Thursday, March 25, 2021

1) Palm oil firm Digoel Agri said to clear Papuan forest without Indigenous consent


2) ’Who’s the real terrorist in Papua?’: Indonesian govt wants to call TPNPB terrorist group
3) Bringing Papua Towards Greater Financial Inclusion 
4) West Papua: Rape The Women To Rape The Land
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1) Palm oil firm Digoel Agri said to clear Papuan forest without Indigenous consent
by  on 25 March 2021

  • A palm oil conglomerate has begun clearing the ancestral forests of Indigenous tribes in Indonesia’s Papua region without the locals’ consent, a watchdog group says.
  • Subsidiaries of the Digoel Agri group have cleared 64 hectares (158 acres) of forest in the first two months of 2021, according to satellite imagery analyzed by Pusaka, an Indonesian nonprofit.
  • Digoel Agri had cleared 164 hectares (405) acres in 2019, before suspending operations for all of last year amid a labor dispute.
  • Pusaka alleges that Digoel Agri has failed to obtain the free, prior and informed consent of local Indigenous tribes to operate in the area, which forms part of the Tanah Merah project, slated to become the world’s biggest oil palm plantation.

JAKARTA — After halting forest-clearing operations in 2020, the Digoel Agri conglomerate has apparently restarted its activities in Indonesia’s Papua province, raising alarms among local Indigenous communities who say they never agreed to its presence on their ancestral lands.

Satellite imagery from the first two months of 2021 shows 64 hectares (158 acres) of deforestation in two Digoel Agri concessions, those held by its subsidiaries PT Boven Digoel Budidaya Sentosa and PT Perkebunan Boven Digoel Sejahtera, according to forest monitoring platform Nusantara Atlas.

Pusaka, an Indonesian nonprofit that analyzed the satellite imagery, says it has heard from local villagers that the conglomerate’s land-clearing contractor started bringing heavy equipment into the area in November 2020.

In 2019, Digoel Agri cleared 164 hectares (405 acres) of forest, before pausing operations in October that year, when it reportedly stopped paying staff salaries.

The concessions form part of the Tanah Merah project, a vast area on the island of New Guinea earmarked to become the world’s largest oil palm plantation. The project lies in the heart of the world’s third-largest rainforest, after the Amazon and Congo.

Development on the project has only just begun, but if it is carried through to completion, it will result in the clearance of 280,000 hectares (692,000 acres) of rainforest, releasing a huge amount of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.

The project has been mired in controversy, such as allegations of falsified permits, conflicts with Indigenous peoples, and the use of shell companies in offshore secrecy jurisdictions to conceal the identifies of the investors behind the project, several of which remain a mystery.

Digoel Agri was founded by the family of the late Ventje Rumangkang, a founder of Indonesia’s Democratic Party who died last year. They have partnered with a New Zealand property developer named Neville Mahon, who in 2018 became the majority shareholder in the Digoel Agri subsidiaries. Neither party replied to a request for comment.

A report from Pusaka includes allegations that Digoel Agri has failed to obtain the free, prior and informed consent of local Indigenous tribes.

“The ancestral forests that have important value for their livelihoods and cultures will be gone” if the project continues, Pusaka director Franky Samperante told Mongabay, adding that the group had been unable to obtain copies of permits held by Digoel Agri.

Banner image: Rainforest in Boven Digoel district, Papua.

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Article published by 
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https://en.jubi.co.id/indonesia-government-tpnpb-terrorist-group/
2) ’Who’s the real terrorist in Papua?’: Indonesian govt wants to call TPNPB terrorist group

 News Desk March 25, 2021 3:36 pm

West Papua No. 1 News Portal | Jubi

Jayapura, Jubi – National Counterterrorism Agency (BNPT) is mulling over a plan to put West Papua National Liberation Army (TPNPB) into a terrorist group category, a plan that has drawn controversies and comments.

 

Markus Haluk, executive director of United Liberation Movement of West Papua (ULMWP), questioned the plan. “Who are the real terrorists who keep terrorizing civilians in Papua, who are the rightful owners of Papua Land? Once again, who are the real terrorists?” said Haluk to Jubi on March 24, 2021.
On Monday, March 22, 2021, the head of BNPT, Comr. Gen. Boy Rafli Amar, told a hearing with legislators of the Commission III at the House of Representatives in Jakarta, that they were studying legal documents to put “armed criminals group” or “KKB”, the government term for TPNPB, to put TPNPB into “terrorist” category.

Boy was quoted as saying by CNN Indonesia that “the real condition on the field, actually they could be said to have conducted terrorist actions.

 

Haluk said TPNPB existed for the sake of Papuan people. He said the fight for Papuan independence had existed since 1961. “The formation of the movement culminated on Dec. 1, 1961, when Papuan people raised the Morning Star flag, sang a song called “Hai Tanahku Papua” or “Hi, My Papua Land”. Haluk said they also sang Dutch anthem and raised the Dutch flag.

 

He claimed that fighting for Papua’s independence was legal according to international law. He also recited Indonesian Constitution: Whereas independence is the inalienable right of all nations, therefore, all colonialism must be abolished in this world as it is not in conformity with humanity and justice. “It is the inalienable right of all nations, including Papuan nation. All colonialism must be abolished, including Indonesian against Papuans,” he said.

 

Haluk said TPNPB had never come with arms to shoot Indonesians in places outside Papua Land like in Java, Sumatra, and Sulawesi.

 

On the other hand, he said, Indonesian security personnel had created terror among the civilians, shooting people including religious figures, he said.

 

The family of Rev. Yeremia Zanambani, a respected pastor in Papua Land who lived in Intan Jaya Regency, accused some Indonesian Military (TNI) members of killing Zanambani. The Indonesian government and TNI, however, have been keeping mum about it, and the report of the government sponsored fact-finding team on the murder was inconclusive.

 

 

“Who came to Papua from faraway places and terrorized the civilians? Who caused residents of Nduga, Intan Jaya, Puncak Jaya and Puncak in Papua to become displaced people?” he said.

 

The TNI and the National Police had said that the presence of TPNPB in those places were the cause of unrest and had caused civilians to feel fear. ULMWP and other organizations in Papua Land, said otherwise. They had been calling for the central government to pull out “nonorganic” troops from Papua Land. Nonorganic troops are soldiers who were on duty somewhere outside Papua but deployed to Papua Land to “secure” the restive region.

 

Haluk asked President Joko Widodo, TNI chief, the National Police chief, and the Political, Legal, and Security Coordinating Minister, Defense Minister and the head of BNPT to be honest and answer the question: Time to honestly answer this, who terrorize, silence democracy and isolate Melanesians in West Papua,” said Haluk.

 

 

TPNPB spokesperson, Sebby Sambom, said Indonesian government could not put them into terrorist category because “the world knows TPNPB fight for our demand, have our rights to self determination given to us,” said Sambom on March 24, 2021.

 

Sambom said Jakarta’s plan to call TPNPB terrorists arose because Jakarta failed to get international support. “What Jakarta decides won’t get international recognition, because our political status is different,” he said.

 

Reporter: Benny Mawel
Editor: Aryo Wisanggeni G
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https://en.tempo.co/read/1445511/bringing-papua-towards-greater-financial-inclusion
3) Bringing Papua Towards Greater Financial Inclusion 
Translator: TEMPO   Editor: Laila Afifa 
24 March 2021 15:53 WIB

TEMPO.COJakarta - According to the World Bank, financial inclusion is defined as individuals and businesses having access to useful and affordable financial products and services that meet their needs, such as transactions, payments, savings, credit and insurance – delivered in a responsible and sustainable way. Financial inclusion gives people access to better economic opportunities, and is an important precursor to economic growth and development.

Access to a transaction account is usually a first step towards financial inclusion, since it allows people to store,send and receive money digitally. However, according to the Financial Services Authority (OJK) of Indonesia, 51 percent of the adult population here do not have a financial account, either banking or non-bank.

In Papua, this problem is compounded by the fact that the province has the lowest financial literacy index in Indonesia at just 29%, far below the national level of38 percent. 

In addition to other contributing factors, such as limited infrastructure and access to information technology, low financial literacy is often the main reason for the financial inclusion gap

The presence of digital platforms like Grab is helping to bridge this financial inclusion gap. Through services like GrabKios, Grab is leveraging warungs - stalls and kiosks found in every neighbourhood in Indonesia - to bring financial services like remittance, gold savings, bill, electricity and BPJS payments to millions of underbanked and underserved Indonesians. 

Improving livelihoods through digital technology

In Jayapura, GrabKios isn’t just addressing the financial inclusion gap, it’s helping to improve earnings for many of the city’s warungs.

“90% of my customers are transacting at my kiosks because they do not have a bank account. Most of them are traditional sellers in Abepura old market,” said Sugiyati (50), a kiosk owner in Jayapura who now offers financial and digital services after joining GrabKios agent-partner in 2017. "Every day, there can be dozens of people doing remittance at my kiosk. They can transact any time and don't have to go far or queue at ATMs and banks since my kiosks are open 24 hours," she said.


Dwiki Pahlevi (30) lost his job a month into the COVID-19 pandemic and decided to set up a smartphone accessory business in Hamadi market, Jayapura.

“At first, I only helped my customers to top up their phone credit. But many of them asked if I could also help transfer money to their family. That was why I decided to become a GrabKios agent-partner. So I can offer more services to them,” said Dwiki who now sells from his minivan that he parked across the Hamadi market.

“Most of my customers are traditional sellers in Hamadi market who do not have bank accounts,” he added. Not only is he able to help his customers with their financial service needs, he has also seen his earnings increase by 50% after joining GrabKios as an agent.

Aside from GrabKios, other services that Grab has brought into Jayapura since it first entered the city in 2017 include GrabFood, GrabBike and GrabCar. Through these services - many everyday entrepreneurs have found a leg up for their ambitions.

For Satrio Supriono (31), digital platforms like Grab have given his entrepreneurial spirit a boost. After floods and landslides forced his printing business to close, he started a culinary business with his wife called Ayam Geprek Juragan Sambel.

At first, he operated his business from his house and only used social media as a promotion tool and needed to deliver customers orders himself. But platforms like GrabFood have given him the ability to reach more customers and allow him to spend more time finding ways of growing his business instead of delivering orders all over the city.


Only 2 months after joining GrabFood, he ventured to open a small restaurant in the Polimak area. But then the pandemic hit.

“Entering the pandemic, almost no one came to eat at our restaurant. However, my wife and I were not too worried because we still get income from online orders. Thankfully, I have been able to etain my6 employees. That’s the most important thing to me,” said Satrio.

As his business grew, the banks now trust Satrio more and he recently received a credit loan for him to open a second restaurant branch in the Sentani area.

Inclusive Technology for all of Indonesia


Neneng Goenadi, Country Managing Director of Grab Indonesia said, "We believe strongly that technology can be a force for good. But it’s so important that the benefits be enjoyed equally across all of society - regardless of location, background, or ability.”

“We are particularly committed to ensuring digital economy growth and financial inclusion is accessible to even the most remote cities in Indonesia. We were the first superapp to bring our services to Jayapura, and we hope to continue serving the needs of the locals there and create more opportunities for better livelihoods for thousands of Jayapurans.”

INFO TEMPO

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Counterpunch

MARCH 21, 2021 
4) West Papua: Rape The Women To Rape The Land

BY DANIEL RAVENTÓS - JULIE WARK
West Papua is often described as “remote”, a handy word conveying two meanings: a pristine place for an exotic holiday and too far away for most people to give a damn. The Jakarta Post gives as its first reason for visiting this wonderland, “Dive with Friendly Whale Sharks”. Number 8 on the list is gawking at friendly natives, naturally including, for wannabe great explorers, “some that have never been in contact”. It’s exotic but safe, or so Number 9 implies because you can swim among “thousands of stingless jellyfish”. Unfortunately, the Indonesian military isn’t as innocuous as the blobby water creatures. To confirm this, you only need to read the Yale Law School report titled “Indonesian Human Rights Abuses in West Papua: Application of the Law of Genocide to the History of Indonesian Control”. This genocide continues today, largely because the “international community” and its media are as spineless as the jellyfish. The Guardian, for example, sneakily blames the West Papuans for their suffering: a “secessionist campaign has run for decades”.
The fact that remote places are a law unto themselves, or at least unto the musclemen running them, has quite an appeal for people like Elon Musk who like doing their thing without too much scrutiny. And for regimes like Indonesia’s, it’s handy to have a billionaire celebrity with a bizarre project to put a bit of celebrity gloss on its militarized barbarity, or to distract from it. Last December, Indonesian president Joko Widodo offered Musk part of Biak island (population, at least 140,000) to play with his SpaceX project (and bugger the traditional hunting grounds that will be devastated by the process of blasting-off of 12,000 satellites, if he actually gets the launches to work).
But how did Indonesia get West Papua’s land to give it away so insouciantly? In a nutshell, the fraudulent UN-supervised “Act of Free Choice” of 1969 gave Indonesia—its military, to be precise—uncontrolled access to West Papua’s vast natural resources. And since a hefty part of the military’s budget comes from its control of extractive industries, these men are engaged in defiling and ravishing the land and, of course, its people. It’s calculated that at least half a million West Papuans have been murdered but this isn’t as much about “secessionism” (read: right to self-determination) as about land grabbing and keeping the military men rich and in power. On the receiving end, West Papuans rely on their ever-dwindling land for their economic, social, and cultural survival.
One little-known aspect of the genocide in West Papua is that sexualized violence is a big part of the general violence that’s driving people from their land. And this fits into a global (hence not remote) pattern of war rape. A penis is an easily transportable weapon of biological warfare, so in recent decades systematic war rape has been recorded in the Balkans, Bangladesh, Rwanda, Uganda, Myanmar, East Timor, Congo, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Kosovo, Darfur, West Papua, and elsewhere. This is a strategy that undermines the dignity and morale of the victim population by destroying, long-term, the basic fabric of society. It’s also a sadistic instrument of torture when men are forced to watch their wives and daughters being raped, a way of mocking the masculinity of men who can’t protect their wives.
It’s difficult to get information about what’s happening in West Papua as it’s off-limits to independent journalists and researchers. If they do enter the country, officials monitor their every move, and the people fear for their lives if they speak to outsiders. However, painstaking efforts have pieced together a picture that led the UN’s Special Rapporteur on Violence Against Women to conclude in 1999 that the Indonesian security forces used rape “as an instrument of torture and intimidation”. More recently, at least one study has documented “cruelly creative sexualized sadism (against the genitals of men and women, and routinely with audiences forced to watch)”. What is “creative” sexualized sadism? To give an example, one informant “witnessed the penises being cut off a number of men in his village. Another informant saw the vagina cut out of a woman and her husband made to eat it.” This apparently random terror becomes total terror because any woman can be a victim, so the indigenous people flee their land. Then the military claims it, bringing about social and environmental catastrophe in the process.
But the terror isn’t really random. It’s deliberate. The relationship between extractive industries and sexual violence is clear in reports of systematic rape of women in the surrounds of Grasberg, site of the world’s largest gold and second largest copper mine—of the notorious Freeport-McMoRan—which, for thirty years, has been dumping millions of tons of heavy-metal mine waste into the Ajkwa river system, and also destroying lowland and mangrove forests before fouling the Arafura Sea. Army and police forces use rape to torture women when interrogating them on the whereabouts of their husbands who are suspected of being members or supporters of the Free Papua Movement (OPM). One witness describes the horror that lives on in people’s memories, terrorizing whole populations for generations.
A twelve-year-old Amungme girl became the victim of continual sexual violence. [A]… patrol came to this girl’s house where she lived with an older sibling and her parents. When the soldiers saw the victim, they invited her to go to their post. Because she refused, one of them… raped her in front of her parents. Soldiers took turns raping the victim. As a result of the rapes she became pregnant and gave birth to a child. After there was a turnover of troops in the village, this girl again became the target of rape, and this continued for five troop turnovers. In the end this victim had five children.
If the penis becomes weaponized in West Papua so too do women’s bodies. According to Survival International, HIV infection rates in “remote” West Papua are fifteen times higher than the national average, and even higher around the Grasberg mine. “Some Papuans believe the military deliberately brings prostitutes infected with the virus into tribal areas. Soldiers have been known to offer alcohol and sex workers to tribal leaders in order to gain access to their land and its resources.”
The Indonesian regime generally manages to cover up its atrocities, but the way this systematic sexual violence works in West Papua can be deduced from other cases. In Bosnia-Herzegovina, war rape of Muslim and Croatian women was official policy. It was rape under control. “It is also rape unto death, rape as massacre, rape to kill and to make the victims wish they were dead. It is rape as an instrument of forced exile, rape to make you leave your home and never want to go back. It is also rape to be seen and heard by others: rape as spectacle. It is the rape of xenophobia liberated by misogyny and unleashed by official command.” It is also rape with a plan for the future: impregnating Muslim and Croatian girls and women, supposedly to build the Serbian state with “Serb” babies (sons) who would “infiltrate” the mother’s group. The infant plants then became victims as well when they were rejected or stigmatized by the mother’s people. In this crime of wrongful procreation children are used to poison communities by reminding everyone of their awful origins.
Rape on this scale undermines a whole group ethos. Victims, abused because of their identity, feel revulsion for it and don’t want to live with the stigma. In the colonial context, rape becomes genocidal when it attacks a native woman because she’s native. In her study of sexual violence, Andrea Smith writes, “every Native survivor I have ever counseled said to me at one point, ‘I wish I was no longer Indian.’” More pervasively, rape was used to instill a patriarchal system in Indian cultures. “In order to colonize a people whose society was not hierarchical, colonizers must first naturalize hierarchy through instituting patriarchy. Patriarchal gender violence is the process by which colonizers inscribe hierarchy and domination on the bodies of the colonized.” Men attack the “weaker sex” but know at some level that they must destroy women’s power in the community. Writing of Darfur, Sarah Clark Miller observes, “Genocidal rape’s abominable effectiveness corrupts women’s roles as caretakers of relationships, conveyors of cultural practices, and sustainers of meaning, using these normally nurturing roles against the community.”
Piecing together the scraps of available information, one sees that these are the kinds of effects that systematic rape is having in West Papua. One survey found that four out of ten women had been subjected to Indonesian state violence. And, since no kind of violence exists alone, it’s no accident that rape violence occurs in regions with “strategic” extractive industries like mining, oil palm plantations, aloe wood, and fishing. Sexual violence and violence against the Earth are intimately connected.
In the Anthropocene championship, Indonesia has gained, by brutal means, two firsts, world’s biggest goldmine and biggest palm oil producer. Another probable first would be “by the most brutal means”. Undismayed by climate crisis warnings, Indonesia is pushing on with its megaplans, including that of building a 2700-mile trans-Papua highway, a road system that will rip through densely forested and mountain regions, including the Lorenz National Park, a World Heritage Site, looking for more access to minerals, fossil fuels, timber, and land for vast palm oil plantations. This of course means biodiversity loss, forest loss and fragmentation, and green-house gas emissions. One hectare of peatland rainforest can produce 6,000 metric tons of carbon dioxide when it’s converted into a plantation. Indonesian peat fires cause most of the unbreathable haze that has been choking much of Southeast Asia in recent years to the extent that it’s estimated that these fires caused up to 100,000 premature deaths in 2015 alone.
Women are raped in West Papua so military men can stay in power by raping the land, violating it, and ravishing the whole planet. A long time ago, the anthropologist Franz Boas (whose doctorate from Kiel was rescinded by the Nazis and his books burned) insisted that, in the indisputable unity of humanity, there’s no hierarchy of “races” (a notion he abhorred), languages, and cultures but only a multitude of peoples; that no culture has any natural claim to superiority. The word “remote” covers up a lot and it creates a superior “us” and an exploitable “them”. Meanwhile, the west, in its superiority, jabbers on about universal human rights while blithely ignoring the extinction of ways of living that are much more compatible with coexistence on this planet. The World Bank calls big infrastructure a “blunt instrument” of progress. In West Papua, the blunt instrument of rape has come to represent the most perverse kind of progress. And hardly anyone (except the rapists) gives a fuck.
Daniel Raventós is a lecturer in Economics at the University of Barcelona and author inter alia of Basic Income: The Material Conditions of Freedom (Pluto Press, 2007). He is on the editorial board of the international political review Sin Permiso.  Julie Wark is an advisory board member of the international political review Sin Permiso. Her last book is The Human Rights Manifesto (Zero Books, 2013).

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