Wednesday, April 22, 2026

1) 107,000 Internally Displaced in Papua amid escalating Humanitarian Crisis


2) Civilian in Puncak Jaya reportedly shot dead, authorities label victim as wanted suspect
3) It’s time to mandate environment spending in Indonesia 

4) More deaths following latest military action in West Papua


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1) 107,000 Internally Displaced in Papua amid escalating Humanitarian Crisis

IN PACNEWS READING TIME: 2 MINS READ 
APRIL 22, 2026  0
Author : Aida Ulim
 Editor : Nuevaterra Mambor

Jayapura, Indonesia, April 21 (Jubi) — The Papua Church Council said about 107,000 people have been internally displaced across Papua as of April 2026, driven by escalating violence and a worsening humanitarian crisis since late 2018.

The council said the situation has intensified in recent months, particularly between March and April, in highland areas such as Puncak and Dogiyai regencies.

Reverend Dorman Wanimbo said increased military operations have directly affected civilians, triggering mass displacement and disrupting access to basic services.

“In addition to causing casualties, the situation has disrupted education, economic activity and worship, while access to healthcare remains крайне limited,” he said in a statement issued in Jayapura on Tuesday.

He added that displaced communities face shortages of food, healthcare and protection, worsened by the expansion of military activities into civilian areas including villages, churches, schools and markets.

He also added that the recent incidents in Pogama and Kembru districts in Puncak Regency,

Central Papua, reportedly resulted in civilian casualties following military operations conducted between April 12 and 15 involving ground and air forces..

The attacks damaged homes and caused civilian casualties, including deaths and injuries. Casualty figures could not be independently verified. Some reports said nine people were killed and five injured, while others put the toll at 15 dead and seven wounded.

“About seven villages were directly affected, and parts of the area remain difficult to access. Witnesses said the attacks occurred in areas previously considered civilian zones and places of refuge,” he said.

Indigenous pastor John Bunay said the council believes the situation is linked to state policies, including Presidential Instructions No. 9/2017 and No. 9/2020 on accelerating development in Papua and West Papua.

“A development approach combined with a security approach has deepened the humanitarian crisis and further marginalized Indigenous Papuans,” he said.

He cited previous studies by the Indonesian Institute of Sciences identifying the root causes of the conflict as racism, development failures, political tensions and weak accountability of security forces.

“However, a peaceful dialogue approach has yet to become a primary priority,” he said.

The council called for an immediate halt to military operations in civilian areas, greater protection for civilians and unrestricted humanitarian access for displaced communities. It also urged an independent investigation into alleged human rights violations and called for access for foreign journalists to report on Papua.

They also called for the importance of peaceful dialogue as the path to resolving the conflict, urging churches, civil society, and all stakeholders to unite in prayer and concrete action to safeguard the lives of Papuans currently facing a humanitarian crisis.

Because, the future of Papua can only be built on justice, humanity, and dignified peaceful dialogue—not violence. (*)


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2) Civilian in Puncak Jaya reportedly shot dead, authorities label victim as wanted suspect

IN PACNEWS READING TIME: 2 MINS READ 
APRIL 22, 2026  0 
Author : Larius Kogoya 
Editor : Nuevaterra Mambor


Jayapura, Jubi — A 27-year-old man, Ony Enumbi, was shot dead in Wiyugwi Village, Mulia District, Puncak Jaya Regency, Central Papua, on Monday (April 20, 2026), with differing accounts emerging from local sources and Indonesian authorities.

A local source in Puncak Jaya said the incident occurred in the late afternoon after Enumbi had returned home from working in his garden. He was reportedly with his wife, child, and several relatives, resting in a hut near their home after a meal.

The source alleged that security personnel, described as members of the Indonesian National Armed Forces (TNI), arrived at the location in three vehicles, fully armed, and entered the residential area without prior notice.

“They were conducting an inspection, and there were civilians in the hut. That’s when the shooting occurred, and everyone, including the victim and his family, fled to safety,” the source said in an audio recording received by Jubi on Tuesday (April 21, 2026).


The source said Enumbi was shot from a distance of about 15 meters. One bullet reportedly grazed his head, while another struck his shoulder from the front and exited through his back, killing him at the scene.

According to the source, the victim was later evacuated by TNI personnel to Mulia Regional General Hospital under tight security before his body was handed over to the family for cremation.

The source added that Enumbi was originally from Piliah Village, Gurage District, Puncak Regency, but had been living in Mulia for an extended period and owned a home there. He and others had moved to the area out of fear of becoming victims of ongoing armed clashes between the West Papua National Liberation Army (TPNPB) and Indonesian security forces.

Head of Public Relations for the Damai Cartenz Operation 2026, Police Commissioner Yusuf Sutejo, said personnel in the Puncak Jaya sector had “successfully neutralized” a TPNPB member identified by the initials OE, also known as ME, in Wuyukwi Village on the same day.

He said OE had been listed as a wanted suspect (DPO) under a warrant issued on April 25, 2024, in connection with a shooting that killed a member of the Elang Task Force, Sergeant (posthumous) Ismunandar, on March 17, 2024, in Kulirik Village, Muara District.

“Action was taken after personnel carried out surveillance and successfully identified the target’s whereabouts,” Sutejo said in a press statement.

According to police, the suspect attempted to flee while resisting arrest, prompting officers to take what Sutejo described as “firm and measured action” in accordance with procedures. The suspect sustained a gunshot wound to the right armpit that penetrated through to the back of the body.

He said the individual was evacuated to Mulia Regional General Hospital for treatment but was later pronounced dead.

“The perpetrator was successfully neutralized and received medical attention but was declared dead. This action is part of law enforcement efforts against armed groups that disrupt security stability,” he said.

Sutejo added that the individual had previously been detained by the Damai Cartenz Task Force on November 27, 2024, in connection with the same case but later escaped while authorities were handling a separate tribal conflict in Puncak Jaya.

“Going forward, we will strengthen security measures and procedures to prevent similar incidents,” he said.

The incident comes amid ongoing tensions and armed violence in parts of Central Papua, where clashes between Indonesian security forces and the TPNPB continue to affect civilian communities. (*)

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3) It’s time to mandate environment spending in Indonesia 
23 APRIL 2026 · 5 min read

 Rifky Pratama Wicaksono      Muhammad Rafi Bakri


Indonesia’s flash floods in Sumatra are not merely natural disasters; they are also symptomatic of fiscal failure. While rescue teams battled torrents of mud, a quieter tragedy unfolded in the budget books. Disaster mitigation funding was systematically crowded out by competing political agendas. It signals a concerning reality that, within Indonesia’s current fiscal hierarchy, resilience appears expendable until a disaster hits.

The crisis extends far beyond emergency response budgets. As climate change accelerates, global norms dictate that nations should ramp up environmental spending to keep risks within acceptable limits. These funds are critical for reforestation and upgrading ecological defences before disaster strikes. Yet Indonesia is moving in reverse. The Ministry of Finance reveals a chilling fiscal paradox: 236 local governments slashed their environmental spending in 2025 compared to the previous year, widening Indonesia’s climate finance gap, which is estimated to reach US$145 billion through 2030. Worse still, even among districts that do allocate environmental budgets, spending bears almost no relationship to environmental quality, suggesting that the problem runs deeper than underfunding alone (see Figure 1).

Figure 1: Environmental spending vs environmental quality index across Indonesian districts, 2024



The Ministry of Finance has attempted to steer local budgets toward environmental priorities using soft fiscal instruments. Under Law Number 1 of 2022 on Central and Regional Financial Relations, land cover indices are now factored into the formula for the General Allocation Fund — the main unconditional transfer from Jakarta to the regions — theoretically rewarding areas that preserve their forests. The law also refines Revenue Sharing Funds — transfers that redistribute natural resource royalties — by compensating areas suffering from the negative externalities of resource extraction in neighbouring regions. Furthermore, the Special Allocation Fund — a conditional grant for priority sectors — explicitly directs capital into environmental maintenance. Yet these mechanisms remain largely incentives rather than binding mandates, leaving execution at the mercy of local political will.

The liquidity trap becomes evident when examining international climate finance as an alternative. Most results-based instruments, such as those from the Green Climate Fund, operate on a reimbursement model where local governments must front costs and receive payments only after verified results are achieved. Cash-constrained regions cannot sustain multi-year environmental interventions while awaiting reimbursement cycles that span several months or even years.

This funding asymmetry collides with what might be called a conservation paradox, though the reality is more complex than a simple trade-off between forests and growth. The six Papua provinces, Indonesia’s easternmost frontier, maintain forest cover exceeding 80% and harbour globally significant carbon stores. Yet the region also records Indonesia’s highest poverty rate — around 26% — despite receiving billions in special autonomy transfers and hosting the massive Grasberg copper and gold mine, one of the world’s largest. Much of Papua’s forest cover persists not because of deliberate conservation policy but because of remoteness and limited infrastructure. At the same time, extraction is actively expanding: new permits for nickel mining, palm oil plantations and logging are encroaching on primary forest, with deforestation rates rising. The paradox, then, is not that Papua has chosen conservation over development, but that neither the revenues from extraction nor the fiscal transfers from Jakarta have translated into meaningful local welfare — while the pressure to open more forest only grows.

Meanwhile, Sumatra and Kalimantan converted vast forest tracts into oil palm, timber and coal extraction zones decades ago, fuelling rapid economic growth. Without deliberate fiscal intervention, conservation-rich regions will remain cash-starved, perpetuating a system where environmental stewardship is a burden only the poorest are expected to bear.

Given this reality, mandating environmental expenditure is not only justified but necessary. A binding floor would force local leaders to allocate environmental budgets at a specified minimum, with failure to meet targets triggering fiscal penalties in future transfers — mirroring the existing 20% education mandate. Fiscal space clearly exists. The Supreme Audit Institution of Indonesia identified trillions of rupiah lost to governmental inefficiency in its 2024 financial report. Beyond this, local budgets also suffer chronic bloat from inflated payroll costs that crowd out productive expenditures. Law 1/2022 already mandates capping personnel expenses at 30% of regional budgets over coming years. These efficiency measures alone could generate sufficient savings to fund mandatory environmental spending without burdening households or crowding out essential services. The solution requires no new revenue — only fiscal discipline and reallocation.

This design has international precedents. Brazil’s ICMS-Ecológico scheme earmarks a share of state VAT-derived transfers for conservation, and research has linked it to the creation of over one million hectares of new conservation units and measurable forest recovery. China’s ecological compensation program channels billions of yuan annually to upstream provinces, conditional on forest maintenance and water quality standards; in pilot basins, water quality has improved markedly. Portugal’s municipal transfer system incorporates Natura 2000 protected areas into its equalisation formulas, channelling additional funds to municipalities that host conservation land. These cases demonstrate that binding fiscal mandates can reshape budget allocations and generate measurable ecological outcomes. Table 1 summarises these models alongside the proposed Indonesian mechanism, highlighting both documented outcomes and inherent limitations that Indonesia’s design should address.



Table 1: Ecological fiscal transfer models: an international comparison


Mandating environmental spending at the subnational level would also strengthen Indonesia’s appeal to international climate finance. A critical barrier to accessing such funds has been concern over accountability and fund utilisation. Binding environmental spending mandates across central and local budgets would create institutional safeguards that transform investor risk assessments. The Supreme Audit Institution can conduct comprehensive audits covering both financial compliance and performance outcomes of climate expenditures. Equally important, local governments possess substantial discretionary funds that can be mobilised toward genuine climate resilience projects. When mandatory frameworks are in place, international investors gain assurance that their capital flows toward infrastructure and conservation rather than vanishing into opaque procurement cycles or politically motivated spending. This fiscal transparency could convert Indonesia from a climate finance risk into a credible investment destination, helping to close the US$145 billion gap in climate financing needed to meet 2030 targets.

Indonesia stands at a fiscal crossroads. Soft incentives have failed, international models show that mandatory spending works, and fiscal space exists. The choice is no longer whether Indonesia can afford a binding environmental spending floor, but whether it can afford not to have one. Delay transforms prevention into catastrophe and multiplies costs. Environmental spending is not compassion for nature but fiscal discipline for climate resilience. The time to mandate is now.

Author/s: 
Rifky Pratama Wicaksono Rifky Pratama Wicksono is currently undertaking a Master of Public Policy at the Crawford School of Public Policy, Australian National University. 

Muhammad Rafi Bakri Muhammad Rafi Bakri is a research analyst based in Jakarta, Indonesia.
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4) More deaths following latest military action in West Papua

Andrew Mathieson Updated April 22, 2026 - 1.57pm (AWST), first published at 8.00am (AWST)

The Indonesian military has been accused of attacking a refugee camp in West Papua territory, reportedly killing at least nine people including a toddler and a pregnant woman.

Free West Papua campaigners have labelled last week's latest attack which came to the attention of western media several days later an unqualified "colonial destruction".

Eyewitnesses say terrified villagers of the Puncak Regency's Kembru districtwere bombarded early in the morning with an array of modern weaponry.

Less destructive operations were also alleged to have been carried out in the Sinak and Pogoma districts of the regency.

United Liberation Movement for West Papua interim chairman, Benny Wenda, said recent actions from strongarm government forces across the western side of the New Guinea Highlands are continuing to intensify.

The violence follows another massacre earlier in the month where at least five people were killed at the hands of Indonesian police in the Dogiyai Regency.

"The true number of victims is currently impossible to know, as Indonesia has blockaded other-affected districts, preventing people and information from getting in or out," Mr Wenda, who is living in exile in London, said about the latest alleged attack. Mr Wenda said the violence has also resulted in "massive internal displacement" in the region, with numerous people forced to flee their homes as a result of the attacks.

One eyewitness told Free West Papua campaigners the bodies of the nine people most recently killed have been burnt in what appears to be a cover-up of the deaths.

The lives of Amer Walia, 77, Tiagen Walia, 76, Pelen Kogoya, 65, Kikungge Walia, 55, Deremet Telenggen, 55, Inikiwewo Walia, 52, Ekimira Kogoya, 47, Wundili Kogoya, 36, and Para Walia, 5, were confirmed to have been taken.

Military operations reportedly commenced around 5am as four attack helicopters began a bombing campaign on a Kembru refugee camp.which were accompanied by ground forces, who were said to shoot indiscriminately into the makeshift shelters.

The helicopters were accompanied by ground forces, who reportedly shot indiscriminately into the makeshift shelters.

The West Papuan civilians were said to be sleeping in their beds when the carnage unfolded.

The victims of the latest Kembru attack were forced from their West Papua homes by previous rounds of military violence in the occupied territory.

"Those refugees that were displaced further into the bush will have no access to healthcare" Mr Wenda said.

"Their children will not be able to attend school.

"Their crops and their livelihoods will perish, as the military prevents them from accessing their gardens.

"Many people will no doubt die from hunger or disease, as over 1100 West Papuans have since 2019.

"Indonesia is a criminal in West Papua and should be made a pariah on the international stage for their actions against my people.

"The inhumane culture of impunity that produced this massacre is a direct result of Indonesia's deliberate isolation of West Papua."

After the camps were first bombed in February, the event marks the second occasion where military forces have targeted Kembru this year, the conflict forcing former residents of nine villages to flee into the nearby forest.

Indonesia's latest attack appears to have been far more brutal and indiscriminate, with the military allegedly utilising bombs, guns, drones and grenades to kill civilians and destroy their temporary homes.

Indonesia's bombing of Kembru appears to be in direct contravention of a 2025 agreement made between the Indonesian military command and the West Papua National Liberation Army, which designated the entire Kembru district as a safe area for refugees.

Bombing designated safe zones, which includes any form of refugee camps, has been declared a crime against humanity by the United Nations and, according to the United Liberation Movement for West Papua, those military forces responsible should be tried for war crimes in the International Court of Justice in the Hague.

"Make no mistake: the targeting of children, pregnant women, and elders is a direct result of a government policy that views all West Papuans as terrorists," Mr Wenda said.

"In the eyes of the Indonesian National Armed Forces, all West Papuans are Kelompok Kriminal Bersenjata (Armed Criminal Group).

"They look on us as subhuman, squatters in our own land, although we've been its guardians for thousands of years."

The United Liberation Movement for West Papua has repeated its demand for Indonesia to allow the international community into the territory to aid its own refugees "at this time of acute crisis".

This extends to allowing the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights to report from West Papua, in accordance with the demands of more than 110 UN member states, as well as allowing international journalists and non-government organisations — including the International Red Cross — to freely operate in West Papua without fear of expulsion or harassment, and for an internationally-mediated referendum on self-determination for West Papua.

"I also call on actors within the international community, particularly the Pacific, to do more to pressure Indonesia to open West Papua to the eyes of the world," Mr Wenda said.

Indonesia's Human Rights Minister, Natalius Pigai, said those people responsible for any civilian attacks will face legal repercussions.

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Tuesday, April 21, 2026

1) Students urge authorities to respond to situation in Kembru District

 



2) West Papua National Committee (KNPB) issues demands over alleged civilian casualties in Puncak Military Operation.

3) Vice President Gibran invites Mama Papua to shop at the supermarket to commemorate Kartini Day

4) KNPB leadership meeting declares Papua a 'military and humanitarian emergency zone’ 

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1) Students urge authorities to respond to situation in Kembru District

IN PACNEWS READING TIME: 4 MINS READ APRIL 21, 2026  0 Author : Aida Ulim Editor : Nuevaterra Mambor



Students from Puncak and Puncak Jaya held a peaceful protest and delivered a public statement in Jayapura City regarding alleged acts of violence by security forces against civilians in Puncak Regency, Central Papua. The demonstration took place at the Mimika student dormitory in Waena, Jayapura, on Monday (April 20, 2026). — 




Jayapura — Students from Puncak Regency, Central Papua, have urged both the Puncak regency administration and the Central Papua provincial government to immediately address the situation facing residents in several villages in Kembru District following a military operation in the area on April 14, 2026.

The operation reportedly resulted in civilian casualties, with several people said to have been killed by gunfire and others sustaining gunshot injuries.
The call was conveyed by the students to Jubi after they held a press conference and a peaceful protest in Jayapura City, Papua, on Monday (April 20, 2026).
According to the students, the most urgent needs of affected residents include medical treatment for the injured, as well as access to medicines and basic food supplies.

esidents of several villages, including Tenoti and Kumikomo in Kembru District, have reportedly fled their homes to areas they consider safer following the military operation. As a result, they are in urgent need of security guarantees and access to basic-necessities.
“We, the students, hope that the regent of Puncak, the Puncak Regional Legislative Council, and various legal aid institutions will step in and pay serious attention to this issue, so that residents can have a proper place to live and feel safe,” said Aiton Kogoya, the field coordinator of the protest.
The students added that the situation in Puncak Regency has deteriorated in recent weeks, particularly in Pogoma, Kembru, and Sinak districts, which they described as no longer being in a stable condition.

Earlier, the Tentara Nasional Indonesia (TNI) was reported to have conducted a military operation in Pogoma District on April 13, 2026. The area had been designated as a conflict zone by security forces and the West Papua National Liberation Army (TPNPB).

Military operations by Indonesian security forces were reported to have expanded into several villages in Kembru District on April 14, 2026. As a result, nine residents from Tenoti and Kumikomo villages were reported killed by gunfire, while five others sustained gunshot injuries.
Those who died were identified as Wundilina Kogoya (36), Kikungge Walia (55), Pelen Kogoya (65), Tigiagan Walia (76), Ekimira Kogoya (47), Daremet Telenggen (55), Inikiwewo Walia (52), Amer Walia (77), and a five-year-old child, Para Walia. The injured included Onde Walia (5), Aliko Walia (5), Nokia Kogoya (21), Anite Telenggen (17), and Daniton Tabuni. Anite Telenggen was referred to a hospital in Jayapura for further treatment, while Onde Walia was transferred to a hospital in Nabire, Central Papua.
On the other hand, the TNI stated that the TPNPB had attacked two women and a child in Sinak District on April 15, 2026. The victims were reportedly shot and later evacuated to the Mulia Regional General Hospital in Puncak Jaya Regency for medical treatment.
“Regarding the situation in Puncak today, it is indeed not stable, particularly in Sinak, Pogoma, and Kembru districts. Large-scale military operations are taking place in Kembru,” said Aiton Kogoya.
Students urged both local and central governments to open access for the Indonesian Red Cross and civilian humanitarian workers to enter villages in Kembru District to assess the condition of residents. They said several areas remain inaccessible, reportedly still under military control, making it difficult to verify whether additional casualties have occurred.
“We call on the Regent of Puncak, the Puncak Regional Legislative Council, and the Central Papua provincial government to take action. Residents of Kembru District are displaced and scattered in various locations. Some have fled to Sinak, Bina, and other districts. The government must take notice and gather the displaced, as many are currently left without proper support,” he said.
In other press statement delivered at the Mimika student dormitory in Waena, Jayapura, students from Puncak and Puncak Jaya condemned what they described as acts of violence by security forces against civilians in Puncak.
They urged the Government of Indonesia to grant full access to the National Commission on Human Rights (Komnas HAM) to directly assess the situation in the region.
According to the students, the continued presence of military forces in Puncak has contributed to alleged serious human rights violations occurring in a systematic and widespread manner, triggering large-scale displacement from 2022 to 2026. They said the situation has made it difficult for residents to access essential services such as healthcare and education.
Many internally displaced persons are now living in temporary shelters under inadequate conditions, lacking sufficient protection from weather and security threats. Vulnerable groups, including women and children, are at heightened risk of violence and trauma.
Given these conditions, the students emphasized the need for an immediate response from the government, humanitarian agencies, and other stakeholders to ensure that the basic needs of affected communities are met.
Deputy field coordinator Otty Telenggen said the alleged acts of violence by security forces against civilians in Puncak could constitute serious human rights violations and are inconsistent with Indonesian law, including legislation on human rights and human rights courts.
“We believe these actions have had a significant impact on vulnerable groups such as women and children, who should receive special protection from the state,” he said.
The students called on the government to conduct a thorough, transparent, and fair investigation into the shootings in Puncak, to halt military operations in civilian areas, and to withdraw security forces to prevent further violations.
They also urged the President of Indonesia to instruct the TNI Commander to take legal action against personnel involved in the incidents in Kembru District.
“We call on Komnas HAM to immediately conduct a direct investigation in Puncak. We demand that humanitarian access be opened for national and international organizations to assist affected communities, and that access be granted to national and international media so that information about the situation in Papua can be reported transparently,” he said. (*)

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2) West Papua National Committee (KNPB) issues demands over alleged civilian casualties in Puncak Military Operation.

IN PACNEWS READING TIME: 4 MINS 
 APRIL 21, 2026  0
 Author : Aida Ulim Editor : Nuevaterra Mambor

Jayapura, Jubi — The Central Executive Board of the Komite Nasional Papua Barat (BPP-KNPB) has issued a number of demands in response to a military operation conducted in several villages in Kembru District, Puncak Regency, Central Papua, on April 14, 2026.

The demands were conveyed during a press conference held in Waena, Jayapura City, Papua, on Monday (April 20, 2026).
According to BPP-KNPB, the operation in Kembru District resulted in civilian casualties. At least nine civilians were reported killed by gunfire, while five others sustained gunshot wounds. All of the victims were residents of Tenoti and Kumikomo villages in Kembru District.
Those reported killed were identified as Wundilina Kogoya (36), Kikungge Walia (55), Pelen Kogoya (65), Tigiagan Walia (76), Ekimira Kogoya (47), Daremet Telenggen (55), Inikiwewo Walia (52), Amer Walia (77), and a five-year-old child, Para Walia.

Meanwhile, those reported injured by gunfire were identified as Onde Walia (5), Aliko Walia (5), Nokia Kogoya (21), Anite Telenggen (17), and Daniton Tabuni.
BPP-KNPB strongly condemned the actions of Indonesian security forces, accusing the military and police (TNI–Polri) of carrying out bombings and armed attacks against unarmed civilians in Pogoma and Kembru districts, Puncak Regency, Central Papua.
The group called on the Indonesian government to take full responsibility for the deaths and injuries among civilians, as well as for the destruction of homes and community property resulting from the operation.

It further asserted that such actions constitute a serious violation of international humanitarian law, describing them as war crimes. According to BPP-KNPB, those responsible — including commanding officers — should be held accountable through international legal mechanisms.

BPP-KNPB called for the immediate and full suspension of all military operations in civilian areas, particularly in displacement sites in Kembru District.
The group also urged the establishment of an independent and transparent international investigation to uncover the facts surrounding alleged human rights violations in Puncak, Papua.
BPP-KNPB also demanded full access for national and international journalists, as well as humanitarian organizations, to ensure the protection of civilians and the delivery of humanitarian aid.
The group called for an end to arbitrary arrests of civilians and urged the immediate release of seven individuals reportedly detained in East Beoga District, while also demanding a halt to alleged acts of torture and intimidation.
It further called for a stop to the deployment of additional military forces and urged the withdrawal of all troops, both organic and non-organic, from Puncak and across Papua.
KNPB also appealed to all parties involved in the armed conflict, including Indonesian security forces (TNI–Polri) and the West Papua National Liberation Army  (TPNPB), to immediately cease violence and open the way for peace negotiations mediated by neutral international actors. The organization called on the international community to take concrete steps in response to what it described as a humanitarian emergency in Papua.
At the same time, KNPB reiterated its long-standing political demand for the Papuan people’s right to self-determination as a fundamental solution to the protracted conflict.
KNPB Chairman Agus Kossay said that military operations conducted on April 13–14 in Pogoma and Kembru districts involved the use of helicopters and drones, which he alleged were used to carry out bombings and shootings in residential areas, including Guamo village in Pogoma District.
He said the incidents occurred amid ongoing armed clashes between the Tentara Nasional Indonesia (TNI) and TPNPB in several مناطق, but that the violence reportedly extended into civilian areas and displacement sites.
“As a result, civilians — including women, children, and the elderly — became the primary victims,” Kossay said.
He added that preliminary data gathered by BPP-KNPB indicated that at least 12 civilians were killed and seven others injured. However, other reports put the death toll at nine, with five people injured.
“The exact number of victims remains unclear. Limited access to information on the ground has been a major constraint, as several areas remain under the control of security forces,” he said.
KNPB stated that the use of heavy weaponry in civilian-populated areas constitutes a serious violation of international humanitarian law, which obliges the protection of civilians in armed conflict.
KNPB Deputy Chairman Warpo Wetipo said that, as a democratic country that upholds humanitarian values and adheres to international law, Indonesia should allow international actors to access Papua to monitor and investigate alleged human rights violations.
“Indonesia also needs to provide broader access for civilians in conflict-affected areas, particularly those who have long faced limitations in accessing basic services such as education, healthcare, medicines, and humanitarian aid,” he said.
He also urged the Indonesian government to allow the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights to visit Papua, saying such a visit would be crucial for conducting direct investigations into incidents in the region.
Meanwhile, KNPB national spokesperson Ogram Wanimbo rejected claims by the military linking TPNPB to attacks on civilians. He argued that throughout the history of the Papua conflict since the 1960s, pro-independence groups have not targeted civilians or residential areas, and described such allegations as unfounded.
“Therefore, we stress that historically, both OPM and TPNPB have never targeted civilians. We believe the accusations made do not reflect the facts on the ground. We firmly state that the perpetrators in this incident were members of the TNI,” Wanimbo said.
He also dismissed statements made by military officials, including regional commanders and senior leadership, regarding the shooting incident in Puncak that implicated TPNPB.
According to him, testimonies from affected residents indicate that the perpetrators were TNI personnel. He urged the media to report the incident based on verified facts.
“Do not spread unverified or inaccurate information. We reiterate our call for the military to withdraw from districts and villages. Civilians have the right to live safely and peacefully in their own communities. Conflict zones should not be located in residential areas,” he said. (*)


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3) Vice President Gibran invites Mama Papua to shop at the supermarket to commemorate Kartini Day

21 April 2026, 23:20 | Editorial Team 


JAKARTA - Vice President Gibran Rakabuming Raka invited Mama Papua or mothers to shop at one of the supermarkets in Sorong, West Papua, as a form of appreciation for women in commemorating Kartini Day.

After departing from Yahukimo and continuing his working visit in Sorong, Vice President Gibran was greeted with a lively enthusiasm by mothers or known as "Mama" as women who drive the economy of the people in Papua.

"This really helps us. I can buy children's needs, such as diapers, sugar, telu and others. Thank you to Mr. Gibran," said Joice Merauga (46), one of the recipients of assistance when he was met in Sorong, West Papua, Tuesday, April 21.

As a form of appreciation for women, Gibran gave shopping vouchers worth Rp500 thousand each for 100 widows in Sorong so that they could buy daily necessities that could be obtained at supermarkets.

The Papuan mothers seemed enthusiastic to greet Gibran, even some of them had the opportunity to interact directly.

Form of concern

The Head of the Social, Women's Empowerment, and Child Protection Service for West Papua Province, Anie Nauw, said that this activity was not just a ceremonial agenda, but a form of concern that was felt directly by the community.

He explained that his party had specifically prepared 100 widows to be able to meet directly with the Vice President.

"This momentum is extraordinary for us. On Kartini Day, Papua mothers can meet directly with the Vice President and feel real attention through simple activities such as shopping together," he said.

Anie also emphasized the importance of sustainability in supporting women, especially in Papua.

According to him, the role of women needs to be strengthened so that they can contribute to various sectors of development.

"We hope that in the future there will be no more inequality. Papuan women must continue to be encouraged to be empowered, work, and have an impact," he added.


The English, Chinese, Japanese, Arabic, and French versions are automatically generated by the AI. So there may still be inaccuracies in translating, please always see Indonesian as our main language. (system supported by DigitalSiber.id)


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4) KNPB leadership meeting declares Papua a 'military and humanitarian emergency zone’ 
Suara Papua – April 19, 2026

Reiner Brabar, Sorong – The 8th National Leadership Meeting (Rapimnas) of the West Papua National Committee (KNPB) has declared Papua a "military and humanitarian emergency zone".

This decision follows the protracted conflict that continues to press down on the lives of civilians and adds to the long list of humanitarian conflicts in the land of Papua that to this day still attracts national and international attention.

In press release number 053.I/SP/BPP.KNPB/IV/2026, the KNPB said that it considers that the situation in Papua has gone beyond normal conditions. The decades-long conflict has become not only a political issue but has also developed into a humanitarian crisis.

The KNPB traces the roots of the conflict to differing views on Papua's political status since the integration process into Indonesia, including the implementation of the 1969 Act of Free Choice (Pepera), which is deemed not to have fully implemented the democratic principles of "one man, one vote".

These differing interpretations of history, according to the KNPB, continue to fuel tensions to this day.

KNPB's chairperson Agus Kossay stated that the situation in Papua is at a critical point. According to the KNPB, on the ground armed conflicts between security forces and armed groups are reportedly occurring in several areas such as Nduga, Intan Jaya, Yahukimo, Paniai and Maybrat. As a result, civilians have been the most affected, with casualties and large-scale displacement.

The KNPB estimates that more than 100,000 people have been displaced by these conflict. However, this figure has not yet been able to be independently verified by other parties.

"The conflicts since 1961 to this day have not stopped. Displacement continues to occur in various locations, and the number of affected residents continues to grow. This indicates an emergency situation that requires the attention of all parties", said Kossay in an official statement on Saturday April 18.

KNPB national spokesperson Ogram Wanimbo emphasised that the declaration of emergency status is an effort to attract wider public attention.

"We see that Papua is not in good situation. Therefore, we invite all elements of society to view this issue from a humanitarian perspective", said Wanimbo.

In its statement, the KNPB emphasised several demands including the formation of an independent fact-finding team by the United Nations (UN), the cessation of military operations impacting civilians and the opening of access for international observers.

In addition to this, the KNPB also requested a review of investment policies and national strategic projects (PSN) in the land of Papua, which have not fully involved and have harmed indigenous communities.

[Translated by James Balowski. The original title of the article was "KNPB Nyatakan Papua Zona Darurat Militer dan Kemanusiaan".]

Source: https://suarapapua.com/2026/04/19/knpb-nyatakan-papua-zona-darurat-militer-dan-kemanusiaan/


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