Wednesday, June 24, 2026

1) I Guard My Land Papua: The Documentary That Exposes Indonesia’s Occupation



2) THE GIRL WHO RAN TO FOOTBALL IN WEST PAPUA
3) Central Papua allocates Rp77.8 bln for free education  

4) Again, civilian injured and residents displaced following drone strikes on Balamai Village, Intan Jaya Regency

5) Central Papua Government Plans to Build Weighbridge in Nabire
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1) I Guard My Land Papua: The Documentary That Exposes Indonesia’s Occupation

By Kayla HillJune 24, 2026 CULTURE  4 Mins Read 

Marred by lawsuits, deepfakes, kidnapping, and state raids of screenings, Pesta Babi, or ‘Pig Feast’, has been a contentious film with a dramatic reception.

Pesta Babi is a documentary that follows five Papuan elders and their communities facing the devastating impacts of Indonesia’s food estate program — the largest deforestation project in the world, spanning over 2.5 million hectares of West Papuan land. The land being cleared is making way for Indonesian palm oil and sugarcane plantations to support the expansion of biofuel. The film was recently screened across Australia by multiple groups, including Aliansi Gusar, The Australia West Papua Association South Australia, the Australian National University Indonesia Institute, and the Pacific Climate Warriors.


The film opens with two dozen Papuan men carrying a 17-metre-long piece of wood being prepared for the ‘red cross ceremony’. This ceremony has been completed 1800  times, wherein a red cross, often several metres long, is placed at a significant site on West Papuan land alongside a red painted sign asserting the Papuan tribe’s opposition to the Indonesian government and foreign companies from entering. This symbolic act bears close resemblance to Jesus Christ carrying the cross through Jerusalem in the procession before his crucifixion, tying the strong Christian presence in West Papua with their political resistance.


The documentary’s filmography shines through as a key highlight. Videographers powerfully capture the harrowing extent of deforestation in West Papua through wide shots of cleared forests and swamps, often only occupied by dozens of excavators, and small remnants of what used to be. As these shots accumulate, they force a sickening confrontation with the sheer scale of ecocide being carried out.

Interestingly, the documentary revealed that the Australian taxpayer-funded institution, Sugar Research Australia, develops sugarcane seeds for both private and public plantations in West Papua, thereby implicating foreign public funds into Indonesia’s violent extraction and occupation.


A limitation of the documentary is its inability to balance information and storytelling. In many parts of the film, the intimate documentary turns into more of a YouTube-style exposé, which makes for a jarring shift. This is particularly evident in a 15-minute section towards the end of the film using graphs and maps looked to have been made on PowerPoint. While the information revealed in these parts was indeed interesting, the change in tone was too dramatic and awkward a disruption. Friendlyjordies/Jordan Shank’s documentary on the occupation of West Papua much better accomplishes this balance and on a much lower budget, no less.


Interestingly, the film offered no explicit representation of Papuan nationalism. We only ever see red crosses, not the Bintang Kejora, and hear mild messages of ecological concern rather than that of independence, let alone the definitive freedom call, Papua Merdeka. President of the United Liberation Movement for West Papua (ULMWP) Benny Wenda said in a statement, it is a “moderate film, which does not show the real truth — that all West Papuans want freedom and independence instead of colonial ‘development’.” This seems to be a strategy by the filmmakers to appeal to a broader Indonesian apolitical society, amid anti-West Papuan sentiment. As a West Papuan activist Koteka Wenda articulated, the film is “building collective consciousness…among ordinary Indonesians.” Such a strategy appears successful, as evidenced by the documentary having screened in over 1000 locations in the country. Even amid this sanitisation, over 30 of these screenings have been shut down by Indonesian police or military, including at the University of Mataram. Another attempt to quell this film involved the publication of a video featuring Koteka Wenda’s likeness, disparaging Pesta Babi in an AI-generated deepfake


Since its release, one of the Papuan elders featured in the film, Mama Yasinta Moiwend, has been kidnapped and brought to Jakarta, and has been out of contact with her family for several days. Despite opposing the deforestation project in the documentary, she has since pursued a litigation against the directors of the film and spoke in support of Indonesia’s food estate project.


Between the several controversies associated with the documentary, Pesta Babiultimately offers insight to a mainstream audience of the struggles of West Papuan life under occupation. Whilst the magnitude of extraction, oligarchy, and expansion seem infinite, tenuous survival persists. The documentary ends with a group of Papuans sitting by a river, playing handmade drums and guitar, singing, “I love my land, I love my people. Day and night, I guard my land Papua.”


Pesta Babi is available to watch on YouTube.

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2) THE GIRL WHO RAN TO FOOTBALL IN WEST PAPUA

In Indonesia's West Papua, football has become more than a sport for girls growing up amid poverty, domestic violence and alcohol abuse. Through the story of Erma Karafir, a talented player who rose from a troubled household to earn a scholarship in the United States before returning home, and her mentor Heidi Scheunemann, whose work combines football with leadership and entrepreneurship training, the piece examines both the promise and limits of sport as a pathway to social mobility.

The first time Erma Karafir learned to run, she was not on a football field. She was growing up in a crowded household in Jayapura, Indonesia, where alcohol often dictated family life. Her father drank heavily, arguments erupted without warning, and violence sometimes followed. With seven siblings packed into the same fragile world, there was little room to escape. But Erma found one. Whenever tensions rose, she left the house and joined neighbourhood kids playing football.

'When I played football, I felt happy,' she recalled. 'I felt joy. I felt like myself.'

That simple act of running after a ball would eventually carry her far beyond West Papua. It would bring scholarships, national championships, a chance to study in the United States and enough prize money to buy her mother the house she had always dreamed of owning.

Yet football could not entirely protect her from the forces she was trying to escape.

A GAME OF ESCAPE

Her story offers a glimpse into a reality often overlooked by global conversations about women in sport.

Located on the western half of New Guinea — the world's second-largest island, split between Indonesia and Papua New Guinea — West Papua remains one of Indonesia's most resource-rich yet economically marginalized regions. Long shaped by conflict, militarisation and uneven development, the region sits atop immense reserves of natural wealth, yet many Indigenous Papuans continue to face poverty, limited educational opportunities, and weak public services.

For some communities, the chasm between vast natural wealth and grinding poverty has bred deep frustration and despair, with alcohol becoming both an escape and a symptom of this broader distress. Research from the Australian National University links binge drinking to poverty, political exclusion, and cultural trauma. Yet Indigenous women bear the heaviest cost—facing domestic

violence, economic insecurity, and alcoholism inside the home, all worsened by displacement and political stress.

Against that backdrop, football has become an important outlet for some girls. Women's football in West Papua remains small compared to the men's game, but community-based development programs such as SSB Mutiara Timur, a football school in Jayapura, have helped produce national-team players and provincial champions. Participation remains limited, however, by inadequate facilities, scarce funding, safety concerns, and family expectations.

As FIFA pushes for greater female representation in football leadership—including new regulations requiring female coaches and technical staff at women's international competitions from 2026 onward—the obstacles facing many young women in Indonesia's easternmost region remain far more fundamental.

'For many girls, football is only the entry point,' Heidi Scheunemann,  a German coach who since 2009 helped establish girls' football programs in West Papua, Indonesia, told FairPlanet. 'What they really need is a safe place, people who believe in them, and some distance from the problems they face at home.'

'Most of the kids in Papua have talent,' Erma said. 'But there is nobody to show them they can do more.'

A CHANCE TO DREAM

When Scheunemann first encountered Erma, she was a small, determined player competing against boys. Talent was immediately apparent. What interested Scheunemann just as much, however, was what happened beyond the field.

'Many girls arriving at training came from homes marked by poverty, violence or family breakdown,' Scheunemann said, quickly realising football alone would not be enough. Alongside coaching, she built a support network focused on mentoring, leadership and entrepreneurship, helping players imagine futures beyond the pitch.

Through the sport, Erma began winning scholarships and representing teams in regional tournaments. By her early teens, she was helping her teams win championships, eventually earning a scholarship opportunity to study in the United States—an unlikely path for a girl from a troubled household in West Papua. But academic struggles, isolation during the pandemic and a spiral into alcohol, drugs and depression led to visa problems and a return home that felt like failure.

Yet football still had one more gift to offer. Soon after returning, she joined Papua's team at Indonesia's National Sports Week, one of the country's most prestigious sporting competitions.

The team's success brought prize money that enabled Erma to buy a house for her family, fulfilling a dream her mother, a kindergarten teacher, had spoken about for years. 'I wanted to make my mother happy,' Erma said, regretting till today that her achievement was short-lived. Only months after the family moved in, her mother fell seriously ill and died.

'I didn't know what to do anymore,' Erma recalled. 'I felt like the reason I was fighting so hard had disappeared.'

The loss pushed her back toward alcohol and left her struggling to find direction. Yet football remained a constant. Today, Erma is studying English at university, playing in local tournaments and hoping to one day mentor younger girls facing challenges similar to her own.

For Scheunemann, that uncertainty highlights the limits of what sport alone can achieve. 'Football can open doors,' she said. 'But young women need support long after the football part is over.'

THE LONG ROAD TO LEADERSHIP

FIFA's efforts to increase the number of women coaches and leaders are intended to create more opportunities for women within the game. Indonesia has also seen more former female players move into coaching and development roles. Yet the experiences of Scheunemann and Erma suggest that leadership pathways begin long before coaching licenses and technical appointments. After decades of mentoring girls, helping them secure scholarships and teaching leadership and entrepreneurship alongside football, Scheunemann remains largely outside the formal structures of the sport.

In West Papua, many girls first have to overcome poverty, family instability, limited educational opportunities and social expectations that discourage their participation in sport. Keeping talented players in the game can be as challenging as developing them.

Erma said she hoped one day to mentor younger girls, though self-doubt remains a challenge. 'I want to help kids,' she said. 'But sometimes I ask myself, how can I help others if I still struggle with my own mistakes, with drinking alcohol occasionally?' If her university schedule allows, she may soon begin assisting with coaching at SSB Mutiara Timur, the football school where she first found the support that helped change her life.

For Scheunemann, that would represent a success greater than any tournament victory. The aim was never simply to produce football players, but to help young women discover possibilities they might never have imagined.

While FIFA and football federations are working to increase the number of women in coaching and leadership roles, West Papua's experience highlights a simpler reality: creating positions at the top is only part of the challenge. Girls must first be given the opportunity to stay in school, remain healthy, continue playing and imagine futures larger than the circumstances into which they were born.
ARTICLE WRITTEN BY:
Robert Bociaga Author

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3) Central Papua allocates Rp77.8 bln for free education  
June 24, 2026 20:10 GMT+700

Nabire (ANTARA) - Central Papua Provincial Government has allocated Rp77.8 billion (around US$4.3 million) to fund a free education programme in 2026.

Central Papua Governor Meki Nawipa said the programme reflects the regional government's commitment to improving access for education while reducing school dropout rates caused by economic constraints.

"This year, we are funding 58,920 junior high school, senior high school, vocational high school, special school students, and school dormitories in Central Papua with a budget of Rp77.8 billion," Nawipa said while opening the 2026 Student Cultural Creativity Light Festival in Nabire on Wednesday.

Nawipa said Central Papua has become the first province in Papua region to allocate a large-scale free education budget to reach students across the province.

With the programme in place, he added, there should no longer be any reason for children to be unable to attend school due to education costs.

Related news: West Papua targets opening special school in South Manokwari in 2025

In addition to financing free education, the Central Papua Provincial Government is also seeking to improve the quality of education through strengthening teachers' capacity and welfare.

Nawipa explained that in 2025, the provincial government facilitated certification for 801 teachers. Then, in 2026, the government is again targeting 1,000 teachers to obtain certification with the same number to be funded in 2027.

"Within three years, we are financing certification for nearly 3,000 teachers. We are also providing additional incentives for teachers," he remarked.

He expressed hope that all programmes prepared by the government would be utilised optimally by students, teachers, and beneficiary schools.

"We want all children in Central Papua to be not only intelligent, but also to possess honesty, integrity, and the spirit to keep moving forward," Nawipa noted.

Related news: Papuan students thank Prabowo for school upgrades, free meal program

Related news: Indonesian govt revitalized 89 schools in West Papua in 2025

Translator: Ali, Kenzu
Editor: Fransiska Ninditya

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4) Again, civilian injured and residents displaced following drone strikes on Balamai Village, Intan Jaya Regency

A 19-year-old civlian, Mr Makelon Majau, was reportedly injured during alleged Indonesian military drone strikes targeting Balamai Village in Hitadipa District, Intan Jaya Regency, on 22 June 2026. According to multiple local sources, the strikes were not preceded by an armed clash between Indonesian security forces and the West Papua National Liberation Army (TPNPB). The attack reportedly damaged civilian property, causing the residents to flee their homes in panic.  The telephone and internet networks were allegedly cut during the military operation to disrupt communication.
Similar attacks on civilians in West Papua involving drone strikes have significantly increased in the past months: On 18 June 2026, a similar drone attack in the Danggoa Village, Intan Jaya, injured two indigenous women while washing their sweet potatoes in a river. Eighteen-year-old Pendite Weya was reportedly killed by a suspected drone-delivered explosive in Wunapunggu Village, Melagi District, Lanny Jaya Regency, during a security force operation on the morning of 6 June 2026. On 17 May 2026, an Indonesian military drone reportedly dropped grenades on the St Paul’s Catholic Church in Mbamogo Village, Agisiga District, Intan Jaya Regency, shortly after worshippers had completed Sunday mass. The headquarters of the Papuan movement organisation West Papua National Committee (KNPB) in Jayapura, Papua Province, were allegedly attacked by a drone on 16 March 2026. As of time publication, none of these cases has been investigated to hold the perpetrators accountable.
Indonesian military forces conducted an aerial operation using unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) between approximately 09:00 am and 6:00 pm across the districts Sugapa, Agisiga, and Hitadipa (see photo below, source: independent HRD). During the operation, drones reportedly carried out two strikes in Balamai Village. Preliminary reports indicate explosions reportedly damaged the yard of a residential property, uprooted several house posts and caused blast damage around nearby homes.
Mr Makelon Majau, a resident of Balamai Village, sustained shrapnel injuries whilst near his home. His dog was reportedly killed by the explosion (see photo below, source: independent HRD). Following the strikes, many residents fled the village seeking safety. Local sources further reported that telephone and internet services were deliberately disrupted during the operation, allegedly preventing information from leaving the area. At the time of writing, no official statement had been issued by the Indonesian military or the Intan Jaya Regency Government regarding the reported incident.
HRM received the photo of a drone dropping an explosive which was allegedly taken during the drone strike on Balamai on 22 June 2026. While meta data analysis of the jpeg file could not confirm the date of recording, the image shows a drone that appears to be a Bayraktar TB3 drone (see photo below, source: independent HRD). The Indonesian Military bought 60 Bayraktar TB3 armed dronesand nine Akinci surveillance drones following the Indonesia visit of Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan in February 2026.  The Bayraktar TB3 was designed to operate autonomously from amphibious assault ships and landing helicopter docks (LHD). It can cover a distance of 5700 km at an average altitude of 20,000 feet and stay in the air for 32 hours.

Human rights law and humanitarian law analysis

The incident raises serious concerns under international humanitarian law, particularly the principles of distinction, proportionality, and precaution, which require parties to an armed conflict to distinguish at all times between civilians and military objectives and to take all feasible precautions to minimise civilian harm. The reported use of explosive weapons in the vicinity of civilian settlements and gardens may violate the right to life protected under Article 6 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), to which Indonesia is a State Party.
In situations of non-international armed conflict, all parties are bound by the customary international humanitarian law principles of distinction, proportionality and precaution, which require constant care to spare civilians and prohibit direct attacks against the civilian population. Even where military objectives are present, parties must take all feasible precautions to minimise incidental civilian harm. The available information indicates that the victims were engaged in ordinary civilian activities at the time of the explosion and there is currently no publicly available evidence suggesting that they were participating in armed hostilities.
Indonesian authorities should ensure a prompt, independent, effective and transparent investigation capable of establishing the facts, determining whether the attack complied with applicable international legal standards, and providing victims with access to justice, effective remedies and adequate reparation.

The explosions reportedly damaged residential property and killed a dog, 22 June 2026


Photo of a drone dropping an explosive. It was allegedly taken during the drone strike on Balamai on 22 June 2026


Detailed Case Data
Document ID: HRM-CAS-087-2026
Region: Indonesia > Central Papua > Intan Jaya > Hitadipa
Total number of victims: 1
#Number of VictimsName, DetailsGenderAgeGroup AffiliationViolations
1.Makelon MAjau
male19 Indigenous Peoplesill-treatment
Period of incident: 22/06/2026 – 22/06/2026
Perpetrator: Republic Indonesia > Indonesian Security Forces > Indonesian Military (TNI)
Issues: drones and clusterammunition, indigenous peoples, security force violence
Sources:
Suara Papua
Related Cases:

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5) Central Papua Government Plans to Build Weighbridge in Nabire

IN PACNEWS READING TIME: 2 MINS READ JUNE 24, 2026  0 Author : Arjuna Pademme Editor : Nuevaterra Mambor

Jayapura, Jubi – The Central Papua Provincial Government is planning to build a weighbridge in Nabire, the capital of Central Papua Province.

Head of Land Transportation at the Central Papua Provincial Transportation Agency, Yunius Tabuni, said the weighbridge project is expected to be completed during the 2026 fiscal year.

“The budget for the construction of this weighbridge is already available. However, the main challenge is determining a suitable location,” Tabuni said in a written statement on Wednesday (June 24, 2026).
According to him, selecting the site requires careful consideration. Several locations have already been surveyed, but issues related to land ownership remain unresolved. Most of the potential sites are privately owned by local residents, requiring land acquisition processes and compensation costs.

Tabuni said his office continues to conduct surveys and assess several locations considered suitable for the project.

Potential sites include areas near the Samabusa entrance road, the boundary of Nabire City, and the Topo area on the outskirts of the city. However, no final decision has been made because the location must meet technical requirements and land status considerations.

“The team is still conducting feasibility studies and coordinating with relevant parties. The contractor is currently assessing field conditions before construction can begin,” he said.

He explained that the planned weighbridge is intended to monitor and ensure that freight vehicles comply with legal weight limits.


According to Tabuni, monitoring vehicle loads is necessary to prevent road damage caused by overloaded vehicles or those exceeding permitted dimensions and weight limits, commonly known in Indonesia as over-dimension and overloading (ODOL). The facility will also help improve road safety and record freight transportation data.

“Vehicles using the roads must operate within their designated capacity and must not carry loads beyond the permitted limits. This is important to ensure that the roads we build remain durable and can be used for a long time,” he said.

Tabuni acknowledged that the project is still facing challenges related to site selection, but he expressed confidence that construction would be completed this year as targeted.

He said funding for the project has already been allocated and planning has been carried out extensively. The provincial government is now waiting for the results of the feasibility study and the completion of land-related matters so that construction can begin in the near future. (*)

Nuevaterra Mambor

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Tuesday, June 23, 2026

1) An Kimin Kindergarten Established for Internally Displaced Children from Nduga


2) Indonesian military personnel allegedly intimidate catholic clergy at Timika Cathedral

3) Indonesian military allegedly raid homes and intimidate residents in Yahukimo

4) Police officer allegedly hits woman during motorcycle accident and opens fire at by-standers in Dekai

5) Arbitrary arrest of hospital patient in Dekai, Yahukimo Regency

6) Gen Z protests expansion of food, energy projects in Indonesia’s Papua
7) Central Papua Government Receives Home Affairs Ministry Award for Reducing Unemployment
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1) An Kimin Kindergarten Established for Internally Displaced Children from Nduga

N PACNEWS READING TIME: 2 MINS READ JUNE 23, 2026  0 Author : CR18 Editor : Nuevaterra Mambor

Wamena, Jubi – The An Kimin Kindergarten learning group in Jayawijaya Regency, Papua Highlands Province, was established to provide educational opportunities for
internally displaced children from Nduga Regency, Papua Highlands, who are currently living in the area.

An Kimin Kindergarten was founded after thousands of Nduga residents were
displaced to various regions following the armed conflict in their home regency, which began in early December 2018.

An Kimin founder Intanus Gwijangge said children living in displacement sites had
not received adequate education due to the lack of government support. The situation prompted his group to establish the learning program in 2021.

“For years, we have been working in the humanitarian sector, particularly in
education, by establishing several community learning groups in Wamena since 2021,” Gwijangge said in a telephone interview on Monday (June 22, 2026).

The An Kimin learning program operates in three different locations. Group One is based in Sekom Village, Muliama District; Group Two in Musaima Village, Hubikiak District; and Group Three in Healekma Village, Napua District.

The program currently serves 100 students, 50 of whom have been registered in Indonesia’s Basic Education Data System (Dapodik). Five volunteers serve as teachers, with one assigned to Muliama, two to Healekma, and two to Musaima.

According to Gwijangge, the group has previously proposed that the Nduga Education Office provide a suitable school building to support teaching and learning activities. However, the proposal has yet to receive a response.

He explained that although the initiative is called An Kimin Kindergarten, its students are not limited to kindergarten-age children. The program also accommodates children of elementary and junior high school age.

“They are school dropouts from conflict-affected areas in Nduga, including Yigi, Mebarok, Mbugumu Yal, Paro, and other districts. We are trying to embrace them, so they do not lose their future,” he said.

Gwijangge said that last year, 13 students from An Kimin were enrolled in are educational foundation in Wamena to continue their studies under better conditions. Several other students have also been placed in schools in Napua District.

“We do all of this because we care about human resource development, not because of any personal interest. We have communicated this situation to the Head of the Nduga Education Office, but until now there has been no serious response,” he said.

Gwijangge hopes the Nduga Regency Government will support the initiative by
helping provide dormitories, learning facilities, and other educational necessities.

According to him, the community-based education movement complements
government efforts to fulfill children’s right to education.

“We are helping the regency government, provincial government, and other authorities prepare the next generation. Therefore, we hope there will be tangible support from the government for the efforts we have undertaken,” he said.

Gwijangge also expressed gratitude to the Rayori Biak Foundation for donating notebooks and pens to the learning program.

“The assistance is very meaningful. However, we still need many things, especially books, stationery, and clothing for children and students,” Intanus Gwijangge said. (*)

Nuevaterra Mambor
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2) Indonesian military personnel allegedly intimidate catholic clergy at Timika Cathedral

Indonesian military personnel (TNI) allegedly entered the private residence (pastoran) of the Three Kings Cathedral (Katedral Tiga Raja) in Timika without authorisation during security operations surrounding the visit of the Vice President of Indonesia, Gibran Rakabuming Raka. According to public statements by Rev. Amandus Rahadat and Rev. Benyamin Sugiya Tanggu Magay, soldiers entered the cathedral compound and private areas of the priests’ residence, including bedrooms, without permission. Rev. Amandus also alleged that unidentified individuals had repeatedly attended Mass whilst secretly photographing and recording clergy and worshippers. Following public criticism by the Church, representatives of Kodim 1710/Mimika met the priests on 28 April 2026, apologised for the conduct of their personnel, and acknowledged that soldiers should not have entered the residence without an official assignment order.
According to Rev. Amandus, the incidents culminated during the Vice President’s visit to Timika, when uniformed TNI personnel allegedly entered the cathedral compound and the priests’ residence without authorisation. During a public announcement after Mass on 26 April 2026, he condemned the intrusion into private areas of the residence and questioned whether the Church was being treated as though it were harbouring terrorists. He also reported repeated surveillance during religious services and announced that the cathedral would strengthen security measures to protect clergy and worshippers.
On 28 April 2026, representatives of Kodim 1710/Mimika, led by the Deputy District Military Commander, met Rev. Amandus and Rev. Benyamin at the cathedral (see group photo above). Rev. Amandus later clarified that the meeting had been intended to seek clarification rather than to interrogate the priests, contrary to reports circulating on social media. During the meeting, the military reportedly acknowledged that soldiers should not enter a private residence without an official assignment order and apologised on behalf of the District Military Commander and Regional Military Commander. The priests accepted the apology but stressed that such incidents must not be repeated.
The reported intrusion and surveillance raise concerns regarding the rights to privacy, freedom of religion and the independence of religious institutions. Entering a private residence without legal authority may constitute an arbitrary interference with privacy under Article 17 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), while surveillance of clergy and worshippers may have a chilling effect on the exercise of freedom of religion and expression. Although the military apologised and acknowledged procedural shortcomings, there should be an impartial investigation, accountability for any misconduct, and guarantees that similar incidents will not recur.

Video with a message condemning the intrusion 

Detailed Case Data
Document ID: HRM-CAS-086-2026
Region: Indonesia > Central Papua > Mimika
Total number of victims: 2
#Number of VictimsName, DetailsGenderAgeGroup AffiliationViolations
1.Amandus Rehadat
maleadult Religious Group
2.Benyamin Sugiya Tanggu Magay
adult Religious Group
Perpetrator: Republic Indonesia > Indonesian Security Forces > Indonesian Military (TNI)
Perpetrator details: Kodim 1710/Mimika
Issues: other
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https://humanrightsmonitor.org/case/indonesian-military-allegedly-raid-homes-and-intimidate-residents-in-yahukimo/

3) Indonesian military allegedly raid homes and intimidate residents in Yahukimo

Indonesian military personnel from a Marine unit (Korps Marinir) allegedly carried out a pre-dawn raid on two civilian homes in the Kebun Nenas residential area on Jalan Kali Merah, Dekai, Yahukimo Regency, on the night of 25 April 2026 at approximately 3 am. According to information received, military personnel forcibly entered the homes of Mr Naton Pahabol and Mr Devi Itlay, damaging doors and windows, ordering family members outside, photographing them, and conducting warrantless searches. No arrests were reported, but the operation allegedly caused significant fear, trauma and insecurity among the affected civilians.
According to the information received, members of the Indonesian Marines simultaneously raided the two residences in the Kebun Nenas area during the early hours of 25 April 2026. The soldiers reportedly forced entry by kicking in the doors of the houses, causing damage to the doors and windows. Family members of Mr Naton Pahabol were allegedly ordered to leave their home, instructed to sit on the ground outside, and photographed by the security forces. The personnel then conducted an extensive search of the property, inspecting all rooms, including bedrooms and bathrooms. During the search, they confiscated one handheld radio (HT) that the family reportedly used for communication with relatives in their village. According to the source, the device was not returned. Similar damage to doors and windows was reportedly inflicted during the raid on the home of Mr Devi Itlay.
The reported conduct raises concerns regarding compliance with Indonesia’s obligations under international human rights law. The forced entry into private homes without any publicly known judicial authorisation or legal basis may constitute an arbitrary interference with privacy, family and home, contrary to Article 17 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, to which Indonesia is a State Party. The confiscation of private property without due process may also violate protections against arbitrary deprivation of property under domestic law. Furthermore, photographing family members after forcing them from their home and conducting military-style operations against civilians may amount to intimidation and contribute to a climate of fear, particularly in conflict-affected areas such as Yahukimo Regency.

Damaged window and door


Detailed Case Data
Document ID: HRM-CAS-085-2026
Region: Indonesia > Highland Papua > Yahukimo > Dekai
Total number of victims: 2
#Number of VictimsName, DetailsGenderAgeGroup AffiliationViolations
1.Naton Pahabol
maleadult Indigenous Peoples
2.Devi Itlay
maleadult Indigenous Peoples
Period of incident: 25/04/2026 – 25/04/2026
Perpetrator: Republic Indonesia > Indonesian Security Forces > Indonesian Military (TNI) > Indonesian Navy (TNI-AL)
Perpetrator details: Korps Marinir

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4) Police officer allegedly hits woman during motorcycle accident and opens fire at by-standers in Dekai

A woman sustained critical injuries after allegedly being struck by a motorcycle ridden by two members of the Yahukimo District Police in Dekai, Yahukimo Regency, Papua Pegunungan Province, on 3 May 2026. The victim, Mrs Nelly Wenda (see photo on top, source: independent HRD), was reportedly hit while walking along Route 1. Witnesses accused that the officers intoxicated as the accident occurred. Following the collision, tensions escalated when local residents protested the incident, Thereupon, police officers allegedly discharged their firearms indiscriminately towards by-standers. Mrs Wenda was admitted to Dekai Regional General Hospital in critical condition, where she received medical treatment.
According to information received, Mrs Nelly Wenda was walking from a residential area on Route 1 when two officers from the Yahukimo District Police, travelling on a motorcycle, allegedly struck her in front of a roadside kiosk at approximately 04:40 pm. Witnesses alleged that the officers appeared to be intoxicated at the time of the incident. The collision caused the victim to suffer severe injuries requiring emergency medical treatment.
The incident immediately drew the attention of nearby residents. Some residents reportedly reacted by throwing stones at the officers. In response, the officers fired their weapons indiscriminately in the direction of by-standers. No information had been received indicating that anyone had been struck by the gunfire. Police officers detained the perpetrators and promised that both officers would be held accountable for the accident. However, there has been no information about disciplinary sanctions against the officers at the time of writing.
Human rights analysis
If confirmed, the incident raises serious concerns regarding the use of force by law enforcement officials and the protection of civilians. The alleged operation of a vehicle while under the influence of alcohol by police officers would constitute a grave breach of professional standards and potentially criminal conduct. Furthermore, the reported indiscriminate discharge of firearms in response to stone-throwing appears inconsistent with the principles of legality, necessity, proportionality and precaution governing the use of force under international human rights law, including the UN Basic Principles on the Use of Force and Firearms by Law Enforcement Officials. The authorities are obliged to conduct a prompt, impartial and effective investigation into both the collision and the subsequent use of firearms, to preserve evidence, identify those responsible, and ensure accountability where violations are established.

Police officers calm down local residents following the traffic accident involving tow police officers in Dekai on 3 May 2026


Detailed Case Data
Document ID: HRM-CAS-084-2026
Region: Indonesia > Highland Papua > Yahukimo > Dekai
Total number of victims: 1
#Number of VictimsName, DetailsGenderAgeGroup AffiliationViolations
1.Nelly Wenda
femaleadult Indigenous Peoplesill-treatment
Period of incident: 03/05/2026 – 03/05/2026
Perpetrator: Republic Indonesia > Indonesian Security Forces > Indonesian Police > POLRES
Perpetrator details: 2 members of the Yahukimo District Police
Issues: indigenous peoples, security force violence, women and children
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5) Arbitrary arrest of hospital patient in Dekai, Yahukimo Regency

On 29 April 2026, members of the Cartenz Peacekeeping Special Police Unit reportedly arrested Mr Natan Heluka, 21, at Kilo 4, Dekai, Yahukimo Regency, Papua Pegunungan province. At the time of his arrest, Mr Heluka reportedly suffered from long-standing blurred vision and was receiving emergency medical treatment at the Accident and Emergency Unit of Yahukimo Regional General Hospital. According to the information received, the arrest was carried out without an arrest warrant or any clear legal justification.
The reasons for the arrest were not communicated to the victim or his family, and no arrest warrant was presented. HRM did not receive confirmed information regarding whether Mr Heluka was subjected to ill-treatment, torture, or coercive interrogation. As of 30 April 2026, Heluka had not been released, despite his poor physical condition.
Human rights analysis
The reported circumstances indicate a possible case of arbitrary deprivation of liberty in violation of domestic and international legal standards. Under Article 9 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), everyone has the right to liberty and security of person and must not be subjected to arbitrary arrest or detention. The apparent failure to present an arrest warrant or provide the legal basis for the arrest also raises concerns regarding compliance with Indonesia’s Criminal Procedure Code (KUHAP), particularly the procedural safeguards governing lawful arrest and detention. Furthermore, if the victim was removed from or prevented from accessing necessary medical treatment, this may also interfere with the right to health protected under Article 12 of the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR).
Detailed Case Data
Document ID: HRM-CAS-083-2026
Region: Indonesia > Highland Papua > Yahukimo > Dekai
Total number of victims: 1
#Number of VictimsName, DetailsGenderAgeGroup AffiliationViolations
1.Natan Heluka
male21 Indigenous Peoplesarbitrary detention
Period of incident: 29/04/2026 – 30/04/2026
Perpetrators:
Republic Indonesia > Indonesian Security Forces
Republic Indonesia > Indonesian Security Forces > Indonesian Police
Perpetrator details: Damai Cartenz special unit
Issues: indigenous peoples
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https://www.ucanews.com/news/gen-z-protests-expansion-of-food-energy-projects-in-indonesias-papua/113935

6) Gen Z protests expansion of food, energy projects in Indonesia’s Papua

Demonstrators marched with red crosses amid government's fresh funding surge

By UCA News reporter Published: June 23, 2026 12:27 PM GMT

Dozens of young Papuans took to the streets to protest further expansion of the state-backed food and energy projects that they say threaten the ancestral land and livelihood of thousands of indigenous people.

Police stopped a protest march on June 21, citing a lack of a permit and a ban on Sunday demonstrations, when members of Papuan Generation Z, or Gen Z Papua, began their ‘Red Cross March’ at the Red Bridge in the provincial capital, Jayapura.

Tensions briefly flared when officers attempted to confiscate protesters’ banners that had slogans against the government’s food project, the military presence in the area, and an alleged genocide against Papuans.


The current protest is against Indonesia's Strategic National Projects (PSN), a government-backed initiative encompassing food estates, sugarcane plantations, and rice field expansion in South Papua.

President Prabowo Subianto has declared his ambition to open 2.5 million new hectares of land in Papua to support national food and energy security, with Merauke at the center of those plans.

The current PSN covers up to 2.73 million hectares in Merauke alone.

“This is a symbol of rejection [of PSN] and of our deep concern for the condition of Papua,” Aldy Hukubun, a Gen Z Papua representative, said.

The protest march was in response to Indonesia's Ministry of Agriculture allocating more than 5.5 trillion rupiah (US$335 million) to expand new rice-field development and crop programs across Papua.

Agriculture Minister Andi Amran Sulaiman announced on June 18 that land under development has now reached 870,000 hectares, including 80,000 hectares of new rice paddy fields added over the past two years.

Protester Brush Wadi said the expansion means indigenous communities are losing more of their customary lands and forests, their food source, and spiritual space.

Researchers from Indonesia's National Research and Innovation Agency have described the food estate model as a “paradox of recognition” — the state claims to protect indigenous rights while, in practice, overriding them.

“The land of Papua is not doing well,” Hukubun said. “Development must take into account human beings and the environment, not just production numbers.”


Father John Bunay, coordinator of Papua Indigenous Priests, said that for the Papuan people, land is not merely an economic commodity or commercial asset, but a primary source of life, a living pharmacy, and a sacred cultural space.

"It is God who gave this land to the tribes; it cannot simply be taken away," he said.


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7) Central Papua Government Receives Home Affairs Ministry Award for Reducing Unemployment

IN PACNEWS READING TIME: 2 MINS READ JUNE 23, 2026  0 Author : Arjuna Pademme Editor : Nuevaterra Mambor

Jayapura, Jubi – The Central Papua Provincial Government has received an award from Indonesia’s Ministry of Home Affairs (Kemendagri) in recognition of its success in reducing the unemployment rate.

As part of the award, the provincial government received a trophy and a fiscal incentive worth Rp3 billion, which has been transferred to the Central Papua Provincial Government’s account.

The award was presented to Central Papua Governor Meki Nawipa during the 2026
Papua Regional Outstanding Regional Leaders Awards ceremony in Jayapura, Papua, on Monday evening (June 22, 2026).

The Ministry of Home Affairs assessed that the account of the Central Papua Provincial Government, under the leadership of Governor Meki Nawipa and Deputy Governor Deinas Geley, had demonstrated innovation in regional development, including efforts to reduce unemployment across the province.

The evaluation for the unemployment reduction category considered the quality of planning, budget support, and the province’s success in lowering unemployment rates.

Innovation in the labor and employment sector was considered a key indicator in creating effective, adaptive solutions that deliver tangible benefits to the community.

The Central Papua Provincial Government also secured second place in the provincial-level inflation control category, earning an additional fiscal incentive of Rp2 billion.


In addition to the provincial government, several regency administrations in Central Papua also received awards. Dogiyai Regency was named third-best performer in the same category and received an additional fiscal incentive of Rp1 billion.

Nabire Regency was awarded first place among provincial capitals and received an additional fiscal incentive of Rp3 billion. Meanwhile, Mimika Regency achieved top honors in the creative financing category as well as in poverty alleviation and stunting reduction, earning a total fiscal incentive of Rp6 billion.

Minister of Home Affairs Muhammad Tito Karnavian said the awards were intended
to encourage and motivate regional leaders to continue delivering their best performance.

However, he reminded regional leaders to exercise caution in the use of the additional fiscal incentives they receive and warned against any misuse of the funds that could result in legal consequences. (*)


Nuevaterra Mambor

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