Urgent message from National Papua Solidarity
I received this message in the mail from Brother Budi Hernawan OFM, Postdoctoral Fellow, Regulatory Institutions Network, ANU College of Asia and the Pacific, Australian National University.
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National Papua Solidarity (NAPAS) condemns the Papuan police decision
to ban the plan to organise public demonstration in Papua to
commemorate the transfer of administration of then West New Guinea (now
Papua) from UNTEA to Indonesia on 1 May 1963. This decision, which was
also explicitly endorsed by the Governor of Papua, breached the freedom
of expression and association which is enshrined by the 1945 Indonesian
Constitution. The ban also represents a reactive, paranoid and
discriminative approach of the Indonesian government that limits the
exercise of the civil and political rights of Papuans. Furthermore, the
decision would undermine the existing processes and initiatives to find a
peaceful solution for Papua conflicts. Finally, the ban to commemorate
the 50th anniversary event illustrates the Indonesian
government position that aims to monopolise the interpretation of Papuan
history for the sake of the state, not for Papuans.
According to the 1962 New York Agreement, the Netherlands transferred
the adminstration over West New Guinea territory to the United Nations
Temporary Executive Authority (UNTEA), which then passed it on to
Indonesia on 1 May 1963. The four main points of the New York Agreement
that we would like to highlight during this 50th anniversary are as follows:
- The transfer was limited to “full administration responsibility,” not the transfer of sovereignty (Article XIV);
- During the transition period, Indonesia held the primary duty to undertake “further intensification of the education of the people, of the combating of illiteracy, and of the advancement of their social, cultural and economic development” (Article XV);
- At the end of 1969, under the supervision of the UN Secretary General, the act of free choice would be held for Papuans in order to determine its political status “whether they wish to remain with Indonesia; or whether they wish to sever their ties with Indonesia” (Article XVIII);
- Indonesia “will honour those commitments” (Article XXII para 3) to guarantee fully the rights of Papuans, including the rights of free speech and freedom of movement and of assembly (Article XII para 1).
Reflecting this historic moment of our history, we regrettably
highlight the fact that Papuans were never invited to participate in any
process of the formulation and implementation of the New York Agreement
either by the Netherlands, Indonesia or the United Nations. We question
the extent by which the Indonesian government has fulfilled its duty to
provide high quality of education, health and other public services as
stipulated by the New York Agreement. Furthermore, Papuans’s rights of
free speech and freedom of movement and of assembly were not fully
guaranteed and protected as documented in various historical reports
around this transition period.
When both the Governor of Papua and the Chief of Police of Papua
deliberately ban any activities of Papuans to commemorate this historic
moment, history repeats itself. Papuans’s rights of free speech of free
speech and freedom of movement and of assembly were not protected and
guaranted then and now. Therefore, we question both the local
authorities in Papua and the national authorities of Indonesia whether
they treat Papuans as citizens or just inhabitants.
Regardless of the ban, in Jakarta, NAPAS will organise the Papuan
cultural night festival “One Papua, One Struggle” to mark this
anniversary. We are well aware that suppressing our memory of the past
not only denies our rights and freedom but more importantly, our
existence. The historical reports have already revealed that the current
and ongoing Papua conflicts are rooted in the very historical date, 1
May 1963, when UNTEA transferred Papua into Indonesia. But the launching
of “One Papua” has a deeper meaning. After fifty years Papuans remain
divided, not united, and have not developed a strong sense of solidarity
among the oppressed. Taking into account this reality, the cultural
night will be an opportunity for NAPAS to reflect on the ways to unify
Papua’s struggle for its liberation and to strengthen solidarity among
the oppressed Papuans as well as to mark 1 May as the day to unify
Papuan solidarity.
Media Contact: Zely Ariane, Chairperson of NAPAS (Mobile +62-8158126673
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NEWS REPORT – LINK - May 01, 2013
Jayapura & Sorong. The Indonesian government’s
celebration of the 50th anniversary of the integration of Papua on
Wednesday was overshadowed by pro-independence flags being raised across
the region and reports of a deadly shooting of separatist activists by
police.
Police allegedly killed two activists and arrested six others after
reporters witnessed them raising the Free Papua Organization’s Morning
Star flag on Jalan Raya Adibay, Biak, on Wednesday morning.
Please Share this. Thank You and God Bless.
Source: my.telegraph.co.uk
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