Tuesday, March 9, 2021

1) Anger after Indonesia offers Elon Musk Papuan island for SpaceX launchpad

 


2) Floods force thousands to flee homes in Papua’s Jayawijaya 
3) Deforestation in Indonesia hits record low, but experts fear a rebound
4) Papua police promise prosperity-oriented approach  
5) Interim President: Young boy murdered as Indonesian police tell West Papuans ‘You are a legitimate target! Shoot!’
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1) Anger after Indonesia offers Elon Musk Papuan island for SpaceX launchpad


Rory James Wed 10 Mar 2021 10.22 AEDT

Biak island residents say SpaceX launchpad would devastate island’s ecology and displace people from their homes

Papuans whose island has been offered up as a potential launch site for Elon Musk’s SpaceX project have told the billionaire Tesla chief his company is not welcome on their land, and its presence would devastate their island’s ecosystem and drive people from their homes.

Musk was offered use of part of the small island of Biak in Papua by Indonesian president Joko Widodo in December.

An Indonesian government representative told the Guardian this week the planned spaceport was being developed in consultation with the Papuan government and local communities, and that Biak’s development as a “Space Island” would “bring positive economic impacts” for islanders.


But Papuans on Biak are fiercely opposed, arguing a space launchpad will drive deforestation, increase Indonesian military presence, and threaten their future on the island. A tribal chief on the island, Manfun Sroyer, said he feared Papuans will be forced from their homes.

“This spaceport will cost us our traditional hunting grounds, damaging the nature our way of life depends on. But, if we protest, we’ll be arrested immediately.”

Russia’s space agency, Roscosmos, also aims to develop a large rocket launch site on Biak island by 2024.

“In 2002, Russians wanted our land for satellite launches. We protested and many were arrested and interrogated… now they’ve brought it back, and this harassment and intimidation is still going on,” Manfun Sroyer said.


Biak is part of Papua province, where a secessionist campaign has run for decades against Indonesian rule. Biak’s eastern coast faces the Pacific ocean, and its location, one degree below the equator, is ideal for launching low-orbit satellites for communications, with less fuel needed to reach orbit. Its proximity to reserves of natural resources also makes it a prime candidate for a launch site.

Musk plans to launch 12,000 satellites by 2026 to provide cheap high-speed internet through internet service Starlink. A SpaceX test rocket exploded on the landing pad this month after landing, the third successive failure.

West Papua’s vast natural resources include copper and nickel, two of the most important metals for rockets as well as the long-range batteries used in Tesla’s electric vehicles (EV).

Widodo also aims to lure Tesla to Indonesia, promoting its nickel deposits, to make it south-east Asia’s second-largest producer of EVs. If successful, Tesla and SpaceX operations could further accelerate resource extraction in Papua and West Papua.

Musk told Indonesian officials in July Tesla would offer a “giant contract for a long period of time if you mine nickel efficiently and in an environmentally sensitive way”.

But Papuans and environmental experts fear a launch site will further damage the island’s delicate ecosystem.

“It’s a tiny island,” Benny Wenda the exiled leader of the United Liberation Movement for West Papua (ULMWP) and interim president told the Guardian. “It’s already destroying ecosystems and threatening the survival of the people of Biak. They just want to live simply, without this destruction coming to the island.”

The Raja Ampat Islands in West Papua hold significant nickel deposits, and a coalition of Indonesian environmental non-government organisations, JATAM, has argued expanded mining there will escalate deforestation, pollute a proposed Unesco marine world heritage site, and endanger the health of local people.

The Grasberg mine on Papua’s mainland is the world’s second largest copper mine. Increased production there is likely to add to the 80m tonnes of mining waste it dumps into surrounding rivers each year, worsening environmental damage.

In July 1998, Biak island was the site of one of the worst massacres in the history of Indonesia’s occupation of West Papua, when scores of civilians were tortured and killed and their bodies dumped at sea, allegedly by Indonesian security forces, after activists had raised the West Papua Morning Star flag.

Biak elder Tineke Rumkabu, a survivor of that violence, said she wanted to tell Musk his space project was not welcome on her people’s island.


“As a South African you understand apartheid, the killing of black people. If you bring your business here you are directly sponsoring Indonesia’s genocide against Papuans.”

Biak is also strategically important to the Indonesian military, where it has built naval, troop and air bases that serve as a jumping off point for aircraft and troop deployments.

A spokesperson for the Indonesian government told the Guardian the Indonesian National Institute of Aeronautics and Space (LAPAN) had consulted extensively with the Papua provincial government on the spaceport plan for Biak.

“The Papua provincial government considers that the building of the spaceport in Biak will make the Biak Numfor District a hub and bring positive economic impacts for the regional government and the local community. The Indonesian parliament also sees that the building of Biak Island as a ‘Space Island’ will bring multiplier effect to the surrounding community.”

LAPAN will continue to consult intensively with local communities as the spaceport plan is developed, the government said.

SpaceX did not respond to questions from the Guardian.

Formerly the Netherlands New Guinea, Papua was invaded, and then annexed by Jakarta in 1963.

Indonesia formalised its control over the province in 1969 under the UN-supervised, but undemocratic and coercive, Act of Free Choice. Jakarta regards Papua and West Papua as indivisible parts of the unitary state of Indonesia.

Papuans – Melanesians who are ethnically and culturally similar to the people of PNG, Solomon Islands, and Fiji – have consistently resisted Indonesian rule, and waged a long-running campaign for independence that has cost an estimated 100,000 lives.

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https://en.antaranews.com/news/169566/floods-force-thousands-to-flee-homes-in-papuas-jayawijaya

2) Floods force thousands to flee homes in Papua’s Jayawijaya  
5 hours ago


Wamena, Papua (ANTARA) - Thousands of families in Jayawijaya district, Papua province have been shifted to higher ground due to floodwaters submerging their homes, the Jayawijaya District Natural Disaster Mitigation Agency (BPBD) reported.

The agency is still calculating the material losses caused by the flooding, which followed incessant rains from late February to March 9, 2021, chief of the BPBD, Amsal Wamo, said on Tuesday.

"The districts affected by landslides are Wollo and Melagalome, while floodwaters have submerged the districts of Assolokobal, Walelagama, Libarek, Kurulu, Witawaya, Pisugi, Siepkosi, Hubikiak, Wesaput, Maima, Assotipo, Yalengga, Asologaima, Silokarno Doga, Muliama, Musatfak, Hubikosi, Usil Ombo, Bolakme, and Pyramid," he said.

Related news: Floods swamp residential, office areas in Keerom District, Papua

According to preliminary data, floods have inundated 1,289 homes, 169 hectares of plantations, 6,064 semi-finished homes, and 145 fish ponds.

BPBD records show 63 pigs have been carried away by the water currents.

The incessant rains have also destroyed 17 wood bridges.

"The nearly one-month-long flood has caused plants to die. The local people had earlier predicted the flood would last two to three days," he said. (INE)

 

Reporter: Markeus FK/Suharto
Editor: Yuni Arisandy Sinaga



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3) Deforestation in Indonesia hits record low, but experts fear a rebound
by Hans Nicholas Jong on 9 March 2021

  • The deforestation rate in Indonesia last year fell by 75% to its lowest level since monitoring began in 1990, according to the government.
  • Officials attribute this mainly to government policies such as moratoriums on clearing primary forests and issuing licenses for new oil palm plantations.
  • Environmentalists say other factors contributed, including an unusually wet year, declining palm oil prices, and an economic slump that led to a slowdown in forest-clearing activity such as plantation expansion and logging.
  • They’ve called on the government to keep aiming for even lower rates of deforestation, and cautioned against pursuing economic growth emulating Brazil’s deforestation-driven extractive model.

JAKARTA — Indonesia’s deforestation rate hit a historic low in 2020, with the government crediting its various policies prohibiting forest-clearing, and experts attributing the trend to more rains, falling oil palm prices, and an economic slowdown as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The country lost 115,459 hectares (285,300 acres) of forest cover in 2020, an area the size of Los Angeles. That’s a 75% drop from 2019, according to the Ministry of Environment and Forestry.

“In the past, we’ve often said that our deforestation [rate] was in the millions [of hectares],” said Belinda Arunarwati Margono, the ministry’s director of forest resource monitoring. But the 2020 deforestation rate, she said, “is remarkable for us because this is the lowest deforestation figure that we’ve ever achieved.”

Government figures show the country also managed to maintain its total forest cover at slightly more than half (50.9%) of its total land area, at 95.6 million hectares (236 million acres). That’s more than double the size of California and behind only Brazil and the Democratic Republic of Congo in terms of tropical forest area.

The forestry ministry, which started tracking annual deforestation rates in 1990, attributed the drop last year to the culmination of a number of policies aimed at protecting the country’s forests. These include a permanent ban on issuing new permits to clear primary forests and peatlands; a moratorium on new oil palm plantation licenses; forest fire mitigation; a social forestry program; land rehabilitation; and increased enforcement against environmental violations.

“This [drop in deforestation] shows that various efforts done by the Ministry Environment and Forestry lately have produced significant results,” said Ruandha Agung Suhardiman, the ministry’s director-general of planning. “Their impact on reducing deforestation is tremendous.”

Arief Wijaya, senior manager of climate and forests at the World Resources Institute (WRI) Indonesia, agreed that these policies could have had a positive impact on the deforestation rate, adding that the government’s efforts “should be appreciated.” He also said other factors, such as the economy and the weather, may have contributed to the drop.

For one thing, Arief said, 2020 was wetter than usual, and in fact among the wettest years in the past four decades, thanks to the La Niña weather system.

“As a result, fires dropped to 296,000 hectares [731,400 acres of land] and deforestation [from fires] was only 1,100 hectares [2,700 acres],” he told Mongabay.

He also pointed to the decrease in global oil palm prices since 2013, responsible for slowing the expansion of the industry.

“Since 2013, the global oil palm prices tend to fluctuate and decline due to the decreasing demand for the vegetable oil, which might be caused by the trade war with the European Union which is looking to phase out [palm oil-based biodiesel from] Indonesia,” he said. “Coupled with the COVID-19 pandemic last year, of course industries are slowing down.”

A recent studynot yet peer-reviewed, has also attributed the slowing deforestation rate in Indonesia to declining oil palm plantation expansion and lower palm oil prices. The study, out by researchers from technology company TheTreeMap and other institutions, found that the rates of plantation expansion and forest loss correlated with palm oil prices.

According to the study, a price decline of 1% was associated with a 1.08% decrease in new plantations and a 0.68% decrease in forest loss. The trends showed deforestation peaking in 2016 and falling below pre-2004 levels in 2017-2019 following a slowdown in new plantations being established from its peak in 2012.

Mufthi Fathul Barri, a researcher with Forest Watch Indonesia (FWI), said another factor that likely contributed to the decline in deforestation was the economic slump induced by measures imposed in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

“The disruption to economic activity can be seen from timber production from natural forests, which declined,” he said. “In 2019, Indonesia produced timber from 8.4 million hectares [20.7 million acres] of natural forests. In 2020, it was 6.6 million hectares [16.3 million acres].”


No time to slack off

Arief said Indonesia should sustain its efforts to bring down the deforestation rate and not become complacent after recording a historic low.

“Indonesia’s declining deforestation is a good trend that we have to maintain together, and even strengthen, because next year, El Niño might return,” he said, referring to the weather system that typically brings an intense and prolonged dry season — ideal conditions for forest fires to spread out of control.

And with Indonesia’s COVID-19 vaccination drive underway, the anticipated economic recovery could jump-start forest-clearing activity, Arief added.

“So the government’s commitments in maintaining deforestation rate this low have to be protected, as well as the zero-deforestation commitments by the private sector,” he said, adding it’s important not to sacrifice the environment for economic growth.

Grita Anindarini, program director at the Indonesian Center for Environmental Law (ICEL), said the declining deforestation in Indonesia should be commended, but the government shouldn’t be satisfied with the figure.

“Deforestation means there are still forests lost,” Grita said. “In the span of two years [since 2019], a total of 578,000 hectares [1.4 million acres], almost the size of the province of Jakarta [was deforested]. So don’t get fixated with the percentage drop without looking at the real size [of deforestation].”

The forestry ministry’s Belinda said the government is not pursuing a zero-deforestation target as part of its climate pledge, or nationally determined contribution (NDC), under the Paris Agreement.

“Because in our NDC, it’s been said that Indonesia still [has room for] deforestation,” she said. “It’s because Indonesia is still developing and of course we [try to] curb deforestation as much as possible.”

Land use change, which includes deforestation and forest fires, accounts for most of Indonesia’s greenhouse gas emissions. Under Indonesia’s NDC, the government allows up to 325,000 hectares (803,000 acres) of deforestation per year to reach its emissions reduction goal while leaving room for economic development. That means that by the 2030 deadline for the Paris Agreement, Indonesia could potentially clear 3.25 million hectares (8 million acres) of rainforest, an area larger than Belgium, and still call it a success.

A 2018 report by the NGO Rainforest Foundation Norway (RFN) shows this won’t be enough to cap the average global temperature increase at 1.5° Celsius (2.7° Fahrenheit) as mandated under the Paris Agreement.

Annisa Rahmawati, an environmental advocate at U.S.-based campaign organization Mighty Earth, called for a more ambitious deforestation and climate target by the Indonesian government. As global emissions continue to rise, with energy-related emissions already rebounding back to pre-COVID-19 levels amid a revival in economic activity, Annisa said even stopping deforestation outright might not be sufficient.

“Even zero deforestation is no longer enough considering the current condition of our climate,” she told Mongabay. “Experts say our planet is already warming by 1.2°C [2.2°F], and soon we’ll reach 1.5°C. So we have to start reforesting in better ways than before. All forests have to be protected no matter their functions, coupled with conservation and restoration as massive as possible.”

More ambitious targets

Grita from ICEL said reforestation is one aspect where Indonesia still has a long way to go.

“Our reforestation number is still very small, only 3,000 hectares [7,400 acres] in 2018-2019 and 3,600 hectares [8,900 acres] in 2019-2020,” she said. “This can be greatly improved. The government should be more confident about achieving more ambitious emissions reduction in the forestry sector.”

In 2019, Indonesian officials considered boosting the country’s emissions reduction target to 45%, from the previous figure of 41% with international aid. But in 2020, the government decided not to go for the higher figure, saying it wants to focus instead on economic growth.

Key to that focus is a slate of deregulation measures passed last year, in particular the revised mining law and the so-called omnibus law on job creation. Critics say these measures roll back environmental protections and could lead to greater deforestation. For instance, the omnibus law removes an article in the 1999 Forestry Law that requires at least 30% of each watershed and/or island area be maintained as forest area.

The government’s recent ambition to establish millions of hectares of farmland across Indonesia under the “food estate” program has also prompted concerns over future deforestation. A new study by the NGO Madani shows that there are 1.57 million hectares (3.8 million acres) of natural forests located in areas targeted by the government for conversion into farmland.

Nearly nine-tenths of these forests are in the province of Papua, one of the most biodiverse regions on Earth and home to the majority of Indonesia’s remaining tropical rainforest.

“Our last frontier of intact tropical forest in Papua is in the food estate program’s area of interest,” said Madani researcher Anggalia Putri.

She noted that the food estate program is exempted from the moratorium on clearing primary forests and peatlands; 1 million hectares (2.5 million acres) of the program’s area of interest in Papua is theoretically covered by the moratorium.


Going the way of Bolsonaro’s Brazil

In an interview with the BBC last year, President Joko Widodo said his priority was to boost economic growth, and that “maybe after that, then the environment [will be the priority], innovation and then human rights. Why not?”

Arief said Indonesia could easily end up like Brazil if it’s not careful.

Between 2004 and the early 2010s, annual forest loss in Brazil, home to nearly two-thirds of the Amazon’s forest cover, declined by roughly 80%. The drop was driven by a number of factors, including increased law enforcement, satellite monitoring, pressure from environmentalists, private and public sector initiatives, new protected areas, and macroeconomic trends.

But Brazil’s success in curbing deforestation has stalled since 2012, and forest loss has increased since then, especially under the administration of President Jair Bolsonaro, who came to office in January 2019.

Bolsonaro campaigned on the promise to open the Amazon to the extractive industries and agribusiness while disparaging environmentalists and Indigenous peoples, and immediately set about dismantling protections for the Amazon when he took office. Deforestation has increased sharply under his watch, reaching levels not seen since the mid-2000s.

“Don’t let us become like Brazil, where even its foreign donor, Norway, has decided to stop its support for the Amazon Fund because deforestation in the Amazon keeps rising,” Arief said. “What Indonesia has achieved has to be maintained because the potential for massive deforestation is still there.”

Arief said that now that it’s been proven that Indonesia can slash its deforestation rate significantly, the government should not be afraid to adopt a more ambitious climate pledge.

“Maybe Indonesia can have bolder climate target, more than 41% [by 2030],” he said. “Because in order to limit global warming by 1.5 degrees, we have to achieve net-zero emissions by 2050.”

And achieving this ambitious target doesn’t mean that Indonesia has to sacrifice its economy, according to Annisa. For instance, she said, the government can focus on restoring the millions of hectares of degraded peatlands and forests, something which will create jobs.

“Restoration and conservation activities are one of the best job creators, where the involvement of local people is key to success,” Annisa said. “Non-timber forest resources as well as ecosystem services are also abundant [in Indonesia], which can be managed sustainably without destroying forests.”

She said there’s needs to be a change in mindset from the established perception that clearing forested land is the only way to get value out of it.

“Massive exploitation and deforestation don’t lead to growth because no matter how much money we get [from it], when there’s a disaster [caused by the exploitation], the money will go away, and so we can’t develop,” Annisa said. “Because there’s no business on a dead planet.”

 

Banner image: Peatland destruction in Riau, Indonesia. Image by Rhett A. Butler/Mongabay.

 

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4) Papua police promise prosperity-oriented approach  
7 hours ago

Jayapura, Papua (ANTARA) - Papua police have pledged to adopt a prosperity-oriented approach to win the hearts and minds of native Papuan communities in areas where armed groups are known to operate.

Such a prosperity-oriented approach would be combined with stern law enforcement efforts, Papua Police chief, Insp.Gen.Mathius Fakhiri, remarked.

"We shall not step back even an inch. But, of course, we will do that with a soft approach," Fakhiri said after attending a farewell ceremony for his predecessor, Coms. Gen. Paulus Waterpauw, in Jayapura on Monday.

He said he would maintain good communication with all parties while utilizing special autonomy funds, but promised that Papua police would crack down on those embezzling funds.

The necessity of applying a prosperity-oriented approach to resolve problems in the Indonesian provinces of Papua and West Papua had been highlighted by President Joko Widodo (Jokowi) last year.

According to Presidential Chief of Staff Moeldoko, from the start, the President has put great emphasis on a prosperity-oriented approach for resolving Papua-related matters.

Citing an example of the Widodo administration's prosperity-oriented approach, Moeldoko drew attention to the various infrastructure construction projects in Papua and West Papua that will allow them to be at par with other provinces.

President Widodo is also focusing on boosting the economic sector of Papua and West Papua by, for instance, enforcing the one-fuel price policy there as part of the government's endeavors to create social justice for the local people, he pointed out.

The government has also remained focused on the development of the health and education sectors in the two Indonesian provinces, he remarked.

Moeldoko said he believes the second phase of the special autonomy status granted for Papua and West Papua would inject a new spirit and expedite development to create prosperity in both provinces.

ANTARA has earlier reported that the central government has provided special autonomy funds amounting to Rp126.99 trillion to Papua and West Papua since 2012.

In Indonesia's 2019 human development index, Papua and West Papua scored 64.7 and 60.84, respectively.

Related news: Armed violence: Soldiers provide aid to returning refugees in Mimika
Related news: Navy helps Papuan children instil reading habit through mobile library
Related news: Indonesian soldiers offer mobile health services to villagers in Papua


Reporter: Evarukdijati, Rahmad Nasution
Editor: Sri Haryati

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https://www.ulmwp.org/interim-president-young-boy-murdered 

5) Interim President: Young boy murdered as Indonesian police tell West Papuans ‘You are a legitimate target! Shoot!’

March 9, 2021 
A 17-year-old boy has become the latest victim of Indonesia’s six-decades-long colonisation of West Papua. Killed on March 6, Melianus Nayagau has been murdered in Intan Jaya, where Indonesian military operations have displaced thousands of my people.

Separately, a video has shown an Indonesian police chief in Java telling demonstrating West Papuan students that they are ‘a legitimate target’, and giving the order to ‘shoot’. This is the reality of what we face in West Papua. As the people of West Papua resist Jakarta’s re-imposition of ‘Special Autonomy’, Papuan students are being beaten by Indonesian nationalist gangs and arrested by colonial police.

The cold-blooded killing and viral video come just after the Indonesian military murdered a 36-year-old deaf disabled man, Donatus Mirip, on February 27. As I previously stated, three West Papuan men were tortured and murdered in a West Papuan hospital by Indonesian soldiers on February 15.

Late last year, West Papuan pastor Yeremia ZanambaniCatholic catechist Rufinus Tigau and other religious figures were tortured, shot and killed by troops, and three school children were executed by an Indonesian state death squad on November 20, 2020. Several soldiers were recently found to have killed two other family members of Pastor Zanambani last year, burning the bodies and throwing their ashes into a local river.

Tens of thousands of West Papuans have been displaced by these military operations since December 2018. Hundreds have died from lack of water, food and medicine, in the middle of a global pandemic. As the largest religious organisation in our nation, the West Papua Council of Churches, has stated, ‘The Land of Papua has become a Military Operation Area.’

No one can deny that this is an absolute humanitarian catastrophe, a pattern of systematic human rights abuses targeted at the Indigenous population of West Papua by the Indonesian colonial regime. This is serial, repeated murder of the young, of religious figures, of displaced women and children. We are treated with inhumanity on our own land.

Indonesia’s response to this undeniable disaster? To deploy 1,350 more highly armed troops to West Papua today, joining the thousands of additional security personneldeployed since 2019.

The Indonesian state is trying to conceal the blood that is dripping from its hands. At the UN Human Rights Council last month, the Indonesian Foreign Minister denounced ‘double standards’ and ‘politicization’ of the Council, something Indonesia has done more to promote than any other state. Whilst they take a noble stand on the Palestinian and Myanmar struggles, they lie to the world about what they are doing to their own neighbours in West Papua.

I’m calling on the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights to pay urgent attention to the situation in West Papua. This is not one-off killings and human rights violations. This is a systematic attempt to subjugate the Indigenous population, to destroy our will to resist, to eliminate our culture and way of life. But we will not give up until we win back our right to self-determination, stolen from us in the 1960s.

We need regional leaders in Melanesia and the Pacific to listen to our cry. All 83 countries that support the visit of the UN High Commissioner to West Papua must redouble efforts to ensure the visit takes place as a matter of extreme urgency, before more of my people are murdered.

As I have stated since 2019, I am ready to sit down with the Indonesian President to find a just solution to live in peace and harmony in West Papua.

Benny Wenda 
Interim President 
ULMWP Provisional Government
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