Komnas HAM Papua reports 65 alleged human rights violations in Papua during 2023

News Desk – Armed Conflict In The Land Of Papua 

14 December 2023

Jayapura, Jubi – Frits Ramandey, the Head of the Papua Office of the National Commission on Human Rights (Komnas HAM Papua), revealed that his office received 65 complaints concerning alleged human rights abuses in Papua from January to December 2023. This announcement came during the 75th World Human Rights Day commemoration in Jayapura, Papua Province, on Sunday, December 10, 2023.

Ramandey stated that out of the 65 complaints, 43 were related to alleged violations of civil and political Rights, predominantly involving armed violence.

“Meanwhile, the remaining 23 complaints were related to suspected violations of economic, social, and cultural Rights,” he added.

He further disclosed that as a consequence of the reported violence, 40 people died, 41 were injured, one was held captive, and one person went missing. These victims consisted of civilians (59), health workers (5), members of the West Papua National Liberation Army or TPNPB (10), Indonesian Military (TNI) soldiers (5), and police personnel (3).

“We are deeply concerned about the continuous string of violence. Our condolences go out to the victims,” he expressed.

Ramandey emphasized that the ongoing and repeated violence indicated flaws in handling the situation in Papua. He highlighted the significance of the Humanitarian Pause appeal made by several national figures in Jakarta on November 9, 2023, aimed at easing armed conflicts and improving the situation in Papua. Efforts to ease armed conflicts are essential for managing refugees and initiating peaceful dialogues in Papua to halt violence.

“Otherwise, the cycle of violence will only escalate,” he warned.

Komnas HAM Papua urged the TNI and police as well as the TPNPB to cease armed violence and seek legal and humanitarian approaches to resolve issues in Papua. They also called upon the provincial and municipal governments in Papua to prioritize human rights issues and create a violence-free living environment.

Additionally, Komnas HAM Papua stressed the importance of considering the rights of indigenous communities in the development of the newly formed province resulting from the division of Papua Province, in line with human rights values and principles. (*)

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4) Komnas HAM Papua voices concern over freedom suppression in Papua  

News Desk – Freedom Of Expression In The Land Of Papua 

14 December 2023

Jayapura, Jubi – Frits Ramandey, the Head of the Papua Office of the National Commission on Human Rights (Komnas HAM Papua), highlighted the consistent stifling of citizens’ freedoms by the state through police authorities in Papua. Speaking during the 75th World Human Rights Day commemoration in Jayapura on Sunday, December 10, 2023, Ramandey stressed that the values of freedom, equality, and justice for all in Papua are yet to be fully realized.

He emphasized that the freedom of expression and public opinion in Papua has consistently been and suppressed by the police, creating limited space for citizens to voice their aspirations.

“Human rights values must be respected, protected, and fulfilled by the state,” he stated.

Additionally, a report titled “Dong Penjarakan Tong Pu Suara dan Pikiran” (They Suppressed My Thoughts) by Pusaka Bentala Rakyat in 2022 documented 26 alleged cases of freedom of expression violations in Papua. These incidents led to three fatalities and 72 injuries, with 361 individuals arbitrarily detained. Among those arrested, 26 faced legal proceedings, and 18 were charged with subversion, facing potential life imprisonment.

Also speaking in the same event, Onan Kobogau, the Chair of the Student Executive Board of Timika University, reported that the Mimika Police forcefully disbanded the commemoration of World Human Rights Day in Timika, detaining 41 individuals. Kobogau and four others sustained injuries from police using firearm butts.

Jubi tried to obtain a response from the Mimika Police Chief Adj. Sr. Comr. I Gede Putra regarding the disbandment of the World Human Rights Day commemoration in Timika but to no avail as of Sunday. (*)

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Indonesia prepares 1 mlllion hectares for sugar factories in Papua

Antara | 12 December 2023

Indonesia prepares 1 mln hectares for sugar factories in Papua

Jakarta (ANTARA) – The government is preparing one million hectares of land in Papua for investors interested in building sugar factories to help Indonesia achieve sugar self-sufficiency, Agriculture Minister Andi Amran Sulaiman said on Tuesday.

“With one million hectares of land, we can attract a lot of companies. One sugar factory may need 20 to 40 hectares of land with a capacity of 12,000 tons of cane per day (TCD),” Sulaiman said after a meeting with President Joko Widodo (Jokowi) in Jakarta.

He added that the government will not limit the number of domestic and foreign investors planning to build sugar factories in Indonesia.

“Yes, it is included in our sugar self-sufficiency plan. We can reach the target if we can build 20 to 30 sugar factories with a capacity of 12,000 TCD,” Sulaiman continued.

He estimated that up to Rp3 trillion (around US$192.7 million) would be needed to build one sugar factory with a capacity of 12,000 TCD.

Claiming that there are companies that have started planting sugarcane in Papua, Sulaiman said that Indonesia’s journey toward sugar self-sufficiency will still take a long time since sugarcane is an annual plant whose seedlings need to be cultivated in stages.

“Sugarcane is an annual plant with several processing stages. It also requires pure and superior seedlings from the beginning of the process,” he added.

Besides the need to adapt to the local agricultural climate, the stages of planting sugarcane seedlings can take more than three years, Sulaiman said.

He added that, to boost sugar production, sugar factories in Papua are expected to be built using modern technology.

“In India, sugar production can reach 150 tons per hectare, whereas in Indonesia it can only reach 60–70 tons. The most important thing is the high-quality seedlings, which can produce a minimum yield of 100 tons per hectare,” he disclosed.

12 Dec 2023

Fight for Climate Justice! Free West Papua!

On the Global Day of Action for Climate Justice, the Merdeka West Papua Support Network joins all climate justice activists worldwide and stands together at a pivotal moment in our shared pursuit of a sustainable, healthy and better planet and future.

Central to this movement is the essential recognition and urgent reminder that climate justice cannot be achieved while lands are occupied, Indigenous Peoples are oppressed, and fundamental human rights are trampled upon.

The demand for climate justice is particularly stark in West Papua, a region abundant in ecological diversity and cultural heritage, yet marred by the grips of exploitation and occupation.

Occupied West Papua

Indigenous peoples in West Papua suffer from a never-ending string of human rights abuses, stemming from decades of political and economic conflict that have loomed over the region since the 1960’s. 

In a sham referendum ironically called “The Act of Free Choice” (1969), the military orchestrated the formal annexation of West Papua into Indonesia—a move widely condemned for its lack of legitimacy and considered an illegal land grab. This so-called plebiscite involved a minuscule fraction of the West Papuan populace handpicked by the military to vote for integration with Indonesia under duress, facing the threat of violence.

Subsequent decades saw the Indonesian government forcibly changing the region’s demography through its transmigration program. The government drew thousands of people from other parts of the country to become settlers in the area, which resulted in a dwindling population of Indigenous Papuans on their ancestral lands, death tolls, and massive displacement.

A Culture of Impunity and Widespread Human Rights Violations

According to reports, patterns of violations continue to differ from other parts of Indonesia strongly showing the highest cases of extrajudicial killings, arbitrary arrests, and criminalization.

Persistent attacks against human rights, Indigenous Peoples and environmental defenders and political activists contiue.  For instance, Papuan activist Victor Yeimo faced an extended sentence and three university students were convicted of treason.

Furthermore, a culture of impunity abounds and allows those in power to evade accountability for enforced disappearance and extra-judicial killings. Case in point: Despite fatally shooting Papuan men Eden Bebari and Ronny Wandik in 2020, military members not only received light sentences but were later acquitted this year.

The violence and legal dead-ends are usually justified by associating the slain victims with freedom fighters. As of September 2023, armed clashes and operations by security forces led to the internal displacement of a total of 76,228 people, predominantly Indigenous Papuans.

West Papua’s Integral Role in Battling the Climate Crisis

The state forest in West Papua spans a staggering 38.15 million hectares (94.27 million acres). Together with Papua New Guinea, it stands as the third-largest repository of ancestral tropical forests globally, trailing behind only the Amazon and the Congo.

Unfortunately, roughly 8.13 million hectares (20.09 million acres) of customary forests in Papua are controlled by companies and investors, a reality facilitated by the government and, essentially, protected by the military. Thus, the ancestral forests endure repetitive and reckless logging, without concern for environmental impacts.

The ongoing deforestation contradicts the claims of the current administration, led by Jokowi government, professing support for forest conservation efforts. The government prioritizes bolstering ties with foreign investors and multinational companies, rather than engaging and consulting with indigenous people—who rightfully hold custodianship and possess the knowledge needed to safeguard the forest.

The exact numbers vary, but recent research shows that nearly half of the Earth’s land is under the governance of indigenous communities, supporting roughly 80% of the planet’s biodiversity. This underscores the effective role of indigenous communities as longstanding defenders of nature across generations.

Moreover, the forests situated on indigenous territories globally store a total of 37.7 billion tons of carbon, significantly contributing to stabilizing the Earth’s climate. In West Papua, specifically, a remarkable array of diverse and unique ecosystems exists—from glaciers, alpine meadows, cloud forests, and karst lakes, to savannahs, mangrove forests, coral reefs, and more.

Urgent Need for Solidarity and Action

The tropical forests of West Papua embody both ecological wonders and untapped potential in combating climate change. However, their boundless capabilities remain suppressed amid the grip of military fascism and corporate greed. Only with the liberation of West Papua can we unlock the region’s true potential, leveraging its capacity to safeguard biodiversity, and forge a sustainable future for generations.

Upholding the West Papuan’s and all Indigenous Peoples right to self-determination means taking bold actions for sustainable environmental stewardship. By confronting the systemic injustices faced by indigenous communities and the imperialist encroachment of rich countries over indigenous land and resources, we can address intrinsic link between climate justice, human rights, and liberation.

The liberation of West Papua is a global imperative in our shared pursuit of justice. As we mark this Global Day of Action for Climate Justice, let us recommit ourselves to amplify our call: Climate Justice is Indigenous Justice! Papua Merdeka!

Stop the attacks on indigenous peoples!

Fight for our rights to self-determination!

Free West Papua!

Presidential hopeful Anies Baswedan embraces political Islam: A benefit or blunder?

CNN Indonesia – December 15, 2023

Jakarta — Presidential election ticket number 1, Anies Baswedan and Muhaimin Iskandar (AMIN) have hooked in Islamic groups and religious leaders in the 2024 presidential election contest.

AMIN National Campaign Team (Timnas) Co-Captain Yusuf Martak has said that former Jakarta governor Baswedan and running mate National Awakening Party (PKB) Chairperson Iskandar have signed an integrity pact with the Ijtima Ulama (an assembly if Islamic clerics) forum.

In addition to this, not long ago AMIN also received support from Ustaz (Islamic cleric) Abdul Somad — who openly denigrates non-Muslims as heretics and has been banned from at least six countries — following a meeting with Baswedan in Riau.

AMIN’s move to embrace Islamic political groups, particularly by signing the integrity pack, has been highlighted by non-government organisations (NGOs). The Commission for Missing Persons and Victims of Violence

(Kontras) for example believes that this contradicts AMIN’s vision and mission and its narrative on freedom of expression and the resolution of past gross human rights violations.

The reason being that under the pact AMIN is required to pursue a number of things, one of which is a moral (akhlak) revolution to “protect society from being undermined by life styles and damaging ideas that conflict with decency and other norms that apply in Indonesian society and conflict with [the state ideology of] Pancasila”.

In addition to this, AMIN is also required to consistently implement Provisional People’s Consultative Assembly (MPRS) Decree Number XXV/1966 (TAP MPRS) on the prohibition against spreading Marxist, Leninist and communist ideas. Yet this decree is seen as the cause of discrimination and restrictions against the victims of the 1995-96 mass killings.

Careful calculation

Andalas University political observer Asrinaldi is convinced that AMIN has carefully calculated the benefits and consequences of signing the integrity pact.

Asrinaldi says that there are many points in the pact that conflict with moderate and liberal Islamic groups who have a high level of respect for civil liberties. AMIN could well lose mass support from this segment.

On the other hand, said Asrinaldi, support from conservative Islamic groups will strengthen.

“The issue of LGBTQ [Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender and Queer], the issue of deviance, sexual orientation, is of concern to the Islamic community and perhaps it will be of more value for the AMIN ticket [to get support from conservative groups and political Islam]”, Asrinaldi told CNN Indonesia on Thursday December 15.

“AMIN is very confident that this will be able to boost his electability, this is of course its commitment in order to be able get support from Islamic groups”, he continued.

Moreover, said Asrinaldi, many of these Islamic political groups are disappointed with Greater Indonesia Movement Party (Gerindra) Chairperson Prabowo Subianto following the 2019 presidential elections, who is running as presidential ticket number 2 along with vice presidential candidate President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo’s eldest son Gibran Rakabuming Raka.

For the record, the integrity pact signed by AMIN no longer includes the sentence “protecting society from being undermined by life styles and damaging ideas that conflict with decency and other norms that apply in Indonesian society such as LGBTQ+ [Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer Plus], prostitution, gambling, liquor, drugs and other social diseases”.

The point on a moral revolution was changed to read: “Carrying out a moral revolution in all sectors of life to build a nation that is religious, responsible and honest (berakhlakul karimah) for the sake of making Indonesia pious and blessed by protecting the society from being undermined by lifestyles and damaging ideas that conflict with decency and other norms that apply in Indonesian society or conflict with Pancasila”.

Disappointed with Prabowo

Many Islamic political groups supported Prabowo in the 2019 elections when he faced off against Widodo. These groups even held demonstrations in front of the Election Supervisory Board (Bawaslu) in Jakarta on May

21-22 because they could not accept that had Prabowo lost the election.

During these often violent actions, nine people were killed.

Following this however, Prabowo joined Widodo’s cabinet by accepting the position of Defense Minister. Asrinaldi says it was this that disappointed the Islamic groups that had supported him and would potentially not support Prabowo if he ran for the presidency again.

“The Ulama [Islamic clerics] are more supportive of AMIN, this position is because Prabowo is identified with Jokowi in the 2024 elections. This will be a benefit for AMIN”, he said.

Asrinaldi concedes that in several regions the conservative Islamic groups and the Islamic clerics are split between Baswedan and Prabowo.

Although Asrinaldi is convinced that the number is not great.

“This is usual yeah, because of course there are ulama that were historically in the past were close to Prabowo and are communicating [with him] to this day”, he said.

“I think this polarisation will also occur in East Java but won’t be a problem, but generally of course they supports Anies more, yes, in the context of ulama support”, he added.

Exposit Strategic political analyst Arif Susanto meanwhile is convinced that the move taken by AMIN in hooking in conservative Islamic groups is a realistic one if the AMIN ticket wants reach the second round of the presidential election.

Susanto explained that AMIN’s move may indeed undermine votes from moderate and liberal Islamic groups. Nevertheless, there are also many moderate Islamic groups that would still be in agreement with the narrative of several points in the Ijtima Ulama integrity pact, especially in relation to LGBTQ.

However, said Susanto, it should be recognised that these groups are nto very significant in garnering votes, because they are still smaller in number than the conservative groups.

In addition to this, the conservative Islamic groups also tend to be more loyal in determining voters’ choices in presidential elections, compared with moderate and liberal Islamic groups. So, he said, grabbing the vote of conservative Islamic groups is more profitable.

“So these contradictions can be explained if indeed the target is what I think is realistic. The initial target is to get into the second round”, said Susanto.

Susanto stated that AMIN must indeed take a position of attracting the voter base that is its priority. According to Susanto, it would be difficult if AMIN wants to hook in two different groups at once.

He said that the groups around PKB and its constituent base the moderate Islamic mass organisation Nahdlatul Ulama (NU) are not united in supporting AMIN because their electoral support is split due to Coordinating Minister for Security, Politics and Legal Affairs Mahfud MD, the vice presidential candidate running under ticket number 3 who has strong ties with NU.

Moreover, AMIN is also backed by the conservative Islamic based Justice and Prosperity Party (PKS). Therefore according to Susanto, it makes more sense if AMIN plays a narrative that is in line with the PKS and conservative Islamic groups if it wants to garner votes.

“The strength of this group is that they’re loyal. In an election what is clear is that the contestation will be won by the larger base of support. This is beneficial. Because they have loyalty”, Susanto explained. (yla/pmg)

Editor’s note: This article was corrected on December 15 at 0.30 am to add an explanation on the points about the moral revolution in the integrity pact and the changes made to the original pact submitted by the Ijtima Ulama forum.

[Translated by James Balowski. The original title of the article was “Kelompok Islam Politik di Barisan AMIN, Perkuat atau Blunder?”.]

Source:

https://www.cnnindonesia.com/nasional/20231215095304-617-1037588/kelompok-islam-politik-di-barisan-amin-perkuat-atau-blunder —————————————————————

Poll race highlights fears for Indonesian democracy

Edward Aspinall

Indonesia’s political mystery of the year – which candidate Joko ‘‘Jokowi’’ Widodo would back in February’s election – was solved in October when a court ruling opened the way for the president’s 36-year-old son, Gibran Rakabuming Raka, to stand as the running mate of Defence Minister Prabowo Subianto.

As well as setting up a dynastic succession of sorts, the pairing was the culmination of a reconciliation between two former rivals.

More important, the decision brings into focus the weakening of core democratic institutions under Jokowi’s presidency.

Jokowi’s rejection of Ganjar Pranowo, from his own PDI-P party, in favour of a ticket uniting Gibran with Prabowo signalled the tightening grip of dynasties on Indonesian politics and the weakening of parties.

The controversial Constitutional Court decision that cleared the way for Gibran to run was a sad coda to the story of a once great institution. In the years after its founding in 2003, the court was widely viewed as an important check on the executive and a major achievement of Indonesia’s reformasi movement.

But the decision to allow Gibran to run was a blatant exercise in political favouritism. The court essentially amended a legal clause prohibiting candidates under 40 from running by writing an exception – for candidates with experience as heads of regions – which was tailor-made for Gibran, the mayor of Surakarta, the central Java town where his father also began his political career.

Adding an element of farce, the court decision overruled a finding handed down that day, following intervention by the chief justice, who happened to be Jokowi’s brother-in-law.

Other key checking institutions have suffered a similar fate under Jokowi. The Corruption Eradication Agency (KPK), once a beacon of independence and probity in a tainted law enforcement landscape, has increasingly become an instrument of the executive. Under Jokowi, the KPK has played a major role in prosecuting senior politicians in ways that consolidate the president’s coalition.

More worrying are signs the integrity of Indonesia’s elections may be threatened. Most observers agree on a democratic decline since Jokowi was elected in 2014.

His presidency has featured increased use of coercion against government opponents – notably Islamists, but also liberal critics – targeted intervention in political parties, selective use of criminal prosecutions against bothersome coalition partners and reactivation of the military in civilian life.

Yet, there was long a consensus among observers that, no matter how problematic aspects of Indonesian democracy became, the open and competitive character of elections remained untouched.

That consensus is now challenged. Stories are accumulating of petty steps by bureaucrats and security officials in Indonesia’s regions to obstruct Prabowo’s opponents and mobilise in favour of him and Gibran.

While these stories still need to be treated with caution, and are not unprecedented in democratic Indonesia, such interventions have, in the past, mainly affected local elections.

Adding to the unease is that 271 of Indonesia’s regional government heads, including governors in many of the most populous provinces, are central government appointees rather than elected politicians – at least until regional elections late next year.

A Prabowo-Gibran victory appears the most likely outcome in 2024’s presidential election.

Jokowi’s tacit endorsement counts for a lot. The president remains extremely popular, with approval ratings of about 75 per cent. Many Indonesians appreciate his Suharto-lite focus on economic development without the most authoritarian elements of Suharto’s rule, supplemented by growing allocations of social assistance.

This is why Prabowo has reinvented himself as Jokowi’s No.1 public admirer and courted his son as his running mate.

Their pairing puts Prabowo, a man with a deeply authoritarian past, closer to the presidency. He was once Suharto’s son-in-law and the leader of a hardline faction of the military during the final years of that regime.

Observers of Indonesian politics debate whether Prabowo’s experience of compromise as a minister under Jokowi might have tempered his authoritarian instincts.

Under Jokowi, Prabowo has largely ditched the fiery populist rhetoric with which he tried to win the presidency in 2014 and 2019.

Regardless, it does not bode well for Indonesia that a new president with an authoritarian pedigree is likely to take office after his predecessor oversaw the capture of previously independent control institutions, transformed the state apparatus into an instrument to pursue political advantage and narrowed the space for opposition.

Edward Aspinall is professor of politics and head of the Department of Political and Social Change at the Coral Bell School of Asia Pacific Affairs, The Australian National University. This article is part of a series from East Asia Forum (www. eastasiaforum.org) at the Crawford School of Public Policy in the ANU’s College of Asia and the Pacific.

US names 2 Indonesians as ‘perpetrators’ of rights abuses

BenarNews staff
2023.12.08

Washington

The U.S. State Department named two Indonesians – including a candidate for the House of Representatives in next year’s election – among its international list of “perpetrators of human rights abuses” on Friday.

The list, released to mark the 75th Anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights on Dec. 10, named Hartomo, a former military officer who is seeking office in the Feb. 14 election, and Terbit Rencana Perangin-Angin, a former regent of Langkat in North Sumatra province.

Hartomo, who goes by one name, “is being designated for his involvement in gross violations of human rights, namely extrajudicial killing,” the State Department said.

He held the highest rank, lieutenant colonel, of a group of soldiers accused of killing Theys Eluay, chairman of the Papua Presidium Council, in November 2001, according to media reports.

Human Rights Watch reported that the soldiers were convicted in 2003, but Hartomo was later promoted to head up the nation’s military intelligence agency. https://www.hrw.org/news/2018/01/26/us-should-not-be-rehabilitating-indonesias-abusive-special-forces

A member of former President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono’s Democratic Party, Hartomo is seeking to represent Central Java in the legislature.

Lt. Col. Hartomo (left), Capt. Rionardo, 1st Sgt. Asrisal and Pvt. Achmad Zulfahmi hear the indictment against them at the Surabaya Military Court in Indonesia, Jan. 3, 2003. [AFP]

Terbit Rencana “is being designated for his involvement in gross violations of human rights, namely the forced labor of boys and men,” the news release said.

In May 2022, 10 soldiers were named as suspects in the alleged torture deaths of at least six people who had been kept in two cage-like rooms in Terbit Rencana’s house in North Sumatra province. https://www.benarnews.org/english/news/indonesian/cage-probe-05232022151449.html

The iron-barred rooms were discovered four months earlier when the Corruption Eradication Agency searched the house and found 27 people inside the cells. Terbit Rencana, who was arrested at that time, said his residence housed drug addicts who were undergoing rehabilitation.

Police said 656 people had been held in the two cages since 2010.

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Indonesia excerpt  from  https://www.state.gov/promoting-accountability-in-support-of-the-75th-anniversary-of-the-universal-declaration-of-human-rights/

Promoting Accountability in Support of the 75th Anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
FACT SHEET

OFFICE OF THE SPOKESPERSON

DECEMBER 8, 2023

On Human Rights Day and the 75th Anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the Department of State, in coordination with the Departments of the Treasury and Homeland Security, is taking actions to promote accountability for perpetrators of human rights abuses.  State is taking steps to impose visa restrictions on four individuals pursuant to Section 7031(c) of the Annual Appropriations Act, 11 individuals pursuant to Section 212(a)(3)(C) of the Immigration and Nationality Act, designating one People’s Republic of China (PRC) individual pursuant to the Uyghur Human Rights Policy Act (UHRPA), and designating two ISIS-DRC leaders pursuant to Executive Order (E.O.) 13224, as amended. On Human Rights Day and the 75th Anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the Department of State, in coordination with the Departments of the Treasury and Homeland Security, is taking actions to promote accountability for perpetrators of human rights abuses.  State is taking steps to impose visa restrictions on four individuals pursuant to Section 7031(c) of the Annual Appropriations Act, 11 individuals pursuant to Section 212(a)(3)(C) of the Immigration and Nationality Act, designating one People’s Republic of China (PRC) individual pursuant to the Uyghur Human Rights Policy Act (UHRPA), and designating two ISIS-DRC leaders pursuant to Executive Order (E.O.) 13224, as amended.  Treasury is designating 20 individuals pursuant to E.O. 13818, which builds upon and implements the Global Magnitsky Human Rights Accountability Act, as well as E.O. 13667E.O. 13413 as amended by E.O. 13671, and E.O. 13664.  These actions also implement the Presidential Memorandum on Promoting Accountability for Conflict-Related Sexual Violence.  Homeland Security is also adding three PRC-based companies to the Uyghur Forced Labor Protection Act (UFLPA) Entity list.

….

Indonesia

State is designating two individuals pursuant to Section 7031(c).

Terbit Rencana Pergangin-Angin, Former Regent of Langkat, Indonesia. He is being designated for his involvement in gross violations of human rights, namely the forced labor of boys and men.

Hartomo, Former Official of the Indonesian National Armed Forces. He is being designated for his involvement in gross violations of human rights, namely extrajudicial killing.

———————– — etanetanetanetanetanetanetanetanetanetanetanetan Support ETAN. Donate now: https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/etan009 John M. Miller etan@igc.orgCoordinator, East Timor and Indonesia Action Network (ETAN)PO Box 1663, NY, NY 10035-1663 USAPhone: (917)690-4391 www.etan.orgTwitter/Instagram: @etan009 Send a blank e-mail message to info@etan.org to for information on other ETAN electronic resources on East Timor and Indonesia etanetanetanetanetanetanetanetanetanetanetanetan

Indonesia has third highest level of money politics in the world:

Research

CNN Indonesia – November 30, 2023

Jakarta — Jakarta Syarif Hidayatullah State Islamic University (UIN) political science professor Burhanuddin Muhtadi says that Indonesia is one of the countries with the highest level of money politics in the world.

According to Muhtadi, Indonesia is only outdone by two countries in Africa, namely Uganda and Benin. Muhtadi made this statement during his inauguration speech as professor of political science at the Jakarta UIN on Wednesday November 29.

“This makes Indonesia the country with the third highest level of money politics in the world. Only being outdone by Uganda and Benin”, he said.

Muhtadi said this was revealed from the results of research he conducted during the last two presidential elections in 2014 and 2019. The result was that around 33 percent or 62 million out of a total of 187 million voters included on the permanent voter list (DPT) were involved in the practice of buying and selling votes.

This was also revealed in data from his scientific research project titled “Votes For Sale: Clientelism, Democratic Deficit, and Institution”, which was released during his inauguration.

Muhtadi added that the voters that were mostly targeted were sympathisers of political parties which account for some 15 percent.

Meanwhile the remaining 85 percent were not targeted as they are considered unreliable because they are “floating” or swing voters.

“They are reluctant to target floating voters because they are seen as accepting the packages offered but their electoral choice cannot be guaranteed”, he said.

Muhtadi said that although money politics only contributes to 10 percent of the vote, this number is considered quite effective especially in the context of legislative elections and when competing with fellow candidates from the same party.

“The 10 percent figure can be the determining factor in winning. The average margin of victory to defeat a rival is only 1.6 percent. So, [the figure of 10 percent] can make the differences between a candidate winning or losing”, he said. (thr/bmw)

[Translated by James Balowski. The original title of the article was

“Pakar: Politik Uang di Indonesia Tertinggi Ketiga di Dunia”.]

Collaboration key to rediscovery of egg-laying mammal in Papua’s Cyclops Mountains

5) Mongabay Series: Indonesian Forests

Collaboration key to rediscovery of egg-laying mammal in Papua’s Cyclops Mountains

by Basten Gokkon on 28 November 2023

  • Collaboration between international and local researchers, conservation authorities, NGOs and Indigenous groups was key to the success of an expedition in Indonesia’s Cyclops Mountains that uncovered new sightings of a rare egg-laying mammal and multiple unidentified species.
  • “I think the trust between the expedition team and the community was important in the success of the expedition, and a lack of trust may have contributed to former searches being less successful,” said University of Oxford researcher James Kempton who proposed the expedition in 2019.
  • The highlight of the expedition was camera-trap images of Attenborough’s long-beaked echidna, distantly related to the platypus, which scientists hadn’t seen since 1961 and which they’d long feared was extinct.
  • The expedition also found the Mayr’s honeyeater, a bird scientists haven’t seen since 2008; an entirely new genus of tree-dwelling shrimp; countless new species of insects; and a previously unknown cave system.

JAKARTA — Researchers have credited a strong spirit of collaboration for the success of an expedition in Indonesia’s Cyclops Mountains that uncovered new sightings of a rare egg-laying mammal and multiple unidentified species.

The highlight of the recently published findings was camera-trap images of Attenborough’s long-beaked echidna (Zaglossus attenboroughi), which, like the distantly related but better-known platypus, is one of just a handful of egg-laying mammals in existence. The species hadn’t been sighted by scientists since an initial specimen collected in 1961, and for decades was thought to have gone extinct.

Much of the success of the four-week-long Expedition Cyclops has been attributed to the collaboration between international and local researchers, conservation authorities, NGOs, and the Indigenous groups who have persistently protected the region’s biodiversity against external threats.

“We built a strong relationship with the community of Yongsu Sapari, who own part of the northern Cyclops, over three years,” James Kempton, a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Oxford who first proposed the expedition in 2019, told Mongabay in an email.

“I think the trust between the expedition team and the community was important in the success of the expedition, and a lack of trust may have contributed to former searches being less successful,” he said.

The headline finding was undoubtedly that of the long-beaked echidna, named after celebrated British nature broadcaster David Attenborough. Echidnas, of which there are four species, all endemic to the island of New Guinea, are tricky to spot because they’re active at night, hide in burrows, and are usually pretty shy. This particular long-beaked echidna has only been seen in the Cyclops Mountains and since its description has been categorized as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List.

In addition to the producing new records of the echidna, the expedition also found other rare and potentially new-to-science species, including Mayr’s honeyeater (Ptiloprora mayri), a bird scientists haven’t seen since 2008; an entirely new genus of tree-dwelling shrimp; countless new species of insects; and a previously unknown cave system.

The team also collected more than 75 kilograms (165 pounds) of rock samples for geological analysis, which they say should give them further insight into the creation of the Cyclops Mountains.

“It represents one of the earliest explored mountain ranges in Indonesian New Guinea, and lies next to the major urban centers of Papua, and yet Expedition Cyclops still rediscovered Attenborough’s long-beaked echidna there, and discovered many new species of insect, two new species of frog, and a new genus of shrimp that lives on land,” Kempton noted.

Covering some 31,400 hectares (77,600 acres) in northeastern Papua, Indonesia’s easternmost region, the Cyclops Mountains encompass primary and secondary dryland forests and provide water to inhabitants of the surrounding region. The coastal range has been designated as a nature reserve and is dominated by two main peaks, Rara and Dafonsoro.

The nature and biodiversity of the Cyclops Mountains also have cultural significance for the community of Yongsu Sapari that has lived in the region for 18 generations and holds the land as sacred. Community beliefs hold that the mountains are stewarded by a female spirit who can take the form of a tree-kangaroo.

The region’s wildlife has also inspired a unique conflict-resolution mechanism in the community: when there’s a disagreement, the rival parties split up into groups, one setting off to search for an echidna up in the mountains, and the other heading out to sea to find a marlin. Because both creatures are so elusive that it can take years or even a whole generation to spot one, the conflict effectively remains on hold for that time. And once they’ve spotted the animals, that marks the end of the conflict and a return to peaceful relationships in the community.

Malcolm Kobak, a co-founder of the Indonesian NGO Yayasan Pelayanan Papua Nenda (YAPPENDA), said the expedition team first visited the Yongsu Sapari in 2020 and continued to regularly visit the community and the forest to understand their culture, their concerns for the Cyclops, and their desires.

“This has resulted in us collaborating with the community not just for the expedition but for ongoing conservation efforts,” Kobak told Mongabay. “The village are even helping us by propagating tree seedlings for our tree nursery, eventually to be planted in deforested areas on the southern slopes of the cyclops.

“We simply could not have done the expedition without their support and blessing. They were excellent guides who helped determine where to place cameras, build camps, find clean water, etc.,” he added.

The researchers say they hope the expedition’s recent findings will boost existing efforts to protect the Cyclops from encroaching environmental damages, such as poaching and deforestation, and social challenges, like internal migration.

The rapid growth in the Papua region’s urban centers, including the cities of Jayapura, Weana and Abepura, has attracted highlanders from a neighboring mountain range seeking economic opportunities. In 2015, for instance, nearly half the population of Jayapura, the capital of Papua province, were permanent migrants from elsewhere in Papua, according to the Indonesian government’s statistics agency. These outsiders have been blamed for logging the forest and using fire to clear land for agriculture, encroaching on terrain that communities like the Yongsu Sapari consider sacred.

“The Cyclops Mountains symbolize the extraordinary biodiversity of New Guinea, the world’s most biodiverse island, and suggest what is yet to be discovered there, let alone rediscovered,” Kempton said.

“They represent what must be protected in the provinces of Tanah Papua, provinces over which 83% of old growth rainforest is still intact and which we must protect before disasters like those in the Amazon and the Congo,” he added.

Basten Gokkon is a senior staff writer for Indonesia at Mongabay. Find him on 𝕏 @bgokkon.

See related:

PMKRI St Thomas Aquina representing students voices support for humanitarian pause in Papua 

News Desk – Armed Conflict In Papua

 29 November 2023

Jayapura, Jubi – The PMKRI St. Thomas Aquinas, representing the Indonesian Catholic Student Association, voiced solidarity with the call for a humanitarian pause to alleviate the ongoing armed conflict in Papua.

During the National Study Conference in Denpasar, Bali, activists from 46 PMKRI branches across Indonesia joined in supporting this crucial initiative.

Tri Natalia Urada, Chairperson of the PMKRI ST Thomas Aquinas Central Board, affirmed the organization’s commitment to social justice and solidarity.

“We support the humanitarian pause as an effort to prevent more casualties in the Land of Papua,” she said, highlighting the dire need for peace efforts amidst escalating conflicts.

Tri also highlighted the distressing impact of law enforcement and military operations on civilians caught in conflict zones, specifying regions affected by armed conflicts.

“Armed conflicts in Papua are spread across Nduga Regency, Intan Jaya Regency, Bintang Mountains Regency, Yahukimo Regency, Puncak Regency, and Maybrat Regency,” Tri emphasized.

The plea for a humanitarian pause aims to mitigate the ongoing turmoil and pave the way for constructive dialogue towards a lasting resolution. PMKRI condemned all acts of armed conflict, urging an immediate halt and advocating for neutral mediation to address the core issues in Papua.

Meanwhile, Thalia Ohoitimur, Chairperson of the PMKRI St. Efrem of Jayapura Branch, reiterated the urgency of a Humanitarian Pause to address pressing humanitarian crises.

“We of the PMKRI Jayapura Branch have acted by sending books, clothes, stationery, milk, and baby food to the displaced people in Bintang Mountains Regency,” she said. (*)

Candidate profile: Prabowo Subianto 

Published in The Jakarta Post 24/11/23

Prabowo Subianto Djojohadikusumo, 72, is a retired Army lieutenant general, a businessman and the incumbent Defense Minister (2019-present). Due to his proximity to power throughout his military career, he entered politics in 2004 to pursue his dream of becoming the nation’s president.

He cofounded the Gerindra Party in 2008 and as its chairman (2014-present), he made two unsuccessful bids for the presidency in 2014 and 2019. Prabowo accepted his party’s nomination on Aug. 12, 2022 to run for a third time.

 He registered as a presidential candidate on Oct. 25, 2023, with the backing of the Gerindra-led Onward Indonesia Coalition (KIM), which groups several pro-government parties of the ruling coalition. What is his background? Prabowo was born in Jakarta on Oct. 17, 1951, the third of four children to one of the most powerful families in Indonesia. His father, Soemitro Djojohadikusumo, was a prominent economist and politician who held several ministerial posts under presidents Sukarno and Soeharto. His mother, Dona Marie Siregar, was a housewife who studied surgical nursing in the Netherlands.

His grandfather, Margono Djojohadikusumo, was the founder of Bank Negara Indonesia (BNI) and the first head of the Supreme Advisory Council, which was disbanded in 2003. Prabowo spent most of his childhood overseas due to his father’s involvement in the Revolutionary Government of the Republic of Indonesia (PRRI), which was set up in 1958 in opposition to the Sukarno administration. As a result, Prabowo is fluent in French, German, English and Dutch.

 Prabowo joined the military, then called the Indonesian Armed Forces (ABRI), shortly after he graduated from the Armed Forces Academy (AKABRI) in 1974. He served with ABRI for 28 years before he was dishonorably discharged following the collapse of Soeharto’s New Order regime in 1998. He married Soeharto’s daughter Siti Hediati Hariyadi in 1983, but they separated soon after the autocratic president’s ouster. 

The couple have a son, Ragowo “Didit” Hediprasetyo Djojohadikusumo, a fashion designer based in Paris, France. He returned to Indonesia in 2001 from self-exile in Jordan and followed in the footsteps of his businessman brother, Hashim Djojohadikusumo. Prabowo set up pulp and paper company Nusantara Energy and later founded the Nusantara Group, a conglomerate with businesses in the palm oil, coal and gas, mining, agriculture and fishery industries. 

He tried his luck but failed at the Golkar Party national convention in 2004 to select a presidential nominee. Four years later, he cofounded Gerindra and was nominated as the running mate of Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P) chair Megawati Soekarnoputri’s presidential bid in 2009, but also lost. He was elected as Gerindra chairman in 2014. What does he stand for? As a member of the ruling class, Prabowo was in a privileged position to pursue his dreams.

 He had an illustrious military career before it came to an abrupt end in 1998. Just two years after he joined the Army, Prabowo was recruited into the Sandhi Yudha division of Kopassandha (Special Forces Command), the precursor to the Army’s Special Forces (Kopassus). He was sent to then-East Timor in 1976 to quell the secessionist movement there. Prabowo became commander to the airborne infantry battalion of the Army Strategic Reserves Command (Kostrad) in 1987 after completing a Special Forces Officer Course at Fort Benning in the United States. 

He returned to the Army’s special forces in 1993 to lead a unit running clandestine operations and eventually became Kopassus general commander in 1996. In March 1998, Prabowo was appointed as Kostrad commander, a position previously held by Soeharto, his former father-in-law.

Prabowo was removed from this position soon after Soeharto stepped down in May 1998 and vice president BJ Habibie was elevated to the presidency, due to an alleged attempt to launch a coup without the knowledge of ABRI chief Wiranto. In July 1998, ABRI formed an Officers Ethics Council (DKP) to investigate Prabowo. 

The DKP eventually decided to dishonorably discharge Prabowo due to a number of actions he carried out, which the council deemed demonstrated his insubordination and disregard for the military code. He and other members of Kopassus were banned from traveling to the US over the alleged human rights abuses they committed against the people of Timor-Leste. 

This ban lasted until 2022, when it was effectively lifted so Prabowo could visit the US as Indonesia’s defense minister. During his 2019 presidential campaign, Prabowo courted the support of some hard-line Muslim groups against the reelection bid of President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo, who was seen as a pluralist leader. 

The strategy resulted in a highly polarizing election that divided the Indonesian public and led to the post-election riots in Jakarta, in which at least eight people were killed and hundreds injured in clashes with police. What does he bring to the table? Prabowo is the wealthiest of all the 2024 presidential candidates. As of March 31, 2023, he is valued at over Rp 2 trillion (US$ 128 million). Prabowo has proven his resilience in national politics. After losing in the last round of the 2004 Golkar convention to his former commander Wiranto, 

Prabowo set up Gerindra with his brother, former student activist Fadli Zon and former State Intelligence Agency (BIN) deputy Muchdi Purwoprandjono. As running mate to former president Megawati in her 2009 election bid, the pair lost to incumbent Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, who was on the DKP when it issued Prabowo’s dishonorable discharge. Despite the loss in 2009, Prabowo’s rising popularity helped propel Gerinda’s electability within a relatively short time. 

The party secured 11.81 percent of total votes in the 2014 general election to come in third, behind the PDI-P and Golkar. In the 2014 election, Prabowo lost to then-Jakarta governor Jokowi with a margin of 6.35 percentage points. He filed an unsuccessful lawsuit with the Constitutional Court alleging “massive and systemic” election fraud, which was dismissed. He tried to make another bid for the presidency in 2019, with then-Jakarta deputy governor Sandiaga Uno as his running mate, and lost with a margin of 11 points. Prabowo supporters took to the city’s streets to protest the election result, which turned violent. He again filed a lawsuit with the court alleging widespread vote rigging, but his claim was again rejected.

 Following the bitterly contested election, Jokowi offered Prabowo the post of defense minister in an effort to bring Gerindra into the cabinet: The party had secured 12.5 percent of votes to become the second largest party in the country. Prabowo took the offer and subsequently buried the hatchet with Jokowi, reinventing himself and basking in the coattail-effect of supporting the President. But he still cuts a polarizing figure because of his military record.

 Prabowo was reportedly sent back to East Timor in 1983, during which he was allegedly involved in the Kraras massacre, although he has repeatedly denied this. As Kopassus commander, Prabowo was allegedly involved in the forced disappearances of pro-democracy activists between 1997 and 1998 amid growing resistance to the Soeharto regime. 

He has denied the allegations, but his subordinates at the time were convicted and sentenced to prison. Prabowo also has been accused of engineering the May 1998 riots in Jakarta and several other large cities, allegedly in an attempt to urge the Soeharto regime to declare martial law. No legal actions have been taken against Prabowo over this allegation.