Tuesday, August 24, 2021

1) Why we’re not more moved by what’s happening in West Papua?


2) Injured Dekai protester dies in Jayapura hospital  
3) Two-day mass vaccination events organized concurrently in Papua  

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1) Why we’re not more moved by what’s happening in West Papua?

Catherine Delahunty wonders why we’re not more moved by what’s happening in West Papua, a Pacific neighbour where Indigenous people are fighting for independence.


News Desk August 23, 2021 7:48 am

 

Jayapura, Jubi – When I first met West Papuan activist Paula Makabory, she told me she came from the land of the “Morning Star”, home to the bird of paradise. In the same breath, she said her people were living in an occupied country — and they were bleeding.

 

I had no idea at the time where West Papua was, but meeting Paula changed the world map in my head.

This is a country 1200 kilometres north of Darwin. It’s the northern half of the huge island of Papua New Guinea. It was colonised by the Dutch in 1898, and then on their departure in the 1960s, it was occupied by Indonesia — traded off, with the support of the UN and the west, for its rich resources.

 

The West Papuans call it the Land of the Morning Star because that’s theirflag — and they can be killed or jailed for raising it.

 

As Paula said the first day we met: “We are a Pacific people and we want our country back.”

 

Indonesia is as brutal in its tactics as all colonisers. Paula can’t return home because of her leadership role in this struggle. In 2006, she was nominated for the Nobel Prize as one of the “1000 Women for Peace”. But these days, she’s in Australia, working night shifts in a meat factory in a town in Victoria.

 

She’s homesick to the heart but staunch to the bone in her commitment to the Free West Papua cause. When she’s not at work, she’s online to keep the world informed of the latest arrests, deaths, destroyed forests, polluted rivers, human rights abuses, and the increasing militarism in occupied West Papua.

 

There’s not much time for her love of soccer and music. Political analysis is her focus.

 

Our friendship has been a light in my life. During visits to my office in parliament, Paula would grab the guitar and do her best to teach me West Papua freedom songs in pidgin and the traditional songs of her own language group. (It’s a country of more than 1100 different languages.)

 

Paula went to university in Jayapura, West Papua, but she can’t use that education at home for the good of her people. She’s a refugee and is doing the best she can to support the struggle as well as caring for her son and daughter.

 

I went to Melbourne some years ago and met the kids. Paula hosted a party for me, and Rex Rumikiek, a renowned Papuan elder and leader, came from Sydney to talk with us about strategy.

 

Rex has been to Aotearoa a number of times and has longstanding links with tangata whenua leaders such as the Harawira whānau. Through Paula, I also met other activists in exile and hosted them in our parliament.

 

The current leader of the movement in exile, Benny Wenda, was refused the right to speak in parliament in 2013 because the Speaker, David Carter, thought it might upset Indonesia. But Benny wasn’t silenced. In fact, he got more media than we could have hoped for, which is unusual.

 

Every time Paula or other leaders have visited, we’ve tried to get good coverage of the West Papua story. But  we can’t rely on any journalists apart from those in the  Māori and Pacific media and RNZ International. And the Pacific Media Centre at AUT have always been on to this issue.

 

Back in West Papua, foreign journalists are virtually banned or heavily monitored, and the local media run huge risks by telling the truth. So it’s no wonder so many people in Aotearoa know much more about Indigenous issues such as Standing Rock in the US, or Palestine, than they do about West Papua.

 

A few weeks ago, a group of us met with Nanaia Mahuta, our foreign affairs minister, to seek support for West Papua. She was generous with her time and gave us a fair hearing, but we await results.

 

One issue we raised with her was the urgent case of Victor Yeimo. I met Victor in Canberra when Paula and I were with a group hosted by the Australian Greens at their parliament. Victor is the international spokesperson of the non-violent KPNB group of activists within West Papua.

 

He’s now in prison awaiting trial for treason charges. He was arrested several months ago for being an organiser of a “Papuan Lives Matter” anti-racism march. When he was arrested, a Papua police chief said: “Let him get old in prison.”

 

The trial may start next week but the word from West Papua is that he is sick, coughing blood. There are street marches in West Papua calling for his release. On one side, there are the Indonesians firing water cannons at his supporters. On the other, there’s Amnesty International demanding his release.

 

Nanaia wrote to our group saying that New Zealand had raised his case with Indonesian officials. But that won’t be enough. There are no consequences for Indonesia at a diplomatic level.

 

But we’ll keep campaigning for his release. I think of Victor every day — a small man with a star on his cap, waiting in prison, joining the long list of Indigenous leaders who dare to challenge colonisation.

 

Meanwhile, on the streets and up in the highlands of West Papua, the pressure builds. The military and the huge flow of Indonesian migrants are pushing hard on the Papuan people in their own lands — and any armed resistance by the Papuans to the carve-up of their country is met with violent retribution from the Indonesians.

 

There are growing numbers of Papuan refugees on the Papua New Guinea border. Somewhere between 7,000 and 10,000. And, in parts of the highland mountains, villages have been burned or bombed.

 

The once wholly Papuan population is now down to 50/50 with their colonisers.

 

Paula carries no hate for the mainly Javanese migrants who’ve been moved to West Papua. She believes peace is possible and that one day her country can be a free nation, governed by West Papuans, and welcoming all to their environmental paradise.

 

But it’s a race against greedy companies cutting down forests for palm oil plantations and against miners hollowing out sacred mountains for gold.

 

The Indonesian government also seeks loyalty to the occupation by belittling West Papuans as “monkeys”, undermining their cultures and pushing messages like “eating sweet potato makes you stupid, eating rice makes you smart” (heard by a Māori film crew filming a cultural festival in Wamena in the highlands of West Papua).

 

I’ve tried talking to some New Zealand dairy farmers who use palm kernel to feed their cows from the palm plantations of Papua. I’ve told them about the destruction of the rainforest and the communities who’ve lived within them for 40,000 years. But they don’t seem to care.

 

Our solidarity groups try and stop people and companies from buying decking timber from the rainforests of West Papua. But not everyone can see past greed. Stupid isn’t about eating rice or sweet potato. It’s about refusing to connect what you buy with where it comes from.

 

I once asked Paula about the courage of her people and their willingness to risk their lives. She said: “We are already dead, so we have nothing to lose.”

 

She didn’t mean she was ready to pick up a gun. She meant that, for them, a risky and dedicated life was not a choice. West Papuans who believe in a peaceful solution don’t criticise their relations who’ve picked up guns, because they understand what drives them. And, if we haven’t had to face such choices, who are we to judge?

 

I and other supporters are heartened by the growing number of younger Indonesians, Pacific Island peoples and governments, and activists in Aotearoa who are supporting freedom for West Papua. But for our friends in exile there is a longing for home that no amount of kindness can replace.

 

To be Victor in prison or Paula in exile is to live a life I’ve never had to imagine. So I think we have a responsibility to act under their direction. They are our neighbours and their story once known is horribly familiar in Aotearoa.

 

The Land of the Morning Star and the Land of the Long White Cloud — both are the ancestral homes of inspiring people challenging the rest of us to wake up and recognise their sovereignty. (*)

 

Catherine Delahunty is a Pākehā activist in environmental, social justice, and Te Tiriti o Waitangi issues. She was a Green MP for nine years and lives in Hauraki. She mainly works in the campaigns against multinational goldmining in Hauraki and is active in the national solidarity network for a Free West Papua. She is a writer and a tutor on social change issues, and a grandmother.

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2) Injured Dekai protester dies in Jayapura hospital  
2 hours ago  
Jayapura, Papua (ANTARA) - Ferianus Asso died in the wee hours of Sunday morning following intensive treatment at the Bhayangkara Police Hospital in Jayapura, Papua Province, since August 20 for a gunshot wound.

Asso, the 29-year-old man, sustained a gunshot wound when police officers in Dekai, Yahukimo District, attempted to disperse a group of demonstrators on August 16.

On the day he was accidentally shot, Asso was admitted to a local hospital in Dekai, the capital of Yahukimo District, but he was then moved to the police hospital in Jayapura for further medical treatment.

Papua Police Chief Inspector General Mathius Fakhiri informed ANTARA on Sunday that he still awaited a comprehensive report on Asso from the head of the Papua Police's Health Division.

In the aftermath of the accidental shooting, the situation in Dekai and Yahukimo is relatively peaceful, he stated while instructing his men to continue their routine patrols to instil a sense of safety and security among the locals.

The rally, in which Asso and several other people participated, demanded that Viktor Yeimo from the National Committee of West Papua (KNPB) be released from the Kotaraja Mobile Brigade headquarters' custody.


Related news: Papua vows to enforce ministry-prescribed price cap on PCR tests

Asso's casket had been handed over to his family in Sentani, the capital of Jayapura District, for the funeral.

Papua has been reeling from armed violence over the past few years. In April this year, two teachers were killed by armed Papuan terrorists.

The first killing occurred on April 8, 2021, when several armed attackers opened fire at a kiosk in Julukoma Village, Beoga Sub-district, Puncak District.

The shooting resulted in the death of a Beoga public elementary school teacher, Oktovianus Rayo.

After killing Rayo, the armed attackers torched three classrooms at the Beoga public senior high school.


Related news: Papua awaits Health Ministry directive on swab test price cap

On April 9, 2021, armed separatist terrorists reportedly shot another teacher, Yonatan Randen, on the chest.

Several villagers attempted to save the junior high school teacher and rushed him to the Beoga public health center, though he succumbed to his injuries.

On April 11, 2021, armed terrorists reportedly set ablaze nine classrooms at the Beoga public junior high school.


Related news: Two-day mass vaccination events organized concurrently in Papua

Related news: MPR Deputy Speaker reiterates support for Papua PON XX

Reporter: Evarukdijati, Rahmad Nasution
Editor: Fardah Assegaf


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3) Two-day mass vaccination events organized concurrently in Papua  
3 hours ago  

Jayapura, Papua (ANTARA) - The XVII/Cenderawasih Military Command has organized mass vaccination events simultaneously across Papua on Saturday and Sunday to support the province's endeavors to achieve herd immunity in local communities.

For conducting the events, it has collaborated with the Papua provincial government, Papua Police, and regional administrations, Chief of Staff's Operation Assistant at the XVII/Cenderawasih Military Command Colonel Surya Wibawa Suparman remarked.

"The mass vaccination drives are held at the military and police's healthcare facilities, hospitals, and public health centers. The Papua administration also organizes the same events in cities and districts," he noted.

Local residents eagerly participated in the vaccination events, Suparman noted in a press statement that ANTARA quoted here, Monday.

The XVII/Cenderawasih Military Command also roped in personnel from the Indonesian Navy and Air Force in Papua in the mass vaccination drives, Suparman revealed.


Related news: COVID-19: Pfizer vaccine distribution starts in Jabodetabek area

The mass vaccination drive organized by the 1701/Jayapura Military District Command in Jayapura City took place at the Twano Entrop Public Health Center, while the drive by the 1702/Jayawijaya Military District Command took place at the Hom-Hom Public Health Center, he noted.

Papua has come under the spotlight of Indonesia's media outlets, as it is scheduled to host this year's PON National Games and National Para Games (Peparnas).

The PON National Games will be held in Jayapura City and the districts of Jayapura, Mimika, and Merauke on Oct 2-15, while Peparnas will be held on Nov 2-15.

At least 6,400 athletes and 3,500 officials from 34 provinces across Indonesia are expected to participate in Papua's PON National Games that will feature 37 events.


Related news: Avoid being picky about brands and get inoculated soon: Expert


Meanwhile, 1,935 athletes and 740 officials will take part in the National Para Games in Jayapura City and Jayapura District that will feature 12 events.

To ensure the safety of athletes and officials participating in the PON National Games and National Para Games, President Joko Widodo has urged the concerned agencies to inoculate all athletes.

The head of state has also instructed that local residents living in proximity to all venues of the sporting events and athletes' villages be vaccinated, according to Youth and Sports Minister Zainudin Amali.

To this end, the Papua administration has planned to integrate the mobile application developed for these multi-sport events with the PeduliLindungi App, an application for COVID-19 contact tracing.


Related news: Govt intensifies vaccination to achieve herd immunity: SOE minister

Related news: Police chief dispatches 34 mobile vaccination buses to Jakarta suburbs

Reporter: Muhsidin, Rahmad Nasution
Editor: Fardah Assegaf

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