused violence that resulted in misery and suffering to the people of Papua," Mahmud said Monday.
The company’s local subsidiary PT Freeport Indonesia halted operations at its Grasberg mine last month due to a contract dispute in which the government is seeking to convert the contract of work with Freeport into an export permit extension.
The new offer also involves Freeport divesting a 51-percent stake within a decade of production and the government’s role in determining base selling prices for minerals.
Freeport Indonesia has rejected the idea of contract conversion and said it may take the case to international arbitration.
Papua's Energy and Mineral Resources Office recorded that Freeport has laid off more than 2,000 employees -- consisting of foreigners and locals -- who work for its contractor since February. 
"Thousands of contract workers have been laid off, they no longer have an income. This could possibly lead to social problems,” the office’s chief, Bangun Manurung, was quoted as saying by metrotvnews.com.
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1) Freeport Indonesia resumes copper concentrate production

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2) Papuan students in Bali protest against Freeport
3) Chief Maritime Minister Demands Firmer Regulations to Manage Raja Ampat Islands
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1) Freeport Indonesia resumes copper concentrate production
3 Hours Ago REUTERS 
Freeport McMoRan's Indonesian unit has resumed production of copper concentrate at its giant Grasberg mine, a spokesman told Reuters on Tuesday, ending a more than one-month stoppage.
"We have begun to resume operations in stages," Freeport Indonesiaspokesman Riza Pratama said, confirming that copper concentrate production had resumed on Tuesday.
Freeport stopped producing copper concentrate on Feb. 11 after Indonesia prevented it from exporting the material used to make refined copper, and its sole domestic buyer halted operations due to a strike.

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2) Papuan students in Bali protest against Freeport

Jakarta | Mon, March 20, 2017 | 02:18 pm




Dozens of people claiming to be workers of gold and copper miner PT Freeport Indonesia hold a rally in front of the Energy and Mineral Resources Ministry in Jakarta on March 6, urging the government to immediately resolve its dispute with the company. (JP/Viriya P. Singgih)



Dozens of students grouped under the Papuan Students Alliance (AMP) in Bali protested on Monday in front of the United States Consulate General on Jl. Hayam Wuruk, Denpasar.
They expressed their rejection of the presence of gold and copper miner PT Freeport Indonesia in Papua.
Before the protests, they marched from the east parking area of Renon.
The students carried handouts that read "Freeport has to rehabilitate environmental damage", "Freeport came, human nature in Papua lost", "let us make our own choices".
The leader of the protest, Gidion Logo, said in 51 years, Freeport had not given any real benefit to the community in Papua. 
AMP coordinator Nipson Murib said the protest only aimed to fight for the fate of the people and the land of Papua.
"When Freeport came, they destroyed our natural resources. We lived off the land through farming, not gold mining," Murib said as quoted by kompas.com
He said local communities faced intimidation in Papua.
The rally ran peacefully under police escort. (dis/wit)

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3) Chief Maritime Minister Demands Firmer Regulations to Manage Raja Ampat Islands

By : Amrozi Amenan | on 10:04 AM March 21, 2017
Jakarta. Coordinating Maritime Affairs Minister Luhut Binsar Pandjaitan has called on the West Papua provincial  administration to improve its regulations for managing the Raja Ampat Islands, a world-famous diving spot, after a British cruise ship damaged coral reefs there earlier this month.
A task force has been deployed to assess the damage caused by the ship, Caledonian Sky, when it ran aground in shallow waters during low tide on March 4. The team will also assess legal aspects of the case.
"We need firmer regulations, since Raja Ampat is our tourism destination that possesses [more] rare coral reefs [compared to other places] in the world," Luhut said in Gresik, East Java, on Monday (20/03).
The minister has yet to receive reports on the total damage.
However, a preliminary investigation showed that the damage covers nearly 1,600 square meters of coral reef at a diving site known as Crossover Reef.
"We have been in contact with the ship's insurer; they will take responsibility for the damage," Luhut added.
The central government will seek compensation of up to $1.92 million, according to the environmental science and conservation news and information website, Mongabay. Marine experts say it will take several years before the coral reefs begin to recover.
The Ministry of Environment and Forestry took over the investigation into the incident from Maritime Affairs Minister Susi Pudjiastuti last Thursday.

Ambassador Peter Ilau: Concerning MSG, Free Papua Not a Sovereign Country

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Ambassador Peter Ilau: Concerning MSG, Free Papua Not a Sovereign Country
Tuesday, 21 March 2017 | 14:37 WIB




                                       Peter Ilau (Netralnews)

JAKARTA, NETRALNEWS.COM - The Free Papua Movement (OPM) and the United Liberation Movement for West Papua (ULMWP) is not a sovereign state. Because of not being a sovereign state then OPM or ULMWP automatically do not meet the requirements of membership in the Melanesian Spearhead Group (MSG).
The Ambassador of Papua New Guinea to the Republic of Indonesia, Commodore (Ret) Peter Ilau, DMS, CBE confirmed this in a series of interviews with Netralnews.com in Papua New Guinea Embassy office in Jakarta last week.
"MSG has a very clearly in its charter that whoever wants to be a member has to be sovereign country, so West Papua is not sovereign country that automatically they don’t qualify for membership," said Ambassador Peter Ilau.
Melanesian Spearhead Group (MSG) is an international organization made up of four countries in Melanesia, including Fiji, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands and Vanuatu, as well as the Kanak National Liberation Front of New Caledonia.
The International organization whose existence is more on Melanesia ethnicity (descent) has strong enough influence. The Indonesian government under President Jokowi seems to look at and consider also the strategic of MSG.
So that in June 2015 Indonesia was accepted as a partner member. Indonesia's entry into MSG of course after MSG thought that Indonesia is a country that is also inhabited by Melanesian descent such as residents of East Nusa Tenggara, Maluku and entire population in Papua.
Ambassador Peter Ilau said that MSG indeed contained Kanak National Liberation Front in the New Caledonia which is not a sovereign state.
"The Kanak for New Caledonia is a special case because the French government gave them endorsement to be a member of MSG. It is not different the government of Indonesia gave endorsement to West Papua, which probably never happen. But there is a case for the Kanak [received by MSG] and Kanak that endorsed by the government of French. That's why they are member and in MSG the charter is very clear: You have to be a sovereign country, independent to be the member of MSG," Peter Ilau asserted.
Information background, Papua separatist group, which is the member of the United Liberation Movement for West Papua and also OPM, failed to become a full member of the Melanesian Spearhead Group during a Summit held in Honiara, Solomon Islands, Thursday, July 14, 2016. This dashed hopes of the movement to be recognized as member of group of countries that are in the Pacific Islands. (*)

1) Freeport Continues To Negotiate, Arbitration Not An Option

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2) Pacific Regionalism - Making an Impact in 2017
3) Indonesia not yet ready to handle cruise ships: Official
4) Jose Ramos Horta lashes out at Australia over East Timor ‘failed state’ fears
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TUESDAY, 21 MARCH, 2017 | 17:24 WIB
1) Freeport Continues To Negotiate, Arbitration Not An Option
TEMPO.COJakarta - PT Freeport Indonesia (PTFI) decided not to rest too much hope with international arbitration because the company asserted that it will only lead to a no-win situation. Freeport will continue to negotiate with the Indonesian Government in order to seek a win-win solution.
Senior Vice President of PT Freeport Indonesia's Geo Engineering Wahyu Sunyoto, said that the American based mining company persistently refuses to alter their Contract of Work into a Special Mining Business Permit (IUPK).
"Don't let the arbitration happen. As for the Government's six month deadline, we will use it well," said Wahyu on Monday, March 20, 2017.
Wahyu revealed the ongoing dispute between Freeport and the government had forced the company to stockpile their mineral concentrate and cut down production capacity. In addition, allowing the dispute to continue, according to Wahyu, will endanger the company's operation and production capacity of its Grasberg Mine.
Meanwhile, the Indonesian Government remain unhinged and continues to be persistent with their initial offer that Freeport Indonesia should switch their CoW to an IUPK in order to increase the country's income.
Director General of Mineral and Coal at the Energy and Mineral Resources Ministry Bambang Gatot, said that Freeport's contribution for Indonesia's state revenue is considered too small.
BISNIS
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10:43 pm GMT+12, 19/03/2017, Fiji

By Dame Meg Taylor
 
This will be an important year for the Pacific, with many opportunities to progress the priorities decided by Leaders of the Pacific Islands Forum when they met in the Federated States of Micronesia in September last year. These priorities include climate change and resilient development, management of our fisheries and our ocean, international and intra-regional trade and investment, disability and gender equality. These priorities recognise and respond to the concerns and ambitions that the people of the Pacific have raised through new avenues for consultation and dialogue within the Forum, initiated under the Framework for Pacific Regionalism.
 
Forum Leaders called for an inclusive and game changing approach to development when they adopted the Framework for Pacific Regionalism in 2014. Leaders recognise that Pacific Regionalism now, and into the future, must be adaptable, innovative, inclusive, and most importantly, it must positively impact the lives of our people.
 
At the heart of Pacific Regionalism is collaboration and partnerships. Last year we welcomed French Polynesia and New Caledonia as full Forum members, and Germany as a Forum Dialogue Partner. Each of these relationships offer new and valuable prospects. This year we must continue to develop genuine and enduring partnerships across all our stakeholders so that we can implement the transformative policy initiatives that Pacific Regionalism reaches for.   
 
I see many opportunities to advance our regional priorities in 2017.
 
Our region is 98% ocean. The Pacific Ocean is at the heart of our cultures and we depend on it for food, income, employment, transport, and economic development. How we manage this resource is critically important. The Forum has undertaken to increase the economic, social and environmental benefits accrued from our oceanic and coastal fisheries through improved management and monitoring. With regard to our oceanic fisheries we are currently focussed on four key areas of work: reform of longline fishery management; increasing the value of employment and ensuring effective labour standards; facilitating greater investment and trade; and scaling up value chain participation. Coastal fisheries are important for food security and the health of our people and this year will see a greater emphasis placed on resourcing for management in this sector.
 
Of course, the ocean itself knows no national borders and therefore the region has great interest this year in the international negotiations relating to the Areas Beyond National Jurisdiction (ABNJ) and protecting Biodiversity Beyond National Jurisdiction (BBNJ). We are committed to unpolluted and sustainably managed eco-systems, and we wish to ensure that the appropriately high levels of conservation that we apply to our own countries is replicated in the international waters that surround us.
 
Progressing these and other related issues at the global level is an opportunity the Pacific will take to the UN Ocean Conference, which Fiji is co-hosting, in New York, 5 – 9 June.
 
Many in our region have witnessed firsthand the devastating effects of climate change and disasters. Guided by the values of Pacific Regionalism, the Framework for Resilient Development in the Pacific (FRDP) represents a risk-informed approach to development that factors the effects of climate change and disasters into the planning of both national and regional strategies. This is the first time in the world that a regional response that complements national level strategies has been attempted. In endorsing the FRDP, Pacific Leaders recognised the need for a Pacific Resilience Partnership – comprising Forum member countries, regional agencies, civil society, private sector, and multilateral banks and agencies - to coordinate its implementation. The first meeting of that Partnership took place at the Forum Secretariat in Suva recently and it was a positive first step which saw a vibrant exchange of ideas and experiences. Further investment in, and development of this Partnership in the coming months will lead to increased opportunities for our most vulnerable into the future.    
 
With Fiji, a Forum member, as President of this year’s 23rd Conference of the Parties (COP23) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) there is a great opportunity for highly visible collective diplomacy that calls on developed countries to increase their ambition to reduce carbon emissions. Together we can advocate for accelerated implementation of the Paris Agreement, which captures many of the core climate related priorities of our most vulnerable countries, including addressing loss and damage, simplified access to climate finance, and limiting global temperature increases to 1.5C above pre-industrialised levels.
 
The promotion of human rights is a core value of Pacific regionalism. Forum Leaders are committed to open and constructive dialogue with Indonesia around allegations of human rights abuses in West Papua (Papua).  Forum Leaders are also committed to the people of the Republic of the Marshall Islands in their quest to obtain just and fair compensation from the United States of America for the ongoing consequences of nuclear testing conducted in their country in the 1940s and 50s. Work in both these areas is ongoing and will continue this year.    
 
Much work has been done in recent years to develop National Trade Policy Frameworks across the Forum and this year, in line with Leaders commitment to streamlining business processes and harmonising business practices, we can look to those documents as the foundation for developing an implementable plan to achieve this. With the reputation of Pacific exporters and importers continuing to grow internationally, this initiative, along with work being done by our Pacific Trade and Invest network, represents further areas of potential and growth.
 
Forum Leaders are committed to inclusivity, equity and equality. In the last two years Leaders have endorsed the Pacific Framework for the Rights of Persons with Disabilities and pacific Leaders Gender Equality Declaration. In doing so, the region has pledged to work together to uphold these values and following through is a responsibility we share and must actively get behind.
 
As you can see, there is much being done and much still to do. The implementation of these initiatives is our primary focus. In February of the last two years we have run a public process that enables the people of the Pacific to contribute regional policy ideas that the Forum should consider. This year we will defer that process until after the Forum Leaders Meeting in Samoa in September. This is to ensure that the Forum Secretariat, the Council of Regional Agencies in the Pacific (CROP), and our development partners can maintain that focus on supporting implementation of our existing regional priorities in the short term.
 
Pacific Regionalism in 2017 must improve the lives of Pacific people. It needs to be at the vanguard of implementing the Sustainable Development Goals in the region. It needs to drive economic growth and it needs to ensure safe and secure societies.
 
Pacific people must continue to speak about what issues are important, what issues Leaders should be paying attention to, and what the solutions might be. They also need to be included in the implementation of those solutions.
 
Most importantly, we need to work together at different political and technical levels. It is through committed and inclusive collective action that the region will have the best chance of achieving development impact in 2017.
 
I remain committed to the vision of Pacific Regionalism and firmly believe that by working together we can achieve meaningful and sustainable development for our people.
 
Dame Meg Taylor is the Secretary General of the Pacific Islands Forum Secretariat.
 



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3) Indonesia not yet ready to handle cruise ships: Official
Jakarta | Tue, March 21, 2017 | 05:58 pm
Regardless of who will be blamed for the recent kerfuffle surrounding UK cruise ship the MV Caledonian Sky, which ran aground in Raja Ampat, West Papua, damaging coral reef in the area, the deputy minister for maritime sovereignty at the Office of the Coordinating Maritime Affairs Minister, Arif Havas Oegroseno, said it must be admitted that Indonesia was not yet accustomed to handling a large number of cruise ships.
Speaking to journalists during a recent interview, Arif Havas said it was only recently that cruise ship companies across the world included Indonesia as one of their destinations because of a string of regulations imposed by the government.
“They were previously somewhat reluctant to visit Indonesia. They just wanted to stop in Singapore. They didn’t want to enter Indonesia because of its [flawed] bureaucracy, its ‘red tape’ [illegal levies] and poor infrastructure,” he said as quoted by tribunnews.com on Tuesday.
With a growing number of cruise ship visits, Arif Havas said infrastructure in Indonesia was not yet ready to handle the challenge.
“Our effort to draw in more ‘cruise visits’ to boost our tourist sector will certainly result in challenges,” he added.
One of the measures the government will take is to tighten regulations for cruise ships that pass through conservation areas such as Raja Ampat.
Arif Havas said in other conservation areas, such as the Great Barrier Reef in Australia, cruise ships were allowed to pass through but were subject to tightened regulations.
“It’s not a strange thing to have a cruise ship enter waters with coral reefs.”
Arif Havas said with the current availability of tourist infrastructure in the country, the government was still calculating how many cruise ships could safely enter Indonesian waters. (hol/ebf)
————————————————
4) Jose Ramos Horta lashes out at Australia over East Timor ‘failed state’ fears
10:47 pm GMT+12, 20/03/2017, Timor-leste

East Timorese leader Jose Ramos Horta has lashed out at what he calls “outrageous” claims before an Australian parliamentary committee that his country could be heading towards becoming a failed state.
 
“What fly-in-fly out so-called instant experts on East Timor claim is outrageous…it's just nonsense,” Dr Ramos Horta, a Nobel laureate and East Timor's former president and prime minister, told Fairfax Media.
 
It is the first presidential election since the departure of United Nations peacekeepers in 2012.
 
“It's either ignorance or malice,” he said, adding “I'm sorry. I don't pay much attention to these so-called academics.”
 
Rebecca Strating, a lecturer at Victoria's Latrobe University, told parliament's treaties committee on 14 March it could "very well be" that East Timor is the "architect of its own demise" and there are indications that like a number of fragile resource-wealthy post-conflict states" the country is “resource cursed.”
 
She said a window on developing the US$40 billion Greater Sunrise oil and gas field in the Timor Sea has “partially” closed because of lower gas prices and a long-running dispute with Australia over how to develop it.
 
“There are elections this year…a change of government or a change in personalities might produce a government that is willing to think a little more laterally or flexibly around the interests in the Timor Sea,” Dr Strating said.
 
“But since 2012 it seems to me that this pursuit of independence may actually create a failed state in Timor-Leste (East Timor),” she said.
 
In response, Hansard records the chair of the committee chair telling Dr Strating “tremendous…most enlightening.” The architect of their own demise' is my favourite statement of the day.”
 
Speaking after East Timorese voted at presidential elections on Monday, Dr Ramos Horta said his country's sovereign wealth fund has US$16 to US$17 billion invested in US bonds and 1000 portfolios around the world and is spending some of it to develop badly needed infrastructure, such as roads.
 
He said the government in Dili is talking with a consortium led by ConocoPhillips to resurrect shelved plans to develop Greater Sunrise before negotiations with Australia on sea borders are completed by a September deadline.
 
“I would say there is a very good chance that Greater Sunrise will be developed,” he said.
 
“How I don't know. I am not involved,” he said.
 
East Timor's independence hero and political power-broker Xanana Gusmao has demanded gas from the field be piped to a proposed US$1.4 billion industrial complex on the country's remote southern coast.
 
The ConocoPhillips consortium wanted the gas to be extracted from a floating platform or to an existing refinery in Darwin.
 
Francisco “Lu-Olo” Guterres, a former anti-Indonesian guerrilla fighter, who in vote counting on Tuesday was set to become East Timor's next president, has also told Fairfax Media there are now “better prospects” for developing Greater Sunrise, which would deliver billions of dollars in revenue to his country.
 
But Clive Schofield, director of research at the Australian National Centre for Ocean Research and Security, told the parliamentary committee that at current gas prices it is "not entirely likely" that a commercial decision would be made to develop Greater Sunrise.
 
“We have low oil and gas prices. I suspect the asset, as it were, will be put on the shelf until such a time as gas prices in particular rise sufficiently to make it viable,” he said.
 
Asked about Dr Ramos Horta's comments, Dr Strating said she wanted to clarify that she does not think East Timor is "necessarily" heading towards becoming a failed state – only that this is possible if an agreement is not reached before oil revenues from an existing oil and gas field and the sovereign wealth fund run out.
 
“This is why it is so vital for Australia and Timor-Leste to find a hasty compromise (on Greater Sunrise),” Dr Strating said
 
“Timor-Leste only has five years until the oil revenues are gone. The revenues provide over 90 per cent of the state budget,” she said.
 
“If Timor-Leste does not have a source of income to provide for state budgets it is very possible that it will become dependent on aid.”
 
Dr Strating said multiple reports had predicted sovereign fund could be depleted within a decade.
 
She said her comments were not made out of malice but for concern about what happens if East Timor and Australia are unable to reach an "expedient" agreement on Greater Sunrise.

SOURCE: SMH/PACNEWS
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