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  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: ndeboost 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Friday, March 18, 2011 11:04 PM
  Subject: [proletar] Re: Why Papua's integration history needs straightening


    
  Kalau bingun @mBoong, pergi NYC sono, tanya PBB.
  nDeboost masih sempet lihat tuh yang namanya
  perangko UNTEA di display disalah satu ruangan.
  mBesok ada juga yang tanya, kok Timor Timur
  misahin diri?
  Yg ini tanyanya sama si anjing buduk(1) Uskup Belo.
  Tapi kemana si anjing ini ya? Kok hilang dari
  peredaran? nDeboost pernah baca, lupa-lupa ingat
  yg dia ini dikasih disuatu tempat tanpa umat. Habis
  manis sepah dibuang, keknya.

  (1) Uskup ini menyamakaan dirinya demikian,
  spt interview dg der spiegel dan dibaca dikoran-koran
  (Indonesia).

  --- In [email protected], "sunny" <ambon@...> wrote:
  >
  >
  http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2011/03/18/why-papua%E2%80%99s-integr\
  ation-history-needs-straightening.html
  >
  > Why Papua's integration history needs straightening
  > Socratez Sofyan Yoman, Jayapura | Fri, 03/18/2011 9:47 PM | Opinion
  >
  > The people of Indonesia outside Papua are clearly confused and keep
  asking: Why have indigenous Papuans never recognized and accepted the
  Act of Free Choice (Pepera) of 1969 but have consistently opposed the
  history of integration of West Papua into Indonesian territory? Do the
  people of West Papua of Melanesian ethnicity misunderstand Papua's
  integration into Indonesia?
  >
  > These questions are not easy to answer as they involve a long struggle
  and journey. In the terminology of the Indonesian Institute of Sciences
  (LIPI), it is the Papua road map. The book published by LIPI, titled
  Papua Road Map: Negotiating the Past, Improving the Present and Securing
  the Future, contains findings of the root problems actually faced and
  questioned by the Papuan people so far.
  >
  > This book has discovered and formulated four basic issues in Papua:
  (1) the history and political status of Papua; (2) state violence and
  human rights violations (3) marginalization of indigenous people; (4)
  discriminative development. This formulation offers room and opportunity
  to the Papuans and the central government to sit together for
  negotiation, mediation, communication and dialogue to propose options
  for a solution with elegance, dignity and equality.
  >
  > However, in my view, the four problems found by the team of LIPI
  actually stem from a single root cause only: the history of Papuan
  integration into Indonesian territory through Pepera 1969, which was
  carried out in West Papua on the basis of the Indonesian system of
  consultation. This Indonesian method differed from the New York
  Agreement of Aug. 15, 1962 signed by the UN, the US, Holland and
  Indonesia that Pepera 1969 was to be realized through the international
  mechanism of one man one vote.
  >
  > In the process of Papuan integration into Indonesia, the Indonesian
  military played a major and important role before, during and after
  Pepera 1969. An official telegram from Col. Soepomo, then the
  Tjenderawasih XVII Regional Military commander, dated Feb. 20, 1967,
  based on a radiogram of the Army Commander dated Feb. 7, 1967, said in
  anticipation of the 1969 referendum in West Irian (Papua): "Intensify
  all activities in relevant fields intensified by utilizing all material
  and personnel strengths of the Army as well as the other forces.
  Strictly follow the guideline provided. The 1969 referendum in West
  Irian must be won, must be won. Strategic and vital materials must be
  safeguarded. Minimize the loss of our troops by reducing static posts.
  This letter is an order to be executed. Make coordination in the best
  possible way."
  >
  > Christofelt L. Korua, a retired police officer and eyewitness, said
  "the Papuans casting their votes in Pepera 1969 were determined by
  Indonesian officials and while the chosen people were in their rooms
  they were tightly guarded by Indonesian soldiers and policemen."
  (Interview by the writer in Jayapura, Dec. 11, 2002). "On July 14, 1969,
  Pepera started with 175 consultative council members for Merauke. On the
  occasion, a large troop of Indonesian soldiers attended." (Official
  report of the UN: Annex 1, paragraphs 189-200).
  >
  > Most members of Pepera 1969 were people coming from Menado, Toraja,
  Batak, Ambon/Maluku, and Buton. It was proven by the 59 pro-Indonesia
  statements in the present UN document. The US Ambassador to Indonesia in
  1969 said "95 percent of indigenous Papuans wanted to have freedom" and
  Sudjarwo Tjondronegoro, the Indonesian team leader to the Act of Free
  Choice, acknowledged "many Papuans might not wish to stay with
  Indonesia".
  >
  > Dr. Fernando Ortiz Sanz, the UN representative supervising the Pepera,
  in his official report at the UN General Assembly in1969 said "The
  majority of Papuan people indicated their desire to break away from
  Indonesia and support the idea of founding a Free Papua State." (UN Doc.
  Annex I, A/7723, paragraph, 243, p. 47).
  >
  > What is clear and certain is that the outcome of Pepera has invited
  strong criticism and protests that continue today. Some noted historians
  like J.P. Drooglever and Hans Meijer have also discovered in their
  research that Pepera was steeped in orchestration so that Papuan
  people's free choice ended in falsehood while a group of voters under
  considerable duress apparently voted to absolutely support Indonesia.
  >
  > US Congressman Eni F.H. Faleomavaega was among the initiators of an
  international movement demanding a review of Pepera in Papua. Along with
  fellow Congressman Donald Payne, Faleomavaega sent a letter to UN
  Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon in February 2008, requesting a repeat
  referendum in Papua. Pressures and demands for an assessment of the
  political status of have also come from the parliaments of Britain, the
  European Union and Ireland.
  >
  > Considering such root issues in the history of Papuan integration into
  Indonesia with all the orchestration and falsehood, it is a necessity to
  seek a settlement with the prospect of fostering peace, dignity and
  humanity between indigenous Papuans and the Indonesian government.
  >
  > Therefore, the idea of a Jakarta-Papua dialogue between the Indonesian
  government and the indigenous people of Papua should be supported by all
  components of society. The dialogue of peace in this context should mean
  an unconditional talk mediated by a neutral third party like the
  Jakarta-Aceh dialogue that ended decades of rebellion in the
  western-most province in 2005.
  >
  > The unconditional talk here should imply a dialogue without speaking
  of a free Papua and a unitary state of the Republic of Indonesia. It
  means an honest dialogue on an equal footing that should apply a new
  framework toward straightening out the history of Papuan integration
  into Indonesia.
  >
  > Without the new framework, this paradox will never find a
  comprehensive and dignified way of resolution. For this reason, the talk
  should deal with the Papuan problems with pure conscience and clear
  minds in order to arrive at a settlement that creates lasting peace for
  the future of Indonesia and indigenous Papuans. The dialogue is an
  initial step to negotiate the past, improve the present and secure the
  future of Papuan people.
  >
  > The writer is chairman of
  > the Papuan Baptist Church Alliance.
  >
  > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
  >



  

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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