Wednesday, December 24, 2025

Seasons Greetings . Selmat Hari Natal . Seasons Greetings . Selmat Hari Natal

 Seasons Greetings . Selmat Hari Natal 


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1) Escalation in West Papua
2) Aus-Indo-PNG trilateral defence pact and the West Papua crisis 
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London Review of Books

23 DECEMBER 2025

1) Escalation in West Papua
 Douglas Gerrard

On 16 October the Associated Press reported that a ‘clash’ between the Indonesian military (TNI) and the West Papua National Liberation Army (TPNPB) had left fourteen people dead. According to the AP, the TNI said they faced ‘military-grade weapons’ during a six-and-a-half hour battle in Soanggama, a village in Intan Jaya Regency. The details of the weapons seized from the TPNPB paint a different picture: a home-made rifle, binoculars, four air rifles and some rounds of ammunition.

As the TPNPB told the AP, only three of the dead were connected to the armed struggle. The report omitted a fifteenth victim, a 75-year-old woman who fell into a river and drowned while being chased by soldiers. Another victim, Agus Kogoya, was executed after producing his identity card: he shared a surname with a TPNPB fighter.

Indonesia has occupied West Papua since 1963. A media blackout, enforced for decades, means the scant press coverage is often drawn largely from TNI press releases. What happened in Soanggama seems to have been less a ‘clash’ than a massacre. The three confirmed TPNPB members were captured and tortured before being killed.

In the days that followed, the Indonesian airforce bombarded Kiwirok in the Star Mountains, near the border with Papua New Guinea. Aerial attacks have increased in frequency throughout 2025, reflecting both the sophistication of Indonesia’s arsenal and its reluctance to be drawn into close-range combat with the TPNPB.

The conflict in West Papua may be the world’s most unequal war: raids on military bases have improved the TPNPB’s fighting capacity, but they still often face Indonesian jets and missiles armed only with bows and arrows. The activist Tom Beanal, who died in 2023, once asked if West Papua was colonised by Indonesia or by the entire world. Munitions recovered by Lamek Taplo, the TPNPB commander in Kiwirok, include Serbian mortars, Chinese drones and bombs manufactured by the French arms company Thales. Taplo was killed by one such bomb on 19 October, shortly after recording video testimony of the attack that he hoped would force the UN to intervene. Standing in the fallout zone of an Indonesian missile, Taplo offered his beleaguered troops a final prayer: ‘God please raise up our nature and our ancestors; the ones eaten by Indonesia in Kiwirok.’

To say, as Indonesia does, that increased guerrilla attacks are behind the current escalation in West Papua, is begging the question. Control of West Papua’s resources has long been the principal strategic goal of Indonesia’s occupation, informing how and where it deploys its soldiers and its settlers. Much of Intan Jaya lies within the concession zone of the vast Wabu Block gold mine, including the Hitadipa and Sugapa districts, where in May five Papuans were executed and seven others disappeared. Begun in 2020, Wabu Block’s development has seen soldiers pour into Intan Jaya, spawning new TNI checkpoints – 31 in the last three months – and consequent restrictions on everyday life. In this highly militarised atmosphere, markers of Papuan identity such as dreadlocks become symbols of TPNPB membership, inviting beatings or arbitrary arrests.

At the same time, punitive bombing raids have destroyed villages across Intan Jaya, forcing thousands into makeshift camps. Just over 80,000 West Papuans were internally displaced at the beginning of the year; that figure has now increased to more than 100,000. Perhaps one in ten West Papuans has been a refugee in the last five years. By clearing Indigenous people from their land, the TNI both eases the extraction process and seeds future conflict: displacement allows extraction which leads to further displacement.

The cycle is compounded by the TNI’s financial interests in the mines and plantations that they work to protect. A 2021 report identified a number of military figures – active-duty personnel along with retired generals – as investors in the companies behind Wabu Block. The highest profile shareholder is Luhut Pandjaitan, a four-star general and former investment minister, who brought a defamation case against two Indonesian solidarity activists who accused him of profiting from the mine. They were acquitted in January 2024.

Pandjaitan’s involvement in Wabu Block is a measure of the TNI’s relative independence from Jakarta, which endured in West Papua past the fall of Suharto’s New Order. President Prabowo Subianto, a former general accused of atrocities in East Timor, inherited a number of ambitious industrial ventures in West Papua from his predecessor, Joko Widodo, including the largest deforestation project in human history and the 4000km Trans-Papua Highway, intended both to increase production on existing agribusiness initiatives and to encourage new ones.

Seen at first as a reformer, Widodo won Papuan votes on a promise to loosen media access and address atrocities such as the 2014 Bloody Paniai massacre, in which five children were killed and seventeen wounded. At the end of his first term, however, Widodo appointed his one-time electoral rival Prabowo as defence minister. (On assuming the presidency in 2024, Prabowo selected Widodo’s eldest son, Gibran Rakabuming Raka, as vice president.)

Rather than rein in the TNI, Widodo confirmed their status as an autonomous power in West Papua. A law passed in 2021 increased the number of provinces there from two to five, ensuring an expanded checkpoint and surveillance regime and giving the military an increased role in administration. Only one soldier involved in Bloody Paniai was put on trial and he was acquitted of all charges in 2022. The combination of a hands-off approach to military command and a terra nullius view of economic development produced the bloodiest phase of the occupation for two decades.

Where Widodo accommodated the TNI, Prabowo is leading it, synthesising the political and military dimensions of Indonesian rule. He has abandoned the euphemistic language of ‘development’, declared Suharto a national hero and instructed Papua’s regional governors to dress in military fatigues during their inauguration.

In another linguistic shift, the TNI have announced that they will stop referring to the TPNPB as KKB (Armed Criminal Group), instead reverting to the traditional designation OPM (Free Papua Movement). In West Papua, OPM doesn’t refer to a particular armed group but to the more general spirit of liberation and resistance to which the vast majority of West Papuans adhere. As one Papuan refugee described it, ‘OPM is not an organisation, it is just a feeling that everyone has for their own fate.’ From this revolutionary perspective, every West Papuan is OPM. But as Soanggama showed, a version of this idea is also held by the Indonesian military: they’re all OPM when they’re dead.



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Green Left

2) Aus-Indo-PNG trilateral defence pact and the West Papua crisis 
Ali Mirin.  December 24, 2025, Issue 1445, World

The trilateral meeting held in Port Moresby on December 3 between the Indonesian, Australian and Papua New Guinean defence ministers marked a significant moment in Indo-Pacific regional security alignment.

PNG’s Dr Billy Joseph, Australia’s Richard Marles and Indonesia’s Retired General Sjafrie Sjamsoeddin discussed strengthening cooperation on border management, maritime security, intelligence sharing, counter-smuggling and crisis preparedness.

On the surface, this trilateral framework appears to advance a pragmatic vision of collective security, particularly through reinforcing the PNG–Australia Mutual Defence Treaty (Pukpuk Treaty) and the Australia–Indonesia Treaty on Common Security.


In his opening remarks, Joseph said the trilateral meeting was a “significant moment” for the three nations, emphasising shared borders, maritime zones, cultural linkages and strategic interests.

However, beneath this diplomatic language lies a deeper contradiction: the trilateral security agenda operates in the shadow of the conflict, humanitarian and political crisis in West Papua.

This crisis is not mentioned directly in the joint communique, but it undeniably shapes the security landscape in which the three states operate. A critical analysis of the meeting therefore requires confronting the tensions between regional security cooperation, state-centric stability and the unresolved conflict at the heart of the Pacific.

Can regional stability genuinely be achieved when the West Papuan humanitarian realities remain structurally excluded from diplomatic and security processes? To what extent do defence pacts framed as instruments of regional stability enable and perpetuate cycles of violence?

These questions highlight a deeper theoretical tension: that security cooperation grounded solely in state-centric paradigms may fail to address, and may even exacerbate, the underlying political and humanitarian drivers of conflict.

Humanitarian situation in West Papua continues to deteriorate

Indonesian military forces reportedly used an armed drone in an operation that struck a civilian home in Yahukimo District on November 25, killing 17-year-old student Atin Sam and seriously injuring others.

Just days before the Port Moresby meeting, West Papuans commemorated their symbolic Independence Day on December 1 by raising the Morning Star flag, staging peaceful protests, and participating in acts of cultural resistance across West Papua and Indonesia.

These events demonstrate the persistence of Papuan political identity and collective memory despite decades of repression. Meanwhile, Indonesian security forces intensified surveillance and arrests, reinforcing the pattern of securitised governance.

 Militarisation and asymmetry in West Papua 

Against the backdrop of colonial narratives emphasising development, stability and normalisation, independent reporting suggests a starkly different reality.

Project Multatuli, among other civil society sources, has reported that more than 80,000 Indonesian security personnel including soldiers, police and intelligence units are currently deployed across the Papuan provinces under the Prabowo Subianto administration.

Although Jakarta has not publicly confirmed these figures, the scale of the deployment would indicate one of the highest levels of militarisation in the Pacific. It also reinforces widespread perceptions that a large-scale, coordinated security operation is underway but not publicly acknowledged.

In striking contrast, various independent estimates indicate that the TPNPB — the military wing of the Papuan independence movement (OPM) and the primary armed resistance group — possesses fewer than 100 firearms and maintains roughly 1000 fighters, most of whom still rely on traditional weapons such as bows, arrows and spears.

The power imbalance is therefore extreme: the conflict is not between two symmetrical armed forces, but between a modern, heavily equipped state military and a lightly armed, territorially dispersed insurgency embedded in rural communities. This asymmetry carries profound implications for civilian safety, the nature of state coercion and the structural dynamics of the conflict.

Indonesia’s strategic silence and the politics of legitimacy

Indonesia’s engagement in the trilateral meeting must be understood within the framework of strategic legitimacy-building. By participating in high-level security dialogues, Indonesia enhances its international standing and reinforces the perception that the situation in West Papua is an internal matter fully under control.

By controlling the narrative, Indonesia can maintain the appearance of stability while deflecting scrutiny of its domestic security policies.

The West Papuan conflict is not a simple domestic security issue, as Indonesia often claims. It has deep international roots, beginning with the controversial Act of Free Choice in 1969, which was overseen and legitimised by the United Nations despite widespread criticism from scholars, human rights groups and West Papuans themselves. Because the UN facilitated this process, the conflict’s legitimacy and outcome remain part of an international dispute, not an internal matter.

The TPNPB positions itself as a liberation force fighting against colonial occupation. Its struggle is framed in the language of anti-colonialism, self-determination and international human rights law — principles recognised under the UN Charter.

Lesson from East Timor, Bougainville, Aceh

The trilateral meeting’s silence on West Papua stands in contrast with important regional precedents. These cases complicate assumptions about military dominance, conflict resolution and the long-term viability of territorial control.

A central tension that the UN, regional and sub-regional fora in the Pacific — including the recent trilateral defence meeting — often fail to acknowledge is that the largest ongoing armed conflict in both the Pacific and Indonesia is the protracted conflict in West Papua. Many West Papuans including armed factions such as the TPNPB explicitly describe the situation as liberation war

While they continue to challenge Indonesia’s sovereignty over the region, external observers commonly assess that the TPNPB is unlikely to prevail militarily against the far more powerful Indonesian National Armed Forces (TNI).

Yet historical precedents complicate such assumptions of inevitability. For decades, the prospect of East Timorese independence likewise appeared impossible, until the political and military dynamics shifted dramatically in the late 1990s.

The example of Bougainville further demonstrates how protracted conflicts can produce unexpected political outcomes. PNG ultimately moved toward dialogue and political accommodation not out of strategic preference but because the PNG Defence Force failed to defeat the Bougainville Revolutionary Army (BRA), eventually withdrawing in disarray.

The long-term settlement has led toward an almost inevitable trajectory of Bougainvillean independence. This path, however, represents precisely the kind of outcome Indonesia seeks to avoid in West Papua, where any form of internationally mediated political process is perceived as a potential threat to territorial integrity.

The case of Aceh is often cited as a more positive and potentially transferable model, but the differences between Aceh and West Papua are substantial. The Aceh settlement was facilitated by strong international support, the role of the EU-led monitoring mission, the aftermath of the 2004 tsunami, and the presence of a comparatively sophisticated and well-armed movement (GAM) with external networks.

Building regional stability without addressing conflict resolution in West Papua is impossible, as the crisis constitutes one of the most severe and enduring humanitarian tragedies in the Pacific. Lasting stability cannot be built on silence or strategic avoidance; it requires confronting the unresolved conflict at the very heart of the region — West Papua.


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Sunday, December 21, 2025

1) Brigadier General Sulastiana the First Female Deputy Chief of Police in West Papua


2) Indonesia Calls in Military to Accelerate Forest Clearance Amid Environmental Concerns

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1) Brigadier General Sulastiana the First Female Deputy Chief of Police in West Papua  
By Admin 1 Minggu, 21 Desember 2025

Inp.polri.go.id - Jakarta. Brigadier General Sulastiana becomes the first female general to serve at the Deputy Chief of West Papua Regional Police following his appointment by the Indonesian National Police (INP) Headquarters on 15 December 2025. 

Her appointment as the first female Deputy Chief of West Papua  Police is based on professional merit and career achievement. It reflects the INPe’s commitment to developing leadership based on competence, experience, and performance.

In her current role, General Sulistiana assists the West Papua Chief of Police in managing organizational administration, supervising operational functions, and ensuring the implementation of professional standards within the West Papua Police. Her assignment reflects the INP confidence in her experience, leadership record, and professional integrity.

Prior to her appointment in West Papua, General Sulastiana served as Senior Auditor (Level I) at the INP’s Inspectorate General of Supervision. In this position, she was involved in strengthening internal monitoring, accountability mechanisms, and compliance across police units. Throughout her career, she has held assignments in public communication, international and domestic cooperation, community empowerment, human resource development, criminal justice administration, education, and internal supervision.

General Sulastiana also has a strong academic background. She earned a Bachelor’s degree in Political Science with a specialization in International Relations in 1995, followed by a Master’s degree in Administration and Human Resource Development in 2001. She later completed a Bachelor of Law in 2007 and obtained a Doctorate in Criminology in 2013, graduating with distinction. Her academic training supports her professional approach to policing, particularly in areas related to governance, policy, and institutional development.

Alongside her service in the police, she is actively involved in higher education. She serves as a lecturer at several universities, including the University of Indonesia, where she teaches postgraduate programs on national resilience, as well as undergraduate and professional programs related to policing and law. She also lectures in the postgraduate law program at Universitas Islam As-Safi’iyah. In addition, she regularly contributes as a speaker at seminars on criminology, narcotics-related crime, and the protection of women and children.

General Sulastiana has also represented Indonesia in a number of international professional forums, including law enforcement networking and policy dialogue platforms in the United States and Europe. These engagements reflect her experience in international cooperation and professional exchange.

In carrying out her duties in West Papua, Brigadier General Sulastiana emphasizes professionalism, coordination, and constructive engagement with local communities and stakeholders. She remains committed to public service, institutional integrity, and the continuous improvement of police professionalism.

(mg/inp/pr/rs)




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2) Indonesia Calls in Military to Accelerate Forest Clearance Amid Environmental Concerns
As deforestation escalates in Indonesia, the government deploys the military to speed up forest clearing, raising debates over environmental impact and sustainable development.

Fiaz Ahmed  By  Fiaz Ahmed Published about 4 hours ago • 3 min read


Indonesia, a country renowned for its rich biodiversity and sprawling tropical forests, has recently taken the controversial step of calling in its military to assist in clearing forests at a rapid pace. The move, aimed at accelerating land conversion for agriculture and infrastructure projects, has sparked widespread discussion about balancing economic development with environmental protection.

A Strategic Decision
The Indonesian government’s decision comes amid mounting pressure to boost economic growth and meet domestic demands for land for farming, plantations, and urban expansion. Officials argue that military involvement will ensure efficiency, discipline, and a structured approach to large-scale land clearing projects, which have traditionally faced logistical challenges.
Military personnel are being deployed to several provinces, particularly in regions like Sumatra and Kalimantan, where forest cover is dense but under increasing pressure from agricultural expansion, notably palm oil plantations. The government claims this initiative will help streamline development projects while maintaining law and order during land conversion processes.

Economic Ambitions vs Environmental Concerns
Indonesia’s forests are vital not only for the country’s ecology but also for global climate regulation. They act as carbon sinks, store vast amounts of biodiversity, and sustain local communities. The rapid clearance of forests, even under military supervision, raises concerns among environmentalists, scientists, and international observers.
Critics argue that using military forces may prioritize speed over sustainability, potentially exacerbating deforestation, soil degradation, and habitat destruction. Environmental groups warn that such measures could accelerate the loss of endangered species and contribute to global climate change by releasing stored carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.
On the other hand, the Indonesian government maintains that careful planning and oversight will mitigate ecological risks. Officials emphasize that cleared land will be used for essential infrastructure and agricultural projects to meet food security goals and provide employment for thousands of citizens.


Historical Context of Deforestation in Indonesia
Indonesia has long grappled with deforestation, primarily driven by palm oil cultivation, logging, and urbanization. According to recent studies, the country has lost millions of hectares of forest in the past two decades, causing soil erosion, flooding, and increased greenhouse gas emissions.
Past efforts to curb deforestation through regulations and conservation programs have often faced enforcement challenges due to the scale of the forests and the economic incentives for clearing land. By deploying the military, the government hopes to achieve faster results, leveraging the organizational capabilities and manpower of armed forces to manage large-scale operations efficiently.


Global Reactions and Sustainability Questions
International organizations have expressed cautious concern over Indonesia’s approach. Experts note that while the country’s economic development goals are valid, the ecological costs could be significant if forest clearance is not managed sustainably. Climate scientists emphasize the importance of maintaining tropical forests as critical components of the global ecosystem and urge Indonesia to adopt innovative methods that balance growth with conservation.
Some environmentalists have suggested alternatives such as reforestation programs, agroforestry, and precision land management techniques that allow development without wholesale destruction of natural habitats. These strategies could provide economic benefits while reducing the environmental footprint.


Military Role and Public Perception
The involvement of the military in non-traditional roles such as forest clearing has sparked debate within Indonesia itself. Supporters argue that the military can bring discipline, coordination, and manpower to projects that would otherwise face delays. Critics, however, worry about the militarization of environmental management and the potential neglect of ecological expertise in favor of rapid results.
Public opinion is divided. While some citizens welcome faster land development that could improve infrastructure and generate jobs, others are concerned about long-term environmental consequences and the loss of Indonesia’s natural heritage.
Looking Ahead
Indonesia’s decision to deploy the military for forest clearance reflects a broader tension between economic ambition and environmental stewardship. As the country moves forward with these initiatives, it will need to carefully balance growth with sustainability, ensuring that development does not come at the expense of ecosystems and local communities.
Experts suggest that transparency, rigorous environmental assessments, and collaboration with conservation organizations will be critical in mitigating risks. The world will be watching closely, as Indonesia’s approach could serve as a model—or a cautionary tale—for other nations facing similar development pressures.


Conclusion
The deployment of Indonesia’s military to accelerate forest clearance marks a significant moment in the country’s development trajectory. While it aims to drive economic growth and meet domestic demands, it also highlights the ongoing challenge of harmonizing human progress with environmental responsibility. The coming months will be crucial in determining whether this strategy can deliver both economic and ecological benefits, or whether it will exacerbate one of the world’s most pressing environmental concerns.

About the Creator 
Fiaz Ahmed  Fiaz Ahmed 
I am Fiaz Ahmed. I am a passionate writer. I love covering trending topics and breaking news. With a sharp eye for what’s happening around the world, and crafts timely and engaging stories that keep readers informed and updated.
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Friday, December 19, 2025

1) Sweet Promises, Bitter Reality: Inside the Merauke Sugarcane Project

  

2) Indonesia targets food self-sufficiency in Papua within three years 
3) ULMWP President Benny Wenda’s Christmas Message 

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1) Sweet Promises, Bitter Reality: Inside the Merauke Sugarcane Project
 Igor ONeill December 19, 2025 




Travellers flying over Merauke, on West Papua’s southern coast, have long been treated to a sight that’s hard to find remaining anywhere in the world: an expansive lowland filled with natural forests, savannahs, and vast wetlands. But these days, they’re also likely to see a landscape in the midst of change. Excavators turning green cover and blue creeks into brown mud. Felled logs piling up in rows.

In the forests and riverside villages, Indigenous Marind, Yei Nan, and Muyu communities are anxious. This new destruction stalks their livelihoods and threatens land passed down through generations. Companies are even encroaching upon the customary territories of Indigenous Peoples who refuse to surrender their land.

In the Marind homeland, land grabbing and forest destruction are taking hold in the name of the Indonesian government’s program for food and energy self-sufficiency – designated as a National Strategic Project (PSN). President Prabowo Subianto has framed this ambition as strengthening national resilience to legitimize massive military involvement. A new Regional Military Command has been established in Merauke, estimated to house over 5,000 combat personnel. On the roads of Merauke, military vehicles and soldiers passing by have become a common sight. But for Indigenous West Papuans, given the military’s long history of brutal violence, their presence is a terror in itself.

The government’s rhetoric is harshly ironic, because in reality the project enhances neither food security nor political security. For many Marind, food security and political freedom means moving through their natural forests, savannas and wetlands, encountering abundant wild foods. Converting those landscapes into intensive monocultures such as sugar or oil palm plantations amounts to enslaving living organisms. As Marind woman Rafaela explained to environmental anthropologist Sophie Chao: “Free beings make free food. Forest foods taste of freedom. And nothing tastes as good as freedom.”

Greenpeace Indonesia investigated one of these government food and energy projects in West Papua, namely the Merauke Sugarcane PSN, which targets an area of 560,000 hectares – the size of the island of Bali. A consortium of ten companies is set to work on the project. Nine out of the ten are connected to two corporate groups with long track records in the palm oil industry.

If this sugarcane plantation project is not stopped, it will sow disaster through the destruction of West Papuan forests, which now serve as a global climate and biodiversity shield. Greenpeace Indonesia invites you, the reader, to join us in urging the government to stop the Merauke Sugar PSN and save Papua’s forests. As West Papuans say, ‘Papua bukan tanah kosong’ – Papua is not an empty land.

Read the Inside the Merauke Sugarcane Project report here (also available in Indonesian).

Key points:

  1. A consortium of ten companies is seeking to develop more than 560,000 hectares of land – an area the size of Bali – for sugarcane plantations in Merauke.
  2. Clearing this natural vegetation could produce emissions equivalent to 221 million tonnes of CO₂, or as much as the annual emissions of 48 million cars.
  3. More than 23,000 hectares of forests, savanna, and wetlands were cleared within the last 18 months by two of the companies.
  4. The Kwipalo Clan, part of the Yei Indigenous People in Blandin Kakayo Village, continue to be forced to release customary rights, putting them in conflict with other clans in the vicinity; the Muyu People in Senayu Soa Village are threatened with eviction; and the Marind People in Domande Village are continuously harassed. The company employs every means necessary to obtain the release of customary territories for sugarcane land.
  5. Militarism is intensifying and makes Indigenous communities fearful. The military assists companies in obtaining customary right releases, even establishing new battalions inside company concessions.

Links:

Media contact:

Igor O’Neill, Greenpeace Indonesia, ioneill@greenpeace.org +61 414-288-424

Refki Saputra, Greenpeace Indonesia, +62 852-6351-5392




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2) Indonesia targets food self-sufficiency in Papua within three years 
 December 17, 2025 11:10 GMT+700

Jakarta (ANTARA) - The Indonesian government aims to achieve food self-sufficiency in Papua within the next three years, Agriculture Minister Andi Amran Sulaiman said on Tuesday.

The target will be pursued through the development of new rice fields and the optimization of local staple food production, particularly sago, he told a press conference in Jakarta.

"We will realize food self-sufficiency in Papua within three years at the latest. If possible, we can complete it within two years," Sulaiman said.

He noted that Papua's annual rice demand stands at around 660,000 tons, while local production is estimated at about 120,000 tons, leaving a shortfall of approximately 500,000 tons.

"To cover the deficit, around 100,000 hectares of rice fields are needed. These have been allocated across South Papua, Papua, and West Papua, with six provinces requesting similar development," he said.

The government also plans to revitalize the sago industry, a key food commodity in Papua, including reactivating a sago factory in Sorong, Southwest Papua, according to the minister.

"We will complete the work in Sorong. The factory has been built and now needs to be reactivated," he added.

Sulaiman said the government is seeking to achieve food self-sufficiency across all regions as a long-term solution to supply stability and inflation control.

"Kalimantan, Sulawesi, and Sumatra are already self-sufficient, while Java has a surplus. Our goal is nationwide food self-sufficiency as a permanent solution to inflation," he said.

Related news: Indonesia plans 100,000 ha land clearing for Papua rice program
Related news: Indonesia's Merauke to get new airport, seaport in food security drive


Translator: Genta Tenri M, Resinta Sulistiyandari
Editor: Anton Santoso


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3) ULMWP President Benny Wenda’s Christmas Message 
December 18, 2025 in Statement

As 2025 comes to an end, I would like to thank everyone who has supported a Free West Papua this year, whether through practical contributions or through their spirit.

2025 has been a year of even further escalation in West Papua, as Indonesia has stepped up its campaign of repression and ecocidal development. Our people have suffered massacres in Intan Jaya, Puncak, Kiwirok, Oksibil, Maybrat, and elsewhere. Our land continues to be plundered for Indonesian and corporate profit: Merauke is now home to the largest deforestation project in human history, destroying an area of mangrove forest the size of Belgium. More than 80,000 occupying security forces, 56,000 soldiers and 26,000 police, are currently posted across West Papua’s towns and villages. The result has been a huge increase in both military operations and subsequent internal displacement. While around 80,000 West Papuans were displaced at the beginning of the year, the number of Indigenous refugees is now over 100,000. 

Yet we remain strong, our spirit unbroken, and utterly determined to win back our stolen sovereign state. Our peaceful struggle is righteous, blessed by God and our ancestors. They are with us every day. 

Despite all the obstacles laid out in front of us, from Indonesia’s military strength to its six-decade long ban on journalists and NGOs, our mission continues to progress. The ULMWP has made big strides forward this year, getting closer than ever to full MSG membership. We continue to advance our campaign for Indonesia to facilitate a visit to West Papua by the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights. Over 110 Member States have now made this demand. And although we have been isolated for a long time, more and more people across the world are learning of our peaceful struggle.

Thank you to all our solidarity groups from around the world; I hope you keep West Papua in your prayers as you celebrate this Christmas. Thank you to the Free West Papua campaign teams in Netherlands, the UK, the United States, and particularly in the Pacific, who do the essential work of pushing our freedom struggle forward and making sure our cries for help are heard. We have few resources and no weapons: your voices are our weapons. 

Thank you to the West Papua Council of Churches, the Pacific Council of Churches, and all religious and civil society organisations in the Pacific. Thank you to all Melanesian leaders and those working for West Papua at an intergovernmental level. Thank you to the International Lawyers for West Papua and the International Parliamentarians for West Papua, and of course, thank you to the people and government of Vanuatu, our Wantoks. You have always been our strongest supporters.

Finally, thank you to the ULMWP, the Executive and Legislative Council, and of course to the people of West Papua. To my people, I ask that you continue to stay strong and stand behind the ULMWP as we fight for your right to determine your future. 2025 has been a year of unity for our movement. I acknowledge and thank the West Papua National Liberation Army (TPNPB), represented by spokesperson Sebby Sambom and Chief of Staff Terianus Satto, for their endorsement of me as President of West Papua. Unity is what the occupiers fear most: there is no more powerful weapon against Indonesia than West Papuans standing together, calling for their freedom with one voice. 

History tells us that no empire lasts forever. Just as Dutch colonialism ended in Indonesia, so too will Indonesian colonialism end in West Papua. As Nelson Mandela said, we are walking our long road to freedom. We have been walking this road for a long time now, but the finish line is in sight. Our dream of freedom will come. 

God bless West Papua. 

Benny Wenda
President
ULMWP

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