Quantcast
Channel: AWPA Sydney
Viewing all 5697 articles
Browse latest View live

Pacific rugby players throw weight behind Free West Papua campaign

$
0
0

http://www.radioaustralia.net.au/international/radio/program/pacific-beat/pacific-rugby-players-throw-weight-behind-free-west-papua-campaign/1416761


Pacific rugby players throw weight behind Free West Papua campaign


Updated 19 February 2015, 10:59 AEDT

Pacific Island rugby players are publicly voicing their support for the Free West Papua campaign.

The Fiji Rugby Union posted a photo of four Pacific players holding the flag of West Papua on social media, in a show of support for the Indonesian province's independence movement.
Flying Fijians players Akapusi Qera and Jim Nagusa both play for the French provincial team Montpellier, and are seen holding the flag with teammates Naama Leleimalefa and Alex Tulou.
Originally from American Samoa, Alex Tulou says the presence of the campaign on social media is what brought the issue to his team's attention.
Presenter: Richard Ewart
Speaker: Alex Tulou, Montpellier Rugby Union
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Photo on Facebook
https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10153690771973484


I want to say thank to the rugby players of Pacific. Your support means a lot to the people of West Papua. I hope the rugby players across the pacific can give their support for freedom for their brothers and sisters in West Papua.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------

1) March to free West Papua

$
0
0
2) For West Papua
3) photos on facebook rally in Fiji
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------

 1) March to free West Papua
SITERI SAUVAKACOLO

Friday, February 20, 2015
Update: 1:23PM 
TEARS flowed freely at Suvas Sukuna Park today as skits were performed,poems read and songs were sung to mark the World Social Justice Day.
The celebration also marked a march for self- determination and freedom of the Melanesian brothers and sisters of West Papua.
More than 300 people were part of todays march from the Flea Market to Sukuna Park where the Methodist Church in Fiji and Rotuma president Reverend Tevita Nawadra also launched the Solidarity Movement for West Papua.
Fiji Council of Churches president Manumalo Tuinanumea said it was their hope and prayers that the morning star would rise, that the freedom of West Papua be achieved peacefully and that their applications to full membership of the MSG be granted.
-------------------------------------------------------
2) For West Papua

Siteri Sauvakacolo
Friday, February 20, 2015

Staff of ECREA stand with posters to show their support for the West Papuans. Picture: KIMBERLEY SACHS
RISE Morning Star — a song dedicated solely to the sufferings of our Melanesian brothers and sisters in West Papua is set to rock Suva's Sukuna Park today.
The song will feature top local musicians Seru Serevi and Black Rose band leader Timoci Ratusila.
Serevi said he had always wanted to compose a song about the sufferings of the West Papua people.
"I've always wanted to do a song about our Melanesian brothers from West Papua and their call over the years.
"They have been oppressed in their own country and it's our moral obligation to do something," Serevi said.
"I'm encouraging our Melanesian brothers and Micronesians, and even Polynesians, to stand up and help our West Papua brothers.
"This song was my experience over the years.
"There is a lot of people out there who support the cause for the freedom of the West Papua people and now I am so glad that there is a forum and a platform where they can show their support, and show that we do support the struggle of our brothers and sisters in West Papua. They have their right to self-determination."
The Vude King said he had travelled through Melanesia and he had been in contact with a lot of West Papuans and this was when he learnt of their struggles, hence being encouraged to compose a song for them.
"So during one of our tours in Vanuatu, we met some of them and that encouraged us to put pen on paper and to do something. A message through the music to tell our people about the oppression going on in West Papua," he said.
The West Papua march to coincide with the World Social Justice Day today will be held from Suva's Flea Market to the Sukuna Park beginning at 9.30am.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
3) photos on facebook rally in Fiji

----------------------------------------------------------

1) GOVT' URGES FREEPORT TO FINISH BUILDING SMELTER IN 2017.

$
0
0
 2) Police Successfully Arrest Labora Sitorus
3) Police, Prosecutors Finally Re-Detain Labora Sitorus
-----------------------------------------------------------------

FRIDAY, 20 FEBRUARY, 2015 | 20:54 WIB
1) Govt' Urges Freeport to Finish Building Smelter in 2017.  

TEMPO.COJakarta - The government urges Freeport Indonesia to finish building its copper smelter in Gresik by 2017. "The smelter in Gresik must begin operation in 2018, so it has to be finished in 2017," said R. Sukhyar, director of Mineral and Coal at the Energy and Mineral Resources Ministry on Wednesday, February 19, 2015.
He believed that the target could be achieved because there are no more obstacles in building the smelter. In addition to providing infrastructures, Freeport has also preapred industries that absorb byproducts.
Freeport had also received requests to revise its smelter capacity to support te availability of raw materials along with plans to build smelters by other companies.
Previously, Freeport Indonesia president director Maroef Sjamsuddin, said that the construction of the smelter in Gresik is ongoing and currently in the stage of licensing. "Building smelter involves many factors such as technical factor, legal factor, licensing and feasibility study," he said.
Development of the smelter in Gresik by Freeport is carried out in cooperation with Mitsubishi. The amount of investment for the smelter reached up to US$15 billion (around Rp 187.1 trillion) to build an underground mine, and US$2.3 billion (around Rp 28.7 trillion) to build the smelter itself.
AYU PRIMA SANDI | ALI HIDAYAT
------------------------------------------------------------------------
FRIDAY, 20 FEBRUARY, 2015 | 17:44 WIB
2) Police Successfully Arrest Labora Sitorus
TEMPO.COJakarta - Spokesman of the National Police Headquarter Ronny Sompie, confirmed that Labora Sitorus, who was convicted for money laundering and several other crimes, has been arrested. "We have received information [from Papua]," he told Tempo.
Ronny said that Labora's arrest went smoothly after local government officials and local figures made several approaches in the last few days. At the moment, Labora is being detained at the Sorong Penitentiary, West Papua.
Previously, Labora made the news headline for resisting arrest and claiming that he have received an official letter that stated that he can be released. Labora was previously arrested for owning a massive account of Rp 1.5 trillion.
The former police was supposed to stay imprisoned for 8 years and pay Rp 50 million fine for his crime.
DEWI SUCI RAHAYU
--------------------------------------------------------------------------

3) Police, Prosecutors Finally Re-Detain Labora Sitorus

By Jakarta Globe on 11:27 am Feb 20, 2015
Jakarta- The Papua Police together with a team of prosecutors forcibly detained rogue cop and money-laundering convict Labora Sitorus early on Friday, news portal Kompas.com reported.
The notorious officer from the West Papua Police was sentenced to 15 years in prison for graft and money laundering, but managed to get permission to leave jail for medical reasons — and then just refused to return.
It was reported recently that Labora was residing in his house in Sorong, in a residential complex owned by Rotua, the timber company at the center of his illegal-logging case. Employees were guarding the complex, previously preventing local police from picking up the fugitive.
Labora, a low-ranking officer in a police station in the remote Raja Ampat islands of West Papua, grabbed national media headlines in 2013 after he was found to have laundered Rp 1.5 trillion ($118 million) through his personal bank accounts, apparently from his illegal logging and fuel hoarding businesses.
Kompas reported that Labora would again be held in Sorong, not in Jakarta.

1) Suva Rally Over Papua

$
0
0

2) Another Hearing Postponed in Trial of Four KNPB Members
3) Theo Hesegem : I Will Testify If Two French Journalists Testify in This Trial
4) Traditional Market in Potikelek Blocked Due To Land Dispute
5) Papua Smelter to Accommodate Freeport’s Underground Mining

6) Extract from article "Bali delays not from death row diplomacy" 
------------------------------------------------------------


http://fijisun.com.fj/2015/02/21/suva-rally-over-papua/

1) Suva Rally Over Papua


February 21
09:002015
👤 by Ana Sovaraki, SUVA

A good crowd gathered yesterday at Ratu Sukuna Park to show their support for a ‘Free West Papua’ campaign.
Human rights, religious and youth organisations were also present at the campaign.
The event is in collaboration with the World Social Justice Day, which is commemorated on February 20 annually.
Ecumenical Centre for Research, Education and Advocacy (ECREA) director Sirino Rakabi said they wanted to share with the people of Fiji an important message to support the fight against what he called the sufferings faced by the people of West Papua.
“It is also a time to reflect on ourselves and that the churches, human rights groups, civil societies need to be the voice of the West Papuan people in their fight for freedom,” Mr Rakabi said.
He said this was a social justice mission for all of them.
“I believe social justice is the care for all people, for our environment so that everybody enjoys the luxury of society that God offers us,” Mr Rakabi said.
Human rights activist and co-ordinator of the Fiji Women’s Crisis Centre (FWCC), Shamima Ali, said as good human beings, men and women, we all must support the cause of justice.
“We must uphold democracy, the rule of law and equality, human rights and everything else that makes us human beings,” Ms Ali said.
She said freedom was fought and struggled for and we must continue the struggle whether we are here or anywhere else in the world.
The president of the Fiji Council of Churches, Manumalo Tuinanumea, said our West Papuan brothers and sisters have long been oppressed and were calling on us to stand in solidarity with them.
“For this reason that I stand here to be the voice of the member churches of FCC and other churches that support the cause and to publicly declare our solidarity with our West Papuan brothers and sisters,” Mr Tuinanumea said.
He said it was their hopes and prayers that the morning star would rise; that the freedom for West Papua be achieved peacefully.
Meanwhile, president of the Methodist Church in Fiji, Reverend Tevita Banivanua, said for too long, we have failed to speak out against what he called the brutal oppression of the West Papuan people.
“As we mark World Social Justice Day, each one of us is called to commit to practicing the golden rule – the source of morality; the act of empathy, of putting yourself in the place of another – to be in solidarity with those oppressed and less fortunate brothers and sisters of ours,”
“In particular we are called to speak for those whose voices are ignored or silenced,” Reverend Banivanua said.
“We are called to speak the truth in love”.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


2) Another Hearing Postponed in Trial of Four KNPB Members




Hearing in trial of four members of the West Papua National Committee Wamena – Jubi

Wamena, Jubi – A hearing in trial of four members of the West Papua National Committee Wamena accused of making explosives to sabotage the 2014 Presidential Election was postponed for the second time due to the absence of witnesses.
The trial will resume next week (Wednesday, 25/02/2015).
The four members are Ibrahim Marian, Yali Walilo, Joni Marian and Marthen Marian. The Jayawijaya arrested them on 11 July 2014 at Wara Village of Pisugi Sub-district, Jayawijaya Regency accusing for the possession of exploisive materials to mess up the Presidential Election 2014.
“The Prosecutor postponed the trial due to problem of presenting the witnesses. The presiding judge will ask the motive of the witnesses’ absence and the prosecutor should be able to prove the letter of summon. There were three or four witnesses have been summoned but they didn’t come to the trial,” Attorney Simon Patirajawane told Jubi at the Wamena District Court on Wednesday (18/2/2015).
According to him, if the witnesses still refused to come, there would be an examination against the witnesses next week. “Because there is a key witness among them. If they are still not coming until next week, they would be questioned and be witnessed to each other,” Patirajawane said.
He expected before the trial against the suspects, the witnesses should be presented in the trial. “But the prosecutor has called them for three or four times but they refused to come. Base on legal perception, if the witnesses refused to come, the prosecutor could force them. But we saw the prosecutor has actually tried by showing the letter of summon,” he said.
Further Partirajawane said he didn’t know why the witness didn’t come although they have right to refuse coming to the trial.
“In my count, the trial has been postponed for five to six times, but I think it wasn’t do on purpose to playing with time because the prosecutor had the evidence,” he said.
Meanwhile a suspect Ibrahim Marian expected this case would be accomplished as soon as possible and found not guilty.
“I and my friends expect they could accelerate this trial and we would be released,” he said at Wamena District Court.
On the same time when they got arrested, the Jayawijaya Police also arrested Yosep Siep with different charge. Siep was taken on the separate trial. (Ronny Hisage/rom).
-----------------------------------------------

3) Theo Hesegem : I Will Testify If Two French Journalists Testify in This Trial

Wamena, Jubi – A witness in Areke Wanimbo’s case, Theo Hesegem refused to testify in the trial against Areki Wanimbo in the Wamena District Court on Wednesday (18/02/2015).
He said the prosecutors should present two foreign journalists because they are the reason behind the arrest of Areki Wanimbo. When both journalists were tried in Jayapura, Wanimbo appeared as a witness.
“The Prosecutors must present both of them in this trial because Wanimbo testified in their trial as a witness,” Theo Hesegem gave his statement in front of judges in the Wamena District Court on Wednesday (18/2/2015).
He also refused to testify because he believed there is an inconsistency consisted in the sentences between the prosecutor’s charge and the police’s charge.
“In his indictment, the prosecutor said the witness Theo introduced Domi Surabut to the suspect Areki Wanimbo, while the police said I didn’t know Domi. Based on this difference, I refuse to testify in this trial,” Hesegem said.
Based on this rejection, the prosecutor assumed to recall him as witness next week. Meanwhile other witness Pither Wanimbo testified in the trial that the suspect had no connection with the letter of circulation on donations issued by the Papua Customary Council.
“I am the Lanny Jaya Customary Chief, not Areki Wanimbo. But because of the short of time to distribute the letter, I asked him to sign it because he is the tribal chief. But he didn’t know what was it about,” Piter Wanimbo testified in the Wamena District Court.
After Piter Wanimbo’s witness, the Presiding Judge Benyamin Nuboba suspended the trial and it will resume next week on Wednesday, 25 February 2015.
Meanwhile, Areki Wanimbo’s laywer Simon Patirajawane told reporter after the trial that Hesegem’s objection is part of his right as witness.
“At the time of examination, a witness (Theo Hesegem) objected to testify in the trial because he wanted two foreign journalists become a witness in this trial. Because they have caused him went behind the bar,” Patirajawane said.
Related to witness Piter Wanimbo, he thought many things were not suitable with the Police’s charge.
“As a lawyer, I thought there are many things improper with the Police’s charge. For example there is a point in the charge that he pulled out. It was actually benefit for us because the suspect was accused related to the letter on donation, but the fact is the suspect didn’t know about it,” he said.
Areki Wanimbo was a resource person of two French journalists Thomas Charles and Valentine Bourat who arrested by the Jayawijaya Police on 6 August 2014 in Wamena. (Ronny Hisage/rom)

------------------------------------------

4) Traditional Market in Potikelek Blocked Due To Land Dispute

Wamena, Jubi – A number of citizens who claimed as land owners blocked the entrance of Potikelek traditional market on Tuesday morning (17/2/2015).
The action prompted the Jayawijaya government to postpone moving the Papuan traders to the market. One of the owners of customary rights said their parents never sold the land to any party.
“This land has never never sold, the land is still part of customary land. However, it is shocking us to know that the certificate is held by Max Puradam as a second party,” Lember said.
He then stated that they have come to see Max Puradam several times but never responded, and now there is a market building.
“We heard the traders will move here, that is why we block it,” he said. He hoped that Jayawijaya regency to immediate meeting to straighten the matter.
Assistant II Secretariat of Jayawijaya, Gaad P. Tabuni who came to see the action, revealed from the beginning there was an objection about the land due to lack of good conversation between local governments and the land owners.
Therefore, Tabuni said before the launch of the market, it will facilitate to solve the problem.
“Actually, they doubted the release of land. We’ll look for clarification by inviting the Muslims and then will communicate with the landlord here, “he said.
According to him, the government is on the part of the third and it bought the land because the area is strategic for the market. (Islami/ Tina)
----------------------------------------------------------------

5) Papua Smelter to Accommodate Freeport’s Underground Mining

Jakarta, Jubi/Antara – Energy and Mineral Resources Minister Sudirman Said said a smelter in Papua is projected to accommodate the underground mining of PT. Freeport Indonesia.
“A smelter in Gresik is to expand the existing one and it would be temporary, while a smelter in Papua is to anticipate underground mining production which will be built by Freeport soon,” he said in Jakarta on Wednesday (18/2/2015).
He in the future Indonesia needs a smelter with a capacity of 4 million tonnes of concentrates to redefine gold, silver and copper.
Earlier, Freeport Indonesia has agreed to build a smelter on 650 hectares of land located in Poumako industrial area in Papua. Under the plan, Chinese investors will build the smelter in Papua while Freeport will provide the concentrates.
Freeport will be involved in building these two smelters through its investment for the Gresik smelter and contribution of concentrates for the Papua smelter.
Meanwhile, besides the smelter, the Papua Provincial Government planned to build a fertilizer and petrochemical factories as well as gas filling plant and cement factories within the Poumako industrial area. Meanwhile seaport, highway and generator near to Freeport’s concentrate pipelines only need to be improved.
The Papua Provincial Government also committed to allocate two trillion of initial investment to expand two thousand hectares more within this industrial area. (*/rom)
---------------------------------------------------------------

6) Extract from article "Bali delays not from death row diplomacy" in The Saturday Paper by Hamish McDonald

Full article at 


Papua little changed

Papuan activists and human rights groups are also querying Widodo’s sincerity in his campaign proposal last year to lift the tight restrictions on access to Papua by foreign journalists and non-government organisations.
Permits for reporting trips are doled out sparingly by a committee of security and foreign policy officials in Jakarta. Two French journalists who entered Papua without this permission last year were locked up for two-and-a-half months before being deported. A Papuan man who helped them, Areki Wanimbo, is still in custody. Police initially tried to charge him with seeking ammunition from the French reporters but couldn’t produce any evidence. Now they are charging him with sedition, for co-signing a letter asking for donations to help Papuan delegates attend a pro-independence conference in Vanuatu. Such charges can bring sentences up to life imprisonment for Papuans, with 60 currently in jail for sedition.
Behind the official screen, security forces still have impunity for violence against Papuans, it seems. On a Christmas visit to Papua, Widodo promised a thorough and impartial inquiry into a shooting in the Paniai region last year, in which security forces opened fire on local people protesting at dangerous driving by military vehicles. They killed five and injured 17, including some children. Nothing has since been heard about an investigation.
Widodo is no more likely than any other Jakarta politician to entertain the idea of Papuan independence. But his wife is the daughter of a teacher sent by Sukarno into the region after the Dutch were forced out in 1963, and her name, Iriana, derives from West Irian, the name Sukarno concocted for the new province. Belatedly giving substance to the idealism of his father-in-law would be a fine legacy for Widodo.
The world and the region are getting impatient with Indonesian excuses about Papua. Earlier this month the Papua New Guinea prime minister, Peter O’Neill, abandoned his country’s usual circumspection. “Sometimes we forgot our family, our brothers and sisters, especially those in West Papua,” he told a conference in Port Moresby. “I think as a country the time has come for us to speak about oppression of our people. Pictures of brutality of our people appear daily on social media and yet we take no notice. We have the moral obligation to speak for those who are not allowed to talk. We must be the eyes for those who are blindfolded.”

-----------------------------

1) Police Seize Home-Made Firearms, Bullets at Jayapura Port

$
0
0
2) Naomi Korwa Produces 100 Sacks of Lime Monthly

3) No Electricity, Patients Served with Traditional Light at Night

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------


http://tabloidjubi.com/en/?p=3838


1) Police Seize Home-Made Firearms, Bullets at Jayapura Port


Jayapura, Jubi – Police in the sea port area of Jayapura city seized a gray suitcase containing six home-made firearms and bullets, believe to belong to one of the passengers. The KM. Dorolonda was docked at the Jayapura port on Tuesday (16/02/2015). According to a source who refused to be named, the suitcase was carried by a port laborer.
“It is suspected that the suitcase belongs to one of the passengers, only it is unclear how many firearms and ammunition in the suitcase,” the source said on Wednesday (02/18/2015).
Papua Police spokesman, Commissioner (Pol) Patrige Renwarin confirmed the finding. He further added that in that day, at about19:30 pm, ship of KM Dorolonda docked at the Port of Jayapura. A member of the police, Adjunct Inspector (Aiptu) Demmaloga suspected a suitcase brought by a port labor. He then told the port labor to call the owner of suitcase but he did not come back.
“The case was then secured in Jayapura Police Sea Port (KPL). Then, on Wednesday (18/2), at 11:00 am, the police chief and deputy of KPL with some members examine the suitcase and yes it contains home made firearms and ammunition,” Renwarin on Wednesday (18/02/2015).
According to him, there are five home made short barrel firearms, and one long barrel firearm. Police also found two rounds of SSI ammunition, and two rounded package that kind of explosive contents. (Arjuna Pademme/Tina)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------

2) Naomi Korwa Produces 100 Sacks of Lime Monthly

Biak, Jubi – Naomi Korwa, a female resident of Kampung Sorido, Biak city district, Biak Numfor, said every month she was able to produce 100 bags of lime made of sea shells at her house.
“In order to produce lime (Kapur Pinang) in large quantities, I gather seashells for a week,” Naomi stated. After that she collects firewood in the second week and burn and process shells into lime by the third week.
“The Kapur Pinang then is sold to the betel nut sellers in Biak and Jayapura,” she explained when met Jubi on Tuesday afternoon (02/17/2015).
One sack of lime sells for Rp 200,000 to Rp 300,000, allowing Naomi to earn Rp 2 million a month.
She then spends her earnings to fulfil daily needs and pay school fees of her children that are now in high school and college levels.
“The rest I use as capital again as I have to pay the cost of unloading shells from a dig into the house, buy firewood, and fit it to the edge of the house,” she added.
Apparently, Naomi was not the only woman who could make lime in Biak. Ani Sroyer, a resident of Sorido, also could produce 21 sacks of lime per month.
“I can only make 21 sacks per month because I have a garden. Every day I have to go to garden and clean it,” she added. (Marten Boseren/Tina)
------------------------------------------------------

3) No Electricity, Patients Served with Traditional Light at Night

Merauke, Jubi – A resident of Senayu village, Jeremias Kaize, said one of the problems faced by medical personnel who served in the health center in Senayu, Tanah Miring district, Merauke is unavailability of electricity.
He said medical workers often used a traditional light lamp (pelita) while treating patients and this has happened for years.
“Yes, we are also grateful to midwives in the village it, because we are still welcomed to stay and serve the community well, ” he said in a dialogue with Merauke regent in Bersehati village on Wednesday (18/2).
He then hoped government of Merauke to install electricity to the village as the poles
have been installed. Merauke regent, Romanus Mbaraka said it has discuss to electricity company, PT. PLN to provide electricity access at several villages in the area of Tanah Miring district. (Frans L Kobun/Tina)
-------------------------------------------------------------------

1) 'Sign West Papua petition'

$
0
0
2) Time to stand up
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1) 'Sign West Papua petition'
Siteri Sauvakacolo
Sunday, February 22, 2015
A PETITION for Fijians to stand in solidarity with the people of West Papua in their application to be full membership of the Melanesian Spearhead Group will be delivered to Prime Minister Voreqe Bainimarama in late April.
All Fijians are now urged to sign the petition that was launched at Suva's Sukuna Park on Friday to show solidarity and support for their Melanesian brothers and sisters.
Ecumenical Centre for Research, Education and Advocacy (ECREA) director Sirino Rakabi said the people of West Papua needed Fiji's support.
"The people of West Papua now look to Fiji, being one of the influential countries in the region, to support and stand in solidarity with them in their bid to be full members of the MSG," Mr Rakabi said.
"Now is the time for us, the citizens of Fiji, to call on our government to officially and publicly express our support and solidarity with their wish to be full members of this Melanesian body, a body that should and ought to represent all Melanesians.
"Their full membership in the MSG will be a highly significant step towards realising their dream that one day soon, they will be free from oppression, fear and slavery, and to determine their own political future."
The petition cause, Mr Rakabi said had already been supported by the Fiji Council of Churches as well as national and regional civil society organisations and individuals.
People are requested to deliver their signed petition forms to the ECREA office at Knollys St in Suva.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

2) Time to stand up
Siteri Sauvakacolo
Saturday, February 21, 2015
"FOR too long, we have failed to speak out against Indonesia's brutal oppression of the West Papua people," says president of the Methodist Church in Fiji and Rotuma, Reverend Tevita Banivanua.
And the Fiji Council of Churches, the Pacific Conference of Churches, the Ecumenical Centre for Research, Education and Advocacy (ECREA) and other civil societies have taken the lead role in the fight against oppression in West Papua.
Yesterday marked a solemn occasion for these church groups, youths and individuals as they marched the streets of Suva to mark the World Social Justice Day celebration — a day dedicated solely to the sufferings of the West Papuan people.
Banners, posters and T-shirts together with the West Papua flag — the Rise Morning Star — coloured the streets as youths cheered and marched with courage showing fellow Fijians that as Melanesians, they had a role to play to end the oppression.
Mr Banivanua launched the Fiji Solidarity Movement for West Papua's Freedom petition signing at Sukuna Park after the march.
"We are here to speak out in love to our families, our community, our nation about the oppression of our brothers and sisters in West Papua and to call on all Fijians to join us in prayer and in solidarity," he said.
"To join us in speaking out about the tragic human rights abuses and violations committed against women, as well as men and children, simply because they live in a place coveted for its vast natural resources.
"And because they dare to dream and to cry out for the opportunity to determine their own future as people."

He said yesterday marked a new beginning in the movement of solidarity for West Papua, adding the movement could not be allowed to become stagnant.
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Australians, reporting on Indonesia

$
0
0

Australians, reporting  on Indonesia

Hans David Tampubolon, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Feature | Mon, February 23 2015, 6:52 AM



For the last 70-or-so years, Indonesia and Australia have been in a dynamic relationship, frequently punctuated by tensions.
The nations have often gone head to head in disputes, such as during the alleged wire tapping incident several years ago. However, the countries have also stood together, as in the aftermath of the Bali bombings.

However, Australian and Indonesian journalists have always been at the ready to deliver factual reports that might affect either nation.

Looking to explore how our southern neighbors have reported on Indonesia, Ross Tapsell, a lecturer in Asian Studies at the Australian National University (ANU), recently launched his book, titled By-lines, Balibo, Bali Bombings: Australian Journalists in Indonesia.

The work, which sprang out of Tapsell’s doctoral research in 2005, highlights important news events that affected relations between the countries, such as the Balibo Five and the Bali bombings.

Tapsell offers profiles and stories of foreign correspondents stationed in Indonesia during the early 1940s and the tumultuous 1960s. He goes into detail on how local staff works with foreign publications, how governments influence the reporting process and the impact of new technology.

“This book is about the Australian media in Indonesia. It’s actually a history of Australian journalism in Indonesia since the Indonesian independence of 1945,” Tapsell told The Jakarta Post during the book’s launch in Cikini, Central Jakarta, recently.

“I went back and looked at a lot of documents and reports,” he said. “They often said that the biggest problem in the bilateral relationship was the Australian media — that the Australian media often deliberately destabilized the relationship.”

Tapsell interviewed several Australian journalists previously stationed in Indonesia, such as Tony Rafty, a cartoonist who came to Jakarta in 1945 after independence to draw pictures of then-president Sukarno.

Rafty “actually went straight to the palace and knocked on the door and said ‘Can I speak to Sukarno?’” Tapsell said. “They let him in and he drew pictures of Sukarno and Hatta and the first Cabinet.”

Sukarno was so happy with Rafty’s work that they stayed close friends.

Initial good relations with the Indonesian government soured, particularly after the Balibo Five incident in 1975, when five Australian journalists were killed while reporting in Timor Leste, which was then occupied by Indonesia.

Tapsell says that many Australian journalists have maintained a “vendetta” against the Indonesian government ever since.

Tensions also rose when David Jenkins wrote a headline article for the Sydney Morning Herald about corruption in Soeharto’s New Order.

Jenkins, once considered one of Indonesia’s best friends in the Australian press, called Soeharto’s wife, Tien Soeharto, “Madame Tien Percent”, suggesting that she always received a 10 percent commission from whatever projects were taking place under the New Order.

In response, the Indonesian government barred Australian journalists from entering the nation for years.

Tapsell, however, downplayed the incident, saying that Australians had typically faced many challenges reporting on Indonesia during the New Order.

“It was a difficult time. There were a number of threats, intimidations, violence and restrictions — particularly in outer regions like Papua and Timor,” he said. “Getting information during the Soeharto years was very difficult because of the way the bureaucracy worked and the closed off nature of New Order.”

“Then there was reformasi and kebebasan pres [press freedom] and suddenly Indonesia was a wonderful place for access with the exception of Papua. What has been interesting is that, over time, the Australian government has become more closed off and journalists now complain that the Australian government manages their media more tightly.”

Constant suspicions and restrictions imposed by both governments on the work of journalists has also made it difficult for Australians to understand their northern neighbor, according to Tapsell.

“A lot of [Australians] still think of Indonesia as a place for terrorism and military dictatorships,” he says. “Of course, we only hear bad news about Indonesia in Australia.”

Tapsell said he hoped his book would improve understanding between Australians and Indonesians and provide a different perspective on the dynamics of their relations.

“In Australia there is a lack of credible information,” Tapsell says. “We don’t learn much about Indonesia. Indonesian language in Australia has been in decline since the 1970s. Unfortunately, our educational knowledge about Indonesia is very limited. We are relying on mainstream media to get information about Indonesia and the mainstream is always limited and restricted.”

1) Papua Councilor Suspect Intervention on Paniai Investigation

$
0
0

2) Police Was Two Hours Late to Respond to Fire Incident

-------------------------------------------------------

http://tabloidjubi.com/en/?p=3854


1) Papua Councilor Suspect Intervention on Paniai Investigation


Jayapura, Jubi – The Papua Legislative Council’s Commission I member Laurenzus Kadepa said a faction is bent on  obstructing efforts to uncover the shooting incident on 8 December 2014 which killed four students at Enarotali, Paniai Regency.
He said the fire incident on One-Roof School building (YPPG Junior High School, Yamewa Vocational High School and Touyemana Pedagogue College) last Friday (20/2/2015) at 03:00 Papua was possibly part of the scenario to prevent a resolution to the case.
“I suspect there is a certain faction who want to intervene in the investigation team of the National Human Right Commission in revealing the Paniai case.  But I cannot tell it by name since there is no evidence or accurate data yet. However it could be happened,” Laurenzus Kadepa confirmed Jubi through short message on Sunday afternoon (22/2/2015).
He further said the recent fire incident has strengthened his assumption because it was occurred when the investigation team of National Human Right Commission and Witness and Victim Protection Agency (LPSK) arrived at Paniai doing the investigation.
“It was very disappointed. The school building at Paniai was burned by unknown people when the investigation team and LPSK doing their mission,” he said. Thus he further asked the police to immediately discover the fire perpetrator.
“The Police and local government as well as community and all related stakeholders must support the National Human Right Committee in investigating the shooting perpetrator who killed four people and injured dozens. It’s a severe human right violation,” he said.
Earlier, human right activist Yones Douw said the burning school building namely Yamewa Vocational School was Yulian Yeimo and Simeon Degei’s school. They are two of four students who killed in the tragedy on 8 December 2014. (Arjuna Pademme/rom)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

2) Police Was Two Hours Late to Respond to Fire Incident

Jakarta, Jubi – Human right activist Yones Douw said police was two hours late to respond to a fire at One-Roof School which broke out at 3:00 Papua time.
He said Yulian Yeimo and Simeon Degei who were killed in the shooting incident at Paniai on 8 December 2014 were students at the Yamewa Vocational School. One-Roof School consists of (YPPG Junior High School, Yamewa Vocational School and Touyemana Pedagogue College).
“The classrooms and school office of YPPGI Junior High School was burned by unknown people. The building was also used by two other schools, namely Yamewa Vocational School and Touyemana Pedagogue College,” he told Jubi through email on Friday morning (20/2/2015).
He revealed the perpetrators burned two buildings. The first building which consisted of eight classrooms was located at the top of school office, while the second building was located at the was located at the top of school office which consisted of eight classrooms, while the second building was located on the ground consist of three classrooms. The perpetrators were taken advantage at night when the building left behind the guard.
“On that night, both security guards and teachers as well as students were not at the school. Thus the irresponsible people took this advantage. Only several buildings safe from the fire, that are YPPPGI High School, Eklesia Kindergarten, mosque and teachers’ houses,” he said.
He further said people reported this incident to the police but the officers came to the scene late. The police officers arrived at the location two hours after the incident while its office is located less than fifty meters from the scene.
“Those who burned this school do not want the Mee people moving forward to compete with other tribes and uneducated. Even they want it to be destroyed,” he said.
Meanwhile the Paniai Customary Council Chariman John Gobay confirmed about the fire incident. He admitted receiving the report from a resident but he cannot tell further about it. “Yes, it happened, but I cannot tell the detail yet because I have guess from Jakarta,” he told Jubi.
And as reported by Antara News Agency, the Papua Police Spokesperson Patrige Renwarin confirmed about the fire incident.
“It burned nine classrooms and three teachers’ rooms. The buildings were destroyed. The fire was extinguished at around 16:00 Papua time,” Renwarin said.
The material lost due to the fire incident, further he said, estimated reach 2.5 billion rupiahs. However, the police could not conclude yet about the source of fire. (Mawel Benny/rom)
-------------------------------------------------

1) Indonesia Seeks to Assure Freeport of Mining Contract

$
0
0
2) Yerisiam and Waoha Tribes Reject Land Concession to PT. Nabire Baru
3) Mimika Regency to Deliver Food Aid to Tsinga Village
 4) Hospitality Business Associations Launch 21 Port Numbay West Papua Recipes

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

http://thejakartaglobe.beritasatu.com/business/indonesia-seeks-assure-freeport-mining-contract/

1) Indonesia Seeks to Assure Freeport of Mining Contract


By Investor Daily on 08:44 am Feb 23, 2015
Jakarta. The government is undertaking efforts to conclude the renegotiation of Freeport Indonesia’s contract of works before July this year, as it seeks to provide the mining company with certainty before it invests billions of dollars in underground mining projects, a minister said last week.
“Whoever wishes to invest $17.3 billion needs assurances. That’s why we hope that we can announce the decision before July 2015,” Energy and Mineral Resources Minister Sudirman Said said in Jakarta on Friday.
Freeport Indonesia, the local unit of US mining giant Freeport-McMoRan, has been in talks with the government to amend its contract of work and to extend its mining operation beyond 2021.
Renegotiations include the company’s value-added obligation; contractual period; size of operation; local-content obligation; government revenue, and divestment.
The toughest point so far had been the value-added obligation, which translated into a demand that the miner should build a smelter in Indonesia.
The government has demanded that all miners, including Freeport Indonesia, must build smelters to add value to the nation’s natural resources.
In the aftermath of Indonesia’s half-hearted implementation of a mineral ore export ban in January last year, all miners, including Freeport Indonesia, had to renew their permits to export copper concentrate every six months.
Freeport has secured an extension of its export permit for six months in January, after it showed its commitment to building a smelter in-country by signing a land lease in East Java.
That means that the miner will be free to export copper concentrate from its Grasberg mine in Papua for the next six months.
“After the six points of renegotiation are completed … then we can sign the new contract,” Sudirman said.
Freeport, which runs the world’s fifth-biggest copper mine in Indonesia, already agreed to a $2.3-billion copper smelter in East Java as it prepares to spend $15 billion for the expansion of its mining operations this year.
The Arizona-based miner wants its Indonesian unit to change to with underground mining from previously open-pit mining to access more copper and gold from the Grasberg mountain in Papua.
Freeport Indonesia’s previous chief, Rozik B. Soetjipto, told GlobeAsia in 2012 that the company was in a race ahead of the 2017 depletion of surface resources at its Papua mining site.
However, the minister said, extending the contract means the government must change its regulation. Regulation No. 77 of 2014 about the implementation of mineral and coal states that holders of contracts of works can only submit a request to the ministry at the soonest two years before  such contract expires. Freeport’s contract will only expire in 2021.
The miner signed its first contract for Grasberg in 1967.
But Said Didu, a member of the national smelter development team at the Energy and Mineral Resources Ministry, said that certainty over Freeport’s contract extension was necessary because 70 percent of the miner’s earmarked investment in underground mining was ready to be disbursed as part of the mine’s first development.
“When the underground access is done, but the contract cannot be extended, it will be a difficult situation [for the company],” said Didu, a former secretary at the State-Owned Enterprises Ministry.
“It can take up to 10 years [to build the necessary infrastructure] to access the ore underground,” he said.
Investor Daily
-------------------------------------------------------------

2) Yerisiam and Waoha Tribes Reject Land Concession to PT. Nabire Baru

Jayapura, Jubi – Yerisiam and Waoha tribes expressed opposition to the issuance of the Land Rights certificate for business to PT. Nabire Baru, a company accused of destroying tribal forests.
“This land certificate will be issued by the National Land Agency (BPN) of Papua Province and we reject it, ” secretary of Yerisiam tribe, Robertino Hanebora, told Jubi in Nabire ( 23/02/2015).
According to Hanebora, PT. Nabire Baru did not deserve to get a concession because there has been a conflict between the owners of property rights and the company.
“The government should not only provide the concession but it must also look at the issue. Unfortunately the government never understands. The government doues not realize that they indirectly kill us, ” Robertino said.
The fundamental reason why the people rejected it because the company has not addressed on tribal protection as the main thing in a Memorandum of Understand.
“But until now it has not been discussed. We does not understand what the purpose of this investment is (palm oil company). If the tribal basic rights have not been talking, it means that the government contributed to the error and want to kill us, “he said.
Meanwhile, Emmanuel Money, Waoha chief in Nabire expressed the same thing. “We, tribal people of Yerisiam and Waoha firmly reject this plan by National Land Agency to several palm oil companies in the land of Papua, one of which is PT. Nabire Baru, “he said. (Arnold Belau/ Tina)


-------------------------------------------------------

3) Mimika Regency to Deliver Food Aid to Tsinga Village

Timika, Jubi/Antara – The Mimika regency government is sending food aid to help victims of landslides in six villages around Tsinga, Tembagapura district.
Head of Tembagapura district Slamet Sutedjo said food aid will be delivered to Tsinga by helicopter from Kilangin Moses airport on Tuesday morning (24/2).
“The distribution of food has been delayed three times, because of bad weather. All food aid is now in Timika airport,” he said in Timika on Monday (02/23/2015),
He said the Social Service Agency of Mimika provided five cartons of basic foodstuffs, 30 sacks of rice, instant noodles and milk. In addition, 100 uniforms of elementary students, pajamas for housewives, plastic tents and mats.
Mimika regent Eltinus Omaleng is also sending 100 sacks of rice, instant noodles, cooking oil, sugar, and coffee.
Head of the Regional Disaster Management Agency in Mimika Yulianus Sasarari said Tsinga aid distribution is coordinated by Social Service Agency.
“We will also send staff to Tsinga to see the condition closer. We hope that PT Freeport will facilitate helicopter to distribute this aid, “he said.
Landslides in Tsinga village occurred on Saturday (14/2) at around 14:30 p.m due to heavy rainfall in the region. Although there were no fatalities, it resulted material losses in six villages in the area of Tsinga.
Based on report from district head Slamet Sutedjo, landslides resulted two elementary teachers’ houses of SDN Tsinga in Beanegogom was almost collapsed. While the teacher’s kitchen was swept away.
The other damage, two hanging bridges in Kampung Nosolandop and Doliningokgin were buried with landslide material and could not be used.
The disaster also resulted the main roads between Beanegogom to Doliningokgin and Tsinga to Hoeya are disconnected and agricultural land belong to 64 families in Tsinga were also swept away. (*)

---------------------------------------------------------

4) Hospitality Business Associations Launch 21 Port Numbay West Papua Recipes

Jayapura, Jubi – To celebrate its 46 anniversary, the Indonesian Hotel and Restaurant Association ( PHRI) launched a cookbook containing 21 recipes of Port Numbay dishes in Jayapura, Papua a few days ago.
“We, PHRI of Papua together with Indonesian Chef Association (ICA) launched a Port Numbay cookbook. There are 21 recipes presented by the best chefs,” Sahrir said on Saturday night (21/02/2015).
He said the book was aimed at supporting government programs, especially the government of Jayapura city in Papua.
Moreover, this is one way to search for patents in each of the hotel menu and restaurant which will be themed “Papua Corner”.
“Also it is to support government programs in order to consume locally-based menu, such as taro, cassava, sweet potatoes, vegetable wax and sago, ” he added.
Damino, Coordinator of Eastern Chef said such long desire finally can be realized.
“These 21 recipes are later patented in every hotel, at least 3 recipe so that the people of Papua and the visitors could feel enjoy traditional menu of Jayapura city,” he said. For example, Port Numbay Salad, Tobati Pudding, Papeda and so on.
Jayapura Mayor Benhur Tommy Mano Jayapura in his speech, urged the PHRI to continue in creating innovations and creations that are very useful for people around Papua especially in Jayapura.
“Hopefully, among them can be made as a souvenir of Jayapura,” Mano added.
He also hoped PHRI to improve its service to the customers and always maintain public relationship.
Meanwhile, Assistant II of Papua Secretariat on Economy, Elia I Loupatty added, with the 46th anniversary of PHRI, hotels and restorant in Papua particularly in Jayapura would be more advanced and solid and continuously to improve its services to all its customers and can support government programs. (Sindung Sukoco/ Tina)



-----------------------------------------------------------------

5New Guinea rainforest being leveled for palm oil, revealing gaps in zero deforestation pacts

Rhett A. Butler, mongabay.com
February 23, 2015


------------------------------------------------------------------------

1) Opposition to Mobile Brigade Headquarters Grows

$
0
0
2) Police Lose Track of Paniai Case Witnesses, Says Papua Police Chief
3) Boy Eluay: Let Theys Eluay Be Martyr for Special Autonomy

4) Owner of Six Firearms Still Unidentified

----------------------------------------------------------------


http://tabloidjubi.com/en/?p=3875


1) Opposition to Mobile Brigade Headquarters Grows


Jayapura, Jubi – The head of the Papua Legislative Council (DPRP) voiced his objection to plans to build the Police’s Mobile Brigade Headquarters in Wamena, Jayawijaya Regency.
DPRP speaker Yunus Wonda said the plan was an attempt by some members of the political elites to pave the way for a Papua Central Highland Province.
“This discourse is intended to serve the political elites’ strategy to materialize the Papua Central Highland Province by creating a controversy among the people. We’re more concerned about the public trauma. More security forces on the ground would increasingly traumatize people. We disagree with the Mobile Brigade Headquarters and the province split proposal,” Wonda said on Monday (23/2/2015).
He said the province split would only marginalize the indigenous Papuans, furthermore in Wamena. He asked the political elites for not just thinking about themselves, their own group or class, but they must think about the indigenous Papuans.
“Because most of them have officiated for two periods and it would be ended soon, these elites started to throw the idea of new province, though people’s need is more important. Please just set up the infrastructures, human resources and another good points,” he said.
According to him, the Papua Governor, Papua Legislative Council as well as the Papua People’s Assembly never agreed on the province split proposal.
“It is their strategy to bargain a position without thinking about the indigenous Papuans whether they would be able to compete with non-Papuans or not. Moreover there is a moratorium on Civil Servant. If the split was occurred, the civil servants were certainly recruited from outside of Papua. The State has already provided the regencies split. It should be managed first. The extension is not an answer,” he said.
He further said the Papua Governor Lukas Enembe also has appointed an attorney to sue the alleged forgery of his signature stating his approval on the extension of Papua Central Highland Province. (Arjuna Pademme/rom)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

2) Police Lose Track of Paniai Case Witnesses, Says Papua Police Chief

Jayapura, Jubi/Antara – Papua Police Chief Inspector General Yotje Mende said investigators have had difficulty uncovering the Paniai shooting incident that killed four civilians because witnesses were missing.
“The witnesses who report the incident are missing,” Mende said in the meeting with the religious and community leaders in Jayapura on Monday (23/2/2015).
He said the local police’s report said some residents reported about the shooting but when the police came to their addresses for questioning, they had moved. In addition, among 43 witnesses who already been questioned, none of them precisely knew about the involvement of police  in the incident.
“The Police are really facing difficulty to uncover this case. Moreover, autopsies on dead victims were not allowed (by their families),” he said.
He said the perpetrators could be the rebel group of Leo Yogi who mingled with hundreds of protesters and run away after the shooting.
In addition to that allegation, Mende said the police officers could be involved in the shooting but the lack of evidence and witness made this case difficult to reveal.
The shooting incident that killed four civilians in Enarotali on 8 December 2014 was trigged by the traffic problems, which followed with the attack on the local Military Command and Police offices. Four death victims are Yulian Yeimo, Simon Degei, Alpius Gogai and Alpius Youw. They were buried near the local Military Command office. (*/rom)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------

3) Boy Eluay: Let Theys Eluay Be Martyr for Special Autonomy

Sentani, Jubi – The family of Theys Eluay confirmed their objection to the National Right Human Commission’s plan to revive the investigation into the Papuan charismatic figure.
“We, the children and family, have never been told about this plan. If it was actually to come, please tell us,”  Eluay’s older son, Boy Eluay, said in Sentani on Monday (23//2/2015).
“What is it about?” he asked.
For him, his father Theys Eluay was a great Papuan leader. His death deprived Papuans of a figure who could speak for their aspirations.
He was also especially regarded as a great leader for people in Tanah Tabi (Tabi Customary Area).
“In particular, as Sentani people and part of Eluay Family, I lost the house’s pillar. As the older son, I should say to those who want to investigate my father’s death for not taking my father’s name like a flagpole,” he said.
He further said it’s enough to let only Theys Eluay becoming a martyr for the Special Autonomy in Papua.
“Someone else took benefit on the Special Autonomy, while we just stay and keep asking and asking, what did this country offer to the children of a great leader in this land?” he said.
Meanwhile at the same place, Eluay’s other son Yanto Eluay said in the Sentani culture, a death in a family has a price.
“My father’s death is for example. As a son in this house, I must pay a penalty to my father’s uncles.  This simple thing has not got attention from the government, and now they talked about the investigation of my father’s death?” Yanto Eluay said.(Engelberth Wally/rom)
 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

4) Owner of Six Firearms Still Unidentified

Jayapura, Jubi – Police are still trying to find out the owners of six home-made firearms that were seized at Sea Port Area (MPA) of Jayapura city a few days ago.
Papua police spokesman Commissioner Patrige Renwarin said police had difficulty identifiying the owners of six firearms. The port laborer who was carrying a gray suitcase also remains unidentified.
“There has been no progress and still in investigation process. The port laborer who carried the bag has not been identified. Our police member who called the owner of the bag did not memorized the face of the person. At that time, the port laborer left the bag and did not come back, ” Renwarin said on Saturday (02/21/2015).
According to him, if you see its specifications, it is not worth selling. The weapon is allegedly from Ambon riots. Probably it is not for sale but it will be used personally. If it is sold, it would be very cheap.
He said the case will be handled by Jayapura city police. Jayapura port laborers is also planned to be managed.
“Port laborers will be organized as possible. During this time they can change their uniform easily. For example,other people could wear the owners of clothes that are numbered, “he said.
On Tuesday (16/02/2015), Sea Port Police secured a suitcase allegedly belonged to a passenger of KM. Dorolonda. When opened, there were five home- made short barrel firearms, and one long barrel firearm. Police also found two rounds of SSI ammunition, and two rounded package that kind of explosive contents.
Inspector General (Pol) Tito Karnavian when served Papua police chief once said, the firearms smuggled into Papua probably derived from Tobelo, North Maluku, Papua New Guinea and from South Philippines. However, the smugglers are unrelated to international smuggling channels. (Arjuna Pademme/ Tina)
------------------------------------------------------------

Amnesty International Report 2014/15-Indonesia

$
0
0

Amnesty International Report 2014/15

Full report

https://www.amnesty.org/en/annual-report-201415/

-------------------------------------------------

Indonesia country report

https://www.amnesty.org/countries/asia-and-the-pacific/indonesia/report-indonesia/

Amnesty International Report 2014/15


Republic of Indonesia
Head of state and government: Joko Widodo (replaced Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono in October)
Security forces faced persistent allegations of human rights violations, including torture and other ill-treatment. Political activists from the Papua region and Maluku province continued to be arrested and imprisoned for their peaceful political expression and at least 60 prisoners of conscience remained imprisoned. Intimidation and attacks against religious minorities continued. A new Islamic Criminal Code by-law in Aceh province, passed in September, increased offences punishable by caning. There was a lack of progress in ensuring truth, justice and reparations for victims of past human rights violations. No executions were reported.

Background
Joko Widodo was inaugurated in October as the new President; he had made pledges during his election campaign to address serious past human rights abuses, protect freedom of religion, reform the police and open up access to the Papua region.1 On 30 April and 1 May, the UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights reviewed Indonesia’s initial report. In June the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child reviewed Indonesia’s third and fourth periodic reports.


Police and security forces
Reports continued of serious human rights violations by the police and military, including unlawful killings, unnecessary or excessive use of force, torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, and enforced disappearance.
In February, seven people were tortured or otherwise ill-treated during arrest and interrogation after police and military personnel raided a gathering organized by the armed Papuan pro-independence National Liberation Army in Sasawa village, Yapen Islands district, Papua province. Security officers chained the men’s hands together and beat and kicked them. They were forced to crawl around the village as the beatings continued and at least two men alleged that they were given electric shocks by the police. According to their lawyers, none of the men were involved or had links with the armed pro-independence struggle. They were each charged with rebellion, convicted and sentenced to three and a half years’ imprisonment in November by the Sorong District Court. No independent investigation into the incident had begun by the end of the year.
In March, eight men from the Suku Anak Dalam Indigenous community of Bungku village, Batanghari district, Jambi province, were tortured or otherwise ill-treated after protesting against the operation of a palm oil company near their village. Puji Hartono died from his injuries after his hands were tied behind his back with a rope and he was beaten by military personnel and company security guards. Titus Simanjuntak was stripped and beaten by military personnel and forced to lick his blood stains on the floor while being stepped on. Police officers watched as the abuses took place. In August, the Palembang military court convicted six military personnel of ill-treatment and sentenced them to three months’ imprisonment. At the end of the year, no one was known to have been held accountable for the killing of Puji Hartono.
In October, six military personnel were convicted by a military court in Medan of the abduction and ill-treatment of Dedek Khairudin and sentenced to between 14 and 17 months’ imprisonment. Dedek Khairudin was subjected to enforced disappearance in November 2013 after being detained by a military intelligence officer from the Army Resort Military Command (Korem 011/LW) and at least eight marines from Pangkalan Brandan region in North Sumatra province. His whereabouts remained unclarified at the end of the year.
In December, at least four men were killed and over a dozen injured when security forces, both police and military, allegedly opened fire on a crowd that was protesting at the Karel Gobai field near the Paniai District Military Command in Papua province. The crowd was protesting against soldiers from the Special Team Battalion 753 who had allegedly beaten a child from Ipakije village. No one had been held accountable for the attack by the end of the year.

Freedom of expression
Cases continued to be documented of the arrest and detention of peaceful political activists, particularly in areas with a history of pro-independence movements such as Papua and Maluku.
On 25 April, 10 political activists from Maluku province were arrested by police for planning to commemorate the anniversary of the Republic of South Maluku (RMS) movement’s declaration of independence and carrying “Benang Raja” flags – a prohibited symbol of the movement. Nine of them were subsequently charged with “rebellion” under Articles 106 and 110 of the Criminal Code (crimes against the security of the state). Their trial began in September and had not been completed by the end of the year.
Two French journalists were arrested on 6 August in Wamena, Papua province, after making a documentary on the separatist movement in the Papuan region. In October, they were convicted by the Jayapura District Court of immigration violations and sentenced to four months’ imprisonment. Areki Wanimbo, Head of the Lani Besar Tribal Council (Dewan Adat) who had met the two journalists, was also arrested by police on the same day and accused of supporting separatist activities. He was later charged with “rebellion” and was awaiting trial at the end of the year.
At least nine people remained detained or imprisoned under blasphemy laws solely for their religious views or the manifestation of their beliefs, or for the lawful exercise of their right to freedom of expression.2
In June, Abraham Sujoko was convicted by the Dompu District Court in West Nusa Tenggara province for “defamation of religion” under Article 27(3) of the Information and Electronic Transaction Law. He was sentenced to two years’ imprisonment and a fine of 3,500,000 rupiah (US$288). Abraham Sujoko had posted a video of himself on YouTube saying that the Ka’bah (an Islamic holy shrine in Mecca) was a “mere stone idol”, and had urged Muslims not to face it while praying.

Freedom of religion
Harassment, intimidation and attacks against religious minorities persisted, fuelled by discriminatory laws and regulations at both national and local levels.
In May, the Bekasi city authority issued a decree to close the Al-Misbah Ahmadiyya mosque in Bekasi, West Java province, referring to a 2008 Joint Ministerial Decree forbidding the Ahmadiyya community from promoting their activities and spreading their religious teachings. The Bekasi local government police then locked and sealed the mosque. On 26 June, the local government in Ciamis district, West Java province, closed down the Nur Khilafat Ahmadiyya mosque, citing the need to “maintain religious harmony” and to stop the spread of a “deviant interpretation of Islamic teaching”. Days before, hundreds of supporters of hardline Islamist groups had protested outside the office of the local district chief demanding the closure of the mosque. In October, the local government in Depok district, West Java, closed down the Al-Hidayah Ahmadiyya mosque to prevent “social disharmony”.
By the end of the year, a displaced Shi’a community from Sampang, East Java, who were attacked and evicted by an anti-Shi’a mob in 2012, remained in temporary accommodation in Sidoarjo and prevented from returning to their homes. The authorities failed to provide remedies for a displaced Ahmadiyya community in Lombok, West Nusa Tenggara, forcibly evicted by a mob from their homes in 2006.
Concerns about the “forced relocation of religious minorities, particularly Shi’a and Ahmadiyya communities, which were instigated by mobs and based on religious incitement” were raised by the UN Special Rapporteur on adequate housing in March. In May, the UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights raised concerns about the situation of several groups, including displaced religious communities, which suffered “multiple discriminations”.
In November, the newly elected Minister of Religious Affairs and the Minister of Home Affairs both stated that the government would make the protection of minority rights one of its priorities.

Impunity
Victims of past human rights violations and abuses continued to demand justice, truth and reparation for crimes under international law which occurred under the rule of former President Suharto (1965-1998) and during the subsequent reformasi period. These included unlawful killings, rape and other crimes of sexual violence, enforced disappearances, and torture and other ill-treatment. No progress was reported on numerous cases of alleged gross violations of human rights that were submitted by the National Human Rights Commission (Komnas HAM) to the Attorney General’s office after a preliminary pro-justicia inquiry was conducted by the Commission.
Former President Yudhoyono failed to act on certain recommendations by Parliament from 2009: to bring to justice those involved in the enforced disappearance of 13 pro-democracy activists in 1997 and 1998, to conduct an immediate search for activists who had disappeared, and to provide rehabilitation and compensation to their families.
By the end of the year, Komnas HAM had completed only two out of five pro-justicia inquiries into “gross human rights violations” during the Aceh conflict (1989-2005). These included the 1999 Simpang KKA incident in North Aceh when the military shot dead 21 protesters, and the Jamboe Keupok case in South Aceh where four people were shot dead and 12 burned alive by soldiers in May 2003.
An Aceh Truth and Reconciliation by-law (qanun) passed in December 2013 was not implemented. No progress was reported on a new law on a national Truth and Reconciliation Commission.
More than 10 years after the murder of prominent human rights defender Munir Said Thalib, the authorities had failed to bring all the perpetrators to justice.
The government failed to implement recommendations made by the bilateral Indonesia-Timor-Leste Commission of Truth and Friendship, in particular to establish a commission for disappeared persons tasked with identifying the whereabouts of all children from Timor-Leste who were separated from their parents around the 1999 independence referendum.

Cruel, inhuman or degrading punishment
At least 76 people were caned in Aceh for Shari’a offences including gambling, drinking alcohol and adultery during the year. In September, the Aceh parliament passed a new by-law, the Islamic Criminal Code, which expanded the use of caning as punishment to other “crimes”, including same-sex sexual relations and intimacy between unmarried couples. There were concerns that the definition and evidentiary procedures related to the offence of rape and sexual abuse in the by-law did not meet international human rights standards. The Aceh Islamic Criminal Code applied to Muslims in Aceh province. Non-Muslims could also be convicted under the by-law of offences not currently covered by the Indonesian Criminal Code.

Women’s rights
By the end of the year, the House of Representatives had yet to pass a Domestic Worker Protection Bill, leaving millions of domestic workers, the majority of them women and girls, vulnerable to economic exploitation and human rights abuses.

Sexual and reproductive rights
In February the Ministry of Health issued a new regulation withdrawing a 2010 regulation authorizing certain medical practitioners, such as doctors, midwives and nurses, to conduct “female circumcision”. By the end of the year, the government had yet to pass specific legislation prohibiting female genital mutilation.
Government Regulation No. 61/2014 on Reproductive Health, an implementing regulation to the 2009 Health Law, was issued in July 2014, restricting to 40 days the time period for rape survivors to access legal abortion. It was feared that this shortened timeframe would prevent many rape survivors from being able to access safe legal abortion.

Death penalty
No executions were reported. At least two death sentences were handed down during the year and at least 140 people remained under sentence of death.
  1. Indonesia: Setting the agenda – human rights priorities for the new government (ASA 21/011/2014)www.amnesty.org/en/library/info/ASA21/011/2014/en
  2. Prosecuting beliefs: Indonesia’s blasphemy laws (ASA 21/018/2014) www.amnesty.org/en/library/info/ASA21/018/2014/en

1) Foreign minister to visit Pacific countries to strengthen Indonesia-Pacific relations

$
0
0
2) South Africa: West Papua's "Cry for Help, Cry for Freedom"
3) Papua Governor Proposes Task Force to Stop Illegal Logging
 4) Students Criticize Regent Wetipo’s Statement on Mobile Brigade Headquarters
5) Otsus Arrangement Not Included in Regional Budget 20156) Gwijangge: Councilors Should Unite to Fight for 14 Seats in Parliament

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

http://www.antaranews.com/en/news/97905/foreign-minister-to-visit-pacific-countries-to-strengthen-indonesia-pacific-relations

1) Foreign minister to visit Pacific countries to strengthen Indonesia-Pacific relations

Kamis, 26 Februari 2015 17:49 WIB | 548 Views
Jakarta (ANTARA News) - Foreign Affairs Minister Retno Marsudi will visit three Pacific countries, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, and Fiji, with the mission to strengthen relations between Indonesia and the Pacific nations.

Minister Marsudi will visit Papua New Guinea on Feb. 26-28, Solomon Island on Feb. 28, and Fiji on March 1. 

Indonesia is keen to strengthen its relations with the Pacific nations, particularly in the areas of economy and connectivity, Foreign Affairs Ministrys spokesman, Arrmanatha Nasir, stated during a press briefing here on Thursday.

"It will be the second working visit of Minister Marsudi after visiting Malaysia as the ASEAN chairman. This implies that Indonesia is serious about increasing cooperation with the Pacific countries as mentioned by the government in the annual press statement," Nasir explained.

Even though economic cooperation between Indonesia and Pacific was still relatively insignificant, but it has shown a steady increase in the last few years and has the potential to be developed further, Nasir noted.

Minister Marsudi also aims to encourage private sector companies in Indonesia and Pacific countries to increase trade and investment, as well as connectivity.

"It cannot be denied that Indonesia is a gateway for Pacific countries to the ASEAN and Asian region, hence the connectivity must be developed," Nasir remarked.

Nasir added that during Indonesias chairmanship of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC), the issue of connectivity was also raised, and now, Indonesia is keen to enhance it.

In 2013, Indonesia committed to donate US$20 million to the Pacific countries to be used in various fields.

"The ministers visit to the Pacific countries is also aimed to gain a better understanding about what they need," Nasir noted.

After visiting the three Pacific countries, Minister Marsudi will depart to New Zealand to attend the 7th Joint Ministerial Commission in Auckland, on March 2-3, 2015.
(T.A060/A/KR-BSR/A014)

--------------------------------------------------------------------

http://allafrica.com/stories/201502260427.html

2) South Africa: West Papua's "Cry for Help, Cry for Freedom"

By Joshua Maserow

On 17 February Equal Education hosted a talk by Benny Wenda of the Free West Papua Campaign at the Wits School of Education. He is in South Africa to spread awareness about the West Papuan fight against Indonesian colonialism and gross human rights abuses of the West Papuan people. He said he was also here to "learn how [South African] leaders fought against apartheid, for justice and against [racial] discrimination."
Doron Isaacs, deputy general secretary of Equal Education opened the proceedings - which were attended my Wits students, members of the PAC and Equal Education staff and members - remarking that EE has a tradition of supporting campaigns, irrespective of locality, which fight oppression under the banner of social justice. He stated that national borders, which are largely constructs of human history, although separating us geographically do not separate us as human beings. He hoped that 'in a small way we can assist in the struggle' to free West Papua from the internecine oppression of Indonesia.
Wenda is a political exile residing in the UK. He escaped prison, and the sustained threat made on his life by the oppressive forces of the occupying Indonesian militia in his native West Papua (three attempts were made on his life while in prison by Indonesian military men). He eventually broke through a ventilation shaft and jumped the wall of the prison in which he was held. After a two week journey on foot through the dense West Papuan forests, he acquired a fake passport and escaped to the UK where he helped form the Free West Papua Campaign and International Parliamentarians for West Papua (IPWP)
He is a founder and spokesperson for the Free West Papua Campaign, founded in 2004, which strives 'to give the people of West Papua the freedom to choose their own destiny through a fair and transparent referendum - a freedom they have always been denied'. According to Wenda there is a total ban on media coverage of West Papuan life: 'On every corner there is a military man holding a gun', preventing local people from documenting, and disseminating to the rest of the world, the atrocities committed on their friends and family.
Wenda, the chief of the largest West Papuan tribe - the Lanu tribe - said that he was honoured to be in South Africa among young people who have political freedom, freedom from discrimination based on race, and access to education - fundamental rights which the children of West Papua are denied. 'We never learned the map of the world, only the map of West Papua up to Indonesia... .I never learned about my mountains, my rivers... .they [Indonesian authorities] the names of everything', he said. West Papuan culture and identity was brutally suppressed and wrested away from its people.
He began his talk with a song, called the 'cry song' which is about West Papuan 'land, culture, identity and their way of life'. The song has been banned in West Papua where raising the national flag, 'morning star', carries with it a 15 year jail sentence. Regaled in traditional attire of the Lanu tribe he ended the final notes of the song for freedom by saying I am 'fighting for who I am and who we are... .This is who I am'.
According to Wenda, West Papuans are regularly abused (he told the story of a 50 year old man who had his genitals burnt by the Indonesian militia), murdered (his uncle was buried alive) and raped by the Indonesian colonial forces. They are treated like animals because they are black, he said. He estimates that close to 500,000 West Papuans have been murdered by the Indonesian military since the beginning of their occupation. Few people around the world know about this "secret genocide".
He recounted a personal story of dehumanisation in which, while a student new to high school, a girl spat in his face on two consecutive days because "[his] skin was black". He eventually went to university and studied politics "to fight back".
West Papua, situated in the Western half of the Island of New Guinea, was a former colony of the Dutch East Indies but also saw waves of British and German Colonial rule until it was annexed by a newly independent Indonesia in 1963 under the UN sanctioned New York agreement.
According to Wenda, under the increasing threat of Indonesia siding with the Soviet Union during Cold War, the US and UN acceded to Indonesia's desire to take West Papua into its control. Indonesia effectively told the US and UN, "if you don't give West Papua to us we will side with the Soviets in the Cold War."
--------------------------------------------------------------------

3) Papua Governor Proposes Task Force to Stop Illegal Logging

Jayapura, Jubi – Papua Governor Lukas Enembe called for a task force to combat illegal logging in the easternmost province of Indonesia.
“Actually this problem of illegal logging has occurred for several years ago and it is massive, ” Enembe told reporters in Jayapura, Papua on Monday (02/23).
He said illegal logging is so rampant that every night containers containing wood board the ship.
“Everyone knows it, but no one dares to fight it,” he said.
For the problem of illegal logging, the officials who made the report also violated it, so it is impossible for them to crack down this practice.
“This country is chaos. Many regulations are made, but can not be enforced well. It is regrettable,” Enembe added.
Therefore, he urged the Forestry Agency and related parties to immediately stop the perpetrators of illegal logging practices in the forests of Papua.
“If illegal fishing, the ship can be sunk, yes illegal logging vessels should also be scuttled and car transporters should be burned. It is to be established by the Minister of Forestry,” he hoped. (Alexander Loen/Tina)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

4) Students Criticize Regent Wetipo’s Statement on Mobile Brigade Headquarters

Jayapura, Jubi – Jayawijaya students have criticized Regent Wempi Wetipo for supporting the establishment of a Mobile Brigade police headquarters in his region.
“We are the students and Papuan people in Jayawijaya Regency regretted the Jayawijaya Regent’s statement saying the Mobile Brigade Headquarters will be and must be established in Wamena. We thought his statement did not totally make sense,” the student activist Soleman Itlay told Jubi on Tuesday (24/2/2015) in Jayapura.
According to him, the regent’s statement about the Mobile Brigade Headquarter was ran counter to people’s aspirations.
Even the landowners have rejected it.
“Do not make any excuses. If drunken people or crimes are behind the reason, the local police could help. What do they do if we cannot optimize their role? Or there is something behind it?” Itlay said.
The regent shouldn’t take a policy to smooth his own interest, but on the other hand he must embracing all related stakeholders to sit and discuss together. “If he didn’t do, it would potentially raise a conflict of clans in Wamena. At the end, people will get suffered. Because people in Wamena has a traumatic experiences in the past and it still continues under their conscience until now,” Itlay said.
Meanwhile, the Jayawijaya Regent Wempi Wetipo told reporters at his office on Monday (23/2/2015) that not a single person could stop the government’s plan on Mobile Brigade Headquarter in Jayawijaya Regency.
“So what we have discussed is for the public interest not mine. I don’t have any interest, but I speak for the sake of people’s secure. We saw snatchers acted everywhere; drunken people walk on the street. During this time the government just acted like a fire fighter, and I don’t want to do this anymore,” Wetipo said.
When asked about the Jayawijaya people who protested to reject the Mobile Brigade Headquarter, he questioned who are they? Because he had a guarantee from the landowners who are ready to handover their land.
“Who are they and which one? If they said they were Jayawijaya people, so they aren’t. They are not Jayawijaya people. I am Baliem native; so I knew the landowners. I didn’t come from outside of Papua to be appointed as regent in here. I am Baliem native. I was born in Baliem and know who the landowners are,” he said.
“I talked with the landowners and they agreed to handover their land, so why are they now talking about a rejection. If it is said about the political interest, I don’t do politic. I only care about the development,” he said. (Arnold Belau/rom)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------

5) Otsus Arrangement Not Included in Regional Budget 2015

Jayapura, Jubi – The head of Papua’s Financial and Regional Asset Management, Benyamin Arisoy, said the government did not allocate a budget for the New Special Autonomy Law (Otsus) preparations for 2015.
“I want to clarify there is no budget allocated for the New Special Autonomy Law preparation in the Regional Budget Plan 2015. But I admit it was allocated in 2014,” Arisoy told reporters in Jayapura on Tuesday (24/2/2015).
He said Papua Governor Lukas Enembe, Parliament’s members and related government officials have left for Jakarta using the office travel budget instead of Regional Budget.
The statement was made in response to remarks to the contrary by Papuan councillor Yan Mendenas.
“So Mr. Mandenas’ assumption was wrong. Instead as councilor, he should know about it,” he said.
Although he accepted Mandenas’ point of view as positive critic for the government to improve its service; however he expected it should be referred to accurate information to avoid the public opinion misleading.
But speaking about the Special Autonomy that has been implemented for 12 years in Papua, he said both former administration and parliament had no effort to establish a regulation in concerning to the Special Autonomy fund management.
“But in the early period of Governor Lukas Enembe and Vice Governor Klemen Tinal’s administration, the government has just thought and taken action to create a regional regulation to manage the special autonomy fund,” he said.
According to him, the Governor’s policy to distribute 80 percent of fund to each regency/municipality started since 2014 and this year would be the second year. Related to the evaluation of Special Autonomy in the recent administration era, we need 2 or two years ahead to find out whether it has been well implemented of gave benefits to the community.
“With 80 percent allocation for local governments, I hope we could take it as collective responsibility. Thus this fund could certainly use to improve the community welfare in Papua,” he said.
On this occasion, he also said during his assignment as government official, he saw the governor always works at his office or regularly visit the regions. “Even he stays at the office till night. It’s outstanding. As his staff, I am very proud of him. So, people’s thinking about he is rarely at the office was not true. Because if he traveled to other regions, it’s for official business,” he said.
Earlier, the Papua Governor Lukas Enembe said the distribution of 80 percent of Special Autonomy Fund has just started since 2014 and currently steps to the second year. (Alexander Loen/rom)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

6) Gwijangge: Councilors Should Unite to Fight for 14 Seats in Parliament

Jayapura, Jubi – Papuan Legislative Council member Emus Gwijangge said it was a mistake if councillors objected to 14 seats for indigenous Papuan representatives through appointment.
The statement was in response to remarks by Hanura faction chairman Yan Permenas Mandenas objecting the appointments.
Gwijangge said it should be understood that the 14 seats are regulated in the Papua Special Autonomy Law 2001 and must be implemented.
“Do not act as if there was a contradicting atmosphere in the parliament. Papuan people want the 14 seats to be filled in the parliament and we are fighting for it now. If it’s about personal interest, please do not talk,” Gwijangge said on Tuesday (24/2/2015).
According to him, the Papua’s legislators should be together to fight for it for the sake of Papuans. Furthermore, he said due to 14 seats, many Papuans have become victims. He further said the differences at the parliament are common in the political dynamic, however it shouldn’t disturb the situation because the Special Regional Regulation on 14 Seats has been authorized and now in the stage of socialization.
“His fraction accepted this in last period. And he was also the Legislative Body member. So why did he refuse it now? Who’s actually behind him? We are Papuans,” he said.
While other Papua’s Councilor Nioluen Kotouki similarly asked why did a councilor said his objection now after the Special Regional Regulation on 14 seats has launched.
“What’s a matter with this? Or he did it for attention? People already understood about the 14 seats. Its mechanism is running. We asked to all parties for not disturbing the situation. On the other hand, we should fight together to deliver it in the parliament. It’s about the people,” he said. (Arjuna Pademme/rom)
------------------------------------------------------------




1) Indonesia-PNG foreign ministers bar reporter questions on West Papua

$
0
0
3) Indonesia's Foreign Minister to Visit Solomons
4) Papua Governor Urges Police to Solve Shooting Case in Paniai
5) Anti-graft body detains former Papua governor
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------


1) Indonesia-PNG foreign ministers bar reporter questions on West Papua
Updated 27 February 2015, 17:55 AEDT
Indonesia's foreign minister Retno Marsudi has arrived in Papua New Guinea at the start of a three-country tour through the Pacific, saying the aim of the trip is to strengthen relations with PNG, Solomon Islands and Fiji.
PNG's foreign affairs minister Rimbink Pato released a statement before a media conference this afternoon saying bilateral, regional and international issues will be discussed.
But there was no mention of the human rights abuses in the Indonesian province of West Papua which Prime Minister Peter O'Neill recently said he would start speaking out about.
The two foreign ministers have just wrapped up their press conference in Port Moresby, and our reporter there says journalists were not allowed to ask about rights abuses across their shared border.
Presenter: Bruce Hill
Speaker: Rolland Banaba, news editor from Yumi FM

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Posted by Niugini Nius

Published On:February 27, 2015
The Minister for Foreign Affairs Rimbink Pato told a press conference in Port Moresby in the presence of his Indonesian Foreign Affairs counterpart Her Excellency Mrs Retno Marsudi that the level of corporation between Indonesia and PNG was wide and varied and both countries stood firm to increase its bilateral relations.
Both Ministers however were tight lipped on the human rights issues affecting West Papuans and even didn’t allow for questions from the media.
At the request of the media, Minister Pato spared a few minutes after the conference to answer to questions from the media in the absence of the Indonesian leader.
In his response to the issues affecting West Papuans, he said Mrs Marsudi had extensive discussions on the issue with the Prime Minister Peter O’Neill during her breakfast meeting this morning both governments agreed to take comprehensive actions to address the plight of the our Melanesia brothers.
“Political commitment is needed to guide the West Papuan issue to end the violence once and for all,” Mr. Pato concluded.
--------------------------------------------------------------
Friday, 27 February 2015 7:53 AM

3) Indonesia's Foreign Minister to Visit Solomons

Indonesia’s Foreign Minister Honorable Retno l. P. Marsudi will make a one-day visit to Solomon Islands on Saturday 28 February.


The visit is part of Minister Marsudi’s pacific tour which includes stopovers in Papua New Guinea and Fiji.
During her visit, Minister Marsudi will hold bilateral talks with Solomon Islands Minister of Foreign Affairs and External Trade Hon. Milner Tozaka.
The Indonesian Minister is also scheduled to meet Deputy Prime Minister Hon Douglas Ete at midday on Saturday.
He leaves Solomon Islands for Fiji on Saturday afternoon.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

http://tabloidjubi.com/en/?p=3914


4) Papua Governor Urges Police to Solve Shooting Case in Paniai

Jayapura, Jubi – Governor of Papua Lukas Enembe urged law enforcers to resolve the Paniai shooting incident as soon as possible.
“It is a demand from the public. So, I urge the police to immediately determine who the real suspects are. We hope the police will open their investigation results to the public,” Enembe told reporters in Jayapura, Papua on Tuesday (24/02).
Related to President Joko Widodo’s instruction to form an investigation team, Enembe claimed he did not know about the plan.
“There has been no report and clarity about it. As, this case has been exposed through the media, it must solve completely,” he said.
He considered, the accumulation of various problems that occur in Papua will lead to disappointment and distrust against the government.
Therefore, the disclosure of the case must be published to the public as they always come to ask.
“We ask that the law enforcement officers to announce who the suspects if they had identified. So, people do not keep asking,” he added.
Earlier, dozens of witnesses and victims in the case of persecution and shootings in Enarotali, Paniai, Papua met the team of the Commission on Human Rights (Komnas HAM) who arrived in Enarotali last Tuesday (2/17).
A commissioner of HAM, Manager Nasution said the investigation process is very important, so that the witnesses and survivors have an opportunity to provide the data and information required.
“Description of witnesses and victims is crucial in the process of this investigation,” he told the Jubi in Enarotali, Friday afternoon (20/2). (Alexander Loen/ Tina)

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

5) Anti-graft body detains former Papua governor

Jumat, 27 Februari 2015 23:24 WIB | 407 Views

Jakarta (ANTARA News) - The Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) has detained three suspects, including former governor of Papua province, over an alleged case of corruption related to power projects in Mamberamo River and Erumka in the 2009-2010 fiscal year.

"BS (Barnabas Suebu) was held at the detention center in East Jakarta for the first 20 days," KPKs head of publication and news report, Priharsa Nugraha, said here on Friday.

Suebu admitted to have been cooperative.

"I have always respected the legal process, which started when I was named as a suspect seven months ago. I will remain cooperative and will continue to respect the ongoing process, considering it is the first step in a long journey to find legal violations. It is the path to finding the truth, to justice and to legal certainty," he remarked after being questioned at the KPK building.

The other suspects detained were President Director of PT Konsultatsi Pembangunan Irian Jaya (PT KPIJ) Lamusi Didi (LD) and head of the mining and energy service of Papua province, Jannes Johan Karubaha (JJB).

"LD was held at Cipinang in East Jakarta for the first 20 days," Nugraha affirmed, adding, "JJB was held at the Guntur KPK detention center in East Jakarta."

The power projects were worth some Rp56 billion, and the estimated losses that the state incurred over the case amounted to Rp36 billion.

The anti-graft body believes that PT KPIJ marked up the price of the projects because of its connection with Barnabas.

Corrupt practices were related to the procurement of "Detailing Engineering Design."(*)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


-

1) Investment board sets high investment target for Papua, West Papua

$
0
0
2) Papua Projects Get Needed Push
3) DPRP Commission Finds 16 Tons of Illegal Plywood
4) Military Ready to Build West Papua Regional Military Command Headquarters, says Army Chief
5) Jayawijaya Government to Spend Rp 34 Billion to Build Potikelek Market
6) Freeport Allocates Rp 28.7 Trillion to Build Smelter

7) Jayawijaya Students Dig in Their Heels over Mobile Brigade Headquarters
------------------------------------------------------------

http://www.antaranews.com/en/news/97931/investment-board-sets-high-investment-target-for-papua-west-papua

1) Investment board sets high investment target for Papua, West Papua

Minggu, 1 Maret 2015 00:17 WIB | 401 Views
Jakarta (ANTARA News) - The Investment Coordinating Board (BKPM) sets a high investment target of Rp265 trillion in Papua and West Papua for the next five years.

The target rose from the total investment of Rp67 trillion in the countrys most backward regions in the previous five years ending in 2014, head of BKPM Franky Sibaranai said here on Saturday.

"I am optimistic the target would be achieved as investment plans in Papua and West Papua are high," Franky said.

Based on BKPMs record in the period of 2010-2014, only 40 percent of investment plans were implemented in the two provinces.

"That means Rp98.8 trillion worth of investments were nor implemented because of a number of factors," he said.

He said BKPM would facilitate the investment plans, adding a number of new investments and expansion plans have been proposed.

Under the middle term development plan of 2015-2019, the government sets economic growth target at 14.1 percent in 2015 and 17.7 percent in 2019 in Papua, he said.

Meanwhile, poverty rate in the province is to be cut to 30.9 percent in 2015 and to 21.5 percent in 2019, and unemployment rate to be slashed from 3.4 percent in 2015 to 2.8 percent in 2019.

In West Papua, economic growth target is set at 7.9 percent in 2015 and 16.9 percent in 2019, the poverty rate is to be cut to 25.6 percent in 2015 and to 17.4 percent in 2019; and unemployment rate from 5.1 percent in 2015 to 4.1 percent in 2019.

"BKPM has calculated that in order to achieve the middle term development plan target in Papua, investment has to be increased to 7.4 percent of the national target of Rp3,500 trillion for 2015-2019," he said.

He said in 2015, the investment target in the two provinces is set at Rp33.2 trillion.

He said in order to achieve the target, BKPM would launch an investment promotion for Papua and West Papua starting in June.

BKPM already formed a team to accompany investors wanting to invest in Papua and West Papua, he said.

"We will work together with the regional administrations including district administrations to cope with possible hurdles hampering investment. At least we will encourage realization of plan to build four economic zones in Papua and West Papua including in Merauke, Sorong, Teluk Bintuni and Raja Ampat," he said.

He said the four areas have potential sectors to be developed.

The Merauke economic zone is potential for development of agricultural sector and farm based processing industry, Sorong economic zone is potential for development of maritime sector and processing industry, Teluk Bintuni is potential for development of smelter and petrochemical industry and Raja Ampat economic zone is potential for tourism industry, he said.(*)
-----------------------------------------------------------





http://thejakartaglobe.beritasatu.com/business/papua-projects-get-needed-push/

2) Papua Projects Get Needed Push

A manta ray swims in the waters of Raja Ampat in eastern Indonesia's remote Papua province. (AFP Photo)
Jakarta. Indonesia’s Investment Coordinating Board, or BKPM, has vowed to accelerate land clearing and power generation permits to support nine investment projects worth a combined $1.3 billion in Papua’s Special Economic Zones.
The projects — consisting of fishery, plantation and petrochemical developments in Merauke, Sorong, Teluk Bintuni and Raja Ampat — have been on hold for several years, due to land clearing issues and a lack power supply, Franky Sibarani, the BKPM chairman, said on Friday.

“One of the requirements to develop the Special Economic Zones is the availability of investors who are ready to place their investment,” he said in a statement in Jakarta.
“Currently the four Special Zones in Papua and West Papua have potential investors who have planned to invest but are still hampered in realization.”
Franky said the Indonesian government had long identified Papua and West Papua provinces as a priority for development, meaning the government will direct investors to develop the area before investing in other parts of Indonesia.
Franky noted that five investors had shown serious interest in investing a total Rp 9.8 trillion ($754 million) in the plantation sector and Rp 2.4 trillion in the oleochemical sector in Papua between October 2014 and February this year.
Foreign investment in Papua and West Papua in 2014 amounted to $1.41 billion, lower than 2013’s $2.41 billion.

Investment flowed into the mining sector, agriculture, food industry, storage, telecomunications and energy.
Indonesia saw foreign direct investment across all sectors, except oil and gas and banking, rise 14 percent to Rp 307 trillion up from Rp 270.4 trillion a year earlier.
The BKPM expects FDI — which accounts for about two-thirds of last year’s total investment — to grow to Rp 320 trillion this year.
GlobeAsia


-----------------------------------------------------------

http://tabloidjubi.com/en/?p=3906

3) DPRP Commission Finds 16 Tons of Illegal Plywood

Jayapura, Jubi – Members of Commission IV of the Papua Legislative Council ( DPRP) have seen 16 tons of plywood confiscated by the Natural Resources Conservation Agency od Papua (BKSDA).
Chairman of Commission IV of DPRP, Boy Mark Dawir said the councillors conducted a snap inspection at BKSDA office on Tuesday morning (2/24).
“There are four plywood counters which is approximately 16 tons of plywood. We will then immediately report to the chairman of DPRP to follow up including to form the Working Committee (Panja) or Special Committee of forest management in Papua, ” Boy Dawir said on Tuesday (24/02/2015).
He said on DPRP chairman approval, the commission would form the committee and work immediately to tackle massive illegal logging in Papua including in Jayapura, Nabire, Paniai, Mamberamo Raya, Sarmi, and Merauke.
“Our authority is only on the issue of forest and mining. We also agree to push for a legal process to any one who back up on illegal logging,” he added.
He said he hoped all parties to keep the forests in Papua well and for any company who run timber business to obey the procedure and should not harm lives of indigenous peoples.
Chairman of Commission II of DPRP, Deerd Tabuni urged police to oversee illegal logging in Papua, especially in Keerom. He said, many trucks and containers transported timbers from Keerom to Jayapura port and it should be noted. And suspected. (Arjuna Pademme/Tina)
----------------------------------------------------------------------

4) Military Ready to Build West Papua Regional Military Command Headquarters, says Army Chief

Jayapura, Jubi/Antara – Army Chief General Gatot Nurmantyo said the Indonesian military is ready to build the West Military Regional Military Command Headquarter in Manokwari.
“Currently we are preparing the location to build the West Papua Regional Military Command Headquarters,” he said after giving a speech to the participants of KNPI 14th Congress in Jayapura on Wednesday (25/2). He said if the location was ready, the military will immediately build the headquarters.
When asked about the preparation progress, he told reporters to ask the question directly to the Cenderawasih Regional Military Commander Major General Fransen Siahaan who accompanied him at the time. And the Commander Siahaan answered that currently the location has been ready.
“The West Papua Regional Military Command Headquarter will be completed within 2015,” he said.
The Army Chief General Gatot Nurmantyo stayed in Jayapura for three days and he returned to Jakarta after giving speech.
The KNPI 14th Congress was opened by the Youth and Sport Minister Imam Nahrawi and would be held from 26 to 28 Februari 2015 in Jayapura. (*/Rom)
------------------------------------------------------------------

5) Jayawijaya Government to Spend Rp 34 Billion to Build Potikelek Market

Wamena, Jubi – Potikelek traditional market intended for Papuan was inaugurated by Jayawijaya regent Wempi Wetipo on Tuesday (24/02).
The aim to build the market is to protect and increase the economy of native Papuans.
Based on data from the Department of Industry and Trade, the market cost Rp. 34 billion to build and took four years to finish, Wetipo said.
“We spent Rp. 34 billion. There are still more concrete actions that we want to do for the people,” Wetipo told reporters.
The regent also would like to thank women traders who compete for economic development in Jayawijaya with people from outside Papua.
“Actually mama–mama have helped economy in Jayawijaya. Therefore, the Industry and Trade department will record them in order to provide capital to build a better economic future,” he added. (Islami/ Tina)
---------------------------------------------------------

6) Freeport Allocates Rp 28.7 Trillion to Build Smelter

Jakarta, Jubi/CNN Indonesia – PT Freeport Indonesia will allocate US$ 2.3 billion or 28.75 trillion rupiahs to build a smelter required by the Indonesian government.
“Freeport wants to finance the construction of smelter. It will become a legal entity in this project,” the Director General of Mining and Coal Department of Energy and Mineral Resources Ministry, R. Sukhyar in Jakarta on Tuesday (24/02/2015).
Sukhyar said Freeport will build a national copper smelter at Gresik, East Java by renting a land area of 80 hectares from PT. Petrokimia Gresik.
The US-based company signed a Memorandum of Understanding with PT. Petrokimia in last January. “We will ask Freeport to present it on Friday,” he said.
The national copper smelter will have a capacity to accommodate two tones of copper concentrates. Further Sukhyar explained it was part of the implementation of Mining and Coal Law No. 4/2009 in order to improve the value of national mineral commodities. In addition, it also will increase the production value of processing concentrates done by the PT. Smelting that previously able to accommodate 1.2 tones of copper concentrates.
“We also will build a smelter in Papua with a capacity of 900 thousand tones of copper concentrates,” he said.
About the agreement on the national copper smelter, four copper contracted companies namely PT Freeport Indonesia, PT Newmont Nusa Tenggara, PT Gorontalo Mineral and PT Kalimantan Surya Kencana agreed to sign the agreement since last year. With the certain financing agreement by Freeport, Sukhyar said the three other companies would supply the copper concentrates to the smelter.
“But we don’t have any information about how much concentrates would be supplied by the three companies,” he said. (*/Rom)
--------------------------------------------

7) Jayawijaya Students Dig in Their Heels over Mobile Brigade Headquarters

Jayapura, Jubi – Jayawijaya students reiterated their opposition to the government’s plan to build the Mobile Brigade police headquarters in Wamena, due to start next March.
“We reject the plan from the beginning. Until now we are consistent about,” Soleman Itlay, who represents students from the Jayawijaya Student Association (HMPJ) and the Papuan Youth and Student Solidarity.
“The regent’s statement to media about the landowners’ acceptance was not making sense. It’s not true. The reality is people in Jayawijaya’s 40 sub-districts have rejected the plan,” Itlay told reporters in Abepura on Wednesday (25/2).
The regent must stop driving people to accept something that is actually rejected by people, he said. “Because it looks like it only serves the interests of the political elites.”
“Please do not sacrifice the people. The elites must stop playing their awful politics. We recognize their strategy to split the province and create Wamena Municipality. We saw there is a political game played by local and provincial elites. So we asked them to stop,” a Wamena origin student Benyamin Lagowan said.
Meanwhile the HMPJ’s representative Alius Himan said,” From the beginning we have rejected the plan to build the Mobile Brigade Headquarter. We need to clarify that those who said acting on behalf of HPMJ were not our members. It was not true. The HMPJ never approved their action. They are the regent’s closest supporters,” Himan said.
Further a student activist Niko Seledak said those who acted on behalf of the tribal chiefs from several sub-districts and met with the Papua Police Headquarter to voice their support were actually doing it for fame and money. “They are not the tribal chiefs nor customary landowners. They just came for fame and money,” he said.
Further he said the Jayawijaya Regent should be aware that Wamena people are still experiencing a severe traumatic due to the military operations since 1977 to the present time. People still think that the military or police officers as bad guys. So the regent must understand what they have been though in Wamena. (Arnold Belau/Rom)
------------------------------

1) PNG-Indonesia Joint Press Statement

$
0
0
2) First Official Bilateral Meeting, Indonesia Confirmed Its Commitment to Solomon Island
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1) PNG-Indonesia Joint Press Statement
Friday, 27 February 2015


PNG-Indonesia Joint Press Statement on the Outcome of the Meeting Between the Foreign Affairs Ministers of Papua New Guinea and Indonesia

Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea,27th February 2015

  
1.The Foreign Minister of the Republic of Indonesia, H. E. Retno L. P. Marsudi, and the Foreign Minister of the Papua New Guinea, Hon. Rimbink Pato, had their first official bilateral meeting in Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea on 27 February 2015.
2.This was Minister Retno Masurdi's first visit to Papua New Guinea and among her first official bilateral visit since assuming office in October 2014. This reflects the importance and close bilateral relationship between Papua New Guinea and Indonesia, as well as Indonesia’s firm commitment to strengthen cooperation, relations and contribution to the development in the Pacific.
3.The two Ministers recognized the strategic importance of the special relationship between Papua New Guinea and Indonesia given the two Countries geographical location and Melanesian cultural background and heritage. They stressed the bilateral relationship between the two countries is based on mutual benefit and mutual respect on territorial integrity.
4.The meeting discussed ways and means to further strengthen cooperation between Papua New Guinea and Indonesia within the framework of the Comprehensive Partnership established in 2013. In this context, the Ministers also agreed to intensify efforts to realize the objectives set out in the 2013 Plan of Action for the Implementation of Comprehensive Partnership, particularly in the areas of economic cooperation, advancing connectivity and people-to-people contact, enhancing border management as well as strengthening cooperation in the areas of capacity building and technical assistance.
5.The two Ministers emphasized on the need to intensify efforts to increase trade, including in border market. While trade from 2009 – 2013 have grown at a rate of 18,73%, the Ministers underlined that there are still ample opportunities to be gain. To this end they will intensify efforts to encourage the private sector to undertake greater cross border trade and investment.
6.In the area of people-to-people contact, the two Ministers agreed to enhance cooperation in youth and sports, education, cultural linkages and among communities in border area. They also discussed efforts to increase cross border tourism and business through greater connectivity by among others enhancing air transport link, road infrastructure in the border area as well visa on arrival.
7.The two Ministers welcomed the planned official launching this year of the Indonesia-Papua New Guinea border plaque and the Border Development Agency/ BDA Office in the Skouw-Wutung border.
8.As part of the realization of Indonesia’s commitment to the US$ 20 million capacity building program for MSGs countries, both Ministers agreed that a technical team will meet this year to further discussed areas in which capacity building program can be directed so as to best contribute to the development of Papua New Guinea. The Foreign Minister of Indonesia also presented a scallop-shell processing machine and a module for the training of SMEs in making seashell-based jewelry to be conducted later this year in Papua New Guinea.
9.On regional issues, Minister Retno Marsudi reaffirm Indonesia’s commitment to support Papua New Guinea’s chairmanship in APEC in 2018, as endorsed by APEC Leaders’ Declaration in Beijing last year.
10.         The Minister of Foreign Affairs of Papua New Guinea agreed that as part of Indonesia’s greater engagement in Melanesian Spearhead Group (MSG), they will intensify communication on issues relating to the MSG. The two Ministers will promote regular consultation, contacts and exchange of visits among Indonesia and MSG Members. The Minister of Foreign Affair of Papua New Guinea also extended an invitation for the Minister for Foreign Affairs of Indonesia to attend the Pacific Islands Forum in 7-11 September 2015 in Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea.
11.         The Minister for Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Indonesia also paid a courtesy call to the Prime Minister of Papua New Guinea, Hon. Peter O’ Neill. The Prime Minister of Papua New Guinea and the Foreign Minister of Indonesia both agreed that over the past few decades, the bilateral relations of both countries have advanced to a sound degree of depth and maturity and that both Governments could now confidently enter into open and frank discussions on any issue, including those that are sensitive to both countries, without adversely impacting on that wholesome relationship of two very close neighboring countries.
12.         Both Leaders underscored the importance for both governments to open communication and reaching common understanding on developments of all bilateral issues in both countries. In this context the Prime Minister welcomed the proposal by Minister Retno Marsudi to intensify open communication between Papua New Guinea and Indonesia as two close neighbors through the establishment of a hotline between the two foreign Ministers.
13.         The Minister for Foreign Affairs of Indonesia conveyed to the Prime Minister of Papua New Guinea an invitation from the President of The Republic of Indonesia to attend the 60th Commemoration of Asian-African Conference and the 10th Anniversary of the New Asian-African Strategic Partnership in Jakarta and Bandung on 19-24 April 2015.
14.         The Minister for Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Indonesia expressed her gratitude for the warm welcome and generous hospitality extended to her and the delegation of Indonesia during their visit to Port Moresby.


 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

2) First Official Bilateral Meeting, Indonesia Confirmed Its Commitment to Solomon Island
Sunday, 01 March 2015

The Foreign Minister of the Republic of Indonesia, H. E. Retno L. P. Marsudi, and the Foreign Minister of Solomon Islands, Hon.Milner Tozaka MP, had their first official bilateral meeting in Honiara, Solomon Islands on 28 February 2015.

This was Minister Retno Masurdi's first visit to Solomon Island as part of her first official bilateral visit to the Pacific. Minister Retno Masurdi’s visit to Solomon Island underlines the importance Indonesia places of having a close bilateral relationship with Solomon Islands and reflects its firm commitment to strengthen cooperation, relations and contribution to the development in the Pacific.

The two Ministers recognized as two countries having Melanesian cultural background and heritage building a close bilateral relationship between based on mutual benefit and mutual respect on territorial integrity is of strategic importance.



The meeting discussed ways and means to further strengthen cooperation between Solomon Islands and Indonesia particularly in the area of economics and people-to-people contact particularly through capacity building and technical assistance. They underlined the to expedite the conclusion of a number of MOUs mainly on development cooperation, visa exemption for diplomatic and service passport and cooperation in the area of education.

The two Ministers recognized there are still great untapped potentials in the area of trade between Solomon Islands and Indonesia. They noted that between 2009–2013 trade only grew ate a rate of 6.3% per annum. In this context, they agreed to intensify efforts to encourage the private sector to seize opportunities available in both countries.

In the area of people-to-people contact, the two Ministers welcome the various capacity building and technical cooperation programs that have been undertaken. It was noted that as of 2014 there has been 22 capacity building programs have been undertaken in areas such as education, fisheries, agriculture and SMEs.

As part of the realization of Indonesia’s commitment to the US$ 20 million capacity building program for MSGs countries, both Ministers agreed that a technical team will meet this year to further discussed areas in which capacity building program can be directed so as to best contribute to the development of Solomon Islands. The Foreign Minister of Indonesia also presented a scallop-shell processing machine and a module for the training of SMEs in making seashell-based jewelry to be conducted later this year in Solomon Islands.

On regional issues, the two Ministers agreed that as part of Indonesia’s greater engagement in Melanesian Spearhead Group (MSG), they will intensify communication on issues relating to the MSG. The two Ministers will also promote regular consultations, contacts and exchange of visits among Indonesia and MSG Members. 

The Minister of Foreign Affair of Solomon Islands also extended an invitation for the Minister for Foreign Affairs of Indonesia to attend the MSG meeting as an observer in July 2015 in Solomon Islands.

The Minister for Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Indonesia also paid a courtesy call to the Deputy Prime Minister of Papua New Guinea, Hon. Douglas Ete. They discussed developments of bilateral and regional issues.The Minister for Foreign Affairs of Indonesia informed to Deputy Prime Minister of Solomon Islands the invitation of the President of The Republic of Indonesia to the PM of Solomon Islands to attend the 60th Commemoration of Asian-African Conference and the 10th Anniversary of the New Asian-African Strategic Partnership in Jakarta and Bandung on 19-24 April 2015. 


1) Fiji – Indonesia talks no mention about West Papua

$
0
0
2) In Papua, Education at the Forefront in Long Battle for Peace
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

 http://www.fbc.com.fj/fiji/27313/fiji-–-indonesia-talks-no-mention-about-west-papua-

1) Fiji – Indonesia talks no mention about West Papua
Taken from/By: FBC News
Report by: Christopher Chand
Fiji and Indonesia are further enhancing their bilateral relations following the first state visit by their Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi.

However no mention was made about the issue of West Papua and their application to become a member of the Melanesian Spearhead Group.
In a statement to the media after the meeting Marsudi says she held fruitful talks with both 
Fiji’s Foreign Minister Ratu Inoke Kubuabola and Minister for Women Rosy Akbar.
“My visit here is to reflect again the friendship, the good cooperation between Fiji and Indonesia and I had very fruitful discussions with the Foreign Minister and I just finished my fruitful discussion also with the Minister for Women first we discussed how to strengthen cooperation and women empowerment and I enjoy being in Fiji”
Fiji and Indonesia have discussed ways to enhance economic cooperation, capacity building and technical assistance.

They have agreed that as part of Indonesia’s greater engagement in the MSG they would intensify communication on issues relating to the MSG.
A joint statement said they would promote regular consultations, contacts and exchange visits between Indonesia and MSG members.
Marsudi’s visit to Fiji completes her three country tour to the Pacific islands.
She visited Papua New Guine and Solomon Islands before coming to Fiji.
Marsudi departed this afternoon.
--------------------------------------------------------------
http://thejakartaglobe.beritasatu.com/news/in-papua-education-at-the-forefront-in-long-battle-for-peace/

2) In Papua, Education at the Forefront in Long Battle for Peace

By Basten Gokkon on 08:10 pm Mar 01, 2015

Children at an elementary school in Manokwari, West Papua, in this December 2014 file photo. (Antara Photo//Indrianto Eko Suwarso)
Jayapura, Papua. While primary education remains a luxury that many children in Papua cannot afford, 10-year-old Eko Kogoya is doing his best studying the various subjects delivered at Tiom Elementary School in Papua’s Lanny Jaya district.
Eko has been placed in a special program established by the school for fifth-graders who are academically more advanced than their peers. While children in the regular scheme go home at noon, Eko and several other gifted students spend four additional hours at school to cover extra material.
The program, which is fully funded by the Lanny Jaya district office, also requires the students to live in a dormitory located some 10 meters away from campus.
“I want to become a professor — an engineering professor,” Eko told the Jakarta Globe during a visit to the school with Wahana Visi Indonesia on Wednesday.
Located in the Middle Mountains some 2,000 meters above sea level, Lanny Jaya district is said to be a hot spot for the separatist Free Papua Organization (OPM).
Christian Sohilait, secretary of the district office, acknowledged that separatist activity was among the area’s top three challenges — after education development and HIV/AIDS.
He acknowledges that Wiyawage subdistrict has long been the base of operations for the separatist outfit.
In August last year, a group of people believed to have been from the OPM fired shots at Christian and his team as they were traveling back from Wamena district. Nobody was killed in the attack but a police officer was injured.

Shallow pool of human resources
“When a gun attack happens, it can disrupt village activities for a whole day,” Christian says.
“Psychological after-effects from the attacks linger for some time, especially for the non-Papuan teachers who are here doing the SM3T program,” he adds, referring to the obligatory, state-funded teaching certification program for university students pursuing a career as a full-time, government-listed teacher.
During the one-year program, these young prospective teachers are based in regions across the archipelago categorized as the least developed and located in the most remote areas.
Lanny Jaya is among the program’s many destinations to support the region’s shallow pool of human resources for the field of education.

Non-Papuan teachers are especially needed to filter out the separatist doctrines seeping into local schools.
Christian, who previously headed the education office in Lanny Jaya, claims district officials have discovered that 24 local teachers are members of the OPM.
“There was a plan to brainwash children [with the group's vision] through schools,” he says, adding that he has personally been in contact with fighters from the OPM on several occasions.
“What I did was I suspended the teachers’ salaries and told them that if they wanted their pay back, they’d have to commit fully to educating the children upon their return,” he says.
When it comes to developing the education system in Lanny Jaya, Christian says he refused to surrender to the separatist movement’s threats and decided to create the Tiom Elementary School and the program for academically gifted students.

“To me, the OPM is just a temporary problem because the attacks don’t happen every day,” he says, noting that since 2011 the OPM has waged six gun battles with the Indonesian Military (TNI) and police. A total of six police officers were killed and 14 guns confiscated during the clashes.
“But illiteracy threatens these people every single day,” Christian says.
Data from the Central Statistics Agency (BPS) show that in 2011, only 37 percent of Lanny Jaya residents aged 15 to 24 years old were able to read, a marginal increase from 36.7 percent the previous year.
Lanny Jaya this year received a regional budget of Rp 1.2 trillion ($92 million). About 20 to 30 percent of that will be set aside for education development in the district, which is home to 214,000 people, according to Christian.
Efforts by the Lanny Jaya district administration to boost education include building a science center for the Tiom Elementary School in late 2013, which boasts 12 computers — a donation made by one of the office’s private partners.
“Our goal is to be a model of developed education for schools in the Middle Mountain area by 2016,” Christian says.
“Our dream is for every single child here to be able to read, write and count. And for Lannny Jaya to be the educational model for other districts in Papua.”

Different districts, same problem
In another district in Papua’s Middle Mountains, located just 100 kilometers from Lanny Jaya, fifth-grader Gustaf Adolf shares a similar situation with Eko.
Studying at the Maima Advent Elementary School in Asolokobal, Jayawijaya district, Gustaf wishes for peace during times of fighting so that he can go to school and study his favorite subjects.
The Asolokobal village neighbors that of other Papuan tribes, including the Kurima, Wouma and Welesi.
The feuding between the different clans has often resulted in violence, with the latest conflict breaking out on Dec. 19 between the Asolokobal and the Kurima, which left three people dead and 70 injured. The fighting went on for weeks before both tribes eventually agreed to a truce on Jan. 6 with the help of the district police.
“I don’t really understand what exactly was happening but my parents told me not go to school,” says 11-year-old Gustaf.
“School should have started on January 5, but it was postponed for a week for our safety,” says Anie Joyce Nirupu, the Maima Advent principal. “Teachers were afraid to go to the school.”
Anie says the school will not skip any classes for its students despite losing a week’s worth of lessons.
“We acknowledge the challenges we face, but we don’t want to push the children if they’re not ready,” she says.
She adds she knows that there is nothing she can do when fighting breaks out between tribes, but says she realizes that she can at least teach her students to live in peace so that they will not be propagate the generations-long feuding in the area.

In early 2013, Anie decided to adopt an educational method introduced by Wahana Visi Indonesia for her school.
Pakima Hani Hano , which translates into “Unity Is Good and Beautiful,” combines up to 34 Papuan seeds of wisdom, including the tenet of living in harmony, to be taught to children at elementary schools.
“When I started implementing [the methodology], I urged my staff to always be the first to set an example,” Anie says.
She concedes to having no hard figures to prove the system has worked for the children, but claims the students always side with peace whenever she asks them how they feel after a clash between tribes.
“These kids are the future, and hopefully they won’t make the same mistakes their elders are committing now [by fighting],” Anie says.
“I don’t like war,” Gustaf says. “When it happens, I can’t go to school and play with my friends.”
The writer’s visit to Papua was facilitated by Wahana Visi Indonesia, a community empowerment NGO.

1) Fiji reaches agreement with Jakarta as MSG bid looms

$
0
0

2) PM raises human rights with Indonesians, again

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

http://www.radionz.co.nz/international/pacific-news/267505/fiji-reaches-agreement-with-jakarta-as-msg-bid-looms

1) Fiji reaches agreement with Jakarta as MSG bid looms


The Foreign Ministers of Indonesia and Fiji have agreed to intensify consultations together within the Melanesian Spearhead Group framework.
Indonesia, which has special observer status in the MSG, sent its minister Retno Marsudi to three full member MSG countries, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands and Fiji late last week.
Johnny Blades reports.
"Retno Marsudi's trip has come as MSG leaders consider a formal membership application by West Papuans.
Following her meeting with Fiji's Ratu Inoke Kubuabola, local media reports that Fiji and Indonesia are further enhancing their bilateral relations.
They agreed to promote regular contacts and exchange visits between Indonesia and MSG members.
However no mention was made about the issue of West Papua and the MSG application.
Earlier, following Retno Marsudi's meetings with PNG's Foreign Minister Rimbink Pato in Port Moresby, local media were told not to ask about West Papua."



------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


2) PM raises human rights with Indonesians, again

Caption:  foreign ministers Pato and Marsudi at Moresby press conference, refusing to talk about Papua issues.
 
Prime Minister  Peter O’Neill says he raised the issue of human rights in West Papua and Papua in talks with Indonesia’s foreign minister.
He also urged the Indonesian government to support the application by the Papuan provinces to join the Melanesian Spearhead Group.
He repeated his statement that his views on Papua were to do with human rights and “not sovereignty’’.
This follows the announcement by PNG Foreign Minister Rimbink Pato that neither he nor his Indonesian counterpart would talk about those issues at their press conference in Port Moresby.
Mr O’Neill says the relationship between Papua New Guinea and Indonesia continued to strengthen and grow.
He made the comments following a meeting with Indonesia’s Minister for Foreign Affairs, Retno Marsudi, yesterday in Port Moresby.
“It is our pleasure to have Foreign Minister Marsudi make her first visit to Papua New Guinea representing the Government of President Joko Widodo.
“We hope the Foreign Minister and her delegation have gained greater insight to our nation.
“Papua New Guinea and Indonesia share a land border and it is essential that we maintain close and ongoing dialogue on a range of issues of mutual interest.
“Foreign Minister Marsudi and Foreign Minister Pato worked through a range of issues during the visit and I look forward to further announcements on these matters.
“After many years of bilateral engagement, ours is a relationship where we can express our views in an open and honest dialogue.
“I have made my position clear on the Indonesian provinces of West Papua and Papua and we appreciate Indonesia’s understanding that our concern on this issue relates to human rights, and this is not linked to issues of sovereignty.
“I further expressed my desire for Indonesia to support the application of Papua provinces to have membership in the Melanesian Spearhead Group.  This important sub-regional group is the ideal forum to foster greater people-to-people relationships between Melanesians.
“There are also border arrangements that have been the subject of discussion in recent years and we are working towards greater understanding on these matters.
“Our two countries are further considering visa arrangements for officials that will enhance ongoing dialogue and cooperation between our countries.
“There are also tremendous opportunities to expand direct trade, and to cooperate and share technical information in sectors where we have common interest such as agriculture, marine resources and mining.
“We would also like to see more Indonesian vessels utilising the expanded Lae Port as a hub to reach Pacific island nations.”
PM O’Neill said he also expressed his desire for officials from Papua New Guinea to learn more from Indonesia’s hosting of APEC in 2013.
“Indonesia hosted an outstanding APEC Summit in Bali in 2013 and there are lessons to be learned from their experience as we prepare to host APEC in Papua New Guinea in 2018.
“I appreciate the APEC exchange that has taken place between our officials since 2013, and look forward to this continuing as we move through the preparation phase leading to 2018.”
The Prime Minister said there are ongoing opportunities across many sectors to increase cooperation and dialogue and this is destined to continue.
“I would like to have more Papua New Guinean students studying in Indonesia, and bringing more Indonesian students to study in Papua New Guinea.  This not only increases immediate cultural exchange, but establishes life-long bonds between the two countries in areas such as business and government.”
---------------------------------------

Summary of events in West Papua for February 2015

$
0
0
Australia West Papua Association (Sydney)
PO Box 28, Spit Junction, NSW 2088

Summary of events in West Papua for February 2015
Support for West Papua by civil society groups continues to grow in the pacific region. On the 20 February in Suva, church, civil society groups and individuals marched to mark World Social Justice Day.   In Fiji the march was dedicated to the sufferings of the West Papuan people. The president of the Methodist Church in Fiji and Rotuma, Reverend Tevita Banivanua said "for too long, we have failed to speak out against Indonesia's brutal oppression of the West Papua people," Mr Banivanua also launched the Fiji Solidarity Movement for West Papua's Freedom petition signing at Sukuna Park after the march. "We are here to speak out in love to our families, our community, our nation about the oppression of our brothers and sisters in West Papua and to call on all Fijians to join us in prayer and in solidarity," he said (Fiji Times online 21/2) The Fiji Rugby Union also posted a photo of four Pacific players holding the flag of West Papua on social media in a show of support for West Papua.  Flying Fijians players Akapusi Qera and Jim Nagusa both play for the French provincial team Montpellier, and are seen holding the flag with teammates Naama Leleimalefa and Alex Tulou. Originally from American Samoa, Alex Tulou says the presence of the campaign on social media is what brought the issue to his team's attention (Radio Australia 19/2) 

This growing support for West Papua in the region and not only from civil society groups is causing concern in Jakarta. At the end of February the Indonesian Foreign Affairs Minister Retno Marsudi visited three Pacific countries, PNG, Solomon Islands, and Fiji, to strengthen relations between Indonesia and the Pacific nations. Antara News reported that in 2013, Indonesia committed to donate US$20 million to the Pacific countries to be used in various fields. "The ministers visit to the Pacific countries is also aimed to gain a better understanding about what they need". Radio Australia reported (27 February) that at a joint Press conference in Port Moresby by the PNG Minister for Foreign Affairs Rimbink Pato and the Indonesian Foreign Minister Mrs Retno Marsudi, journalists were not allowed to ask about the issue of West Papua. However, the PNG Prime Minister says the issue of human rights in West Papua and Papua was raised in talks with Indonesia's foreign minister. He also raised the issue in a speech at the beginning of the month when he told a local PNG leaders summit that the time has come to speak about the oppression of brothers and sisters in West Papua. He also urged the Indonesian government to support the application by the Papuan provinces to join the Melanesian Spearhead Group. He repeated his statement that his views on Papua were to do with human rights and “not sovereignty’’. This follows the announcement by PNG Foreign Minister Rimbink Pato that neither he nor his Indonesian counterpart would talk about those issues at their press conference in Port Moresby. http://www.pngloop.com/2015/03/01/pm-raises-human-rights-indonesians/ After visiting the three Pacific countries, the Indonesian Foreign Minister went to New Zealand to attend the 7th Joint Ministerial Commission in Auckland, on March 2-3, 2015.

 
Papuans behind bars
Papuans behind bars reported that at the end of January 2015, there were at least 38 political prisoners in Papuan jails. The notable apparent decrease in the number of political prisoners is due to updated information on cases where news is often inaccessible or hard to come by. As timely information is often difficult to obtain, it is at times challenging to confirm if a political prisoner has been released. Additionally, news was also received this month of the release of six political prisoners in the Aimas 1 May case last November, following the end of their 1.5 year prison sentences. While the number of political prisoners recorded this month is comparably lower than those recorded in previous months, reports of mass arrests, ill treatment and torture continue. Full update at http://www.papuansbehindbars.org/?p=3399

 
In brief

Papua Governor Says Freeport Royalties Unfairly Distributed
tabloidjubi.com Feb 12th, 2015 . Jakarta, Jubi / Merdeka.com – Papua Governor Lukas Enembe and four regents visited the Minister of Energy and Mineral Resources (ESDM), Sudirman Said in his office on Friday (02/06/2015) to discus the future of PT Freeport Indonesia and its smelter development plan. During the meeting, Enembe commented about the low royalties received by Papuans from Freeport Indonesia. A total of 80 percent of Freeport royalties are paid to the local government and 20 percent go to the central government. 
The royalty for Papua is then divided into several regencies and Mimika regency gets only 32 percent. He admitted, the distribution of royalties to several regencies in Papua seems uneven and the people who live around the mine or Mimika are treated unfairly because their portion is equal to those in other areas. Mimika regent, Eltinus Omaleng reported the royalties received by Mimika regency is only Rp 200 billion per year and this number is too small. (*/Tina)


Police Officers Allegedly Back Up the Palm Oil Company and Intimidate Local Residents
tabloidjubi.com Feb 12th, 2015. Jayapura, Jubi – Yerisiam Tribal Chief Simon Petrus Hanebora said he was expecting the attention from Papuan NGOs for investigating and doing advocacy on the palm oil plantation issue at Sima and Wami villages of Yaur Sub-district in Nabire Regency, Papua. “We have tried to terminate the activity of PT. Nabire Baru through an official letter, but the company is still conducting its operation and get support from the Police Mobile Guard officers,” Hanebora said through email to Jubi on Wednesday (11/2/2015). He further said on behalf of Yerisiam Tribe, he has sent letter to the Nabire Legislative Council and local government asking them to follow up their aspiration to shut down the company. However, both parliament and local government have not given their answer until now. 
“Why do government and law enforcement keep silence about Yerisiam’s trouble? Though an intimidation, human rights violation and genocide towards Yerisiam tribe are on going. If we fought them back, they would accuse us as separatist, rebel and so on. What is truly happening?” said Hanebora. For that reason, he expected both environmental and humanitarian NGOs could take part in the palm oil plantation issue in Nabire, in particular to conduct investigation and advocacy. Meanwhile, as published in surapapua.com, as land tenure right owners whose land used palm oil plantation by PT. Nabire Baru, some Yerisiam tribal residents always been terrorized and threatened by police officers by accusing them involving with the Papua Free Movement (OPM) although it never existed. 
“So we can make conclusion that those officers only made an argument to justify their acts to arrest and intimidate to customary landowners,” a coalition member of Nabire palm oil company’s victims, Charles Tawaru told suarapapua.com on Tuesday afternoon (3/2/2015). “People protested the company for not being concerned towards their rights, including hire the police officers to intimidate and arrest them. There’s really no OPM headquarter here,” Tawaru said. (Arnold Belau/rom)



Indonesian Police Will Continue to Build Mobile Brigade’s Headquarters in Wamena.  
Jayapura, Jubi/Antara – Papua Police Chief Inspector General Yotje Mende confirmed the Indonesian Police will continue to build the Mobile Brigade’s Headquarters in Wamena following the shootings by some armed groups. “Many considerations were taken before deciding to build it at Wamena,” the Chief confirmed during the meeting with some community and religious leaders in Jayapura on Thursday (12/2/2015). He said the armed groups are currently becoming a threat that potentially growing into a serious danger for the future if it was tolerated. Moreover, these groups were often shooting against the security force as well as civilians around this region, such as the groups led by Enden Wanimbo and Puron Wenda. “The headquarters will help the mobile brigade officers to overcome these troubles,” Chief Mende said. He further revealed currently the operational cost covered by State is very high, especially when it should send a troop. But, if there is a headquarters in Wamena it will help accommodating the troop’s delivery as well as reducing the operation cost,” the Chief said as he promised to keep eye on the plan. Further he admitted during their acts, the armed groups were recorded conducting seventy-three shootings that have killed nine police officers, four soldiers and seven civilians. “I ask for your support to avoid any casualties in the future,” said the chief. He promised ensuring his officers to act properly in carrying their duty as law enforcement: they will not only strict but also be humanist. (*/rom) tabloidjubi.com Feb 15th, 2015  
  
Protection for Lawyers and Human Right Defenders Sought in Papua
tabloidjubi.com Feb 18th, 2015 . Sorong, Jubi – Lawyers and human right defenders are particularly exposed to intimidation and physical threats due to their rights advocacy, a legal aid activist said. “Lawyer and Human Right Defender thought it’s very important and critical to immediately establish a network to protect their life and work in the entire Papua regions,” the Executive Director of Research, Assessment and Legal Assistance Development Office (LP3BH), Yan Christian Warinussy on Tuesday (17/2/2015) in Sorong. He was speaking during a focus group discussion on the efforts to develop a protection system for lawyers and human right defenders in Papua in Sorong from 16 to 17 February 2015. The partnership network for Lawyer and Human Right Defender Protection in Papua is located in LP3BH Manokwari Office with four contact persons base in Manokwari, Fakfak, Sorong and Jayapura. “The contact persons are responsible to follow up action plans and strategic plans of the network,” he said. Some lawyers who recently involved in the human rights violation cases and human right defenders from Fakfak, Sorong, Jayapura and Manokwari participated in the FGD. Lawyers and human right defenders in Papua realized the level of threat to their life, their clients and families and as well as there works are consistently increased. Some lawyers in Papua have experienced many physical threats.  Lawyer Helene Olga Hamadi has been terrorized by a group of people when she defended her client in the case against the Jayawijaya Police Chief at Wamena District Court in 2013.  Meanwhile Lawyer Eliezer Murafer often got the physical pressure and threat while working on the subversion case in Timika and Serui in 2013 to 2014.  And the Director of Democratic Alliance for Papua, Lawyer Anum Siregar was attacked by unknown person who also robbed her bag and stabbed her left hand, which cause her to must taking two times of neurosurgery and bone surgery. Meanwhile Lawyer Damus Usmany in Sorong has also got physical assault by a group of unknown people. He also experienced to be excluded in the legal practice by some lawyers who involved in collusion with other law enforcement from the local police, prosecutors and district court. The case to criminalize against the lawyers and their works were often occurred when they were dealing with the cases related to human right violations such as Lawyer Gustav Kawer who took the court experienced in Jayapura in 2014 and Simon Bunudi in Manokwari who got the similar experience in Manokawari in 2010. (Nees Makuba/Rom)



Demiliterization is the essential condition for dialogue in Papua
Statement by the Executive Director of LP3BH. 19 February 2015
If President Joko Widodo wishes to enter into dialogue with all components of the people of the Land of Papua, as he has indicated, there must first be a reduction in the number of military personnel in the region. As a lawyer and defender of human rights in the Land of Papua, I think that this is an essential condition for dialogue to take place. And the place to start this would be in those regions where conflict is still widespread in the Central Highlands and along the border between Indonesia and Papua New Guinea as well as in the regions surrounding the massive Freeport mine in Tembagapura and Timika. This would help to create a peaceful atmosphere and lessen the feelings of terror and anxiety among the Papuan people, so that dialogue could take place in an atmosphere of peace.  As the Executive-Director of the Institute of Research, Investigation and Development of Human Rights - LP3BH - and recipient of the John Humphrey Freedom Award in 2006, I urge President Joko Widodo as Supreme Commander of the Indonesian Armed Forces to cancel his decision to create more territorial regions [KODAM] in the Land of Papua. All groups of the community in the Land of Papua, including the religious organisations, should press for this. There is no reason for any increase in the number of Kodams which would simply reinforce the impression that the security approach isstill the government's priority in the Land of Papua.  I firmly believe that this positive move by President Widodo to enter into dialogue with the Papuan people should be welcomed by all the stake holders, including the TNI [Indonesian Army] 
Peace. Yan Christian Warinussy, Executive-Director of the LP3BH -Manokwari (Translated by Carmel Budiardjo) 


Another Hearing Postponed in Trial of Four KNPB Members
Jubi reported (19 Feb.) that a hearing in the trial of Four KNPB Members accused of making explosives to sabotage the 2014 Presidential Election was postponed for the second time due to the absence of witnesses. The trial is resume on 25/02/2015. The four members are Ibrahim Marian, Yali Walilo, Joni Marian and Marthen Marian. The Jayawijaya arrested them on 11 July 2014 at Wara Village of Pisugi Sub-district, Jayawijaya Regency accusing for the possession of exploisive materials to mess up the Presidential Election 2014.
“The Prosecutor postponed the trial due to problem of presenting the witnesses. The presiding judge will ask the motive of the witnesses’ absence and the prosecutor should be able to prove the letter of summon. There were three or four witnesses have been summoned but they didn’t come to the trial,” Attorney Simon Patirajawane told Jubi at the Wamena District Court on Wednesday (18/2/2015).


KNPB denies 14 of their activists arrested
West Papua National Committee (KNPB) denied the claims of Papua Police that 14 of their activists were arrested in the Port of Nabire for allegedly carrying information about the West Papuan movement (political educational materials). KNPB spokesman Center, bazookas Logo told reporters in a press conference said the Papua Police had misled the public through a media statement that was not true.  A spokesperson for the KNPB said only one person was arrested and he was later released.

Opposition to Mobile Brigade Headquarters Grows
tabloidjubi.com Feb 24th, 2015. Jayapura, Jubi – The head of the Papua Legislative Council (DPRP) voiced his objection to plans to build the Police’s Mobile Brigade Headquarters in Wamena, Jayawijaya Regency. DPRP speaker Yunus Wonda said the plan was an attempt by some members of the political elites to pave the way for a Papua Central Highland Province. 
“This discourse is intended to serve the political elites’ strategy to materialize the Papua Central Highland Province by creating a controversy among the people. We’re more concerned about the public trauma. More security forces on the ground would increasingly traumatize people. We disagree with the Mobile Brigade Headquarters and the province split proposal,” Wonda said on Monday (23/2/2015). He said the province split would only marginalize the indigenous Papuans, furthermore in Wamena. He asked the political elites for not just thinking about themselves, their own group or class, but they must think about the indigenous Papuans. 
“Because most of them have officiated for two periods and it would be ended soon, these elites started to throw the idea of new province, though people’s need is more important. Please just set up the infrastructures, human resources and another good points,” he said. According to him, the Papua Governor, Papua Legislative Council as well as the Papua People’s Assembly never agreed on the province split proposal. 
“It is their strategy to bargain a position without thinking about the indigenous Papuans whether they would be able to compete with non-Papuans or not. Moreover there is a moratorium on Civil Servant. If the split was occurred, the civil servants were certainly recruited from outside of Papua. The State has already provided the regencies split. It should be managed first. The extension is not an answer,” he said. He further said the Papua Governor Lukas Enembe also has appointed an attorney to sue the alleged forgery of his signature stating his approval on the extension of Papua Central Highland Province. (Arjuna Pademme/rom)




Opinion pieces/reports/press releases etc.

MIFEE and other top-down developments in Papua will continue under Jokowi administration.


Struggle and survival in West Papua


High tension in Papua and West Papua

Papuan Voices: Everyday stories from West Papua

Book. By-Lines, Balibo, Bali Bombings: Australian Journalists in Indonesia

 Book. The Incubus of Intervention
(Conflicting Indonesia Strategies of John F. Kennedy and Allen Dulles)


Amnesty International Report 2014/15
Full report
Indonesia country report

Film review: Tanah Mama

Police breakup ULMWP seminar in Jayapura . 3 arrested

$
0
0
Police breakup ULMWP seminar in Jayapura . 3 arrested 

Google translates of two articles in majalahselangkah.com. Be-aware google translate can be a bit erratic. 
original bahasa link above articles.




Disband the Police Force ULMWP Seminar in Jayapura
 Author: Hendrikus Yeimo | Monday, March 2, 2015 10:34 Viewed: 665 Comments: 6
Share:

When the police violently dispersed ULMWP seminar in Jayapura. Photo: A Kossy

Jayapura, STEP MAGAZINE - Indonesian National Police (INP) in Jayapura, Papua forcibly day seminar organized by the committee as the first agenda United Liberation Movement for West Papua (ULMWP) in hall 1 Waena Dormitory Housing Timika, Jayapura, Papua, the This, on Monday (03.02.15) morning, at 09:20 Papua time.

Majalahselangkah.com direct observation in the venue, police lowered hundreds of armed personnel. They (police) forcibly depriving baleho, attributes seminars, and arrested 3 persons seminar committee.

Vehicles around a traffic jam due to the activities of this seminar disperse forces. This seminar presents speakers from the Government of Papua, the Provincial People's Representative Council (DPRP) Papua, Papuan People's Assembly (MRP), academics, and the Church to the people of Papua in the ULMWP seminar, with the theme, "Searching for Identity Papua in Melanesia."

When the news was revealed, after the dissolution of the situation is still chaotic day seminar ULMWP. Papuans who came to the seminar questioned the status of Indonesia as a state of law and democracy which respects freedom of opinion and expression. (Hendrikus Yeimo / MS)




----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Disbanded After Police: Seminar Held in Dormitory Rusunawa ULMWP, 3 People Still Detained
 Author: Hendrikus Yeimo | Monday, March 2, 2015 12:38 Viewed: 313 Comments: 1



The atmosphere in the hostel Rusunawa socialization ULMWP Uncen. Photo: Oktovianus Pogau

Jayapura, STEP MAGAZINE - This morning, on Monday (02.03.15), 09:20 At the time of Papua, the Indonesian National Police (INP) in Jayapura forcibly day seminar organized by the committee as the first agenda United Liberation Movement for West Papua ( ULMWP) or Unity Movement for the Liberation of West Papua in hall 1 Waena Dormitory Housing Timika, Jayapura, Papua (Read: Disband the Police Force ULMWP Seminar in Jayapura).

After disbanded armed police, seminar participants busy to go to the simple Flats Rent (Rusunawa) belong to the University of Paradise (Uncen) in Housing III, Jayapura, Papua. The distance participants is about 3 Kilo Meters from Timika dorm hall Housing I Waena heading Rusunawa Housing III.

Monitoring majalahselangkah.com, there (Rusunawa Housing III) held political speeches and continued with the socialization of the formation of the United Liberation Movement for West Papua (ULMWP). ULMWP as an umbrella organization that unites the Federal Republic of West Papua (NRFPB), West Papua National Coalition For West Papua (WPNCL), West Papua National Parliament (WPNP / New Guinea Raad) in Saralana Port Villa, Vanuatu, November 30 and December 6, 2014 .

A number of speakers from the Government of Papua, the Provincial People's Representative Council (DPRP) Papua, Papuan People's Assembly (MRP), academics, and the Church of planned giving material at a seminar entitled "Looking Back Identity Papua in Melanesia" fails to provide the material.

Known, three committee, Benu Rumbiak, Simeon Alua, and Yas Wenda local police detained the liquidation of the seminar was not discharged. Currently they are still being questioned at the local police.

"They are still being held," said Committee Chairman Seminar, Sem Awom.

Confirmation to the relevant local police arrest 3 people this seminar committee failed.


Until this news was written, socialization ULMWP still going on Rusunawa Housing III Jayapura Papua attended by hundreds of people. (Hendrikus Yeimo / MS)

1) Retno Rushes to Scuttle Melanesian Recognition of Papua as ‘Occupied State’

$
0
0
2) Anti-graft body detains former Papua governor
-----------------------------------------

http://thejakartaglobe.beritasatu.com/news/indonesias-foreign-minister-melanesian-shuttle-diplomacy/

1) Retno Rushes to Scuttle Melanesian Recognition of Papua as ‘Occupied State’


By Jakarta Globe on 10:31 pm Mar 02, 2015
Category FeaturedFront PageNews
Jakarta. Indonesian Foreign Minister Retno L.P. Marsudi is rushing to put out diplomatic fires across the Pacific with back-to-back visits to neighbors Papua New Guinea, the Solomon Islands and Fiji — three members of the intergovernmental organization known as the Melanesian Spearhead Group that have threatened in recent weeks to recognize West Papua as an occupied member state.
Retno’s trip comes as MSG leaders are set this month to consider a formal membership application from the United Liberation Movement for West Papua, a joint resistance group formed in December last year. Its leaders submitted their application to the MSG’s Secretariat in Vanuatu on Feb. 4.

The ULMWP is comprised of leaders from the Federal Republic of West Papua, West Papua National Parliament and West Papua National Coalition for Liberation.
Indonesia gained special observer status in the MSG under former president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono.
Papua New Guinean Prime Minister Peter O’Neill says he raised the issue of human rights in West Papua and Papua in talks with Indonesia’s foreign minister, Radio New Zealand reported.
O’Neill also urged the Indonesian government to support the application by the Papuan provinces to join the MSG, according to PNG Loop.
O’Neill insisted that his views on Papua were to do with human rights and “not sovereignty.”
The statements marked a significant break from Papua New Guinea’s previous stance of recognizing Indonesian sovereignty over West Papua and remaining silent on human rights abuses there.

“Sometimes, we forget our own families, our own brothers, especially those in West Papua. I think as a country, the time has come to speak for our people about the oppression there,” O’Neill told cabinet ministers on Feb. 4, as quoted by ABC News. “Pictures of brutality of our people appear daily on social media and yet, we take no notice. We have the moral obligation to speak for those who are not allowed to talk. We must be the eyes for those who are blindfolded.”
However, Papua New Guinea’s Foreign Minister Rimbink Pato said prior to his press conference in Port Moresby with Retno that neither he nor his counterpart would talk with reporters about West Papua issues — and reporters should not ask. Press conferences in Fiji and the Solomon Islands were similarly silent on the issue.
While Fiji’s government and opposition both voiced their support for West Papua’s application earlier last month, Fijian leaders’ tune changed shortly thereafter.

On Feb. 11, Papua New Guinea Today reported Fiji’s foreign minister, Ratu Inoke Kubuabola, and opposition leader Ro Teimumu Kepa met with exiled West Papuan activist Octavianus Mote.
Mote said Fiji’s leaders expressed their willingness to support West Papua’s bid.
“I’m very pleased with the reception to the visit and look forward to further talks with our Fijian friends in March,” he said. “The CSO community and the Methodist Church in Fiji have been very gracious in offering to write to the MSG Secretariat in support of our request for membership.”
Mote added that Vanuatu had also signaled its support.
However, on Feb. 16, the foreign minister appeared to equivocate under questioning from opposition whip Ratu Isoa Tikoca.
“I cannot confirm if Fiji will support the application of West Papua,” Ratu said, as reported by the Fiji Times.
“The application [is] to be considered by senior officials of the MSG and then it goes out to the foreign ministers and then the MSG leaders. We have to follow the process so I can’t confirm whether Fiji  will support the application.”
Retno’s primary bargaining chip in her whirlwind tour last week would appear to be money. Indonesia declared its commitment to disbursing a total of $20 million in financial assistance to support capacity building of MSG nations. Meetings to discuss technical details of usage and disbursement of the funds are expected later this year.
The Foreign Ministry said that each of Retno’s meetings yielded “intensified cooperation” regarding MSG issues.



------------------------------------------------------------------------

http://www.antaranews.com/en/news/97925/anti-graft-body-detains-former-papua-governor

2) Anti-graft body detains former Papua governor

Jumat, 27 Februari 2015 23:24 WIB | 1.398 Views

Jakarta (ANTARA News) - The Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) has detained three suspects, including former governor of Papua province, over an alleged case of corruption related to power projects in Mamberamo River and Erumka in the 2009-2010 fiscal year.

"BS (Barnabas Suebu) was held at the detention center in East Jakarta for the first 20 days," KPKs head of publication and news report, Priharsa Nugraha, said here on Friday.

Suebu admitted to have been cooperative.

"I have always respected the legal process, which started when I was named as a suspect seven months ago. I will remain cooperative and will continue to respect the ongoing process, considering it is the first step in a long journey to find legal violations. It is the path to finding the truth, to justice and to legal certainty," he remarked after being questioned at the KPK building.

The other suspects detained were President Director of PT Konsultatsi Pembangunan Irian Jaya (PT KPIJ) Lamusi Didi (LD) and head of the mining and energy service of Papua province, Jannes Johan Karubaha (JJB).

"LD was held at Cipinang in East Jakarta for the first 20 days," Nugraha affirmed, adding, "JJB was held at the Guntur KPK detention center in East Jakarta."

The power projects were worth some Rp56 billion, and the estimated losses that the state incurred over the case amounted to Rp36 billion.

The anti-graft body believes that PT KPIJ marked up the price of the projects because of its connection with Barnabas.

Corrupt practices were related to the procurement of "Detailing Engineering Design."(*)
Viewing all 5697 articles
Browse latest View live


<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>