Police and military personnel attend a joint antiterror exercise held by the National Counterterrorism Agency (BNPT), the Indonesian Military (TNI) and the National Police at the East Java Police’s Mobile Brigade headquarters in Malang, East Java, on May 18, 2020.(Antara/Ari Bowo Sucipto)
Last week, Indonesia’s handling of insurgencies in Papua took a new turn, eliciting a strong response from rights watchdogs and experts.
For the most part, lawmakers agree with the agency and support a hard approach to unrest and conflict in Papua. Romo Muhammad Syafi’i, a Gerindra Party legislator who sits on House of Representatives Commission III overseeing legal affairs, said acts of terrorism in Indonesia were not only disruptions of public order but also threatened “sovereignty, unity and national defense”.
House Deputy Speaker Azis Syamsuddin of Golkar said the KKB redesignation plan was a political approach that could ease the tension brought about by Papuan separatism, tribunnews.com reported.
But critics have said the proposal undermines many non-security aspects that can help authorities remedy the lack of trust that residents of Papua have in them.
Amnesty International Indonesia (AII) executive director Usman Hamid said, “[The redesignation] won’t do anything to help end the numerous human rights violations and abuses suffered by the Papuan people, many of which are suspected to be at the hands of state security forces.”
Indonesia has been widely criticized for the cycle of violence in its easternmost provinces, and certain countries have openly backed Papuan separatists. Experts say the unrest is the consequence of outdated, security-oriented attitudes toward Papuan issues.
She said she feared that once KKB were stigmatized as terrorist groups, there may no longer be any room for dialogue, as terrorist groups are normally subject to dismantling.
The government announced on Tuesday that it would not seek to renew Papua’s special autonomy (otsus) status, which is set to expire in November after two decades in force.
Coordinating Political, Legal and Security Affairs Minister Mahfud MD said that only the disbursement of special autonomy funds would continue and noted that they could even increase.
The head of the National Commission on Human Rights (Komnas HAM), Ahmad Taufan Damanik, has said that while physical infrastructure development was being aggressively pursued by the government, this approach was not accompanied by a cultural approach that could bring the central government closer to the people of Papua.
He suggested that security operations be transformed into “welfare operations” to address the complexity of issues. “Komnas HAM is deeply concerned about the idea that KKB [is to be called] as a terrorist organization. This will make it even harder to take a peaceful approach to Papua,” Taufan said recently, as quoted by tribunnews.com.
Mahfud acknowledged that the state’s development drive in Papua had not been effective, due in part to the dire security situation, the prevalence of corruption and the lack of integration among government programs.
The minister did not address the terrorism designation plan but said the government was working to solve a number of pending issues. He asserted that the question of Papuan integration into Indonesia had long been laid to rest and was final. “It is inviolable and [the government] will maintain it at all costs. Whether social, economic, political or financial – we will defend it,” Mahfud said in a statement.
According to Amnesty, at least 49 cases of suspected unlawful killings by security forces occurred in Papua and West Papua from February 2018 to March 2021, resulting in 83 casualties. The fatal shooting of Papuan pastor Yeremia Zanambani in Intan Jaya regency last year, which the military has been accused of being responsible for, has created another a major rift with Papuans and has posed an extra security challenge.
Reiner Brabar, Sorong – Scores of activists from the Papua People's Solidarity Against Racism (SPMR) held a free speech forum in front of the Elin traffic light intersection in Sorong city, West Papua province.
The action was held to oppose racism against indigenous Papuans which is flourishing and rooted in the minds of Indonesian people. They urged the Indonesian government to immediately investigate cases of racism against indigenous Papuans (OAP).
"The contempt towards OAP is not something that has only happened recently in Indonesia. It has been happening for a long time but the Indonesian state continues to protect the perpetrators without acting firmly against them", said action coordinator Apey Tarami following the action on Monday March 29.
According to Tarami, the racist attitudes shown towards Papuan soccer player Patrik Wanggai is just one more note in a long record of racism in Indonesia which has befallen the Papuan people.
"The state protects the perpetrators of this flourishing racism. This is evidence of continued racism against Papuans this year. Meanwhile there no clear legal actions are taken even though it's reported to the police", said Tarami.
Tarami noted other cases which have occurred such as those against former rights commission member Natalius Pigai and the recent racist threats against Papuan students in Malang, East Java, by the Malang police chief (Kapolresta) as concrete examples of how the state protects the perpetrators.
Ando Sabarafek meanwhile said that each time there is a racist incident against Papuans it is always resolved by an apology through the mass media, but this does not heal the spiritual injury suffered by Papuans.
"The Malang Kapolresta must be sacked. Firm action must be taken against the perpetrators of racism against Patrik Wanggai though social media. An apology can never heal the hearts of Papuan people", he asserted.
The activist from the group Kaki Abu also called on the Indonesian government to immediately give the Papuan people the right to self-determination as a democratic solution to heal the hearts of the Papuan people.
"The NKRI [Unitary State of the Republic of Indonesia] is a racist state. Papuan independence is the best solution so that the Papuan people will be free to determine their own future. As long as the Papuan people are under Indonesian [rule], racism against Papuans will continue to flourish and never disappear from the face of the earth and the character of the Indonesian people", he said in conclusion.
[Translated by James Balowski. The original title of the article was "Rasisme Terhadap OAP Tumbuh Subur di Indonesia".]
Source: https://suarapapua.com/2021/03/31/rasisme-terhadap-oap-tumbuh-subur-di-indonesia/
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