Indonesia: Dynamics of Violence in Papua
Jakarta/Brussels, 9 August 2012: The only measure likely to halt violence in Indonesia’s Papua
province in the short term is a major overhaul of security policy.
Indonesia: Dynamics of Violence in Papua, the
latest report from the International Crisis Group, examines multiple sources of
conflict in Papua, following fifteen violent incidents in the provincial
capital Jayapura in May and June and others in the central highlands.
“Everything
suggests that there is going to be more trouble in Papua unless the government
can produce a policy that will have an immediate and visible impact on how
ordinary Papuans are treated”, says Cillian Nolan, Crisis Group’s South East
Asia Senior Analyst. “Changing how security forces are trained, redesigning
incentive structures, penalising excessive use of force, improving
accountability and tightening auditing procedures could make a major difference”.
Recent
violence has exposed the lack of a coherent government strategy to address the
many dimensions of conflict in Papua. Too often well-intentioned programs
designed to build trust or produce concrete benefits are undercut by security
initiatives to combat separatism or rent-seeking by police or soldiers in
resource-rich areas.
The
problem is exacerbated by the lack of functioning political institutions. An
ineffectual caretaker governor appointed in July 2011 has left the provincial
government in limbo, with elections repeatedly postponed as Papuan politicians
challenge each other in court. Local government at the sub-provincial level is
often even more dysfunctional.
Hopes
are fading that a new coordination unit for Papua established in late 2011 –
the Unit for Accelerated Development in Papua and West Papua, known by its
Indonesian abbreviation UP4B – will be able to make much difference in the
short term. The idea of a dialogue on Papua, which seemed to be gaining
traction in Jakarta earlier in the year, seems to have foundered as it becomes
clear that Papuan groups and Jakarta-based officials have very different
interpretations of what the word “dialogue” means. All of this means that the
so-called “new deal” for Papua that the government of President Yudhoyono
announced in 2007 is a long way from realisation.
“In
stressing the need for a change in security policy, Crisis Group is not
suggesting that police and soldiers are the only source of violence; many,
indeed, have been victims”, says Jim Della-Giacoma, Crisis Group’s South East
Asia Project Director. “But if the aim is to improve the political dynamics,
the security sector may offer more hope for 'quick wins' than economic
development projects”.
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