Monday, July 13, 2026

1) When the army changes costume



2) Claims Indonesian humanitarian service supported military operations in West Papua

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Inside Indonesia


1) When the army changes costume 
YUDI BACHRIOKTORA   Published: 13 July 2026

Three decades after Suharto fell, the army is back

On the night of 8 May 2026, a screening of the documentary film Pesta Babi: Kolonialisme di Zaman Kita (Pig Feast: Colonialism in Our Time) directed by Dandhy Dwi Laksono and Cypri Paju Daleat the Pendopo Benteng Oranje Ternate in North Maluku was disrupted. The event was organised by the Society of Indonesian Environmental Journalists (SIEJ) and Aliansi Jurnalis Indonesia (AJI) Kota Ternate. Disruptions of public events including seminars and film screenings are not unusual in Indonesia.

What was different this time, was that instead of being initiated by religious groups or community organisations, the disruption in Ternate was led by the local District Military Commander, Lieutenant Colonel Jani Setiadi. This was not the first nor would it be the last disruption of a screening of the now banned documentary.

At the time of writing, since its Indonesian premiere in April 2026, at least 50 incidents involving intimidation during or before screenings have been reported. The 95-minute film documents the experiences of the Marind, Yei, Awyu and Muyu people in southern Papua since the late 2024 when the central government launched a massive agricultural project on their land.

Why was this documentary banned? Why is the military interested in regulating film screenings? The answer lies far beyond the scope of the cinema, specifically in a village called Wanam.

Red cross at Wanam

On 15 December 2025, the elders of the Malind Maklew clan planted a red cross on their customary land in Wanam Village, Ilwayab District, Merauke Regency. This red cross symbolises rejection of the national project and is one of 1800 installed in the South Papua region over the past few years.

The Merauke National Strategic Project (Proyek Strategis Nasional, PSN) aims to clear 2.29 million hectares of forest and wetlands for bioethanol sugarcane plantations and national rice reserves in 19 of the 22 districts of Merauke Regency. It is led by a consortium headed by Andi Syamsuddin Arsyad (Haji Isam) from Jhonlin Group, working with Global Papua Abadi and PT Agrinas, a state-owned company created by President Prabowo Subianto in March 2025. Haji Isam, cousin to the Minister of Agriculture, Amran Sulaiman, made headlines in 2024 by ordering 2000 excavators from China in a single transaction, marking the largest such order globally.

On 2 October 2024, the Commander of the Indonesian Armed Forces (Tentara Nasional Indonesia, TNI) inaugurated a new battalion in Papua, the Infantry Battalion Supporting Vulnerable Areas(Batalyon Infanteri Penyangga Daerah Rawan, Yonif PDR). This unit was given an unusual mandate: support food security programs. When questioned about its origin, the Army Chief of Staff, Maruli Simanjuntak, firmly stated, ‘this is the idea of the Minister of Defence, and it's extraordinary’. The Minister of Defence in question was Prabowo Subianto, who had just been elected president.

Two thousand soldiers were deployed to Merauke alongside the heavy machinery. By 10 November 2024, 11 military posts were established along the project corridor. A letter from the National Commission on Human Rights (KOMNAS HAM) counted 300 units of heavy equipment in one district, each directly guarded by military personnel. KOMNAS HAM also requested clarification from the Ministry of Agrarian Affairs and Spatial Planning/National Land Agency (ATR/BPN), the Ministry of Forestry, the Government of South Papua Province, the Government of Merauke Regency, and the TNI Commander regarding this matter.

The new face of dwifungsi

The disruption of the Pesta Babi screening and the deployment of the battalion to Papua reveal deeper systemic mechanisms at play. Rather than isolated institutional missteps, these actions reflect a system functioning precisely as designed: an architecture that is fundamentally sanctioned by law.

Between 2021 and 2025, the government built a legal framework for what is now happening. Government Regulation No. 23/2021 on Forest Areas made it easier to release forest areas for PSNs. The revised Job Creation Law of 2023 also introduced an ‘accelerated and simplified’ framework that narrows consultation opportunities. The 2025 National Development Plan reaffirms Merauke and Rempang as PSNs, and Presidential Decree No. 15/2024 designates Wanam as a food production center. During this period, the TNI Commander also established five new Daerah Rawan battalions, all of them stationed in Papua.

A critical milestone was reached on 20 March 2025, when the House of Representatives (DPR) ratified a revision of the Military Law, Law No. 3/2025. This legislation expands non-war military operations and increases the number of civilian ministries where active-duty officers can be staffed, from ten to 14. The most consequential shift lies in a crucial procedural distinction: article 7, paragraph 4, eliminates the requirement that troop deployment for non-war operations be mandated by a ‘state political decision’. By institutionalising what was previously deemed a constitutional deviation, the new law normalises military intervention in civic space. Consequently, one of the foundational pillars of reformasi, namely dismantling the military’s dual functionality (dwifungsi), has effectively been brought to an end.

To understand this evolving dwifungsi, we can look to Paul Chambers and Napisa Waitoolkiat’s framework of ‘khaki capital’which explains how the military leverages state budget, resources and lucrative positions for economic gain, backed by violence if necessary. The practice itself is not new. Harold Crouch showed that military business and administration has been intertwined since the founding of Indonesia’s military institutions. What is new is its combination with ongoing electoral democracy. Marcus Mietzner has noted these continuous challenges since the reform era, including military control over territorial command structures and extensive informal business interests.

In 1998, the symbols of the New Order were exposed: military factions in parliament, automatic appointment of active soldiers to civil positions and formal immunity. However, the military’s core framework remained untouched: the territorial command structure still spans from Military Regional Command (Komando Daerah Militer) to Military Resort Command (Komando Resor Militer), Military District Command (Komando Distrik Militer), Military Subdistrict Command (Komando Rayon Militer), and Village Supervisory Non-Commissioned Officer (Bintara Pembina Desa) at the village level. As long as this structure exists, and soldiers at each level have access to local resources through unit foundations, project security and the placement of retired officers, the TNI will never be entirely dependent on the state budget. This ‘fiscal autonomy’ remains a root cause of why the state cannot fully control the TNI.

When food becomes a matter of security

The evolving dwifungsi of TNI warrants close examination. Under the New Order, deploying soldiers into communities was justified through a national security lens aimed at crushing ‘the enemy of the state’: communism, separatism and instability. After 1998, these lost their ideological potency. Communism lacks a living opponent. Separatism can only be proclaimed in Papua, with diplomatic costs.

Since 2020, a new discursive shift emerged: the language of food security. This framework has a flexible rhetorical structure. It allows the government and military to legitimise large-scale projects without needing a specific enemy. It only needs generic threats: disruptions to the global supply chain, climate volatility, and the need for independence. None of these are easily disputed. Once an initiative is securitised under the banner of food security, three mechanisms occur simultaneously: criticism is delegitimised as unpatriotic; military involvement is normalised as national service and local community resistance is framed as an obstacle to the public interest.

A systemic pattern

The recurring pattern of military and state intervention under the banner of national projects is not confined to Papua. Similar structures of motivation and action are seen in several cases in other regions across Indonesia.

In September 2023, on Rempang Island, Riau Islands, a thousand combined police and military personnel fired tear gas at 16 villages, populated by Malay people, Orang Darat dan Orang Laut inhabitants. The land will be cleared for a glass factory and industrial area supported by the Chinese company Xinyi. The project was reinstated as a PSN in 2025.

In Central Kalimantan’s peatlands, on the land where the Million-Hectare Peatland Project failed during the Suharto era in the 1990s, the government launched a new food estate in 2020, under Prabowo Subianto’s leadership as the Minister of Defense. Five years later, Pantau Gambut found that only one per cent of the new planting area was suitable for food crops.

Since 2018, in West Java, the TNI has run an environmental program along the upper Citarum River. A study by the Agrarian Resource Centre Bandung shows that the soldiers are concentrated in the long-disputed upstream area; farmers are prohibited from planting vegetables based on conservation efforts; large plantations are allowed to continue, and the military is pressuring residents to plant coffee while also controlling the marketing. This economic takeover, disguised as ecological initiatives, affects the substance of local livelihoods.

The Agrarian Resources Center also highlights a parallel case in Urutsewu, Kebumen. In 1998, based on unverified colonial-era maps, the TNI began mapping the coastal land in Urutsewu, covering around 1.150 ha. Based on this map, the Army formally registered it as a state asset under its control in 2010. In 2008, prior to any legal authorisation, the military signed an agreement with an iron sand mining company to operate on the disputed land. The commissioner was a retired major-general, and the director was Gautama Hartarto, the child of Hartarto, a former Suharto cabinet minister and the brother of Airlangga Hartarto, the current Coordinating Minister for Economic Affairs. In Urutsewu, the soldiers do not merely protect external capital; they are autonomous actors in capital accumulation, claiming the land, transacting and holding assets. Although the mining partnership ended in 2011, the military retained control, securing land use certificates from the National Land Agency (Badan Pertanahan Nasional, BPN) in 2020 and 2021.

What happened in Merauke is not unprecedented. Rather, it is a much larger version of an established pattern. The justification for military involvement has shifted from national defence to food security. The underlying structure of collaboration between the military and business interests remains the same.

An old ghost in a new uniform

The 1998 reformasi (reformation) succeeded in overthrowing the Suharto regime, but it failed to dismantle the structural architecture that supported it. Between 2014 and 2024, that architecture was rebuilt under a different guise. What was once dwifungsi has been rebranded as military support for food security. What was once territorial development has materialised as the Infantry Battalion Supporting Vulnerable Areas (Yonif PDR). What used to be the looming threat of communism or separatism, has shifted to the spectre of a food crisis.

On the day the new TNI Law was enacted on 20 March 2025, the Minister of Defence Sjafrie Samsoeddin declared dwifungsi a thing of the past and that ‘its ghost no longer remains’. His statement reads like a premature epitaph for an era that, in fact, is well and truly alive.

In Wanam, the red cross still stands. Behind it, the bulldozer keeps working, shielded by 11 military posts guarding the project corridor. The questions the people of Wanam ask, ‘Why send soldiers? What did we do wrong?’ was also asked long before the bulldozers arrived in Merauke. It was asked in Rempang. It was asked upstream of the Citarum. It was asked on the Urutsewu coast. No government has answered honestly.

The coordinated disruption of Pesta Babi screenings across multiple venues, represents the answer to that question: preemptive censorship. What is silenced is not merely the film. What is also being shuttered is a rare window through which citizens outside Wanam can witness how this architecture operates.

But the red crosses remain standing. And despite relentless state interference, the documentary continues to be watched by thousands of viewers both offline and online, including many Indonesians who continue to resist.

Yudi Bachrioktora (yudibachri@gmail.comteaches in the Department of History, Faculty of Humanities, at the University of Indonesia, and is a researcher at the Agrarian Resource Center (ARC)-Bandung.

Inside Indonesia 164: Apr-Jun 2026


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2) Claims Indonesian humanitarian service supported military operations in West Papua

Andrew Mathieson Published July 13, 2026 at 8.00am (AWST)

A humanitarian air service has been accused of transporting Indonesian military personnel and ammunition for an armed operation in the West Papua territory.

Evidence has been presented suggesting Associated Medical Aviation, an Indonesian privately-run organisation acting on behalf of the Catholic Church, has violated its non-political, humanitarian charter to provide aviation transport for essential goods to remote communities inaccessible by road.

The allegations have been made by the West Papua National Liberation Army, who have also issued a formal warning of repercussions for the alleged actions of the Indonesians.

Associated Medical Aviation has denied the allegations, however its spokesperson has admitted to primarily financing its air service through Indonesian government subsidies.

An operations spokesperson said the organisation "regretted the allegation" while adding it has never received a formal warning from the armed group which is fighting for Papuan independence and a proposed separatist state.

The denials also come after the shock death of Nicholas Gosselin, a 29-year-old American pilot who flew for the aviation operators.

He was shot and killed on July 2 after landing an aircraft on a remote airstrip among Indonesia's Papua highlands.

Communication with the aircraft, which had also been carrying seven passengers, was lost shortly after landing, the operators confirmed.


The West Papua National Liberation Army claimed responsibility for the incident, adding its fighters shot the pilot and later burned the plane.

The passengers reportedly survived, according to Indonesian authorities.

An Associated Medical Aviation spokesperson said the aircraft is only used to deliver food supplies, transport critically-ill patients from isolated villages to urban hospitals in West Papua, and to provide other essential humanitarian services.

The spokesperson issued the remarks from the Bhayangkara Hospital in Jayapura — the largest city in West Papua — on Friday while awaiting the completion of the forensic, post-mortem examination of Mr Gosselin's body.

The organisation confirmed the deceased body was first given a farewell mass before the examination.

However, access to the examination room in the hospital was said to be restricted, according to reports.

Mr Gosselin's body was flown to Jakarta where the US Embassy in the Indonesian capital were overseeing arrangements for the body's repatriation.

West Papua National Liberation Army activist, Sebby Sambom, said the fighters from the army's Yahukimo Regional Command's Bakusip Company were responsible for the shooting and for later setting the aircraft on fire.

The attack took place in Balinggama, a village located in the Yahukimo Regency of the Papua Highlands province.

"We burned the aircraft because the pilot had violated the West Papua National Liberation Army ultimatum," Sambom said in an online statement.

Mr Sambom confirmed the aircraft was targeted as it had allegedly been utilised to transport armed personnel and had ignored an earlier West Papua National Liberation Army's warning.

The resistance group believes the civilian aircraft has routinely been used to transport Indonesian troops and military logistics into West Papua's interior to support its armed operations, which it alleged has resulted in a number of civilian casualties among West Papua's Indigenous population.

"We have issued an ultimatum banning all civilian aircraft from entering the operational area of West Papua National Liberation Army Kodap XVI Yahukimo," Mr Sambom added.

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Saturday, July 11, 2026

1) GMKI South Sorong Urges President to Protect Civilians in Papua


2) Indonesia studies provincial hospital for Highland Papua  

3) South Papua Steps Up Cross-Sector Efforts to Eliminate Leprosy
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1) GMKI South Sorong Urges President to Protect Civilians in Papua

News Desk July 11, 2026 6:01 pm 

Teminabuan, Jubi – The South Sorong branch of the Indonesian Christian Student Movement (GMKI) has called on President Prabowo Subianto to ensure the protection of civilians and pursue a peaceful and just resolution to the conflict in Papua.

The appeal comes amid growing concern over the continuing armed conflict between Indonesian security forces and the West Papua National Liberation Army (TPNPB).

South Sorong GMKI chair Gofon Arky Lemauk said the continued loss of civilian lives demonstrates that efforts to resolve the conflict have yet to address its underlying causes.

He said civilians should not continue to bear the consequences of a prolonged conflict and stressed that the state has a constitutional responsibility to protect all citizens, regardless of where they live or their background.

GMKI South Sorong also expressed its condolences to the families of those who have lost their lives in the conflict.

Lemauk noted that the victims have included not only those directly involved in the fighting but also civilians, including religious leaders, pregnant women, and people with no involvement in the conflict.

“The loss of a single human life is an irreplaceable loss,” Lemauk said in a written statement on Friday (July 10, 2026).

He said that as a Christian student organization grounded in faith, nationalism, and intellectual responsibility, GMKI believes that every person possesses inherent dignity that must be respected and protected.

“No interest can justify the loss of civilian lives. Human life cannot be measured against political interests or security approaches. The state must stand at the forefront in protecting its people,” he said.

GMKI South Sorong reminded President Prabowo that Indonesia’s 1945 Constitution explicitly mandates the state to protect all Indonesians, including Papuans who continue to live amid armed conflict.

According to the organization, the success of national development should not be measured solely by the construction of roads, bridges, or other physical infrastructure.
Instead, it said, progress should also be assessed by the extent to which the government is able to provide security, justice, legal protection, and respect for human rights.

“Development has little meaning if people continue to live in fear. The state must bring not only physical development, but also security, justice, and the assurance that every citizen’s right to life is protected,” Lemauk said.

He added that Papua should no longer be defined by recurring reports of violence.

“Every time gunfire erupts, civilians once again become those who suffer the most,” he said.

Lemauk said the government must ensure that protecting civilians becomes its highest priority rather than merely a political promise or an administrative objective.

According to GMKI South Sorong, lasting peace in Papua cannot be achieved through security measures alone but requires efforts to build trust, uphold justice, and respect human rights.

The organization said the government should implement policies that restore a sense of safety so that people can return to their daily lives, attend school, work, and worship without fear.

It also called on the government to ensure that children do not grow up under the shadow of conflict and that women, religious leaders, healthcare workers, and Indigenous communities are able to live without constant fear.

“The prolonged conflict has created a deep humanitarian crisis. Children are losing educational opportunities, healthcare services have been disrupted, livelihoods have been destroyed, and many families remain displaced,” Lemauk said.

GMKI South Sorong presented six demands to the Indonesian government.

The organization called on the government to review its security policies in conflict-affected areas with civilian protection as the highest priority. It also urged independent, professional, and transparent investigations into all alleged human rights violations.

GMKI further called on the state to provide maximum protection for religious leaders, teachers, healthcare workers, women, children, Indigenous communities, and other civilians.

The organization urged the government to open an inclusive dialogue as a peaceful and dignified pathway to resolving the conflict.

It also said development in Papua should go hand in hand with respect for human rights, social justice, improved education, and accessible healthcare services.

Finally, GMKI called for thorough investigations into all alleged killings of civilians and for those found responsible to be prosecuted in accordance with the law. (*)

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2) Indonesia studies provincial hospital for Highland Papua  
July 11, 2026 17:15 GMT+700


Wamena, Highland Papua (ANTARA) - The Ministry of Health is conducting a feasibility study for the construction of a provincial hospital in Wamena, Jayawijaya District, Highland Papua, as part of efforts to improve healthcare services in the region.

Director of Clinical Services at the ministry, Obrin Parulian, said on Saturday that the planned Highland Papua Provincial Hospital is one of the ministry's priorities to strengthen healthcare services in the province.

"The Highland Papua Provincial Hospital is part of our efforts to improve the equitable distribution of healthcare services across Indonesia. We are currently conducting feasibility studies for the project," he said.

Parulian explained that Highland Papua Province does not yet have a provincial hospital capable of serving residents from its eight districts.

"Existing hospitals in Highland Papua are owned and managed by the district governments. Therefore, a provincial hospital is needed to handle cases that cannot be treated at the district level," he said.

According to him, hospitals in the eight districts are able to manage only around 70 to 75 percent of medical cases, while more complex conditions require advanced treatment.

"To provide comprehensive healthcare services and treat the remaining 20 to 25 percent of advanced medical cases, a provincial hospital is essential. It will require better medical facilities and stronger support from specialist healthcare professionals," he said.

Parulian added that the ministry will conduct the study in collaboration with the Highland Papua Provincial Government and the Jayawijaya District Government.

"Close coordination with the local governments is crucial to ensure that the hospital can be managed effectively once construction is completed," he said.

Related news: VP Gibran pledges upgrade of Asmat Hospital to type C

Related news: Jayapura Hospital eyes role as Western Pacific healthcare hub


Translator: Yudhi, Kenzu
Editor: Primayanti


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3) South Papua Steps Up Cross-Sector Efforts to Eliminate Leprosy
  News Desk July 11, 2026 6:03 pm 

Merauke, Jubi – The South Papua provincial government will strengthen cross-sector collaboration to accelerate leprosy elimination after Governor Apolo Safanpo signed a joint declaration at the 2026 National Leprosy Conference in Jakarta on Friday (July 10, 2026).

Benedicta Herlina Rahangiar, head of the South Papua Health, Population Control and Family Planning Office, said the commitment will be followed by a series of coordination meetings and the signing of a provincial joint agreement involving government agencies and other stakeholders.

The initiative will bring together district governments, regional government agencies, the Indonesian Military (TNI), the National Police (Polri), legislative institutions, the Papuan People’s Assembly (MRP), academics, professional associations, development partners, customary leaders, and religious leaders.


“Following the Governor’s directive, we will immediately organize a coordination meeting and sign a joint commitment to accelerate leprosy elimination, strengthen efforts to combat HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, and malaria, and improve maternal and child health,” Rahangiar said.

She said the agreement will involve all district heads, district health offices, regional government agencies, and other cross-sector partners.

According to Rahangiar, broad collaboration is essential because South Papua continues to record a high burden of leprosy cases.

Provincial health data show that the prevalence of leprosy in 2025 reached 8.13 cases per 10,000 people, well above the national elimination target of fewer than one case per 10,000 people.

The province also recorded 221 new leprosy cases during 2025, including 180 adults and 41 children. Its Case Detection Rate (CDR) reached 40.21 cases per 100,000 people, significantly exceeding the national target of five cases per 100,000 people.

Rahangiar said every confirmed case is treated according to national medical guidelines, although the province occasionally experiences delays in receiving medication supplies from the central government.


“We ensure that every patient diagnosed with leprosy receives treatment as quickly as possible,” she said.

She acknowledged that delayed deliveries of medicines remain a challenge but stressed that maintaining healthcare services remains the government’s priority.

Rahangiar also encouraged residents to take advantage of Indonesia’s Free Health Check Program, saying it can help detect diseases, including leprosy, at an early stage so treatment can begin promptly and the risk of transmission can be reduced.

Earlier, Governor Apolo Safanpo joined Indonesia’s other 37 provincial governors in signing the Joint Commitment for Accelerating Leprosy Elimination during the 2026 National Leprosy Conference, organized by the Ministry of Health and the Coordinating Ministry for Human Development and Culture.

The declaration forms part of Indonesia’s national goal of eliminating leprosy, ending stigma, and eliminating social exclusion related to the disease by 2030. (*)


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Friday, July 10, 2026

1) BRIN expedition discovers new gold reserves in Papua: Prabowo


2) Freeport Workers’ Layoff Dispute Brought Before Labor Minister

3) Update on arbitrary detention and alleged torture of Papuan student Roy Suhuniap: Mr Suhuniap released without charges

4) Papua Governor Proposes Expanding Cross-Border Trade With Pacific Nations to Boost Local Revenue



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1) BRIN expedition discovers new gold reserves in Papua: Prabowo  
July 10, 2026 09:56 GMT+700


Jakarta (ANTARA) - President Prabowo Subianto announced that a cross-agency expedition led by the National Research and Innovation Agency (BRIN) had discovered gold reserves and several new mineral deposits in Papua's mountainous region.

The new discovery was reported just hours before the President delivered a speech at the launch of the mandatory B50 program at the KM 57 rest area of the Jakarta-Cikampek Toll Road in Karawang, West Java, on Thursday (July 9).

"In two or three weeks, the team has discovered vast gold reserves and other mineral reserves," Prabowo spoke at the launch event.

Therefore, he called on all groups to foster the same sense of optimism for Indonesia's future.

"Our future is very good, very bright. Now we just have to continue pioneering, protecting our nation, maintaining goodness, reducing evil. We have to stop corruption, we have to stop smuggling, we have to stop narcotics, we have to stop online gambling," Prabowo continued.

At the same event, the President also highlighted Indonesia's vast untapped natural resources, citing substantial coal reserves as well as newly identified natural gas fields in the Andaman Block off the coast of Aceh and the Masela Block in Southwest Maluku.

"We still have very large (gas) fields in Masela, Southwest Maluku, in Natuna, in Kalimantan. We also recently discovered large fields, and we uncovered CNG. We still import LPG but we have a lot of CNG," he confirmed.

The head of state added that Central Java has started using compressed natural gas (CNG) as an alternative to liquefied petroleum gas (LPG), expressing hope that the initiative will be expanded to other parts of Indonesia.

"CNG is available throughout Indonesia, and technology has also been discovered to produce gas from deep underground coal, which has not yet been utilized. Ladies and gentlemen, in the midst of a global crisis, Indonesia has proven to have strength," Prabowo pointed out.

Related news: Forging Indonesia's future as a global gold reserve hub

Related news: Indonesia ready to establish bullion banks: Minister Thohir

Related news: RI hopes CNG gas networks accelerate clean energy access



Translator: Genta Tenri M, Resinta Sulistiyandari
Editor: Azis Kurmala



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2) Freeport Workers’ Layoff Dispute Brought Before Labor Minister

   
Reading Time: 3 mins read

Jayapura, Jubi – Presidential Special Adviser for Labor and Workers’ Welfare Said Iqbal has raised the unresolved dismissal of thousands of employees of PT Freeport Indonesia with Indonesia’s Minister of Manpower, Yassierli. Iqbal, who also serves as president of the Confederation of Indonesian Trade Unions (KSPI), discussed the case during a meeting with the minister at the Ministry of Manpower in Central Jakarta on Thursday (July 9, 2026).

“I informed the minister that we are handling the case of 2,374 PT Freeport employees who have remained in limbo for nearly nine years since they were dismissed. There is still no clarity over whether they were formally terminated or not, or what severance pay they are entitled to,” Iqbal said in a video recording provided to Jubi by KSPI’s Central Papua chapter on Friday (July 10, 2026).

Iqbal said his priority is to find a solution that is fair to all parties, including the affected workers, the people of Papua, and the company itself.

“We want the company to continue operating, but workers’ rights must not be ignored. Next week I will meet with PT Freeport’s board of directors at the Office of the Presidential Special Adviser,” he said.

The meeting between Iqbal and Yassierli also covered broader labor issues, including outsourced workers and a proposal to eliminate taxes on old-age security benefits (JHT).

Meanwhile, Laurenzus Kadepa, chair of KSPI’s Central Papua chapter, said President Prabowo Subianto should intervene directly to help resolve the long-running dispute involving former PT Freeport employees who participated in the workers’ strike, commonly known as Moker.

Kadepa said the dispute has remained unresolved since 2017 despite numerous attempts at settlement through bipartite negotiations, mediation, labor inspections, and both litigation and non-litigation processes.

He said representatives of the workers have also held hearings with the House of Representatives (DPR), the Regional Representative Council (DPD), the Ministry of Manpower, and Indonesia’s National Human Rights Commission (Komnas HAM).

“Despite those efforts, thousands of former workers are still waiting for a comprehensive resolution that provides legal certainty over their employment status and rights,” Kadepa said.

He said hopes for a breakthrough have grown after Iqbal formally raised the issue with the Ministry of Manpower.

Iqbal is also scheduled to meet PT Freeport’s management to discuss the unresolved employment dispute involving the workers at the company’s copper and gold mining operations in Mimika Regency, Central Papua. 

ReferensiGeografis

Kadepa noted that Iqbal had previously met with Minister of Human Rights Natalius Pigai on June 24, 2026. During that meeting, Iqbal said he would prepare an assessment and submit recommendations to President Prabowo on resolving the long-running dispute involving the striking workers.

“That meeting marked an important milestone because it opened the possibility of the issue receiving direct attention from the President for the first time,” Kadepa said.

However, he stressed that resolving the dispute should not be viewed solely as the responsibility of the central government.

According to Kadepa, the Central Papua provincial government also has a responsibility to ensure effective coordination among relevant institutions so that the settlement process can move forward more efficiently.

He pointed to Government Regulation No. 33/2018, which designates provincial governors as representatives of the central government in their respective regions.

Under the regulation, governors are responsible not only for leading provincial administrations but also for coordinating government affairs, supervising district and municipal governments, monitoring and evaluating public policies, overseeing the implementation of national programs, and facilitating the resolution of strategic cross-sector issues.

Kadepa said those responsibilities are directly relevant to the Freeport labor dispute.

“Now that the central government has opened a path toward resolving the dispute through the Presidential Special Adviser, the Central Papua provincial government is in a strategic position to act as the main link between the central government, district administrations, labor authorities, and other stakeholders,” he said.

Kadepa said the current developments provide an opportunity for Central Papua Governor to demonstrate leadership in resolving one of Papua’s largest labor disputes.

He argued that as the central government begins to engage more actively through the Presidential Special Adviser, the provincial government should strengthen coordination within the scope of its own authority.

“The Central Papua provincial government has a strategic role in strengthening coordination so that the settlement process becomes more effective and provides certainty for workers as well as all stakeholders,” Kadepa said. 

ReferensiGeografis

He also welcomed the formation of a special committee by the Mimika Regional Legislative Council, saying it reflected growing political commitment at the local level.

With communication channels to the central government now opening, Kadepa said the momentum should not end with meetings and recommendations alone. Instead, he urged the Central Papua provincial government to become an active strategic partner in implementing any future recommendations submitted to President Prabowo.

He said this would ensure that the President’s decisions are supported by accurate information from the field, strong inter-agency coordination, and administrative measures that fall within the authority of regional governments. (*)



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3) Update on arbitrary detention and alleged torture of Papuan student Roy Suhuniap: Mr Suhuniap released without charges

Papuan students, Mr Roy Suhuniap, was released unconditionally on 2 July 2026 after investigators found no evidence of linking him to any criminal offense. His release set an end to three weeks of arbitrary detention during which Mr Suhuniap was reportedly tortured. The Papuan Association of Human Rights Lawyers (Paham Papua) and Legal Aid Organisation, LBH, had provided legal support during detention, demanding Mr Suhuniap unconditional release. Yet there has been no information whether the allegations of torture have been officially reported to the Police Profession and Security Division (Propam).

Background

On 11 June 2026, intelligence and police officers forcibly arrested twenty-three-year-old student Roy Suhuniap at Jayapura Port, Jayapura City, Papua Province. Mr Suhuniap had just arrived in Jayapura aboard the Gunung Dempo Ship. As he was about to disembark, approximately 15 officers apprehended him without showing a warrant. Mr Suhuniap was subjected to torture during police detention at the Jayapura District police headquarters. Following the detention, the police failed to inform Mr Suhuniap’s family about the detention.

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4) Papua Governor Proposes Expanding Cross-Border Trade With Pacific Nations to Boost Local Revenue


by News Desk  10 July 2026 in National & International Reading Time: 2 mins read

Jayapura, Jubi – Papua Governor Matius Derek Fakhiri has proposed strengthening cross-border trade with Pacific countries, particularly Papua New Guinea (PNG), as part of efforts to increase the province’s locally generated revenue (PAD).

Fakhiri presented the proposal during a meeting with Indonesia’s Minister of Immigration and Corrections, Agus Andrianto, in Jakarta on Thursday (July 9, 2026).

He said Papua’s economy could grow significantly if locally produced goods were marketed not only within the province but also exported to international markets.


“Selling our products within Papua alone can already increase local revenue. It would be even better if we could expand into the Pacific region, including PNG,” Fakhiri said.

According to the governor, achieving that goal will require close cooperation with the Directorate General of Immigration, including strengthening border checkpoints to facilitate trade and improve cross-border mobility.

During the meeting, Fakhiri also proposed a strategic partnership with the Ministry of Immigration and Corrections that would allow civil servants from the Papua provincial government to transfer into the ministry.

He said the initiative would help optimize the province’s civil service workforce while strengthening immigration services in eastern Indonesia.

“We appreciate the opportunity to meet with the Ministry of Immigration and Corrections today. One of the issues we raised is the relatively large number of civil servants employed by the Papua provincial government. We are encouraging the transfer of some of our civil servants into the Ministry of Immigration,” he said. 

AsiaTenggara & Kepulauan Pasifik

Fakhiri said Minister Agus welcomed the proposals and expressed the ministry’s readiness to support the Papua provincial government’s strategic programs.

The meeting also discussed involving prison inmates in agricultural and plantation programs currently being promoted by the provincial government.

“Rather than simply waiting to complete their sentences, inmates could take part in productive activities such as the food brigade program. It would equip them with practical skills before they return to society,” Fakhiri said.

He also welcomed the minister’s support for expanding opportunities for Indigenous Papuans to serve within the Ministry of Immigration, including the possibility of holding senior leadership positions such as regional office heads in the future.

According to Fakhiri, the initiative forms part of broader efforts to strengthen Indigenous Papuan representation within Indonesia’s national bureaucracy. (*)


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