https://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2019/08/28/we-reject-whoever-comes-papuans-in-surabaya-turn-down-visit-by-east-java-papua-governors.html



*'We reject whoever comes': Papuans in Surabaya turn down visit by East
Java, Papua governors*


News Desk

The Jakarta Post


Jakarta   /   Wed, August 28, 2019   /   12:38 pm

A banner that reads “We Reject Whoever Comes” on the gate of Papuan
students' dormitory on Jl. Kalasan in Surabaya, East Java. (kompas.com/A.
Faizal)


Papuan students living in a dormitory on Jl. Kalasan in Surabaya, East Java
refused to welcome East Java Governor Khofifah Indar Parawansa and Papua
Governor Lukas Enembe when the two visited their dorm on Tuesday evening.

A group of students in the dormitory went down to the front gate when they
saw several vehicles — the governors’ motorcade — pulling up outside the
gate at 6 p.m. on Tuesday.

The Papuan students, however, stayed behind the fence and banged on the
gate from the inside, telling Khofifah, Lukas and their entourages to leave
the premises.

They also told the officials to read the words on a banner they had put up
on the front of the gate that read “We Reject Whoever Comes”.

A number of students even chanted “Papua Merdeka” (Free Papua) as they
threw rocks at the motorcade, *kompas.com <http://kompas.com> *reported.

Due to security risks, the governors decided to leave as local police
attempted to diffuse the tension.

East Java Police chief Insp. Gen. Luki Hermwan and Maj Gen. Wisnoe Prasetja
Boedi of the Indonesian Military (TNI) were among the officials traveling
in the motorcade.

“We discussed our visit in advance. There seems to have been a
miscommunication,” Luki said as quoted by *tribunnews.com
<http://tribunnews.com>.*

The students put up the banner last week after a number of security
personnel and local mass organizations hurled racist slurs at them as they
accused them of refusing to celebrate Indonesia’s 74th Independence Day.

The racist abuse, which involved the students being called “monkeys” and
“pigs” before being arrested and questioned for allegedly desecrating a
national flag, triggered widespread anti-racism protests in the country,
primarily in cities and regencies across Papua and West Papua.

The Brawijaya Military Command in East Java subsequently suspended and
launched an investigation into five military personnel who were suspected
of involvement in the physical and verbal abuse of the Papuan students.

Last week, Khofifah apologized on behalf of the people of her province for
the racist abuse. (rfa/afr)

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