Wednesday, March 9, 2022

1) Self-denial about Papua



2) Indonesia to protest ‘ill-intentioned, click-bait’ UN Papua report
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1) Self-denial about Papua 

Editorial board (The Jakarta Post) 
PREMIUM Jakarta   ●   Wed, March 9 2022 

Harsh words and phrases like “unprofessional, ill-intentioned and one-sided” chosen by the Indonesian Mission at the United Nations in Geneva recently in response to the report of UN human rights rapporteurs on Papua have reminded us of the repeated denials from the same mission during Indonesia’s 24-year occupation of East Timor, now Timor Leste. East Timor, then the country’s 27th province, voted for independence from the colonial power of Indonesia during a UN-sanctioned referendum in 1999. 

Indonesia invaded the tiny former Portuguese colony in 1975 and used to claim that a majority of the people there were grateful for joining Indonesia; that only a few wanted to part with their beloved Indonesia. 
The Jakarta Post in its March 9 edition quoted the mission as saying that “the government will submit a strong protest through [the UN human rights body] for the unprofessional, ill-intentioned, one-sided and click-bait working method to establish negative public opinion”. 
The mission accused the three rapporteurs of having worked “unprofessionally, not impartially and with bad intentions”. Do not ever belittle the situation on the ground in the provinces of Papua and West Papua.

 What happened in East Timor decades ago could happen in Papua because discrimination and racism against the indigenous population persist. Separatist groups, which the government refers to as criminal armed groups, have launched sporadic armed attacks on security forces and innocent people working in the territory. 

But we are often confused about whether the resistance movement is genuine or involves various interests of the elites inside and outside of Papua. “Between April and November 2021, we received allegations indicating several instances of extrajudicial killings, including of young children, enforced disappearance, torture and inhumane treatment and the forced displacement of at least 5,000 indigenous Papuans by security forces.” 

The three independent experts said in a statement uploaded on the UN human rights body’s official website on March 1. In their estimation, between 60,000 and 100,000 people had been displaced since an escalation of violence in the provinces of Papua and West Papua began in December 2018.

“These cases may represent the tip of the iceberg, given that access to the region is severely restricted making it difficult to monitor events on the ground,” they warned.  The report was signed by the special rapporteur on the rights of indigenous peoples, Francisco Cali Tzay; the special rapporteur on the extrajudicial, summary, or arbitrary executions, Morris Tidball-Binz; and the special rapporteur on the human rights of internally displaced persons, Cecilia Jimenez-Damary. The Foreign Ministry and the government alike should learn from our past mistakes. 

The government used to deny the reports of international media and organizations, including the UN human rights body, claiming that the situation in East Timor was much better than what they saw. We understand the Foreign Ministry has to listen to the voices of other state institutions such as the Indonesian Military (TNI) and the Defense Ministry on domestic security affairs, including on Papua. 

Some Indonesian diplomats have complained that they have had to defend something they did not believe in. Now it’s time for diplomats to bolder in speaking the truth with their counterparts at home. 

There is no choice for the government; it must listen to the people of Papua and West Papua and stop pretending as if everything is OK in their province.

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2) Indonesia to protest ‘ill-intentioned, click-bait’ UN Papua report

Dian Septiari (The Jakarta Post) PREMIUM Jakarta   ●   

Tue, March 8, 2022 

The government has said it will file a complaint against what it has called an “unprofessional, ill-intentioned and one-sided” report by three United Nations human rights experts on its handling of conflicts in Papua. 

Earlier this month, the experts issued a joint statement that called for urgent humanitarian access to Papua and West Papua and for the government to conduct independent investigations into alleged abuses against indigenous communities there. 

The statement was published on the website of the UN’s human rights body on March 1 and was signed by the special rapporteur on the rights of indigenous peoples, Francisco Cali Tzay; the special rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions, Morris Tidball-Binz; and the special rapporteur on the human rights of internally displaced persons, Cecilia Jimenez-Damary. 

In the statement, the special rapporteurs expressed concerns about a deteriorating human rights situation in Papua and West Papua, citing abuses against indigenous Papuans that included child killings, enforced disappearances, torture and the mass displacement of people. "Between April and November 2021, we received allegations indicating several instances of extrajudicial killings, including of young children, enforced disappearance, torture and inhuman treatment and the forced displacement of at least 5,000 indigenous Papuans by security forces," they wrote. 

They estimated that between 60,000 and 100,000 people had been displaced since an escalation of violence in Papua and West Papua began in December 2018. 

 As special procedures mandate holders (SPMHs), the experts are part of the Special Procedures of the Human Rights Council, which handles investigations and monitoring mechanisms for issues around the world. 

They work on a voluntary basis and are not paid by the UN. The special rapporteurs have, on multiple occasions over the past few years, expressed their concerns over the Papua conflict to the UN Human Rights Council and have sent at least 13 official letters to the Indonesian government in the past four years. 

The Indonesian mission in Geneva said it had replied to the experts’ Dec. 22, 2021, correspondence, which requested a government response to allegations that were later outlined in a published statement on Feb. 20, in accordance with the council’s procedure. 

The rapporteurs’ March 1 statement acknowledged that the government had sent a reply to their latest letter but did not address the reply’s contents. The mission claimed the experts’ report did not properly take the statements of all parties into account and that this suggested they had worked “unprofessionally, not impartially and with bad intentions”. “In response to this, the government will submit a strong protest through [the UN human rights body] for the unprofessional, ill-intentioned, one-sided and click-bait working method in order to establish negative public opinion,” the mission said in a statement received by The Jakarta Post. 

Indonesia has been widely criticized for its large-scale deployment of armed forces to address security issues in Papua and West Papua, a method experts say has failed to effectively treat the root causes of the violence in the regions. Read also: 

Simplifying the complexity of Papuan conflict could be fatal President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo has emphasized the government’s focus on developing Papua and West Papua through infrastructure and welfare programs, with the hope that it will resolve the longstanding conflicts in the regions. However, the infrastructure drive has created other security issues in the regions, with separatist groups periodically targeting government projects and workers. 

Recently, the West Papua National Liberation Army (TPNPB) – the armed wing of Free Papua Movement (OPM) – claimed responsibility for the killing of eight technicians who were repairing a telecommunications tower belonging to state-owned operator Telkomsel. 

Only one technician managed to escape. When asked about the attack, Coordinating Political, Legal and Security Affairs Minister Mahfud MD said the government would continue to implement its “territorial operation” in Papua, which focused on coordinating government agencies, including law enforcement and the Indonesian Military (TNI), to deal with separatist groups.

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