Free Papua!
 

http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2010/02/13/issues-papua-indonesia039s-great-enigma039.html

Issues: `Papua: Indonesia's great enigma'
Sat, 02/13/2010 1:12 PM  |  Reader's Forum 

The country's easternmost territory has been a bane of security and development 
for a long time. With Timor Leste separated from the republic and Aceh 
peacefully consolidating itself, Papua remains an enigma despite the numerous 
political initiatives taken at various levels. 

The Jakarta Post's Ridwan Max Sijabat and Markus Makur look at the latest 
efforts to resolve the complex issues holding back this resource-rich region 
from realizing its development potential. 

Your comments: 

Talking to Jakarta is like "boiling stones or talking to the wall". What am I 
going to do? I'll fight for basic fundamental freedom: free from starvation, 
diseases and stupidity. These will be the ways to get complete freedom. I 
realize that politics is an umbrella system that embraces, organizes, protects 
and leads, but politics is not that easy to unravel. It is more a game than a 
policy for the common good. 

My friends and I try to play it with a good heart and the right motivation, but 
we are always the losers. So I'll do it my way. 

I'll fight for the sake of humanity through my expertise. I'll live not for 
myself, but for my children and my grandchildren in the land of the 
Cenderawasih. It's the fight of dignity and hospitable hosts. 

Ino Ngari
Papua

Wamena is part of Papua in this country. The soldiers in each village have a 
duty to secure and to protect the people. But what usually happens in the 
villages is that the soldiers bring their weapons to gardens, to churches, to 
the markets, to schools, to parties, on the way to forests and wherever people 
live. 

Soldiers stop taxis and ask to see driver's licenses and car tax documents, 
which is actually not their job. This is happening in Bolakme district of 
Jayawijaya regency. 

What the police have to do is protect society wherever they are, not make them 
scared, destroy their lives, to oppress them, not take their rights and take 
control of them. The behavior of the soldiers does oppress society. 

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and the army generals must tell the soldiers 
clearly about their duty in Papua before they are sent to work in Papua. 

Onius Taboya
Papua

The soldiers make their own rules in Papua province. Many soldiers are on duty 
in every regency and district of Papua in order to protect or ensure the safety 
of society. Soldiers hold guns all the time and walk around the towns, 
especially in the highlands of Papua. 

The soldiers ask drivers in every district to see their driver's license and 
car tax documents without any clear reason. In fact, it is not the soldiers' 
job to peruse local driver's licenses. 

The soldiers threaten the people with guns, therefore native Papuans are scared 
to visit their family at night, and society lives in fear. Soldiers 
differentiate between native Papuans and others in the community. Papua 
province has been part of Indonesia since 1962 and native Papuans are also 
citizens of Indonesia and need to receive proper treatment like other citizens. 

Dondy Helasbo
Papua

It seems like the musyawarah and mufakat (the deliberation to reach a 
consensus) strategy used before and during the Act of Free Choice in 1969 is 
being replayed behind the scenes in this transparent and democratic era. Tom 
and Franz confirmed that the behind-the-scenes meetings (a musyawarah and 
mufakat strategy) had made limited progress. 

I think this is true because this is no longer the era of the Act of Free 
Choice where the Papuans at that time were under the threat of death if 
rejection was their choice. Now the interesting question is, why young Papuans 
are the ones who are actively promoting and proposing separation from 
Indonesia. 

I think this indicates that the Indonesia government has failed to embrace 
Papuans with love and respect for four decades. The young generation shows 
their rejection not by reading from books or learning from schools, but, they 
themselves have been witnessing and experiencing injustice in all walks of life 
on their own land. 

Papuans are now waiting for an invitation from the central government to have 
an open, transparent and fair dialog in order to come up with a comprehensive 
solution to the long-standing conflict in Papua. Dialog is the last channel 
because the 2001 law on special autonomy, considered a win-win solution to the 
conflict, has failed due to the lack of a strong commitment from the government 
to implement it. 

Izak Morin
Jayapura








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