http://www.iht.com/articles/2009/03/25/asia/papua.php

 
People chant slogans during a rally in Jayapura of Indonesia's Papua province 
on Tuesday. Over a thousand people rallied in Jayapura demanding a referendum 
on independence from Indonesia. (Oka Barta Daud/Reuters) 
Unease in Papua over leader's return

By Peter Gelling Published: March 25, 2009


JAKARTA: Tensions arising from clashes between the Indonesian military and 
independence fighters in the restive and resource-rich region of Papua in 
recent months have been further stoked by the return of the separatist 
movement's founder from exile.

Nicolas Jouwe, 85, arrived last week from the Netherlands at the request of the 
Indonesian authorities, who said they hoped to begin discussions on a possible 
settlement of the decades-old conflict. In a statement distributed by 
government officials after his arrival, Mr. Jouwe said that separatist fighters 
should help "rebuild Papua within the frame of the unitary republic of 
Indonesia," suggesting a willingness to give up his independence struggle.

But at a Friday news conference in Jakarta, Mr. Jouwe referred to Papua and 
Indonesia as separate nations, saying only that a dialogue should be opened. 
"We are close nations," he said. "We cannot live without considering each 
other."

The apparently contradictory statements angered independence activists, who 
greeted Mr. Jouwe's return to Papua on Sunday with protests against his 
willingness to negotiate with the government.

On Tuesday, thousands rallied in the streets of Jayapura, the capital of West 
Papua Province, demanding independence. Security forces there, apparently 
fearful of the protest reaching an international audience, detained four Dutch 
television journalists. They were released after 12 hours of questioning, 
according to local media reports.

The government has not commented on Mr. Jouwe's statements in Jakarta.

Mr. Jouwe's return comes after several months of sporadic violence and ahead of 
parliamentary elections on April 9. On March 15, the police said, separatist 
rebels attacked a security post, killing a government soldier.

A small group of armed rebels and other independence advocates have waged a 
low-level separatist campaign for almost 40 years. Indonesia took over Papua, 
which occupies the western part of the island of New Guinea, from the Dutch in 
1963 and in 1969 formalized its control over the region by a vote of 1,000 
Papuan community leaders that was widely thought to be rigged.

Papua's development lags behind that of the rest of the country, despite its 
huge stores of natural resources. It still lacks basic public health programs 
and reliable electricity and water supplies.

As a concession to independence advocates, in 2001 legislators in Jakarta 
passed an autonomy law aimed at giving the region more local control and a 
greater share of mining, gas and timber revenues. Human rights groups say the 
law has never been fully implemented and a portion of the funds have gone 
missing in a web of corruption.

"The special autonomy package in many ways represented a victory for the 
independence movement," said Eben Kirksey, an American anthropologist and 
Papuan expert. "But the renewed violence of the last few months is evidence 
that the autonomy package is not a solution to the problem. The autonomy funds 
have been disappearing in a vortex - a black hole somewhere between Jakarta and 
Jayapura."

Muridan Widjojo, an official at the state-funded Institute of Social Sciences 
who has published a paper about the autonomy law, said the legislation lacked 
legitimacy. None of the stakeholders "politically or morally support the 
implementation of the law," he said.

As a result, the administration of President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono is 
increasingly considering a settlement similar to the one reached in the 
northern province of Aceh, which also waged a decades-long independence 
struggle until a peace deal was signed in 2005.

Ending the conflicts in Aceh and Papua was a central promise of Mr. Yudhoyono's 
election campaign in 2004. His administration's renewed efforts at peace in 
Papua come just before the parliamentary elections and ahead of presidential 
elections in July.

The invitation to Mr. Jouwe, officials said, represented an important early 
step in the peace process.

"Indonesia is a very different place now since we have become a democratic 
country," said Rizal Mallarangeng, a spokesman for the minister of people's 
welfare, Aburizal Bakrie, who was Mr. Jouwe's host in Jakarta.

"We said to Jouwe: No longer will you be put in jail simply because you have a 
different opinion," the spokesman said. "Like in Aceh, we wanted to find a new 
path to solve these disagreements in a way that everyone can accept."

Indonesia, a sprawling archipelago with hundreds of ethnic groups, has a long 
history of independence movements. The country's late authoritarian ruler, 
Suharto, brutally squelched rebel groups.

But after East Timor's secession in 1999, the government has attempted more 
peaceful negotiations with breakaway provinces. With the peace deal in Aceh, 
Papua remains the country's last flash point of separatism.



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