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http://internasional.kompas.com/read/2013/05/04/21322255/Indonesia.Protes.Keras.Inggris.Buka.Kantor.Free.West.Papua

They're taking our kids

West Papua's youth are being removed to Islamic religious schools in Java for 
"re-education", writes Michael Bachelard.

Captive audience … Papuan boys at the Daarur Rasul Islamic boarding school, 
outside Jakarta, behind locked gates. Photo: Michael Bachelard

Johanes Lokobal sits on the grass that cushions the wooden floor of his little, 
one-room house. He warms his hands at a fire set in the centre. From time to 
time a pig, out of sight in an annex, squeals and slams itself thunderously 
against the adjoining wall.

The village of Megapura in the central highlands of Indonesia's far-eastern 
province of West Papua is so remote that supplies arrive by air or by foot 
only. Johanes Lokobal has lived here all his life. He does not know his exact 
age: "Just old," he croaks. He's also poor. "I help in the fields. I earn about 
20,000 rupiah [$2] per day. I clean the school garden." But in a hard life, one 
hardship particularly offends him. In 2005, his only son, Yope, was taken to 
faraway Jakarta. Lokobal did not want Yope to go. The boy was perhaps 14, but 
big and strong, a good worker. The men responsible took him anyway. A few years 
later, Yope died. Nobody can tell Lokobal how, nor exactly when, and he has no 
idea where his son is buried. All he knows, fiercely, is that this was not 
supposed to happen.

"If he was still alive, he would be the one to look after the family," Lokobal 
says. "He would go to the forest to collect the firewood for the family. So I 
am sad."


Heavy learning … boys and girls at Daarur Rasul. Photo: Michael Bachelard

The men who took Yope were part of an organised traffic in West Papuan youth. A 
six-month Good Weekend investigation has confirmed that children, possibly in 
their thousands, have been enticed away over the past decade or more with the 
promise of a free education. In a province where the schools are poor and the 
families poorer still, no-cost schooling can be an irresistible offer.

But for some of these children, who may be as young as five, it's only when 
they arrive that they find out they have been recruited by "pesantren", Islamic 
boarding schools, where time to study maths, science or language is dwarfed by 
the hours spent in the mosque. There, in the words of one pesantren leader, 
"They learn to honour God, which is the main thing." These schools have one 
aim: to send their graduates back to Christian-majority Papua to spread their 
muscular form of Islam.

Ask the 100 Papuan boys and girls at the Daarur Rasul school outside Jakarta 
what they want to be when they grow up and they shout, "Ustad! Ustad! 
[religious teacher]."

Watch and learn … students watch a performance of singing, dancing and 
wrestling. Photo: Michael Bachelard

In Papua, particularly in the Highlands, the issues of religious and cultural 
identity are red-hot. Census data from over the past four decades shows that 
the indigenous population is now matched in number by recent migrants, largely 
Muslims, from other parts of Indonesia. The newcomers' domination of the 
economy, particularly in the western half of the province, effectively 
marginalises the original inhabitants. This immigration means that indigenous 
Papuans have a real - and realistic - fear of becoming an ethnic and religious 
minority in their own country. Stories of people taking away their children 
adds an emotive edge and has the potential to inflame tensions in an already 
volatile region.

For about 50 years, a separatist insurgency has been active in Papua and 
hundreds of thousands have died in their efforts to gain independence for the 
province. Christianity, brought by Dutch and German missionaries, is both the 
faith of a vast majority of the indigenous population, and a key part of their 
identity. Islam actually has an even longer history in Papua than Christianity, 
but it's of a gentler kind than what's preached in Java's increasingly hardline 
mosques and it's still, for the moment at least, the minority religion. But 
when the pesantren children return from Java, their faith has changed. "They 
become different persons," Papuan Christian leader Benny Giay, tells me. "They 
have been brainwashed".

The schools insist they recruit only students who are already Muslims, but it's 
clear they are not too fussy. At Daarur Rasul, I quickly found two little boys, 
Filipus and Aldi, who were mualaf - brand new converts from Christianity. One 
radical Islamic organisation, Al Fatih Kafah Nusantara (AFKN), makes no bones 
about its intention to convert, and to use religion for political ends. Leader 
Fadzlan Garamatan says AFKN has brought 2200 children out of Papua as part of 
his program of nationalistic "Islamicisation". "When [Papuans] convert to 
Islam, their desire to be independent reduces," says Fadzlan on AFKN's internet 
page.

Johanes Lokobal says his son died after being taken to an Islamic school. 
Photo: Michael Bachelard

In restive West Papua, the movement and conversion of young children is 
politically explosive. We were warned a number of times not to chase the story. 
It's never reported in the Indonesian press. The chief of the Indonesia 
government's Jakarta-based Unit for the Acceleration of Development in Papua 
and West Papua, Bambang Darmono, downplays it as just one of "many issues in 
Papua", and the Religious Affairs Ministry's director of pesantrens, Saefudin, 
says he has never heard of it. But my efforts to trace the life and death of 
one Papuan boy has revealed that the trade goes on. And, in the service of 
grand religious and political aims, sometimes young lives are broken.

Elias Lokobal smiles to himself when he talks about the feisty little 
stepbrother he lost, but when talk turns to Amir Lani, his expression darkens. 
Lani is a local cleric in Megapura and the other villages surrounding the 
highland capital, Wamena. It was in about 2005 when he and Aloysius Kowenip, 
the police chief from the nearby town of Yahukimo, began approaching families 
to recruit their children. The pair worked to take five boys from vulnerable 
families in each of five villages and transport them to Java for education. 
Kowenip, a Christian, says it was his idea to "help" the children, and that the 
funding came from "the local government and an Islamic organisation" whose name 
he could not remember. He says he sought out children with only one living 
parent because "nobody guided them".

Young Yope was one such boy. Although he had a stepmother, his natural mother 
had died. Neither Lani nor Kowenip ever visited Yope's father, Johanes Lokobal, 
to explain their scheme. It still rankles. "These people should ask permission 
from the parents," Lokobal says. Instead, they asked young Yope himself, who 
was enthusiastic about this adventure. Some friends had gone the previous year 
and he was keen to join them.

School spirit … students at Daarur Rasul perform chants in praise of prophet 
Muhammed. Photo: Michael Bachelard

When it came time for Yope to depart, it happened in a flash, stepbrother Elias 
recalls. "I went to school, and when I came back there was no one home."

Andreas Asso was part of the same group. Now a shy young man scrabbling a 
living in Jayapura, the capital of West Papua, he was perhaps 15 at the time. 
Like Yope, Andreas had only one parent. His father was dead and, though his 
mother was alive, he was living with his stepmother. Like Yope, he was 
approached directly. "They asked if I wanted to pursue my study in Jakarta for 
free," Andreas says. "The police chief never spoke to my stepmum but he spoke 
to my uncle, the brother of my father, and he agreed. I was born Christian and 
I'll always be Christian. The police chief just said we'd be put in a boarding 
house ... If he had told us it would be a pesantren, none of us would have 
wanted to go."

When the day came to leave, Andreas says a group of 19 boys were loaded into an 
Indonesian air force Hercules C-130 aircraft in Wamena. By some accounts, the 
youngest of them was just five. The plane was crewed by men in uniform. It has 
been difficult to verify whether the military was officially involved, but a 
former Papuan army chief says civilians are permitted to buy cheap tickets to 
fly on military aircraft as part of the military's "corporate social 
responsibility". "We didn't speak to the soldiers," Andreas recalls. "We were 
afraid."

It took two days for the plane to reach Jakarta and, "we were not fed or 
offered drinks. A few, especially the little ones, got sick ... a few vomited," 
Andreas says. "When they came to my village, I thought I wanted to go. But when 
I was in the aeroplane, all I was thinking was, 'I want to go back to my 
village.' " When they landed in Jakarta, the boys were driven about three 
hours to their new home - the Jamiyyah Al-Wafa Al-Islamiyah pesantren, high on 
the slopes of the volcano, Mount Salak, behind the regional city of Bogor. The 
head of the Al-Wafa school's foundation, Harun Al Rasyid, remembers Andreas 
Asso and the boys from Wamena, and the men who brought them, Amir Lani and 
Aloysius Kowenip, whom he knows as "Aloy". The two men had come and "offered 
the students" in 2005, he recalls. "Aloy was ambitious in politics, and 
bringing children to my pesantren was a way to improve his standing or image in 
society," Al Rasyid says.

Andreas Asso's account and his differ on many points but they concur on one: 
the boys from the village in the wild highlands of Papua simply did not fit in. 
"It wasn't like a real school because in school they have classes," Andreas 
says. "In this one, we just went to a big mosque and all we learnt about was 
Islam, just reading the Koran. Sometimes they slapped us on the face, beat us 
with a wooden stick. They just told us we Papuans were black, we have dark 
skin."

The food and education at Al-Wafa were free but the religion was strict. It has 
Yemeni teachers and Saudi funding and its website describes it as Salafi 
sholeh, or "pious Salafi". Its purpose: "Setting up a cadre of preachers and 
people who can call others to Islam." Andreas insists that, like him, some of 
the other boys were Christians, and that the head of the school changed five of 
their names to make them sound more Islamic - allegations Al Rasyid denies. For 
his part, Al Rasyid says the Papuans were an unruly rabble who exhausted the 
teachers "because their cultural background was different".

He says the boys urinated and defecated on the school grounds and stole the 
crops of neighbouring farmers. He admits punishing them by "scolding" and 
hitting them "with rattan on the foot". About two or three months after they 
arrived, one sickly boy, Nison Asso, died.

"He was 10 years old," says Andreas. "He was already sick in Wamena but ... he 
passed away. The body is still there in Bogor because the boarding school 
didn't have the money to send the body back, though his parents wanted the body 
sent back." Al Rasyid will not comment on Nison's fate. After less than a year, 
it was clear to both the boys and the school that the experiment was failing, 
so Amir Lani was summoned. Andreas says he pleaded with Lani to take him home, 
but was refused. Instead, Lani took them to Jakarta to another Papuan man, 
Ismail Asso, who himself had been an imported student whose name was changed. 
Ismail told the boys there was not enough money to return them to Papua. Their 
parents, it seems, were never consulted.

Some of the students were found a new pesantren in Tangerang, near Jakarta. 
Later they were to be expelled from there, too, because, according to Ismail 
Asso, "These children were already bad children in Papua." But Andreas stayed 
out of school and instead teamed up with another boy, Muslim Lokobal, "who was 
also a Christian but was given the name 'Muslim' ". The pair went to make 
their own way in the big city.

A persistent problem in researching this story has been pinning down details - 
names, times and ages. Names have been changed, roots erased, and village 
children rarely know their own age. The tragic end to Yope Lokobal's story 
suggests, however, that he may be the same boy whom Andreas Asso knew as Muslim 
Lokobal.

Andreas says that one night Muslim got drunk. There is no eyewitness to what 
happened next, and it's the subject of five or more differing, second-hand 
accounts. Andreas's is the most gruesome. "On the way back to the boarding 
house, Muslim made trouble with the local people, so they beat him up and 
killed him. They put his body inside the boarding house. And because they hated 
him, they took out one of his eyes and put a bottle in the eye socket." Does 
this awful scene describe Yope's death? Or was Muslim a different boy?

Back in the village of Megapura, they can shed little light. "There was a call 
from Jakarta to the mosque at Megapura, and the people from the mosque gave us 
the news," Johanes Lokobal recalls. "There was no explanation about how Yope 
died." Says stepbrother Elias: "It was 2009 or 2010. We just held a mourning 
ceremony at home, praying." Nobody knows where Yope's body is buried.

The rest of the boys from that Hercules would be in their early 20s by now. 
Last time Andreas Asso heard from them, they were in Jakarta as little better 
than beggars - "street singers or working in public transport - the drivers' 
assistant, collecting the passengers," he says. It's not known how many groups 
of children Amir Lani and Aloysius Kowenip organised to take away. Teronce 
Sorasi, a mother from Wamena, says she was approached in 2007 or 2008 by "the 
police chief", who asked her to send her daughter, Yanti, who was then five, 
and her son, Yance 11, to Jakarta, even though "we are a Christian family". "I 
said, 'no' because my husband had just passed away and we were still mourning," 
Sorasi says.

Amir Lani still lives in a villa in the hills near Megapura. According to 
Elias, whenever people ask him about the lost boys of Wamena, "he just avoids 
them". When I reach Aloysius Kowenip by telephone, he boasts of his scheme. "If 
any one of them has become somebody, then, as a Papuan, I am proud of that." 
But when asked about those who died or failed, Kowenip abruptly ends the call. 
A few days later, his friend Ismail Asso phones in a fury, then issues two 
threats via SMS. "I remind you ... not to dig out information about the Muslims 
of Wamena," he writes, otherwise the "provocative foreign journalist" will be 
"deported from Indonesia", or "axed, killed by the [people of] Wamena".

Internal transportation of children has a long and dishonourable history in 
Indonesia. Around 4500 children were removed from East Timor over the 24-year 
Indonesian occupation to serve, in the words of author Helene Van Klinken in 
her book Making Them Indonesians, a "proselytising Islamic faith", and to bind 
the region closer to Jakarta. Children, she wrote, were chosen because they 
were "impressionable and easily manipulated to serve political, racial, 
ideological and religious aims".

Papua has been a target in the past, too. In 1969, former president Suharto 
proposed transferring 200,000 children of the "backward and primitive Papuans, 
still living in the stone age" to Java for education. Another Saudi-backed 
group, DDII, used to bring children from both East Timor and Papua. And today, 
AFKN, which is linked to the thuggish, hardline Islamic Defenders Front (FPI), 
is actively seeking children to recruit.

Daarur Rasul is half pesantren, half building site in a satellite city of 
Jakarta called Cibinong. Here, 100 boys from the lowlands in Papua's western 
half crowd up to the heavy bars of a gate to greet us. The gate is locked 
because, according to one member of staff, "they like to escape". Forty or so 
girls live downstairs with more freedom of movement. School principal Ahmad 
Baihaqi insists he teaches moderate Islam, and the children are at least seven, 
but some look younger. He doesn't deny they are locked up, but says it is only 
during study hours "to put discipline on them".

In 2011, four boys did escape and claimed not only that they'd been forced to 
work on the construction site, but that at the school, they had been left 
hungry, given unboiled water to drink and were taught only Islam, Indonesian 
language and maths. Baihaqi insists the boys exaggerate, saying they had been 
"naughty" from before they arrived. He agrees that sometimes his students do 
work on the construction site, but says they enjoy it. The boys' lessons begin 
at 4am with prayers. School continues, with breaks and an afternoon nap, until 
9pm, during which there are seven hours of prayer and Koran reading and only 3 
1/2 hours for "natural sciences, social sciences, reading and writing".

Baihaqi says he recruits new students in Papua every year and swears parents 
give their consent. But the children only travel home every three years. They 
don't miss their parents, he says, and the parents knowingly agree to the 
arrangement.

Arist Merdeka Sirait, the head of Indonesia's non-government child protection 
group Komnas PA, says separating children for that long "means erasing their 
cultural roots", particularly if their names and religion are also changed. "It 
is very dangerous," he adds. But Indonesia's powerful Religious Affairs 
Ministry has no problem with it. It's encouraged, in fact, says pesantren 
division director Saefudin, because, "The longer you stay [in a pesantren], the 
more blessing you'll get."

The Indonesian government's Child Protection Commission, KPAI, is also 
sanguine. Deputy chairman Asrorun Ni'am, who is also a senior member of the 
Fatwa Council of the MUI, the government's Islamic advisory body, was more 
worried about the "religious sentiment" we might stir up by writing the story. 
"It's against all efforts to build harmonious atmosphere," he warned us.

The law is clear. The UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, to which 
Indonesia is a party, says children should not be separated from their families 
for whatever reason, even poverty. And Indonesia's Child Protection Act 
includes a five-year jail penalty for those who convert a child to religion 
different from their family's. In West Papua, religious leaders have little 
doubt that removing children is part of a broader effort to overwhelm the 
indigenous population; "It is Indonesia's long-term project to make Papua an 
Islamic place," says the head of the province's Baptist church, Socratez Yoman. 
"If Jakarta wants to educate Papuan children," says Christian leader Benny 
Giay, "why don't they build schools in Papua?"

We could not confirm if the government of Indonesia or its agencies were active 
in the movement of children. But some organisations have high level support. 
AFKN is funded by zakat (Islamic alms) delivered through the charitable arm of 
state-owned Indonesian bank BRI; Aloysius Kowenip talked of "local government" 
funding; Daarur Rasul's donors include "some police officers and military 
officers" acting personally, and at least one group was moved by a military 
plane.

Perhaps, like the well-documented movement of children in East Timor, the 
Papuan operation has no government endorsement but enjoys quiet consent at high 
levels of Indonesian society. Andreas Asso survived to tell his tale, but 
remains furious at how he was duped into leaving his highland home, then 
abandoned to his fate.

"I could have had an education there in Wamena. Some of my friends who stayed 
have graduated from school ... My dream job is to become a policeman. But I 
look back, and I've achieved nothing."



Read more: 
http://www.smh.com.au/lifestyle/theyre-taking-our-kids-20130429-2inhf.html#ixzz2SMJbWkfv



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