Bulan September yang akan datang diadakan sidang umum PBB. Selama ini JK
yang berpidato,jadi apakah kali ini Jokowi atau Maruf akan berpidato pada
forum tsb dan apakah akan tetap berbicara tentang toleransi masyarakat dan
Pancasila di NKRI?


https://www.asiatimes.com/2019/08/article/indonesia-blocks-internet-in-papua-over-unrest/?_=2621241



Dozens of Papuan students held a demonstration in Jakarta on Thursday,
following a demonstration that ended in riots in Manokwari, Papua province,
this week after alleged acts of mistreatment and racist speech against
Papuan students in Malang and Surabaya, East Java provinces on August
15-16. The Indonesian government has blocked internet networks in the
province of Papua to prevent the spread of provocative content that can
worsen the situation. Photo: AFP / Aditya Irawan / NurPhoto
*Indonesia blocks internet in Papua over unrest*

Protesters shouted racial slurs at ethnic Melanesians, calling them
‘monkeys’ and ‘dogs’

*By ASIA TIMES STAFF, JAKARTA*
Indonesia has cut off internet access in unrest-hit Papua over fears that a
stream of offensive and racist online posts would spark more violent
protests in the region, but critics slammed the move as a threat to free
speech.

Riots and demonstrations brought several Papuan cities to a standstill this
week, as buildings were torched and street battles broke out between police
and protesters in Indonesia’s easternmost territory.

A rebel insurgency against Jakarta’s rule has simmered for decades in the
resource-rich but impoverished island, which shares a border with Papua New
Guinea.

The riots appear to have been triggered by the arrest of dozens of Papuan
students in Java at the weekend, who were also pelted with racist abuse.

Indonesia had slowed internet service in recent days to clamp down on
hoaxes and provocative comments targeting Papua’s ethnic Melanesian
population.

It shut down service completely late Wednesday, although many users still
managed to get around the block.

“The amount of racist and provocative content was very high … and it went
viral,” communications ministry spokesman Ferdinandus Setu told AFP..

Amnesty International hit out at the measure, saying that “this blanket
internet blackout is an appalling attack on people’s right to freedom of
expression”.

“This is not a time for censorship,” said Usman Hamid, the group’s
executive director in Jakarta.

“These tensions are not an excuse to prevent people from sharing
information and peacefully speaking their mind.”

Calm appeared to have been mostly restored Thursday after Indonesia sent in
1,200 extra police and military to Papua. A few dozen protesters were
arrested.

Several police officers had been injured, and there were unconfirmed
reports of wounded demonstrators. No deaths have been reported.

The unrest came after reports that authorities tear-gassed and briefly
detained some 43 Papuan university students in Surabaya, Indonesia’s
second-biggest city, on Saturday – the country’s independence day.

Police in riot gear stormed a dormitory to force out students who allegedly
destroyed an Indonesian flag, as a group of protesters shouted racial slurs
at them, calling them “monkeys” and “dogs.”
‘*2d-class citizens’*

In Jakarta on Thursday, more than 100 demonstrators scuffled with police
near the presidential palace as they called for Papuan independence.

Some were dressed in traditional clothing and with their faces painted in
the image of Papua’s banned flag.

“Papuan students are treated like second-class citizens,” university
student Mika Dabe told AFP.

“Our dignity and pride have been trampled on.”

In riot-hit Sorong, Indonesia’s chief security minister Wiranto on Thursday
appealed for calm, as he referred to Papua as the nation’s “golden child”.

“Indonesia’s unity is non-negotiable,” the minister, who goes by one name,
told reporters.

“Don’t let negativity divide us.”

Wiranto had flown to Papua with the head of the military and Indonesia’s
national police chief, while President Joko Widodo was expected to visit
next week.

In Bali’s capital Denpasar, dozens rallied and carried placards that read
“Stop Racism” and “Stop Genocide.”



“It was discriminatory and racist,” said rally coordinator Jeeno Dogomo,
referring to the Surabaya arrests.

“But the riots weren’t just triggered by the Surabaya incident. They were
also caused by what’s happened in the past and the abuse that Papua has
suffered.”

Papua has been the scene of a low-level insurgency aimed at breaking away
from Indonesia, which took control of the former Dutch colony in the 1960s
after an independence referendum widely viewed as a sham.

Security forces have long been accused of committing rights abuses against
Papuans who say they have not shared in the impoverished region’s vast
mineral wealth.

*AFP*

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