WWW.INFOPAPUA.ORG
West Papua News and Information
West Papua Net | Free West Papua Campaign (UK) | West Papua Action (Ireland) 

Last Updated: Jul 30th, 2008 - 16:54:35
WPNews Online 
 
 INFO PAPUA
 
 Statements
 
 Papuan Human Rights
 Human Rights News
 Military Operations
 Papuan Political Prisioners
 West Papua Churches
 Health Issues
 Refugees News
 
 Eco-Terrorism
 
 Indo Neocolonialism
 
 Refugee Issue
 
 War on Terror
 
 Melanesia Roundup
 
 WARTA PAPUA MERDEKA DALAM GAMBAR

 

PLEASE HELP US:

DONATE with PayPal

We need your support to keep our websites and campaigns going.

We need your contributions to assist us with our Human Rights campaigns.

Please use the PayPal Donate button above to help the people of West Papua

 

Search

Papuan Human Rights : West Papua Churches


World Council of Churches tells Indonesian Government "WEST PAPUANS ARE TRAUMATIZED"
By World Council of Churches
Jul 30, 2008, 16:52

Email this article
 Printer friendly page
"Papuans still are subject to torture, ill-treatment, arbitrary arrests and unfair trials by the Indonesian authorities” the World Council of Churches told the United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva in March 2008. ( http://www.oikoumene.org/?id=5684 ).

The WCC oral intervention blamed the "ongoing militarization" of the island for this "pattern of intimidation" against Papua's indigenous people.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

World Council of Churches - News Release

Contact: +41 22 791 6153 +41 79 507 6363 media@wcc-coe.org


For immediate release - 29 JULY 2008


WEST PAPUANS "TRAUMATIZED" WCC TEAM TELLS INDONESIAN GOVERNMENT


West Papuans have yet to recover from the trauma of human rights violations. At the same time continuing in-migration is threatening to marginalize them in their resource-rich province, an ecumenical team from the World Council of Churches (WCC) told top-level Indonesian government officials.


Papuans appear to be traumatized because of migration to their island, Rev. Prof. James Haire told Indonesian social welfare minister Aburizal Bakrie 24 July.


A theology professor from the Uniting Church in Australia, Haire was one of a six-member ecumenical team of "Living Letter (

http://overcomingviolence.org/index.php?id=5725 )s" who visited West Papua and other parts of Indonesia from 18-24 July.


Living Letters teams representing the member churches of the WCC travel to locations around the world in advance of theInternational Ecumenical Peace Convocation ( http://overcomingviolence.org/en/iepc

)in 2011. They listen, learn, share approaches and challenges in overcoming violence and in peace-making, and pray together for peace in the community and in the world.


"As Indonesia democratizes and undergoes reform, and thus experiences the free movement of population from other provinces into Papua, an irony is that these factors unintentionally tend to marginalize the indigenous Papuans," said Haire, speaking on behalf of the Living Letters team.


At the root of the problem is a transmigration programme sponsored by the 1965-1998 Suharto government. It had encouraged other Indonesians to migrate to West Papua in order to make the Papuans, who had long been fighting for independence, a minority in their own territory.

The post-Suharto government stopped the transmigration programme, but it could not stop waves of other Indonesians seeking to do business in West Papua, again tilting the economic scale to the disadvantage of less educated, largely illiterate Papuans.


With the continuing spontaneous in-migration of mostly Muslim traders, the population now is about 2.4 million, with about 1.4 to

1.5 million West Papuans, most of whom belong to churches such as the Christian Church of West Papua or the Indonesian Christian Church (GKI), a WCC member.


Autonomy has recently been granted to Papuans. However, trained bureaucrats and public servants still often come from outside the island, again unintentionally tending to disadvantage the position of the Papuans, note d Haire.


"All these emerging marginalization trends plus the serious concerns for education, healthcare, and economic livelihoods need to be addressed," he added.

Give and take

In response, social welfare minister Bakrie told the Living Letters team that the Indonesian central government had not failed West Papua.

"The central government actually gives five times more budget to West Papua than to the Javanese and other provinces because the Papuans are too backward," he said. "Other provinces are actually subsidizing Papua."

One problem, according to Bakrie, is that the new West Papua autonomous provincial government has to spend 80 percent of the funds given to them for facilities such as office buildings and equipment.


"Another problem arises when people more adept in trading and commerce come to West Papua and end up more economically well off," he said. He stressed that under democracy the government cannot stop people from other provinces doing business in the mineral and timber-rich province, which comprises one fifth of Indonesia's total area.

Despite what the social minister said was a substantial amount of funds the central government is pouring to West Papua, it appears that the central government is still getting more from the province than what it is giving back, says Dr Mathews George Chunakara, the WCC programme executive for Asia, who accompanied members of the Living Letters team to West Papua.

He cites the poor health care, low literacy rate, and poverty of the Papuans despite the gold, copper and timber that have been extracted and continue to be extracted in the province.


"This situation is a great cause for anxiety and anguish for the Christian Church of Papua because its members have yet to recover from the trauma of massive human rights violations" suffered under Suharto, he said.

Human rights violations in West Papua were also denounced by the WCC before the United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva in March 2008. "Papuans still are subject to torture, ill-treatment, arbitrary arrests and unfair trials by the Indonesian authorities," the UN body was told ( http://www.oikoumene.org/?id=5684 ). The WCC oral intervention blamed the "ongoing militarization" of the island for this "pattern of intimidation" against Papua's indigenous people.

Earlier on 23 July, the Living Letters team also met with the deputy foreign affairs minister Andri Hadi, more regretful of past government policies in Papua.


"We made a mistake in Papua. We acknowledge that justice has not been well-served there," he told the team, citing the transmigration policy that had been in place some 15 years under Suharto's regime.

But he assured that the central government is trying hard to empower local people so they can become leaders in their own communities and need not "import" outsiders to lead Papuans.


More information on the Living Letters visit to Indonesia:

http://overcomingviolence.org/en/iepc/living-letters-visits/indonesia.html

Photo gallery:

http://overcomingviolence.org/en/news-and-events/photos/visit-to-indonesia.html


High resolution versions of these pictures are available upon request.


WCC member churches in Indonesia:

http://www.oikoumene.org/?id=4671


Additional information:Juan Michel,+41 22 791 6153 +41 79 507 6363media@wcc-coe.org

The World Council of Churches promotes Christian unity in faith, witness and service for a just and peaceful world. An ecumenical fellowship of churches founded in 1948, today the WCC brings together 349 Protestant, Orthodox, Anglican and other churches representing more than 560 million Christians in over 110 countries, and works cooperatively with the Roman Catholic Church. The WCC general secretary is Rev. Dr Samuel Kobia, from the Methodist Church in Kenya. Headquarters: Geneva, Switzerland.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Richard Samuelson
Free West Papua Campaign, Oxford, UK.
www.freewestpapua.org


© Copyright by w@tchPAPUA

Top of Page

West Papua Churches
Latest Headlines
HEAD OF INDONESIAN POLICE IN WEST PAPUA WAS CRITIZED FOR A STATEMENT MADE ON INDIGENOUS DAY CELEBRATION IN WAMENA, WEST PAPUA
World Council of Churches tells Indonesian Government "WEST PAPUANS ARE TRAUMATIZED"
Rev Socratez Sofyan Yoman Give talk to all Anglican Bishops from Melanesian Countries and United Kingdom in London.
INDONESIA: RELIGIOUS TENSIONS RISE IN WEST PAPUA
WEST PAPUA: Voice of the West Papuan Church seeking protection for native West Papuans (Report by Revd Socratez Sofyan Yoman)