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Showing posts with label Politik. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Politik. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 13, 2017

Files Show Birth of Papua Independence Struggle


JAKARTA, Indonesia— Prominent Papuans pleaded for the U.S. to give them money and arms in the mid-1960s to fight Indonesia’s colonization of their vast remote territory, according to recently declassified American files that show the birth of an independence struggle that endures half a century later.


The documents add to the historical evidence of deep Papuan grievances against Indonesia at a time when clashes between rebels and Indonesian security forces have flared in the impoverished region and Papuan nationalists have succeeded in drawing more attention to their cause at the United Nations. Indonesia’s defense minister said last week that activists who attended a recent pro-Papuan independence meeting in Vanuatu should be arrested on return to Indonesia.


The files are among the thousands of pages of cables between the State Department and the U.S. Embassy in Jakarta from the 1960s that were declassified earlier this year. The 37 boxes of telegrams are stored at the National Archives and Records Administration in Maryland and researchers are working on making them available online.


Papua, which makes up the western half of the giant island of New Guinea, remained in Dutch hands after Indonesia shook off colonial rule at the end of World War II. Many Indonesians saw their government’s campaign in the early 1960s to take Papua from the Dutch as the final victory in their struggle for independence. But to Papuans, with a Melanesian culture and history distinct from Southeast Asia, Indonesia was a hostile colonizer.


The rest of the world looked away as a rigged vote of a little more than 1,000 hand-picked and closely managed Papuans cemented Indonesia’s control in 1969. The Netherlands, which before annexation was preparing Papua for self-rule, did not object. The U.S., which in 1967 helped American mining company Freeport secure rights to exploit rich copper and gold deposits in Papua, did not want to upset a status quo favorable for U.S. business or destabilize Indonesia’s pro-U.S. government.


An April 1966 cable from the State Department recorded the “eloquence and intensity” of Markus Kaisiepo, an exiled Papuan leader, who spoke with a senior U.S. official about the “desperate plight of the Papua people under Indonesian rule.”


Kaisiepo said Papuans were determined to have independence but were completely without financial resources or the military equipment needed to “rise against the Indonesian oppressors.”


Kaisiepo, whose son would also become a prominent advocate for Papuan independence, asked if the U.S. “could provide money and arms secretly to assist him and his movement.” He was rebuffed, as was another Papuan leader, Nicolaas Jouwe, who made a similar request to the U.S. in September 1965 and also to Australia.


The documents also show how officials looted the region after Indonesia annexed it in 1962 and brought about a collapse in living standards, stoking anger that boiled over into outright rebellion. But the biggest source of resentment was Indonesia’s reluctance to honor its U.N.-supervised and U.S.-brokered treaty with the Netherlands, which mandated that Papuans would decide in a plebiscite whether to stay with Indonesia or become self-ruled.


After U.N. troops left Papua, Indonesians systematically looted public buildings and sent the booty to Jakarta, the April 1966 cable said, citing Kaisiepo. Hospitals built by the Dutch were stripped of beds, X-ray equipment and medicines, desks were taken from schools and soldiers stole anything “that took their fancy” from private homes.

Other cables citing American missionaries working in Papua described widespread food shortages, and how Indonesian officials bought up all consumer goods and shipped them out of Papua for a profit. When shipments of goods and food arrived at ports, Indonesian troops would commandeer them.


Victor Yeimo, chairman of the pro-Independence West Papuan National Committee, said the documents are “very important” because they provide evidence of crimes against Papuans by the Indonesian military and the U.S. role in denying self-determination. Administratively, Indonesia divides the region into two provinces, Papua and West Papua, but Papuans refer to both as West Papua.


“Information gained from these documents shows the world and today’s generation that the U.S. and Indonesia have been hand-in-hand in hiding the truth all along. The economic and political interests of the U.S. played a big role in West Papua’s colonization,” Yeimo said. “We, West Papuans, have been butchered since Indonesia first entered our land and up to now. And we have never seen any justice.”


Papuans were not without supporters in the U.S. Embassy in Jakarta but their views did not prevail. In August 1965, the embassy’s political officer Edward E. Masters recommended the department leak word of violent uprisings against Indonesia’s rule in Papua to the world press. Without the glare of publicity, Papuans would suffer “complete colonial subjugation” by Indonesia, he wrote in a prescient cable.


Citing the U.S. role in negotiating the 1962 treaty between the Netherlands and Indonesia, Masters wrote “we would appear to have a special responsibility to see that the terms of that treaty concerning ascertainment of the true wishes of the Papuan people are respected.”

Another cable written by Ambassador Marshall Green, however, described Papuans as “stone-age” people. Their “horizons are strictly limited,” it said, and they weren’t capable of deciding their own future, contradicting other assessments by the embassy of Papuans’ widespread desire for independence.


Word of violent uprisings, which began about March 1965, began trickling out of Papua as American missionaries who were working in the region visited Jakarta and embassy officials tapped sources in the Indonesian military for information.


In June 1965, rebels launched a full-scale attack on a government post in the town of Wamena that killed at least a dozen Indonesian soldiers and an unknown number of Papuans.

“No figure on the number of Papuans killed is available but one informant described it as a ‘slaughter,’ since almost the only weapons in the hands of the highland Papuans were knives and bows and arrows,” said a cable sent two months later.


The same document reported that rebels overran most of Manokwari, a major coastal town, in early August and held it for a week until beaten back by Indonesian soldiers.

A massacre by Indonesian forces the previous month may have been a catalyst for that attack.


A Dutch missionary told U.S. officials that rebels had shot three soldiers raising a flag in a valley near Manokwari in late July.

“Indo reaction was brutal,” said a cable transmitted in September 1965. “Soldiers next day sprayed bullets at any Papuan in sight and many innocent travelers on roads gunned down. Bitterness thus created not easily healed.”


By early 1967, there were persistent rumors within Indonesia and abroad that 1,000 to 2,000 Papuans had been killed by an Indonesian air force bombing campaign.


The Indonesian government denied it, asserting instead that 40 tribesmen were killed in “strafing” runs by an air force bomber in response to an ambush of paramilitary police, according to an April 1967 cable.

The number of police wounded in the ambush: two.

___



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U.S. Embassy Tracked Indonesia Mass Murder 1965


Washington, D.C., October 17, 2017 - The U.S. government had detailed knowledge that the Indonesian Army was conducting a campaign of mass murder against the country’s Communist Party (PKI) starting in 1965, according to newly declassified documents posted today by the National Security Archive at The George Washington University.  The new materials further show that diplomats in the Jakarta Embassy kept a record of which PKI leaders were being executed, and that U.S. officials actively supported Indonesian Army efforts to destroy the country’s left-leaning labor movement.



The 39 documents made available today come from a collection of nearly 30,000 pages of files constituting much of the daily record of the U.S. Embassy in Jakarta, Indonesia, from 1964-1968. The collection, much of it formerly classified, was processed by the National Declassification Center in response to growing public interest in the remaining U.S. documents concerning the mass killings of 1965-1966.  American and Indonesian human rights and freedom of information activists, filmmakers, as well as a group of U.S. Senators led by Tom Udall (D-NM), had called for the materials to be made public.



The documents concern one of the most important and turbulent chapters in Indonesian history and U.S.-Indonesian relations, which witnessed the gradual collapse of ties between Jakarta and Washington, a low-level war with Britain over the formation of Malaysia, rising tension between the Indonesian Army and the Indonesian Communist Party, the growing radicalization of Indonesian President Sukarno, and the expansion of U.S. covert operations aimed at provoking a clash between the Army and PKI. These tensions erupted in the aftermath of an attempted purge of the Army by the September 30th Movement – a group of military officers with the collaboration of a handful of PKI leaders.  After crushing the Movement, which had kidnapped and killed six high-ranking Army generals, the Indonesian Army and its paramilitary allies launched a campaign of annihilation against the PKI and its affiliated organizations, killing up to 500,000 alleged PKI supporters between October 1965 and March 1966, imprisoning up to a million more, and eventually ousting Sukarno and replacing him with General Suharto, who ruled Indonesia for the next 32 years before he himself was overthrown in May 1998.



In an unprecedented collaboration, the National Security Archive worked with the National Declassification Center (NDC) to make the entirety of this collection available to the public by scanning and digitizing the collection, which will be incorporated into the National Archives and Records Administration’s (NARA) digital finding aids. When completed, scholars, journalists, and researchers will be able to search the documents by date, keyword, or name, providing unparalleled access, in particular for the Indonesian public, to a unique collection of records concerning one of the most important periods of Indonesian history.



Of the 30,000 pages processed by the NDC, several hundred documents remain classified and are undergoing further review before their scheduled release in early 2018. While some of the documents in this collection were declassified and deposited at NARA or the Lyndon Johnson Presidential Library in the late 1990s, many thousands of pages are being made available for the first time in more than 50 years.



The Documents

The documents in the files of the U.S. Embassy in Jakarta range widely, from the daily operations of the Embassy to observations on Indonesian politics, economics, foreign policy, military affairs, the growing conflict between the United States and Sukarno, the conflict between the Army and PKI, the September 30th Movement and the mass killings that followed, and the consolidation of the Suharto regime. While most of the documents in this briefing book concern the events of September 30, 1965, and their aftermath, we have included a handful of others to give a sense of the range and historical significance of the larger collection for an understanding of the broader consolidation of the Suharto regime.





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Tuesday, October 17, 2017

Kemerdekaan Negara Papua Barat Adalah HAK Bangsa Papua Barat

Indonesia sebagai negara hukum memiliki kewajiban yuridis untuk melindungi HAM setiap warga negaranya tanpa memandang latar belakang sosial, budaya, etnis, agama, gender dan pandangan politik. Hak asasi manusia warga negara baik Ekonomi, sosial, budaya, sipil dan politik merupakan HAK Konstitusi sesuai dengan UUD 1945.


Pandangan Politik Rakyat Papua untuk melepaskan diri dari negara kesatuan republik indonesia (NKRI) dan mendirikan West Papua yang merdeka dan berdaulat diluar negara kesatuan republik indonesia seharusnya dipandang sebagai Hak Konstitusi Bangsa Papua, dan dalam pemenuhannya Wajib dihormati oleh negara kesatuan republik indonesia (NKRI)


Hak Politik Bangsa Papua diatas secara tegas dan terbuka telah dijamin dalam pembukaan UUD 1945 yang menyebutkan “bahwa sesungguhnya kemerdekaan itu ialah hak segala bangsa dan oleh sebab itu semua penjajahan diatas dunia harus dihapuskan karena tikda sesuai dengan pri kemanusiaan dan pri keadilan”. Penegasan itu secara lugas telah menunjukkan bahwasannya Negara Hukum Indonesia turut Mengakui dan menjamin terimplementasinya Prinsip-prinsip HAM secara Internasional yang mulai disahkan secarl  internasional pada tanggal 10 Desember 1948 bersamaan dengan berdirinya Perserikatan Bangsa Bangsa (PBB).


Kemerdekaan Negara West Papua Merupakan Kewajiban Hukum Negara Indonesia”.



Telius Yikwa
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Sunday, October 15, 2017

Ini Upaya Indonesia Menghentikan Tim Pencari Fakta dari MSG Masuk di Papua

Indonesia mulai mencari jalan menghentikan tim pencari fakta yang dibentuk dari forum Melanesia Speard Group (MSG) yang akan turun di Papua Barat dalam waktu dekat.

Upaya negara Indonesia ini dilakukan bertepatan menguaknya isu kampanye penentuan nasib sendiri bagi rakyat Papua Barat di luar negeri. Dan intervensi negara-negara terhadap Indonesia untuk menghentikan pelanggaran hak asasi manusia yang terus dilakukan terhadap rakyat Papua Barat.

Ketakutan negara Indonesia terhadap pelanggaran hak asasi manusia yang terus dilakukannya di Papua Barat di mata dunia dimana telah dikategorikan sebagai pemusnahan etnis Melanesia di atas tanah mereka sendiri.
Bertepatan dengan menguaknya isu kampanye Papua Barat untuk lepas dari Indonesia dan pembentukan tim pencari fakta dari MSG ini pula. Ketua forum MSG yang juga perdana menteri Salomon Island mengundang presiden Indonesia, Joko Widodo untuk hadir sebagai anggota MSG di pertemuan forum MSG untuk membahas penyelasaian kasus pelanggaran HAM di Papua Barat. Presiden Indonesia, Joko Widodo menolak undangan tersebut tanpa alasan yang jelas.

Dibalik penolakkan undangan dari forum MSG tersebut. Joko Widodo secara diam-diam menyuruh Polda Papua untuk mendokumentasikan dan mendata semua kasus pelanggaran HAM yang dilakukan negara Indonesia terhadap rakyat Papua Barat.

Dari sekurang-kurangnya 19 kasus yang dilaporkan, hanya dua kasus pelanggaran ham yang Joko Widodo hendak menyelesaikan dalam waktu antara bulan Mei-Juli sebelum tim pencari fakta dari forum MSG turun di Papua Barat.

Tujuan Dari Negara Indonesia
Sudah jelas dan bukan rahasia lagi apa tujuan dari negera Indonesia yang seakan sok baik dan sok adil terhadap rakyat Papua Barat. Berikut adalah tujuan-tujuan yang ingin dicapai Joko Widodo (Indonesia):
  1. Setelah sejak puluhan tahun hingga kini dimana pelanggaran HAM negara indonesia terhadap rakyat Papua Barat yang terus berlanjut, Indonesia berupaya untuk menghentikan tim pencari fakta dari forum MSG yang langsung turun di Papua Barat dengan alasan bahwa indonesia sedang menyelesaikannya.

  2. Tujuan yang berikut adalah untuk mengurangi desakan negara-negara lain yang terus mendesak indonesia untuk menghentikan pelanggaran ham negara terhadap rakyat Papua Barat.

  3. Tujuan berikut, adalah Indonesia mau menjadikan penyelasian dua pelanggaran HAM di Papua Barat itu sebagai Senjata untuk memperbaiki image di mata dunia dan menjadikan alasan bahwa semua kasus pelanggaran HAM di Papua Barat telah diselesaikan dan sudah beres dan tidak ada lagi, dimana sesungguhnya puluhan bahkan ratusan kasus pelanggara ham negara terhadap rakyat Papua Barat.

  4. Tujuan lain adalah untuk meredam ideology kemerdekaan negara Papua Barat yang bergema di seantero tanah dan bangsa Papua Barat.

     

Layakkah Indonesia Yang Menyelesaikannya Pelanggaran HAM di Papua Barat?

Dalam kasus ini, penanganan kasus pelanggaran HAM di Papua Barat, negara Indonesia tidak bisa menyelesaikannya. Karena negara Indonesia adalah pelaku, maka pelaku tidak bisa selesaikan kejahatan yang ia lakukan sendiri. Karena kasus pelanggaran hak asasi manusia yang dilakukan negara terhadap rakyat Papua Barat tergolong pelanggaran ham berat bahkan masuk kategori pemusnahan Etnis.

Semua kasus pelanggaran HAM negara Indonesia terhadap rakyat Papau Barat tergolong kasus berat dan termasuk dua kasus yang hendak Joko Widodo selesaikan itu, maka harus dibawa ke makama pengadilan HAM internasional. Bukan Joko Widodo yang menyelesaikan. Harus diselesaikan di pengadilan HAM internasional.

Dua kasus yang disebut Joko Widodo untuk menyelesaikan itu harus diselesaikan di pengadilan internasional. Bukan Joko Widodo yang menyelesaikannya, karena Joko Widodo adalah pelaku pelanggara ham berat terhadap rakyat Papua Barat.

“Penyelesaian Dua Kasus Pelanggaran HAM di Papua Barat adalah Upaya Indonesia Menghentikan Tim Pencari Fakta dari MSG Masuk di Papua”


105 Kamasan 1. Yogyakarta
19 Mei 2016
Telius Yikwa
 
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Saturday, October 14, 2017

Solomon dan Vanuatu Dukung Gerakan Pembebasan Papua Jadi Anggota Penuh MSG

 
 
Jayapura— Negara Kepulauan Solomon dan Vanuatu menyatakan akan mendukung upaya ULMWP untuk menjadi anggota penuh organisasi Melanesian Spearhead Group (MSG). Dukungan itu akan mereka berikan dalam pertemuan MSG di Papua Nugini bulan depan.
Perdana Menteri Kepulauan Solomon Manasseh Sogavare hari Kamis (12/5/2016) mengatakan dia mengakui adanya keinginan Perdana Menteri Vanuatu untuk mengajukan mosi dalam pertemuan MSG untuk meningkatkan status keanggotaan ULMWP dari status peninjau menjadi status anggota penuh.
“Keputusan anda (PM Vanuatu) untuk mengajukan mosi semacam itu menyentuh hati saya dan mendapat dukungan penuh dari saya. Saya berharap anggota (MSG) lainnya akan turut memberikan dukungan atas agenda penting ini,” kata Perdana Menteri Slomon Island seperti dilansir radionaustralia.net.au yang dikutip media ini pada Sabtu (14/5/2016).
Dikatakan, Indonesia telah menjadi associate member dari kelompok MSG pada Juni 2015, sementara ULMWP diberikan status peninjau.
ABC melaporkan bahwa sejumlah pengamat telah memperingatkan tindakan kedua negara Pasifik ini dalam mendukung keanggotaan penuh ULMWP mungkin akan menghadapi tantangan dari Indonesia.
Dalam pernyataan susulan pada Hari Jumat (13/5/2016) PM Sogavare mengatakan, Indonesia telah diberikan status keanggotaan associate member pada MSG untuk memungkinkan terjadinya dialog antara Jakarta dengan pemimpin negara-negara MSG terkait isu Papua Barat.
PM Kepulauan Solomon menambahkan bahwa, Penolakan Indonesia atas permintaan (Sogavare) untuk berdialog telah memberinya alasan yang cukup untuk membawa masalah ini ke MSG, dengan mempertimbangkan bahwa Indonesia telah melanggar sehingga perlu diambil tindakan tegas.
Sumber : Media Papua
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