Turning
a new page in relations with Papua
Cillian Nolan ; Deputy
director of the Institute for Policy Analysis of Conflict, Jakarta
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JAKARTA POST, 19 Mei 2015
In his
fourth visit to Papua in just over a year, President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo last
weekend told Papuans that he wanted to “turn over a new page” in their
relations with Jakarta.
Offering
a pardon to five political prisoners and the easing of restrictions on visits
by foreign journalists, he seemed to be signaling a new openness in policy on
Papua.
But a
real change is going to require a far more coordinated approach.
Jokowi
called the release of the five prisoners “a first step” but said little about
the reasoning behind it or what would come next. The five were each serving
terms of between 20 years and life in prison for their role in a 2003 weapons
raid at the Jayawijaya Military Command (rights groups say only two were
actually involved).
Two
soldiers were killed in the raid and many more civilians in reprisals that
followed. Other political prisoners in Papua have made it clear that they
will not accept clemency because it would require an admission of guilt.
Those
close to the President say he is considering a broader amnesty drive, which
would not entail admitting wrongdoing and would be more widely welcomed.
If the
pardons were meant to signal a greater political openness, they came at time
when the police are clamping down on freedom of expression in Papua.
Their
primary target is the West Papua National Committee (KNPB), a
pro-independence group that occupies the radical fringe of activist groups.
Some of
its members have advocated violence as part of a strategy to turn Papua into
an “emergency zone” to attract more international attention. This is clearly
unacceptable, but nonviolent meetings are different.
In
recent weeks, the provincial police commander has said he is determined to
dismantle the KNPB. He has ordered district commanders to break up meetings —
public or private — of the organization, which he said were bent on
undermining Indonesia’s territorial integrity.
KNPB
demonstrations — some of which have turned violent — are routinely shut down
with force, such as when the police allegedly shot at six KNPB activists in
Yahukimo in March. On May 1, as KNPB supporters rallied in cities across
Papua, the police arrested at least 40.
If
Jokowi’s intention is to look forward rather than backward, one way to change
dynamics in Papua would be to commit to upholding basic freedoms of
expression and assembly while making it clear that violence (and incitement)
by NGOs, mass organizations and security forces alike will be prosecuted.
This
would mean sending a message that peaceful dissent will no longer be
considered makar (treason). Jokowi could also commit to improving incentive
structures to ensure the best-performing police are sent to Papua,
recognizing the challenges of policing there.
At the
same time, he would have to commit to dramatically stepped up accountability
for violence committed by security forces. One major omission from the trip
was any mention of an investigation into the shooting of four civilians
allegedly by security forces in Paniai on Dec. 8 last year, a key commitment
made by Jokowi on his last visit.
Ensuring
improved accountability is perhaps the single most important
confidence-building measure needed in Papua.
The
timing for Jokowi’s visit may have been influenced by the upcoming summit of
the Melanesian Spearhead Group. Its members are due to meet later this month
to consider an application for membership by an alliance of three
pro-independence lobby groups, including the KNPB.
Jakarta
has responded with a renewed diplomatic charm offensive in the Pacific in an
effort to block the move, including the President’s follow-on visit to Port
Moresby.
The real
challenge for Jakarta is to understand and address Papuan issues as part of
an overall strategy on Papua that includes everything from regional division
(pemekaran) to palm oil production.
Jokowi
told Aljazeera in an interview in Jayapura last week that “there are no
longer any problems in Papua” and thus there is nothing left to discuss.
A more productive
response would be to channel grievances in Papua into a domestic forum and
then pair this with a government agency with the authority to do something
about them.
Setting
up domestic communication channels has been the goal of the Papua Peace Network
since 2009, but Jokowi believes his own occasional visits are a suitable
replacement.
A new
page in Jakarta-Papua relations is going to require more productive
communication at many levels. It will require making good on Jokowi’s
commitment to ensuring Papuans have access to the same economic opportunities
as other Indonesians, that the security agencies uphold human rights while
responding to the region’s high levels of violence and that the millions of
dollars in special funding the two provinces receive are spent more
effectively.
Papuans
themselves will have to take responsibility for a large part of this. But
they need a more engaged partner. ●
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