Thursday, August 9, 2018

1) Vanuatu appoints special West Papua envoy

1) Vanuatu appoints special West Papua envoy
2) Indonesia: speaking for rights
3) Australia ramps up arms exports to Indonesia
4)Soedarmo: Papuan Coffee promoted in Boston and Paris
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1) Vanuatu appoints special West Papua envoy

6:48 pm on 9 August 2018 

The Vanuatu government has appointed Laura Lini as special envoy for West Papua.
Ms Lini is the daughter of Walter Lini, who is known as the founding father of the Pacific nation.
The United Liberation Movement of West Papua has welcomed the move with spokesperson Jacob Rumbiak saying they are pleased and impressed and thank Vanuatu Foreign Minister Ralph Regenvanu for the appointment.
"Melanesian sovereignty runs deep in the veins of all ni-Vanuatu, and especially in Laura's family," Mr Rumbiak said.
"In the 1970s both West Papua and Vanuatu were struggling for their independence.
"Vanuatu got there first and it was Laura's father, as Prime Minister, who pledged not to abandon West Papua or the Kanak of New Caledonia," he said.
Mr Rumbiak said there was now just one more river to cross before West Papua rejoins the international community of nations, and that is to be listed on the UN Decolonisation Agenda.

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2) Indonesia: speaking for rights
9 August 2018 12:00 
By Max Walden
Last month, Amnesty International held a major press conference for the release of its first research report on Indonesia since opening a dedicated office in Jakarta.Representatives of all major local and international media outlets, including newswires, Al Jazeera, the ABC, and The Australian, were in attendance for the unveiling of a harrowing report entitled “Don’t bother, just let him die”: Killing with impunity in Papua.

A wider trend in Indonesia has seen human rights issues marginalised across the archipelago under the current administration.
Unlike press conferences held by other local rights organisations, this one was conducted in both Indonesian and English in the ballroom of a 4-star hotel. Amnesty International Indonesia’s charismatic executive director Usman Hamid appeared onstage amid lit-up banners, as if on a television talk show.
The report documents extrajudicial killings in the troubled provinces of Papua and West Papua, where a combination of huge mineral wealth, poverty, and a long-standing separatist movement have catalysed allegedly widespread abuses against the local population.
The report claims at least 95 people have been killed unlawfully by security forces since 2010. Usman told the assembled media that most cases are not related to political activities, in contradiction to government claims that the violence is to “eradicate the separatist movement”, and he went on to say not a single perpetrator had been brought to a civilian court: “Accountability is very rare in West Papua compared to many, many other provinces.”
When President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo was elected in 2014 with the backing of many civil society organisations, there was great optimism that past human rights abuses, including the massacres of more than a million leftists in 1965–66, would be addressed.
Usman acknowledged early progress under Jokowi’s government, and that he is the only president to make regular visits to West Papua – where he travels at least twice a year. Moreover, the release of several political prisoners and ostensible lifting of media restrictions in Papua were also applauded.
But Usman also noted that mass arrests have occurred in Papua during Jokowi’s term, and that to date “the overall state of accountability remains to be unchanged”.
In practice, media freedom in Papua hasn’t improved either. Earlier this year, the Australian chief of the BBC’s Indonesia bureau, Rebecca Henschke, was arrested and expelled from the province for “hurting the feelings” of the military. A wider trend in Indonesia has seen human rights issues marginalised across the archipelago under the current administration. 
Activists have observed rising religious intolerance, anti-LGBT crackdowns, and, more recently, extrajudicial killings, for which perpetrators have enjoyed almost total impunity. Ahead of Jakarta hosting the Asian Games this month, police shot dead 11 suspected criminals in only 10 days.
The government’s ban last year on Hizbut ut-Tahrir – an ultraconservative Islamist organisation whose members mobilised in a number of mass demonstrations to bring down Jokowi’s former ally, then-governor Basuki “Ahok” Tjahaja Purnama – has spurred accusations from the religious right-wing that Jokowi is an authoritarian.
Many human rights activists are also disappointed and concerned with growing repression. A number of people have been jailed for insulting the president, and parliament recently made it illegal to “disrespect parliament or its members”.
In this environment, Amnesty International can potentially play a vital role. When the BBC reported the sentencing of an 18-year-old for supposedly posting memes insulting to Jokowi on Facebook, for example, Amnesty International was the only rights organisation quoted.
Amnesty International opened a central Jakarta office in December 2017, pledging to campaign against the death penalty and other causes, and hired dozens of internet-savvy young professionals. By contrast, Human Rights Watch works with a local team of one: the well-known journalist Andreas Harsono, whose work to date has been vital for international coverage of human rights in Indonesia.
Despite the Jokowi administration’s longstanding preoccupation with domestic affairs, Indonesia is still deeply concerned about its international image. Next year it will take up a two-year term on the UN Security Council and wants to be seen as a regional leader within ASEAN, and as a moderate, Muslim-majority democracy that protects the rights of minorities.
Jakarta’s vocal offers of support to help Myanmar progress to become a successful pluralistic democracy is testament to this ambition. As was the Jokowi administration’s facilitation of peace talks between Islamic scholars from Afghanistan and Pakistan in May.
Heading to the 2019 Indonesian presidential election, human rights are unlikely to be a priority for Jokowi or his rivals. Jokowi will likely point to his heavy investment in regional infrastructure, a recently touted decline in the poverty rate to single-digit figures, and the introduction of a basic form of universal healthcare – all noble achievements.
In late July, Jokowi’s cabinet announced a “team” supposedly given the job to address past human rights abuses, consisting of the Attorney General’s Office, the National Human Rights Commission (Komnas HAM), the National Police, and the Ministry of Justice and Human Rights. It will be headed by the security minister Wiranto, a former general who was indicted by a Dili-based UN court in 2003 for crimes against humanity during East Timor’s independence vote in 1999.
The true intentions of such an initiative are questionable. It may simply be a tokenistic gesture to once again garner civil society’s backing for Jokowi in 2019. Yet Amnesty International, able to advocate on both the local and international level, could be an important new voice in holding those in power in Jakarta more accountable. 
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https://www.greenleft.org.au/content/australia-ramps-arms-exports-indonesia
3) Australia ramps up arms exports to Indonesia

Issue 


Melbourne researcher into satellite-communication and surveillance Jacob Grech claims Australia is ramping up arms exports to Indonesia at a time when Indonesia is stepping up its militarism in West Papua.
“West Papuans are being shot and villages bombed because Indonesian law makes no distinction between ‘terrorism’ and ‘separatism’,” Grech explained at the West Papua Rent Collective Open Day at the Federal Republic of West Papua (FRWP) office in Docklands on August 5. 
Grech described how Australia is complicit in the continued dispossession of indigenous West Papuans: “Indonesia is the second biggest importer of Australian-made arms and other defence exports – and [Prime Minister] Malcolm Turnbull has just committed $3.8 billion of Australian taxpayers money so that Australia can become the tenth biggest arms exporter in the world”.
Indigenous West Papuans are often the target of these imported arms. Australian Special Forces and Federal Police also assist Indonesian police, military and ‘anti-terrorist’ forces in their training.
A “slow motion” genocide has been occurring in West Papua resulting in more than 500,000 “missing” indigenous people since 1963, when the United Nations officially handed the administration of West Papua to Indonesia.
The West Papua Rent Collective is a group of Australians who are investing in West Papua’s future as an independent Melanesian state.                 
Membership to the organisation helps pay the rent on the FRWP’s office in Docklands, undoubtedly to the annoyance of the Australian government that is bound by the Lombok Treaty to outlaw any display of West Papuan separatism or independence within its borders. 
Three times a year, Rent Collective ‘shareholders’ are treated to an informative talk, a delicious Dapur Sampari lunch and live music by The Neighbours, the office house band. 
[If you would like to join the revolutionary West Papua Rent Collective, contact the FRWP Women’s Office on frwpwomensoffice@gmail.com or ring 0420 250 389.]

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4)Soedarmo: Papuan Coffee promoted in Boston and Paris
Published 11 hours ago on 9 August 2018

Jayapura, Jubi – Acting Papua Governor Soedarmo said Provincial Government is going to promote Papuan coffee to Boston and Paris shortly.
He revealed this agenda to reporters when opened the Papua Coffee Festival held in the parking of Bank Indonesia. Banks, local entrepreneurs and coffee farmers participated in this event.
“So, we are not only promoting Papuan coffee domestically but also abroad. Through our partner, we will participate in a coffee exhibition in Boston, whereas in September, I am going to send a team to participate in the exhibition held at the Eiffel Tower,” said Soedarmo on Friday (08/03/2018) in Jayapura.
According to him, the taste of Papuan coffee is not less delicious compared to coffee from other Indonesian regions or even other countries, because he has compared it with others. “I have met with the former Colombian Ambassador; then we compared Papuan coffee with Colombian coffee. But Papuan coffee is still better,” he said.
In the same place, Jayapura Mayor Benhur Tommy Mano claimed the municipal government is ready to support the provincial government in developing local commodities by promoting the local food in every event held by the municipal government.
“Indeed, we are not growing coffee here in Jayapura Municipality, but we are the biggest coffee connoisseurs,” Mano said. (*)

Reporter: Alexander Loen
Editor: Pipit Maizier
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