2) Papua Quarterly Report Q2 2024: Stagnation and Conflict: Land Rights and Military Presence Intensify
4) Indigenous communities in Sorong demand end to illegal logging by PT MAM
https://www.benarnews.org/english/news/indonesian/three-killed-07172024155159.html
1) Protest erupts after Indonesian military kills 3 suspected independence fighters in Papua
Victor Mambor
2024.07.17
Jayapura, Indonesia
Dozens of protesters took to the streets in Indonesia’s Papua region on Wednesday, a day after the military killed three people it claimed were armed pro-independence fighters.
The military said its forces killed the three men on Tuesday in the Mulia district of Puncak Jaya regency. It identified them as members of the Free Papua Movement, which seeks Papuan independence from Indonesia, and said they were armed and had resisted capture.
An insurgent group spokesman denied the men were members.
Military spokesman Lt. Col. Candra Kurniawan said one of the men, Teranus Enumbi, had been hunted by Indonesian security forces since 2018 for “cruel and sadistic attacks,” including shootings and killings of civilians and security personnel.
“The Indonesian military and police will continue to maintain stability in the region by protecting and serving the community,” Kurniawan said. “Law will be enforced.”
Sebby Sambom, a spokesman for the West Papua National Liberation Army – the armed wing of the independence movement – said the information provided by the military was false and that the deceased were not members of the liberation army.
“The shooting of civilians is a violation of human rights,” Sambom told BenarNews.
Papuans protested at the hospital where the bodies of the victims were taken and the Puncak Jaya police station in Central Papua province, demanding an explanation for why the three were killed.
“We don’t accept the military’s response to the community’s demands regarding the shooting of three civilians, allegedly by members of the [infantry battalion] Raider 753 Task Force,” said one resident who declined to be named for security concerns.
Representatives of victims’ families have called for a transparent investigation into the shooting and for those responsible to be held accountable.
Papua police spokesman Ignatius Benny Ady Prabowo declined to comment.
Insurgency
An insurgency has simmered in Papua since the early 1960s when Indonesian forces invaded the region, which had remained under a separate Dutch administration following Indonesia’s 1945 declaration of independence from the Netherlands.
Indonesia argues its incorporation of the mineral rich territory was rightful under international law, because it was part of the Dutch East Indies empire that is the basis for Indonesia’s modern borders.
Papuans, culturally and ethnically distinct from the rest of Indonesia, say they were denied the right to decide their own future and are marginalized in their own land. Indonesian control was formalized in 1969 under a United Nations-supervised referendum where a little more than 1,000 Papuans were allowed to vote.
Lawyer shot
In a separate development on Wednesday, a lawyer and human rights activist said he was being treated in a hospital after he was shot by an unknown assailant in Manokwari, a town in West Papua province.
“Thank God, I’m all right. I’m undergoing an observation in the hospital,” Yan Christian Warinussy, a lawyer and spokesman for the Papua Peace Network, told BenarNews in a text message.
Frits Ramandey, the head of the Papua branch of the National Commission on Human Rights, said Yan suffered a chest wound in the incident, which occurred as he was leaving a bank.
“He is in good condition,” Ramandey told BenarNews.
Amnesty International condemned the attack.
“The shooting was an act of terror against Yan personally and his lifelong work,” it said in a statement sent to BenarNews. “Amnesty urges the authorities to find the perpetrators and bring them to justice to be held accountable.”
West Papua police chief Inspector Gen. Johnny Edison Isir said officers were investigating the shooting, local media reported.
Pizaro Gozali Idrus in Jakarta contributed to this report.
2) Papua Quarterly Report Q2 2024: Stagnation and Conflict: Land Rights and Military Presence Intensify
Summary
Human rights
Conflict
Political developments
International developments
Pupung Purnama, head of the BPJS Kesehatan office in Sorong, said on Wednesday that the PRB aims to ensure that JKN participants, particularly those suffering from chronic diseases, receive the appropriate medical treatment.
The referral program targets JKN participants with stable chronic diseases who require long-term treatment or nursing care at first-level healthcare facilities (FKTPs), following a referral or recommendation from specialist doctors.
"This program not only provides new hope for participants with chronic diseases to get better treatment but also helps change the outlook on chronic disease management in Indonesia," he explained.
Chronic diseases covered by the program include diabetes mellitus, hypertension, heart disorders, asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), and epilepsy.
Patients with chronic mental health disorders, stroke, systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), and other chronic diseases listed by the Health Ministry can also participate in the program.
According to Purnama, the program's participants will get access to regular health examinations, medical consultations, and medicines at FKTPs collaborating with BPJS Kesehatan.
"We are committed to ensuring the availability of drugs to support the control of participants' health conditions and increase accessibility to quality health services for those in need," he emphasized.
One of the JKN participants who has registered for the PRB program is John Hutahean. The 57-year-old man, who visits the clinic every month, said that his treatment and control process is more organized and efficient.
"In 2009, I underwent bypass surgery because I had a heart disease; so every month, I have to check my health at the clinic," he said, adding that all treatments he received were free of charge.
Related news: BPJS launches facial recognition tech to enhance services
Related news: Health Ministry downplays bed loss concerns over KRIS
Translator: Yuvensius B, Kenzu
Editor: Anton Santoso
4) Indigenous communities in Sorong demand end to illegal logging by PT MAM
Social media giant Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram, has censored the School Strike 4 Climate group. The group’s Instagram page was shut down in April after it announced plans for a school strike for West Papua on August 30.
“We were quite excited for about five minutes,” spokesperson Jaromir Pinkas told Green Left. They had commissioned artwork, posted it online and “after about five minutes” the account was banned.
“We haven’t been able to get anything back,” Pinkas said.
Social media promotion had been an important way of building support for the strike, Pinkas said. The group is calling on supporters to spread the word about the action and about West Papua’s struggle for self-determination.
Pinkas believes that Meta’s action is “specifically because [the post was associated with] West Papua”.
The anti-colonial struggle and climate activism are “intrinsically linked, almost to the extent that in a lot of cases they are effectively the same fight”.
This is especially the case in West Papua, “because the destruction of lives and communities is done to facilitate ecological destruction”, in particular mining and logging.
The group has tried to get Meta to reverse its decision, but has been led to believe there is no appeal.
Facebook and Instagram have a long history of censorship. Green Left’s popular Facebook page was unpublished for 10 years in March.
“A lot of people just don’t know about what’s happening in West Papua” including the “ties that Australia has to that,” Pinkas said.
Facebook wants to keep it that way whereas School Strike 4 Climate wants to change that.
[The School Strike for West Papua is on August 30 at 1pm in the Queens Gardens in Magan-djin/Brisbane.]
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.