Saturday, September 12, 2020

1) Public health services in Timika remain unaffected amid pandemic


2) Police confirm 16 native Papuans injured in Jayawijaya tribal clash  
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1) Public health services in Timika remain unaffected amid pandemic  
16 hours ago
Timika, Papua (ANTARA) - Public health services in the remote mountainous and coastal areas of Mimika District, Papua Province, remain unaffected by the ongoing novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, Head of the Mimika Health Office Reynold Ubra affirmed.

"We ensure that health services from Potowayburu to Jita sub-districts continue to run normally. We do not receive any report on complaints from the local people," he told local journalists in Timika, the capital of Mimika District, on Saturday.

In thwarting the potential spread of COVID-19 in the district's administrative areas, the health authorities have outlined health protocols on the basis of a mapping of green, yellow, and red risk zones of COVID-19, Ubra noted.

Next week, the Mimika Health Office has planned to deploy a team of doctors and paramedics to serve people in coastal villages, including Yapakopa, Aindua, and Ararau, in Mimika Barat Jauh Sub-district.

Their public health services prioritize the handling of leprosy, and their colleagues deployed to the areas of Amar Sub-district will help care for mothers and children as well as those suffering from malnourishment, he stated.

The medical workers dispatched to Sumapro Village in Jita Sub-district will provide essential health services, including immunization, to the local residents.

Over the past years, Mimika District has been striving to tackle diseases, such as malaria, tuberculosis, and HIV/AIDS. The COVID-19 pandemic has further raised public health-related challenges, he stated.

As of Sept 11, some 957 people had contracted COVID-19, of which 758 fully recovered, while seven others succumbed to the deadly virus that causes COVID-19.

Five neighborhoods in Mimika are still categorized as red zones or high-risk areas for the infection: Tembagapura neighborhood in Tembagapura Sub-district, Amamapare Village in Mimika Timur Jauh Sub-district, Kwamki neighborhood in Mimika Baru Sub-district, Wonosari Jaya neighborhood in Wania Sub-district, and Kuala Kencana neighborhood in Kuala Kencana Sub-district, he stated.

The COVID-19 pandemic continues to pose a grave threat to Papua. The General Elections Commission (KPU) authority in Papua Province revealed recently that one of its members had contracted the novel coronavirus disease and was under hospitalization at a local facility.


Related news: Police confirm 16 native Papuans injured in Jayawijaya tribal clash

Related news: KPU-Papua office member infected with COVID-19: commission
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Reporter: Evarianus S, Rahmad Nasution
Editor: Fardah Assegaf


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2) Police confirm 16 native Papuans injured in Jayawijaya tribal clash  
19 hours ago
Wamena, Papua (ANTARA) - Some 16 native Papuans suffered arrow wounds in a tribal clash erupting in Jayawijaya District's area, Papua, on Thursday and Friday, but a public hospital’s local doctors offered timely life-saving treatment, a police officer stated.

The doctors extracted the remnants of arrows that pierced into the victims' bodies, though none were hospitalized in keeping with the requests of families, Jayawijaya Police Chief Adjunct Sen. Coms. Dominggus Rumaropen stated in Wamena on Saturday.

Hence, the injured Papuans were taken home by their families to be treated at home, he remarked while steering clear of elaborating on the factors causative to the clashes between the tribes in the villages of Wukahilapok and Meagama.

In putting a stop to the clash and pushing them back, police personnel deployed to the incident site fired a warning shot while appealing to them to stop assaulting each other.

They also installed a Red-and-White flag on a boundary line of the area that each member of the warring camps was not allowed to pass through. They were also persuaded to start negotiating to end the conflict, he revealed.

Apart from the local police's endeavors to end the clash, one of the warring groups set ablaze several traditional Papuan huts (honai). They appeared to disregard the police’s presence on the ground.

On the contrary, each sparring camp was on guard and equipped with traditional weapons, including arrows, spears, and machetes, he stated.

Violent conflicts between tribes in the eastern Indonesian province of Papua have repeatedly occurred. Media reports attribute the conflicts to causative factors, such as old rivalries and revenge.

Related news: Bawaslu: KPU-Papua office advised to conduct swab testing

Related news: KPU-Papua office member infected with COVID-19: commission


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Reporter: Marius FY, Rahmad Nasution
Editor: Fardah Assegaf

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