http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/news/audit-agency-probes-causes-of-persistent-papua-poverty/

Audit Agency Probes Causes of Persistent Papua Poverty 
Papua has received some Rp 40 trillion in funds since integration, but the 
region remains one of the poorest in Indonesia 

By Markus Junianto Sihaloho & Carlos Paath on 10:43 am May 1, 2013.
Category Featured, News
Tags: Indonesia poverty, Papua, papua investment, Papua poverty 
 
Residents walk through a street market in the remote town of Timika, Papua. (JG 
photo/Jurnasyanto Sukarno)

The Supreme Audit Agency has announced that it will soon conduct an audit on 
the special autonomy funds channeled to Indonesia’s two easternmost provinces, 
Papua and West Papua.

The central government has disbursed more than Rp 40 trillion ($4.1 billion) 
since the two provinces were granted special autonomy status in 2001, but both 
provinces remain among the poorest and most underdeveloped regions in the 
country, fueling social unrest and calls for secession.

“We will conduct [the audit] this year,” said Hadi Purnomo, the chief of the 
audit agency known as the BPK, said during a hearing with the Regional 
Representatives Council on Tuesday.

According to data from the Central Statistics Agency (BPS), both provinces have 
high rates of unemployment with a combined total of 77,000 people of working 
age currently without work.

  Is it acceptable for provinces rich in natural resources to have such poverty 
rates? 
  Puan Maharani, PDI-P
Poverty is also common, the latest BPS figures show, with 30 percent of people 
in resource-rich Papua and 27 percent in West Papua, which is also rich in 
natural gas and currently enjoying a tourism boom, living below the poverty 
line.

Western New Guinea came under interim Indonesian administration in accordance 
with a UN-ratified agreement 50 years ago today.

Full integration with Indonesia was completed in 1969 through the controversial 
“Act of Free Choice” vote of Indonesian-picked Papuan elders.

Puan Maharani, a politician with the Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle 
(PDI-P), said that in those 50 years, the region was largely ignored by 
Jakarta, which nevertheless enjoys its vast wealth, including revenue from the 
nation’s biggest taxpayer, the Freeport Indonesia copper and gold mine.

“Is it acceptable for provinces rich in natural resources to have such poverty 
rates?” Puan said on Tuesday.

She called for tighter monitoring of the special autonomy funds to ensure that 
they were used for the development of the provinces and the benefit of Papuans.

During a meeting with Papua Governor Lukas Enembe on Monday, President Susilo 
Bambang Yudhoyono said he was considering providing Papua with even greater 
autonomy, calling it a solution for the unique problems facing the province.

Yudhoyono said the so-called “Special Autonomy Plus” would be implemented in 
Papua by August.

Priyo Budi Santoso, a deputy speaker of the House of Representatives, said the 
government must first discuss the plan with legislators, adding that an 
amendment to the Special Autonomy Law would be needed before the proposal could 
be formally implemented.


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