Church leaders ask Indonesia to scrap transmigration plan
They support ethnic people’s struggle to protect their ancestral land in the conflict-stricken Papua province
By UCA News reporter Published: November 11, 2024 11:44 AM GMT
Church leaders in conflict-stricken Papua have urged the Indonesian government to stop the transmigration and new rice field programs that will destroy indigenous lands.
The land acquisitions by Indonesian and foreign firms are leading to the destruction of tropical rainforests, biodiversity, and indigenous lands, said the Papuan Council of Churches and a coalition of indigenous Catholic priests in an appeal on Nov. 11.
The appeal was issued following President Pabowo Subianto’s plan to open 2 million hectares of new rice fields in southern Papua. Nearly 200 excavators will be sent to the former Dutch colony to work as part of the new project.
The Church leaders criticized Subianto’s plan to implement a transmigration program in the region under which non-Papuans would be sent to the easternmost region.
Father John Bunay from the indigenous community, who is also chairman of the Justice, Peace and Integrity of Creation Commission of Jayapura diocese, said this was an attempt to destroy the existence and culture of Papuans.
“There are so many migrants coming to Papua. There has been a seizure of living space from the indigenous Papuan people by non-Papuans," he said while reading the appeal with other priests and pastors.
Currently, around 75,000 Papuans are displaced due to the freedom struggle in the conflict-stricken province which has worsened since 2018, the priest said.
He added that the government has sent thousands of military personnel to Papua since 2019.
The Church leaders said the government must learn from the failure of the food estate programs carried out by former Presidents Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and Joko Widodo.
"At that time, idle land was converted into rice fields but abandoned later," they said.
Unfortunately, President Prabowo "is repeating the same” mistake, the Church leaders alleged.
They said they are inspired by Pope Francis' ecological encyclical Laudato si (praise be to you).
"We support indigenous peoples’ rights to defend their ancestral lands because it is the source of their livelihood," they said.
Pastor Benny Giyai, moderator of the Papua Church Council, asked the military and police not to target indigenous people who carry out “peaceful resistance movements.”
They said the appeal was sent to envoys of countries cooperating with Indonesia, including those that provide funds.
In the appeal, they criticized the statement of Archbishop Petrus Canisius Mandagi of Merauka, who supported the plan to establish new rice fields.
Mandagi’s meetings with investors and military officers have circulated on social media.
At a time when the Catholics of Papua were “sad and angry because their land was destroyed,” the archbishop praised the project, they said.
Catholic layman Soleman Itlay said the archbishop was “more on the side of the authorities and companies than the community and Catholics."
Mandagi declined to comment, telling UCA News, "Let them criticize me."
"They already have negative thoughts about me," the prelate said.
Papua has a population of 4.3 million and Christians make up 85.02 percent – Protestants 69.39 percent and Catholics 15.63 percent.
The Papuans want to free their region from Indonesian control, but Indonesia looks to suppress it militarily. The region is home to the world's largest gold mine, as well as extensive sources of natural gas, minerals, timber and palm oil.
The struggle, ongoing since 1962, is estimated to have killed up to 500,000 people. At least 300 people have died in the last decade.
Prabowo Subianto has got his diary right: First overseas handshake from the new President of Indonesia is for his bankers in Beijing, President Xi Jinping and Premier Li Qiang. Trump can wait.
A year ago Bank Indonesia reported the nation owes China more than US$27 billion and is already in a debt trap according to some economists.
Prabowo is 73, physically unfit and seven years past the average Indonesian man’s use-by date – which is 15 years less than his Australian counterpart.
But if genetics has a role in longevity, he’s got two five-year terms to reset directions for world’s fourth-largest nation. His economist Dad Sumitro Djojohadikusumo lasted till he was 83, so on that basis, the new president has plenty of time to destroy his dislikes.
Like Trump, he has a little list, but this is no cue for the Mikado favourite.
First up is democracy followed by critics in and outside Parliament, independent historians, human rights activists, NGOs and journalists.
He’s appointed the second-largest cabinet in Indonesia’s democratic history. As reported earlier on this website, to ensure they’re not into any woke ideologies he ordered them to parade wearing camouflage for a dawn assault on civil rights.
His 48-member ministry (five are women) together with 59 vice ministers, and five heads of state presented at a military training camp and snapped into line.
If there were any dissidents, independent thinkers or even the odd rebel present, they knew they’d lose their jobs, allowances, titles and status for challenging the autocracy.
As all are deep in debt to their political and business backers, best to grin not grimace at the shameful farce.
Second president Soeharto (1966-98) was allegedly the world’s worst kleptocrat – $35 billion from the public purse and never prosecuted.
He called his autocracy Orde Baru (New Order) and his former son-in-law Prabowo intends to take the Republic back to the vile days of quasi-military rule.
A grim joke at the time had a civilian in a crowd grovellingly asking a big man if he was a general, a colonel or had in-laws in the military.
“No – why?” “In that case, sir, please move because you’re standing on my foot.”
Gerindra (Great Indonesia Movement) the party Prabowo started and leads, openly wants a return to the Constitution of 18 August 1945, written the day after Soekarno proclaimed the Dutch East Indies dead and the birth of the world’s newest republic. The Constitutional Court came later.
The preamble talks about “developing the nation’s intellectual life and to contribute to the implementation of a world order based on freedom, lasting peace and social justice.
Also in the wording is “belief in the One and Only God, on just and civilised humanity, on the unity of Indonesia and on democratic rule.”
As Melbourne University Indonesian law expert Professor Tim Lindsey has written: “It did not guarantee human rights or a separation of powers, and it gave huge power to the president, who was not elected and had no term limit.”
Orde Baru included the policy of dwifungsi (dual function). Serving soldiers had 100 secure seats in parliament (dropping to 75 in 1997). They were appointed as mayors, provincial governors, ambassadors, heads of state-owned corporations, the judiciary, and the cabinet.
Mateship, not merit, was the qualification for these jobs. Golkar (functional groups) was a mockery of democracy. It was the government’s political party that public servants had to support. As ballot boxes were in offices bosses could catch the disloyal.
Dwifungsi was scrapped when Soeharto quit in 1998 and Reformasi arrived returning power to the people. But it’s fast evaporating.
In October 2023, new laws were passed allowing active members of the military and police (which used to be run by the Army) to hold civilian positions.
Tentara Nasional Indonesia (TNI Indonesian Armed Forces) commander General Agus Subiyanto toldKompas newspaper this was not dwifungsi, but multifungsi – in other words even more uniforms in the corridors of civilian authorities.
Historian Dr Jonathan Tehusijaranawrites of the military’s “creation myth … derived through the central role the TNI claims to have played in Indonesia’s struggle for independence despite civilian incompetence.
“The official narrative says the TNI became an effective fighting force that successfully beat back Dutch colonialism through a campaign of guerrilla warfare.
“This ‘closeness’ to the people in turn gave the TNI the legitimacy to claim … a role in both national defence and sociopolitical affairs.”
Prabowo remains a suckling of the TNI even though kicked out for disobedience in 1998.
In 2026, a new law will make it illegal to criticise the government and for radio and TV stations to broadcast “investigative journalism content”.
Legislation from 2017 allows the dissolution of NGOs without going through the courts.
Added Lindsey: “Many activists now speak openly of their fear of being targeted and intimidated by government trolls or even the intelligence agencies. Others fear Prabowo will use his links to Muslim civil society organisations to pressure or delegitimise other groups he sees as critics.
“Soeharto’s system was based on a Faustian bargain that allowed him to rule corruptly and oppressively in return for high economic growth and development that lifted millions out of poverty.”
In this year’s presidential election campaign, Prabowo promised GDP eight per cent growth. As his predecessor got just above five per cent with massive infrastructure programmes the higher figure seems unreachable.
None of this is likely to bother China, the source of loans and investments that powered the economy during the ten years of seventh President Joko ‘Jokowi’ Widodo.
This is why Prabowo’s first overseas trip as President was to Beijing. His authoritarianism won’t bother Red lenders but will stress Western investors worried about human rights.
Whether any remain after Trump’s trouncing of the left is a matter for Prabowo’s talks in Beijing.
Duncan Graham
Duncan Graham has been a journalist for more than 40 years in print, radio and TV. He is the author of People Next Door (UWA Press). He is now writing for the English language media in Indonesia from within Indonesia. Duncan Graham has an MPhil degree, a Walkley Award, two Human Rights Commission awards and other prizes for his radio, TV and print journalism in Australia. He lives in East Java.
2) In Indonesia, Prabowo’s Dark Past Casts a Pall Over His Presidency
Originally published by World Politics Review
NOVEMBER 7, 2024 | BY CAROLYN NASH |INDONESIA
In 1976, then-Lt. Prabowo Subianto arrived for his first tour of duty in East Timor, the former Portuguese colony that Indonesia had invaded and occupied the previous year. The youngest person to lead a unit of the Indonesian military’s special forces arm, Kopassus, the 26-year-old Prabowo was sent to Timor in search of Nicolau Lobato, a prominent leader of the region’s independence movement.
Two years later, Prabowo’s unit located, arrested and killed Lobato. His severed head was mailedopens in a new tab to then-Indonesian President Suharto as proof of his death.
With that mission, Prabowo began his long military and political career. It would be a career littered with abuses, including alleged war crimes. It would also culminate in his inauguration as Indonesia’s eighth president on Oct. 20.
Since that first mission almost 50 years ago, Prabowo’s journey has been inseparable from Indonesia’s fractious, often violent history. As a general during the country’s occupation of East Timor in the 1980s and 1990s, Prabowo organized gangs of hooded killers to terrorize and subdue civilians associated with the independence movement. And he allegedly participatedopens in a new tab in one of the bloodiest events of the Timor war: the Krakas massacre, in which 300 Timorese—mostly civilians—were hunted down and killed by Kopassus units.
In 1996, Prabowo was sent to the province of West Papua, where the secessionist Free Papua Movement, or OPM, was embroiled in violent clashes with the Indonesian army. There, he and his unit carried out reprisal attacks, targeting villages they believed were sympathetic to the armed independence movement.
Two years later, after the Asian financial crisis spurred mass student-led protests against Suharto’s repressive regime in Jakarta, Prabowo spearheaded campaigns to kidnap, arrest and torture student activists, 22 of whom were disappeared by state authorities. After Suharto’s fall, Prabowo was dishonorably discharged from the army for his role in the enforced disappearances, and for years, the United States government, which had previously provided him with military training, barred him from entering the country.
Today, the whereabouts of 13 of the 22 disappeared student activists remain unknown, and a weekly candlelight vigilopens in a new tab in their honor still takes place every Thursday at the steps of the Presidential Palace—the palace that Prabowo now occupies.
Prabowo’s human rights record did not deter Indonesian voters from handing him a decisive first-round victory in February’s presidential election, with 58 percent of the vote in a three-candidate field. His presidential ambitions began a decade ago, when he first ran for the office. Five years ago, Prabowo joined forcesopens in a new tab with the man who had beaten him in the 2014 and 2019 contests, serving as defense minister for outgoing President Joko Widodo, known as Jokowi.
But Prabowo’s political rise has also been championed by an Indonesian populace that is predominantly forward-looking and often unconcerned with his central role in some of the darkest chapters of the country’s recent history.
That history will undoubtedly shape his presidential term. Prabowo has now appointed his Cabinet, comprising more than 100 ministers. Among them is Prabowo’s longtime friend and one-time fellow military academy cadet, Sjafrie Sjamsoeddin, who will serve as defense minister. Like Prabowo, Sjamsoeddin also servedopens in a new tab in Kopassus, completing tours of duty in East Timor, Aceh and Papua, and cementing his career by curbing political dissent, crushing opposition movements and brutalizing separatists. Also like Prabowo, he was once deniedopens in a new tab a visa to the United States due to his involvement in atrocities and human rights violations during his Kopassus tenure. A report commissioned by the United Nations High Commissioner of Human Rights found thatopens in a new tab, in the lead up to the Timorese independence referendum in 1999, Sjamsoediin discussed with other senior officers “plans to destroy vital infrastructure, and to kill key pro-independence leaders, in the event that the ballot result favored independence.”
The rise of both Prabowo and Sjamsoeddin highlights the military’s return to centrality in Indonesian politics, which has been building under Jokowi following a fall from grace in the initial post-Suharto democratic transition. Prabowo and his cohort will now have a new legislative arsenalopens in a new tab of repressive lawsopens in a new tab at their disposal, as they navigate escalating tensions with the Papua independence movement and oversee the winding down of the post-civil war financing mechanism in Aceh province.
If Prabowo’s pre-inauguration outreach is any indication, his administration will also pivot away from Jokowi’s primary focus on domestic policy to put a greater emphasis on projecting Indonesia’s influence in the global arena. Even before taking office, Prabowo met with the leaders of China, Russia, Vietnam, the Philippines and Australia, among others. He has indicated opens in a new tabthat he believes “a web of strong friendships” will be Indonesia’s “strongest pillar of foreign policy and … defence policy.”
The enthusiasm Prabowo has generated for a more globally engaged Indonesia is one of the factors that helped catapult him to victory at the polls in January. But his rise could jeopardize the safety of many communities in Indonesia, including the independence movement in Papua, as well as Indigenous groups, human rights defenders, the LGBTQ+ community and others whose activism and organizing is now in the crosshairs of the repressive powers of the Indonesian state.
Abuses in Papua
In a wide-ranging interview with Al-Jazeera in May, just a few months after his election victory, Prabowo was askedopens in a new tab about a video that had gone viral earlier this year showing Indonesian soldiers torturing a detained West Papuan rebel who subsequently died in custody.
Initially, Prabowo acknowledged that those responsible for the incident were facing disciplinary measures. But when pressed about the apparent frequency with which such acts occur in the two Papuan provinces, Papua and West Papua, he bristled and accused the interviewer of “one-sided” questioning. “Have you been there?” he demanded. “Why don’t you go there?”
His attempt to deflect the questioning was ironic, given that the Indonesian government enforces strict prohibitions on access to Papua, which has been home to a long-simmering independence movement since Indonesia took over the administration of the former Dutch colony in 1962. Jakarta traces its territorial claim over Papua to a 1969 United Nations-supervised plebiscite, in which a group of electors, who were largely hand-picked by Jakarta, voted unanimously to join Indonesia.
In the decades that followed, Papua’s independence movement, like those in East Timor and Aceh, posed a constant threat to Jakarta’s control over each territory. But only the Papua movement will present Prabowo with an active conflict—Timor-Leste has been an independent nation since its 1999 referendum, and the independence movement in Aceh all but vanished following a 2005 peace agreement in the aftermath of the tsunami the previous year.
Indonesian forces have been regularly accusedopens in a new tab of human rights abuses in their decadeslong battle against the Papuan independence movement. In March 2022, U.N. experts expressedopens in a new tab concern over reports of child killings, disappearances, torture and mass displacement. And earlier this year, in its periodic review of Indonesia’s compliance with the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, the U.N. Human Rights Commission expressly notedopens in a new tab the treatment of Papuans—including accusations of torture, unlawful detention and extrajudicial executions—as problem areas. The report also pointed to the lack of available information due to the prohibitions on access, as well as the frequency of internet shutdowns in Papua, especially during military operations, as exacerbating the risks of human rights abuses.
Meanwhile, Papuans Behind Bars, a civil society monitoring organization, recordedopens in a new tab over 500 politically motivated arrests in the territory in 2023. And in July, a Papuan lawyer and human rights defender was shot by unknown assailants in what Amnesty International describedopens in a new tab as “a reprehensible attempt to silence a courageous voice and to instill fear in those who fight for justice.”
These reports are already troubling, but the situation could very well worsen under Prabowo. While he is often described as erratic, he has in fact been quite consistent in his contempt for agitators against the Indonesian government—whether in East Timor and West Papua, or on the streets and in the universities of Java.
In the previously mentioned interview with Al-Jazeera, Prabowo went on to dismiss those fighting for independence as “terrorists” who “burn and kill children.” He rejected the concerns of human rights organizations and other NGOs, insisting that his decisions on Papua “will be guided by our national interests.”
The Crackdown on Dissent
That is further cause for concern, because in Indonesia, talk of “national interests” has long been a euphemism for exploiting the vast reserves of natural resources, including oil, gas, timber, nickel and gold, that have buoyed the country’s economy. In recent years, activists have sought to highlight how neatly these “national interests” overlap with the personal financial stakes of decision-makers in the government.
As a result, activists have also been increasingly targeted by Indonesia’s political elite. In 2021, for instance, human rights activists Haris Azhar and Fatia Maulidiyanti were chargedopens in a new tab with defamation for a YouTube video in which they discussed their report on human rights violations perpetrated by the Indonesian military in Papua. During the conversation, they mentioned that Luhut Binsar Pandjaitan—at the time Indonesia’s minister for maritime affairs and investments and now namedopens in a new tab by Prabowo to head the National Economic Council —holds personal investments in gold mines where some of these violations took place.
In response, Luhut launchedopens in a new tab a campaign of judicial harassment against the two, filing criminal and civil charges under Article 27 of the Electronic Information and Transactions, or EIT, Law, which prohibits making available any material “with contents of affronts and/or defamation.” Article 28 of the law also prohibits “disseminating false and misleading information.” These two articles alone were used against at least 332 individuals between January 2019 and May 2022, according to Amnesty Internationalopens in a new tab.
While the charges against Haris and Fatia were ultimately dropped—the last was finally dismissed in January—the activists were subjected to three years of legal harassment and multiple interrogations. Luhut’s campaign has also established a model for abusing the EIT Law to protect an elite political class that has largely captured Indonesia’s “national interests.” In August of this year, criminal defamation charges similar to those leveled against Haris and Fatia were brought against two student activists protestingopens in a new tab outside the headquarters of the Indonesia Weda Bay Industrial Park, or IWIP, a nickel-mining and industrial venture. The protesters were calling for IWIP to address the environmental impacts of its nickel-mining operations in North Maluku, where Indigenous communitiesopens in a new tab’ land and way of life remain at high risk of devastation as a result of state-sanctioned development projects.
The defamation charges brought against the two activists mirror those at the heart of Luhut’s case. They have been accused of personally insulting Suaidi Marasabessy, a retired military general with personal financial ties to the mining industry who shares an office with IWIP. The students alleged said that Marasabessy has failed to use his position to protect and assist the communities affected by IWIP. The two activists have also been targeted with vague threats by Ali Marasabessy, the chairman of Bravo 5, an organization of former military generals of which Luhut is a member. In a video shared on TikTok, Ali Marasabessy insisted the students apologize or face a “risk.” The case further illustrates the trend of political and military elites abusing Indonesian laws to protect their personal interests and reputations.
Beyond the targeting of individual activists, the EIT Law perpetuates a climate of fear among activists who represent any threat to the state power that Prabowo has so fiercely defended throughout his career. This climate has only been exacerbated by the launch in 2021 of the “virtual police,” a division of the Indonesian National Police responsible for supervising content on social media platforms. While the purported purpose of the virtual police is to reduce prosecutions by “educating and informing” the authors of offending posts, the reality is closer to the establishment of a state-sponsored online surveillance system.
Much of this worsening climate for civil society began under Jokowi, who initially presented himself as a democratic reformer but ultimately did more to undermine democracyopens in a new tab and entrench elite power—including that of the military—in Indonesia. However, unlike Jokowi, who came from a humble background and rose to power as a political outsider, Prabowo comes from a family of political elites and has personal interests of his own to protect, including more than $127 million in assets. And with the repressive legal landscape quickly becoming entrenched in Indonesia, Prabowo will have even more extensive powers to repress dissent.
As Prabowo focuses attention on strengthening the country’s “network of friends” in the global arena, he will likely try to leverage Indonesia’s role as a leading state in Southeast Asia—a strategic region often seen by the international community only through the narrow lens of the geopolitical rivalry between the U.S. and China—to deflect scrutiny and criticism of the deteriorating environment for political freedoms at home. That bodes poorly for independence activists facing abuses at the hands of the Indonesian military in Papua, as well as for Indonesia’s civil society, whose rights to free expression have been increasingly subsumed by a legal warfare that aims to silence dissent and pursue facetious claims of “national interest.”