Wednesday, January 19, 2022

1) Indonesia Deploys 1,925 Police, Army Personnel to Papua for Cartenz Peace Ops



2) INDONESIA FAILED TO ADDRESS HUMAN RIGHTS CRISIS IN PAPUA: WCC

3) Petition to be launched against alleged Indonesia infiltration in Vanuatu
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1) Indonesia Deploys 1,925 Police, Army Personnel to Papua for Cartenz Peace Ops
Translator: Ririe Ranggasari  
 Editor: Petir Garda Bhwana 
19 January 2022 11:04 WIB

TEMPO.COJakarta - The Indonesian Police and TNI Army deployed 1,925 personnel to Papua for the 2022 Cartenz Peace Operation. The peacekeeping operation began on January 17 and will end on December 31 this year.

"The team consists of 1,824 police officers and 101 TNI personnel," Indonesian Police's head of PR Bureau, Brig. Gene. Ahmad Ramadhan, said in Jakarta, Tuesday, January 18th.

Ahmad said that the operation will be led by the Papua chief of police. "The operation is carried out to maintain security and order in the legal territory of Papua," he said.

The 2022 Cartenz Peace Operation is a follow up to the Nemangkawi Peace Operation that ended at the end of 2021. The police extended the Nemangkawi Operation until January 25, 2022 to prepare it into a regional operation led by the Papuan Police Chief.

Brig, Gen. Ahmad added that the Cartenz Peace Operation will be focused on pre-emptive and preventive efforts. The police, he said, would work together with religious, community and traditional leaders to maintain order in Papua. Field officers will also be giving community trainings such as agriculture, fisheries and education to the locals.

Read: Indonesian Armed Forces Sent to Quell Tribal Clash in Papua

M ROSSENO AJI


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2) INDONESIA FAILED TO ADDRESS HUMAN RIGHTS CRISIS IN PAPUA: WCC
News Desk January 19, 2022 11:29 am

Jubi TV – Peter Prove, the director of International Affairs of the World Council of Churches (WCC), has spoken about the human rights situation in Papua, internationally known as West Papua. In a recent broadcast by the council, Prove said the Indonesian government had failed to address and improve the humanitarian crisis in Papua.

The land of Papua – the two Indonesian provinces on the western part of the island of New Guinea – has become the focus of WCC for a long time. In a recent interview, Prove said that concern for Indigenous Papuans by the international community was increasing as a result of the ongoing serious human rights violations in the region, which the Indonesian government had apparently failed to address and remedy.

Recalling the history of the so-called “Act of Free Choice”, which is still a matter of debate to date, by which West Papua was integrated into Indonesia in 1969, Prove notes that the government’s failure to fulfill its promises to the Papuan people has resulted in increased opposition to Indonesia by the citizen of Papua.

“What we have seen for decades is a very high level of human rights violations. This includes extrajudicial killings, denial of freedom of expression and assembly, and many other offences,” Prove said.

Prove also emphasized that during the COVID-19 pandemic, the incidence of serious human rights violations increased.

The World Council of Churches and its partners work together to monitor civil and political rights as well as economic, social, and cultural rights in West Papua.

The increasing militarization in response to the armed group’s activity in Papua has exacerbated the situation, despite promises of dialogue with Indigenous Papuans. According to Prove, these are promises that have been made at the political level but have not been fulfilled.

Prove said that based on his observation on the actions of the military and police in Papua, violence against peaceful protesters had increased. Many killings, beatings, and enforced disappearances occurred in the peaceful protests by the Papuans.

In addition, the internally displaced people from conflict zones do not receive the assistance they need from national authorities. Moreover, international humanitarian agencies are given little or no access to these areas by the Indonesian government.

“The Indonesian government certainly needs to address the long-standing, ongoing, and escalating human rights crisis in the region,” Prove said. (*)

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3) Petition to be launched against alleged Indonesia infiltration in Vanuatu
By Hilaire Bule  Jan 14, 2022

The Vanuatu Free West Papua Association (VFWPA) is convening an urgent public meeting over alleged Indonesia infiltration in Vanuatu at 3pm today.

The meeting will be held at the Free West Papua Office at the Anambouru hilltop in Port Vila.

A staunch advocator and active member of VFWPA, Lai Sakita, emphasized the importance of Vanuatu maintaining its stand on the decolonization of West Papua and Kanaky.

He confirmed the United Liberation Movement for West Papua (ULMWP) will also launch a petition to be signed by the people of Vanuatu, which will be presented to the Government.

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