‘Live
from Papua’ : Indonesia’s free-press black hole
Julia Suryakusuma ; The author of Julia’s Jihad
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JAKARTA
POST, 01 Oktober 2014
When you are a journalist, you know that following your journalistic
instincts sometimes means big trouble.
That’s why a slew of films have been made on this topic, including: The
Killing Fields (1984) a drama about the civil war in Cambodia; The China Syndrome
(1979), an American thriller about the dangers of nuclear power and Veronica
Guerin, a 2003 biographical Irish film about the drug trade in Dublin. These
three films were all based on true stories.
The characters of Dith Pran (Haing S. Ngor), Sydney Schanberg (Sam
Waterson), Kimberly Wells (Jane Fonda), Richard Adams (Michael Douglas) and
the eponymous character of Veronica Guerin (Cate Blanchett), all risked their
lives in their pursuit of the truth — the ultimate aim of investigative
journalism. For that Guerin also paid the ultimate price: She was murdered in
1996.
I reckon a film entitled Live
from Papua could also be made about the two French journalists, Valentine
Bourrat and Thomas Dandois, who have been detained in Papua since Aug. 6 this
year. They were arrested while filming the conditions in which the local
population lives. The trouble was, they were there on tourist visas.
So when the authorities caught them not long after they arrived, it
would have been pretty easy to hit them with immigration violations and
deport them.
A clear-cut case, huh?
So how come two months later they are still being detained, especially
after they admitted they were working without press visas and have
apologized? It turns out that because Bourrat and Dandois had contacted local
separatists, seeking to film their demands, they are facing the possibility
of subversion charges.
If brought to trial, they could face up to five years in jail and a
fine of up to Rp 500 million (US$41,000). Heavy stuff.
The Alliance of Indonesian Journalists (AJI) has condemned the
detention of the two French journalists. They say that it adds to the long
list of the failures of the government of President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono
when it comes to press freedom in Indonesia.
There is certainly precedent for this sort of thing.
In 2010, another French journalist, Baudoein Koening, was also kicked
out.
Unlike Bourrat and Dandois, he was legit: He came with a press visa.
His crime was filming a peaceful student demonstration in favor of autonomy.
According to Endy M. Bayuni, former editor-in-chief of The Jakarta
Post, it has always been very difficult to get permission to go to Papua as a
journalist.
Even when international news agencies like Agence France Press (AFP),
Reuters or Associated Press (AP) journalists apply, it can take more than a
year to get a visa.
This “go slow” approach enables the government to deny there is a ban
on foreign journalists visiting Papua.
Tourists on the other hand, can travel freely in Papua. No wonder so
many journalists come to Indonesia using a tourist visa. They just have to be
careful not to get caught.
Bourrat and Dandois were unlucky. They came at a time when tension and
violence were at a peak, with five separatist rebels shot dead in an exchange
of gunfire with the Indonesian military just a few days earlier.
The political transition was another factor, with local military
authorities exploiting the gap between the end of the Yudhoyono
administration and the start of that of Joko “Jokowi” Widodo.
Benjamin Ismail, head of the Asia-Pacific desk of the Paris-based
Reporters Without Borders (RWB) has a take on this.
“For the local authorities it might be the last opportunity to send a
big message internationally not only to foreign journalists but also to
human-rights activists, NGOs and even the UN, as they have tried to send
inspectors in the region,” says Ismail.
The reality is that there has been a foreign-media blackout imposed on
Papua whereby the central government has restricted the access of
journalists, activists, researchers, diplomats and aid workers ever since it
was annexed by Indonesia in 1963.
Yet this has not prevented Papua’s separatist movement from becoming
well known. Activists are jailed for raising the banned separatist flag, and
security forces are heavy-handed, engaging in abuse, violence and even
torture.
Despite Papua’s vast natural wealth, most Papuans live in extreme
poverty. Is it any wonder they are resentful and want independence?
Indonesia ranks 132 on the RWB press freedom index, lower than Thailand
(at 130), and Brunei (at 117). Ismail says that Indonesia’s rank would be
much higher if Papua were excluded. They do that for Hong Kong (60) and
Taiwan (50), which rank much higher than China (175).
Ismail points out that in 2006 Indonesia ratified the International
Covenant for Civil and Political Rights. It therefore must be implemented as
part of Indonesian law.
The covenant says you cannot discriminate regarding the entry of
foreign journalists, especially to sensitive regions where there are
allegations of human-rights abuse.
Ah well, it certainly isn’t the first time Indonesia has ratified an
international convention and then not applied it domestically.
After his expulsion, Koening wrote of his experience: “Why does
Indonesian democracy stop at Papua?” (The
Guardian, June 9, 2010).
The answer is that since its annexation, Papua was basically set up as
a colony. This has been the case under every single Indonesian government
since 1963.
Will things change with Jokowi? While campaigning in Papua, our
incoming president stated that the region’s development was a priority
program for his Cabinet and he was committed to implementing it immediately
after his inauguration on Oct. 20. He also promised to open Papua to
journalists.
Will it finally be possible then, to shoot Live from Papua? ●
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