Indonesia bishop urges calm
in Papua, denounces racism
Indonesian Papuans protasting in front of the presidentials palace in Jakarta (ANSA) |
Violence has flared in Indonesia’s provinces of Papua and
West Papua, following reports about security forces and angry mobs allegedly
maltreating and hurling racist taunts at Papuan university students in East
Java.
By Robin Gomes
An Indonesian bishop has condemned the ongoing violence in
Papua and the alleged physical attacks and racist taunts against Papuan
students that sparked it.
All people “share a noble dignity which must be respected
and protected,” Bishop Petrus Canisius Mandagi MSC of Amboina said on
Thursday. The bishop who is apostolic administrator of Merauke
Archdiocese in the province of West Papua, denounced racism as “an inhumane and
immoral act,” saying, “it is understandable that they feel offended by racist
abuse”.
Violence erupted in the provinces of West Papua and Papua on
Monday following reports that security forces and angry mobs reportedly
attacked some 40 Papuan university students living in the East Javan cities of
Surabaya and Malang on August 16, verbally abusing them with racist
taunts.
After accusing the students of damaging an Indonesian flag
during Independence Day celebrations, the police arrested them while an angry
mob called them "monkeys", "pigs" and "dogs".
They were later released.
In what is regarded as the largest protests in Indonesia’s
eastern-most region, buildings have been torched, including the West Papua
Regional Legislative Council (DPRD) in Manokwari, a jail, a market and a hotel.
Bishop Mandagi expressed sadness over the violence, calling
for peaceful protests. “Papuan people,” he said, “are civilized and
dignified.” “They should not be savage like those who spout
racism,” he said.
The government has flown some 1,200 extra security forces to
the region, which is already the country’s most heavily militarized
region.
Police on Wednesday arrested some 34 people in the Papuan
town of Timika, where thousands of protesters threw stones at a parliament
building, houses, shops and a hotel.
Resentment and hurt
While the racist taunts appeared to have sparked the violent
protests, it is, in fact, the simmering resentment and separatist movement that
provided the fuel.
Residents of the two eastern provinces are ethnically
similar. The region became part of Indonesia controversially in the
1960s, despite the former Dutch colony declaring independence in 1961.
Since then, a separatist movement has been simmering among
Papuans who complain of discrimination and rights abuses at the hands of
Indonesian authorities.
On Thursday, more than a hundred Papuan students marched to
the gates of the presidential palace in the Indonesian capital, Jakarta,
shouting pro-independence slogans demanding "Referendum for Papua" or
"Freedom for Papua".
Some of them were dressed in traditional clothes and with
bodies painted in the colours of Papua’s banded flag. They held posters
demanding the right to self-determination and an end to racism and colonialism
in West Papua.
Others held a smaller protest in the nearby city of Bogor.
Calming tempers
Rights group and journalists associations on Friday urged
the communication ministry to end an internet blackout in Papua that started on
Wednesday night. Telephone calls and text messages were unaffected.
While Papuans said the protesters would continue, Indonesian
president, Joko Widodo, claimed on Thursday that West Papua had returned to
normal.
In an attempt to calm tempers, he pledged action against
racial and ethnic discrimination, saying he has ordered the national police
chief to “take stern, legal action against acts of racial and ethnic
discrimination.”
Meanwhile, thousands of Indonesians have been taking part in
protests throughout the country, condemning the mistreatment and racial abuse
against Papuans and demanding justice and an end to discrimination against
them. (Source: UCANEWS)
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