AWPA Sydney
Contact seosamh20@hotmail.com
Thursday, March 5, 2026
West Papua advocates call for solidarity as displacement and deforestation escalate
Latest West Papuan Film Friday 13 March "Pig Feast"
The first Australian screening of 'Pig Feast', (Friday 13th ) is a film by a team of acclaimed Papuan and Indonesian journalists and filmmakers, It's a documentary about the world's largest deforestation project, taking place in West Papua.
Register at
https://dtp.org.au/training/invitation-to-groundbreaking-new-west-papua-film-pig-feast/
1) Side event explores “Human Rights in Indonesia – The Right to a Clean, Healthy, and Sustainable Environment”
The event was co-sponsored by Franciscans International and Forum Asia.
The discussion focused on the grave human rights and environmental implications of Indonesia’s Merauke National Strategic Project in South Papua Province, also known as the Merauke Food and Energy Development Zone, and the operations of the Grasberg Mine, the world’s largest combined copper and gold mine.
Peter Prove, director of the WCC Commission of the Churches on International Affairs (CCIA), spoke on how the Special Economic Zone by Indonesia’s Coordinating Ministry for Economic Affairs, designated in 2023 as a Merauke Food and Energy Development Zone, spans approximately two million hectares—an area nearly half the size of Switzerland—within Merauke Regency, which covers 4.5 million hectares in total.
The project includes large-scale sugarcane plantations, a sugar factory, a bioethanol development initiative, and the creation of one million hectares of new rice fields. If fully implemented, it risks becoming the largest deforestation project in the world.
Two West Papuan Indigenous women, Dorthea Wabiser, who works for a civil society organization called Pusaka Bentala Ratyak; and Rode Wanimbo, from the Evangelical Church of Indonesia and West Papua Council of Churches, reflected on how they are advocating for Indigenous People’s rights and environmental justice in West Papua.
The Merauke project area overlaps with 858 hectares of natural forests and peatlands that support unique biodiversity, some found nowhere else on earth. The region is also home to thousands of Indigenous West Papuans whose customary lands and livelihoods are directly affected.
Land clearing began in May 2024 and has already resulted in the destruction of customary forests and critical ecosystems. Peatland degradation and forest loss are expected to significantly increase carbon emissions, contributing to global climate change while degrading local air quality.
The side event raised awareness of the massive scale of the Merauke National Strategic Project and the human rights and environmental impacts at local and global levels.
Speakers urged the government of Indonesia to immediately suspend the project pending a comprehensive re-evaluation to ensure compliance with its international human rights and environmental obligations.
“The issue here really is to see how do these obligations in the field of international human rights law directly concern the type of issues we are discussing today,” he said, also highlighting the issue of access to justice.
In central Papua, the trade of metals from the Grasberg Mine is producing severe environmental harm through widespread deforestation and river pollution, with an estimated 200,000 tonnes of toxic mining waste dumped into local rivers every day. For the Indigenous West Papuan communities living downstream, the consequences are severe. Rivers once central to fishing and transport have been choked with sediment. Forests they relied on for hunting have vanished under mounds of waste. People suffer from skin diseases and serious health conditions due to heavy metal contamination in the water they use daily for drinking, cooking, and bathing.
Stéphanie Caligara, an attorney specializing in international human rights law and strategic litigation with a particular focus on corporate accountability, spoke about how extremely profitable this mine is. “It is actually the biggest gold reserve on the planet, and the second biggest copper mine in the world,” she said. “It produces very valuable commodities, especially in the area where we find ourselves—where we looking to transition as soon as possible to a green economy and where we need these metals.”
“Access and transparency”, said CCIA Director Prove in his closing remarks. “This is what we need from the Indonesian Government. We renew our call for Indonesia to issue invitations to the High Commissioner for Human Rights and the Special Procedures of the UN Human Rights Council to visit West Papua to examine these issues”, he said.
Jayapura, 5 March 2026. Marind Indigenous people from the south of West Papua today filed a legal challenge against a 135-kilometre access road planned to facilitate a government National Strategic Project (PSN) to convert their tropical forest, savannah and wetlands into rice paddies and commodity plantations in Merauke district.
The five plaintiffs, Simon Petrus Balagaize, Sinta Gebze, Liborius Kodai Moiwend, Kanisius Dagil, and Andreas Mahuse, arrived at the at the Jayapura State Administrative Court in traditional Marind dress, accompanied by West Papuan youth and student groups carrying banners reading “Save Indigenous Papuans’ Forests” and others in Indonesian, including one translating to “Customary Land is not Terra Nullius — Resist Colonialism.” Before entering, the plaintiffs performed a traditional prayer ceremony, smearing white mud on their bodies in mourning for the ongoing destruction carried out in the name of the PSN.
“We are filing this lawsuit because we are grieving. We have lost our land, our mother, the place where we find our food. We were born on this land, but now it is hard to find food because the forest is being torn apart. Investors entered without permission, like thieves, and tore the forest apart with excavators. We erected traditional blockades but they ignored them. We spoke out against them but we are afraid, because the military worked there and brought their firearms,” said Marind woman Sinta Gebze, one of the five plaintiffs.
Indonesia’s Prabowo-Gibran administration says the 135km road is designed to support its food and energy estate plans (PSN) for South Papua province. The road runs alongside a rice paddy project in Wanam, Ilwayab District, led by the Ministry of Defence in partnership with PT Jhonlin Group owned by South Kalimantan mining businessman Andi Syamsudin Arsyad.
The road cuts through Indigenous customary forest from Wanam village to Muting, and construction has proceeded in violation of the law from the outset. The first 56 kilometres have already been cleared, and phase two is now being overseen by the Ministry of Public Works and Housing through several state-linked construction companies.
“This 135-kilometre road project reflects the chaos of the PSN regime that began under Joko Widodo and has continued under Prabowo Subianto. Land clearing began illegally in September 2024, before any environmental feasibility documents existed. The Merauke Regent’s environmental permit was only issued in September 2025, and we believe it was issued to retroactively justify violations that had already taken place,” said Tigor Hutapea, a member of the Merauke Solidarity Advocacy Team at Pusaka Bentala Rakyat Foundation.
Not only is it procedurally flawed, the permit is also invalid in that it ignores the rights of affected Indigenous communities who have actively opposed the project. “On the international stage the Indonesian government declares its commitment to peace, but its PSN project is generating conflict within West Papuan communities on the ground. A PSN backed by the military only entrenches the threat of violence and trauma for the Papuan people,” said advocacy team member Emanuel Gobay of the Indonesian Legal Aid Foundation (YLBHI).
Sekar Banjaran Aji, also a member of the legal team and Forest Campaigner at Greenpeace Indonesia, added: “While roads destroyed by the disastrous floods in Sumatra are still in urgent need of repair, the government is instead clearing forest in Merauke for a road that will primarily serve to accelerate the seizure of Papuan lands. Destroying forests during a climate crisis is not a shortcut to food and energy self-sufficiency. Instead it drives us toward the loss of those forests and the Indigenous knowledge they contain.”
This lawsuit at the Jayapura State Administrative Court is one part of a wider struggle. West Papua’s Indigenous communities are simultaneously challengingPSN-enabling provisions of the Job Creation Law at the Constitutional Court, while in their villages they continue to erect traditional blockades in protest.
Notes to Editor:
Photos and videos from the court case lodgement are available for use.
Contacts:
Sekar Banjaran Aji, Greenpeace Indonesia, +62 812-8776-9880
Tigor Hutapea, Pusaka Bentala Rakyat, +62 812-8729-6684
Igor O’Neill, Greenpeace Indonesia, +61 414-288-424
In short:
What's next?
Wednesday, March 4, 2026
Devastating new ‘ecocide’ film to premiere at West Papua solidarity forum weekend
Asia Pacific Report
A new documentary film on the devastating “ecocide” happening in West Papua will be screened as a world premiere at a weekend solidarity forum in Auckland Tāmaki Makaurau this weekend.
The 90m feature film, Pesta Babi (“The Pig Feast”) — Colonialism In Our Time, produced by award-winning Papuan journalist Victor Mambor and directed by Dandhy Dwi Laksono, tells a story about the impact of the Indonesian government and military on the lives of thousands of Papuans trying to protect their rainforests from destruction.
It also relates the plight of thousands of internal refugees in the Melanesian region.
- READ MORE: West Papuan filmmakers expose Merauke rainforest destruction in ‘siege’ doco
- West Papua Solidarity Forum, 7-8 March 2026
- Kōrero with Victor Mambor – West Papua: Journalism as Resistance, 9 March 2026
The peaceful resistance of local communities is revealed in the documentary as they face up to 54,000 Indonesian troops and large corporate entities make big profits at the expense of an ancient culture.
Dorthea Wabiser of the environmental and human rights group Pusaka, will speak on the deforestation and displacement of communities in the south-eastern district of Merauke where Indonesia is destroying 2.5 million ha of rainforest for palm oil, sugar cane, biodiesel, rice and other crops.
Military force is deployed to silence any dissent from communities.
Solidarity group hosts
The solidarity group West Papua Action Aotearoa with West Papua Action Tāmaki are hosting the two-day public forum on March 7 and 8 with the speakers from West Papua including environmental champions and filmmakers who operate in militarised zones at considerable risk to their personal safety.
Also, a media talanoa featuring Jubi Media founder Victor Mambor and others will be hosted by the Asia Pacific Media Network (APMN) at the Whānau Community Centre and Hub on March 9.
“The forum is an important event with a number of speakers and filmmakers from West Papua telling the hidden stories of the Indonesian occupation of their country,” said organiser Catherine Delahunty.
The climate impact of their destruction was incredibly serious as was the use of the military to enforce an end to traditional life, food sources, and forests, she said in a statement.
“These people are our Pacific neighbours with a devastating story to tell that our government and others across the world have chosen to ignore,” she said.
“They have a right to come here and to be heard despite the media bans in Indonesia and the desire of successive New Zealand governments to ignore structural genocide in our region.
NZ citizen kidnapped
“Only when a NZ citizen was kidnapped by Papuan soldiers did the government show any interest in West Papua, and this quickly faded once he was safely released thanks especially to West Papuan efforts.”
Other speakers at the forum include veteran activist and writer Maire Leadbeater, Green MP Teanau Tuiono, Hawai’an academic Dr Emalani Case, journalist and author Dr David Robie, Dr Arama Rata of Te Kuaka, and PNG academic Dr Nathan Rew.
- Forum Day One (public sessons), Saturday, March 7: Old Choral Hall, University of Auckland, 7 Symonds St, 9am–4pm.
- World Premiere of “Pesta Babi” (The Pig Feast) documentary with Q&A – The Academy Cinema, Lorne St, CBD (below the Auckland Public Library), March 7, 6-8.30pm.
- Forum Day Two (solidarity development), Sunday, March 8: The Taro Patch, 9 Dunnotar Rd, Papatoetoe.
- Media Talanoa, Monday, March 9: “Kōrero with Victor Mambor: West Papua: Journalism as Resistance” – Whānau Community Centre and Hub, 165 Stoddard Rd, Mt Roskill (Next to Harvey Norman), 6-8pm.
- Further information: Catherine Delahunty, West Papua Action Tāmaki and West Papua Action Aotearoa. Tel: 021 2421967
1) Series of arbitrary detentions in Dekai continues: Security forces alleged of detaining dozens of Papuan youth without warrant, including minors
2) TNI-Polri vow firm action against armed groups in Papua
3) Indonesian minister pushes export villages to boost West Papua economy
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https://humanrightsmonitor.org/case/series-of-arbitrary-detentions-in-dekai-continues-security-forces-alleged-of-detaining-dozens-of-papuan-youth-without-warrant-including-minors/
1) Series of arbitrary detentions in Dekai continues: Security forces alleged of detaining dozens of Papuan youth without warrant, including minors
Human rights analysis
Security forces search a house in Dekai, February 2026
Some of the Papuan youth arrested in Dekai on 21 and 22 February
Location: Dekai, Yahukimo regency, Highland Papua, Indonesia (-4.8638158, 139.4837298) Various locations in Dekai
Region: Indonesia, Highland Papua, Yahukimo, Dekai
Total number of victims: 26
| # | Number of Victims | Name, Details | Gender | Age | Group Affiliation | Violations |
| 1. | 1 | Melkim Selak | male | 27 | Indigenous Peoples | torture |
| 2. | 1 | Dartinus Esema | male | 21 | Indigenous Peoples | arbitrary detention |
| 3. | 1 | Yoten Giban | male | 15 | Indigenous Peoples, Student | arbitrary detention |
| 4. | 1 | Amonto Nato | male | 20 | Indigenous Peoples | arbitrary arrest |
| 5. | 1 | Sonai Giban | male | 17 | Indigenous Peoples, Student | arbitrary arrest |
| 6. | 1 | Panus Payage | male | 14 | Indigenous Peoples, Student | arbitrary arrest |
| 7. | 1 | Meli Heluka | male | 14 | Indigenous Peoples, Student | arbitrary arrest |
| 8. | 1 | Kris (Kotor) Giban | male | 16 | Indigenous Peoples | arbitrary arrest |
| 9. | 1 | Mika (Homi) Heluka | male | 17 | Indigenous Peoples | arbitrary arrest |
| 10. | 1 | Enake (Arnius) Heluka | male | 17 | Indigenous Peoples | arbitrary arrest |
| 11. | 1 | Feri Alemdam | male | 15 | Indigenous Peoples, Student | arbitrary detention |
| 12. | 1 | Olan Alya | male | 17 | Indigenous Peoples, Student | arbitrary detention |
| 13. | 1 | Erik Alya | male | 18 | Indigenous Peoples, Student | arbitrary detention |
| 14. | 1 | Eli Malyo | male | 17 | Indigenous Peoples, Student | arbitrary detention |
| 15. | 1 | Benius Uow | male | 14 | Indigenous Peoples, Student | arbitrary detention |
| 16. | 1 | Samuel Mare | male | 15 | Indigenous Peoples, Student | arbitrary detention |
| 17. | 1 | Kutrom Suhun | male | 19 | Indigenous Peoples, Student | arbitrary detention |
| 18. | 1 | Andi Heluka | male | 17 | Indigenous Peoples, Student | arbitrary detention |
| 19. | 1 | Sanpe Nato | male | 15 | Indigenous Peoples, Student | arbitrary detention |
| 20. | 1 | Jekson Giban | male | 20 | Indigenous Peoples | arbitrary detention |
| 21. | 1 | Pinaus Nato | male | minor | Indigenous Peoples, Student | arbitrary detention |
| 22. | 1 | Ania Nato | male | minor | Indigenous Peoples, Student | arbitrary detention |
| 23. | 1 | Meno Heluka | male | 25 | Indigenous Peoples | arbitrary detention |
| 24. | 1 | Menggel Soma | male | 18 | Indigenous Peoples | arbitrary detention |
| 25. | 1 | Arun Giban | male | 0 | Indigenous Peoples | arbitrary detention |
| 26. | 1 | Hilang Suhun | 0 | Indigenous Peoples, Student | arbitrary detention |
Perpetrator: Indonesian Security Forces
Issues: indigenous peoples, security force violence
Brigadier General Thevi Zebua, chief of staff of the Military Regional Command XVII Cendrawasih, said the measures aim to protect communities and demonstrate state presence in the region.
Speaking during a leadership meeting at Kodam XVII Cendrawasih headquarters in Jayapura, Thevi cited a recent increase in security incidents, prompting joint operations with task forces including Satgas Habema and Satgas Operasi Damai Cartenz.
He confirmed combined TNI-Polri teams are targeting KKB in areas such as Nabire and Timika, with operations already producing results.
“The armed groups have targeted teachers and healthcare workers, accusing them of supporting the military, even though their presence serves local communities,” Thevi said.
He emphasized that terrorist actions by these groups cannot be tolerated, and state forces are acting to protect civilians while affirming government authority.
Thevi warned that unchecked violence would harm local populations by deterring teachers and medical personnel from serving in affected areas.
He urged residents to report any suspicious activity or presence of armed groups so TNI-Polri can take preventive and protective measures.
“This is crucial to safeguard the community and ensure continued access to essential services,” he said, stressing the importance of collaboration between security forces and civilians in maintaining peace.
Papuan separatists have intensified attacks across Indonesia’s easternmost provinces in recent years, targeting civilians, workers, and security forces in a campaign aimed at spreading fear and undermining state authority.
Armed groups linked to the Free Papua Movement (OPM) have frequently used hit-and-run tactics against Indonesian troops and staged assaults on civilians in districts including Intan Jaya, Nduga, Yahukimo, and Puncak.
Targets have included construction workers, motorcycle taxi drivers, teachers, students, food vendors, and civilian aircraft crews.
Notable incidents include December 2, 2018: Rebels killed 31 workers from PT Istaka Karya building the Trans Papua highway in Kali Yigi and Kali Aurak, Yigi Subdistrict, Nduga District.
February 7, 2023: New Zealand pilot Phillip Mark Mehrtens was taken hostage by an armed group led by Egianus Kogoya after landing a Susi Air flight in Nduga District. His aircraft was then set on fire.
April 2025: Sixteen illegal gold miners were shot dead by an armed group in Yahukimo District, Highland Papua.
Related news: Smart Air pilots killed in South Papua airfield, armed group suspected
Related news: RI Govt urged to halt arms, ammo sales in Papua
Related news: More personnel of Cartenz Task Force, Brimob deployed to Sugapa
Translator: Evarukdijati, Rahmad Nasution
Editor: Azis Kurmala
“Villages can now directly conduct export through village-owned enterprises (BUMDes),” Villages and Development of Disadvantaged Regions Minister Yandri Susanto said while receiving West Papua Governor Dominggus Mandacan at the ministry’s office here on Wednesday.
In line with that, Susanto urged the West Papua provincial government to thoroughly map out the potential of villages that could be developed for export activities.
In addition to export villages, the minister noted that the tourism village program could also accelerate rural development. He asked the governor to designate one village as a pilot project for tourism village development.
He also encouraged the provincial government to participate in developing thematic villages tailored to each village’s unique potential.
“West Papua has also become a locus of the Integrated Village Economic Transformation (TEKAD) program in Manokwari, South Manokwari, Pegunungan Arfak, Fakfak, and Kaimana, covering 185 villages,” he stated.
Earlier during the meeting, Governor Mandacan outlined several priority programs requiring intervention from the ministry across seven regencies, 91 sub-districts, 57 urban villages, and 817 villages.
“We are prioritizing strengthening the rural economy based on local potential. In addition, there are programs in the education and health sectors,” he remarked.
Mandacan also conveyed that the province has been preparing programs to enhance the capacity of village officials and residents, along with rural infrastructure development and initiatives targeting disadvantaged areas.
Meanwhile, Minister Susanto responded positively to the proposals, noting that they align with the "12 Priority Actions in Building Villages, Building Indonesia" agenda.
Related news: Indonesian minister urges priority Infrastructure push in Papua
Related news: Indonesia seeks synchronized efforts for development in Papua
Related news: Papua regions receive first-quarter 2026 special autonomy funds
Translator: Tri, Kenzu
Editor: M Razi Rahman
Reiner Brabar, Jayapura – The Papua Indonesian Forum for the Environment (Walhi) has issued a strong critique stating that Papua is being pushed to the brink of ecological destruction by a coalition of oligarchs, capitalism and the state, hiding behind the narrative of investment and green development.
Walhi Papua Executive Director Maikel Primus Peuki referred to the relationship between the oligarchy and capitalism as an "illicit love affair between power and capital", which is systematically sacrificing the forests and indigenous communities for the sake of accumulating profits.
He made this statement during a public discussion held at a hotel in Jayapura city, Papua, on Thursday February 26.
The discussion, titled "Fighting the Oligarchy in the Land of Papua", featured four keynote speakers: Peuki, Umbu Wulang, Walhi Institutional Division head, Ester Haluk, a social activist and academic at the Walter Post Theological College (STT), and Naomi Marasian, director of the Limited Association for the Study and Empowerment of Indigenous Communities (Pt PPMA) Papua.
Peuki believes the state is not neutral, but rather an instrument of the oligarchy that acts through mining permits, palm oil plantations and large-scale investment projects.
"Papua's natural environment is being reduced to a commodity. Indigenous communities are marginalised on their own land, while profits flow to the owners of capital", Peuki asserted.
According to Peuki, the narrative of increasing regional revenues and clean energy is merely a cover for massive concessions on customary forests. On the ground, village communities often encounter heavy equipment entering without their free, prior or informed consent (FPIC).
Thousands of hectares of forest are being cleared, spiritual ties with the land are being severed and local economies are being destroyed.
"This is a green illusion. The state talks about energy transition and prosperity, yet extractive permits continue to be issued. There's an addiction to permits to cover the budget [shortfall]", Peuki said.
Peuki emphasised that the impact is real, indigenous communities who subsist on sago, fish and gardens are being forced into a fragile money economy and the global market. Structural poverty exists in regions rich in resources. "Trees don't need people; people need trees", said Peuki.
Umbu Wulang added that the Papuan issue must be interpreted as internal colonialism, a process of control of living space by the state and corporations in the name of development. He highlighted the practice of "statistical poverty": rich regions are labelled poor so that large-scale mining and plantations are legitimised.
"The root of the problem is the power structure. In an oligarchic system, capital is sovereign. In indigenous communities, the people are sovereign over their land", said Wulang.
Wulang called for a reversal stating that every investment must comply with the ecological, customary, theological and economic safety requirements set by the communities themselves.
He also called for the restoration of culture and mother tongue as the foundation of human relationships, a land now being eroded by industrial expansion.
Walhi Papua emphasised that the current juncture is clear: continuing a development model based on extraction and accumulation of capital, or shifting to ecological justice that recognises the unity of humans and nature.
"Without changing the power structure, they warn, the ecological destruction and impoverishment of indigenous communities in Papua will continue to be repeated", he concluded.
[Translated by James Balowski. The original title of the article was "WALHI Papua: Oligarki dan Ilusi Hijau Hancurkan Tanah Papua".]
Source: https://suarapapua.com/2026/02/28/walhi-papua-oligarki-dan-ilusi-hijau-hancurkan-tanah-papua/