Papua’s diverse population,
with more than 200 distinct indigenous ethnic groups (and a large population of
migrants from elsewhere in Indonesia), struggles with some of the lowest
development indicators in the country. Successive Indonesian administrations have
failed to solve these problems or reduce the grievances that fuel the
independence movement. This is despite the gradual ‘Papuanisation’ of the local
government bureaucracy since 1999 and the implementation of limited special
autonomy since 2001. Will Indonesia’s new President, Joko Widodo (Jokowi), who
made the region a special focus of his 2014 election campaign, do any better?
The drivers of Papuan
grievances include an influx of non-Papuan Indonesians, a failure to address
isolation and poor social services in remote highland communities, and the need
for more equitable sharing of Papua’s vast natural resource wealth, including
that derived from Freeport, the largest copper and gold mine in the world.
There are also demands to acknowledge the violence and procedural shortcomings
that accompanied the 1969 Act of Free Choice, to ensure more accountability for
human rights violations, extortion and rent-seeking by security forces, and to
improve governance without exacerbating inter-clan rivalries.
Successive governments have
combined a ‘security approach’ and a ‘prosperity approach’ in different
proportions. They have confronted the armed Free Papua Movement (OPM) with
force and cracked down on non-violent pro-independence groups while
simultaneously pouring in poorly targeted and supervised funds for
‘development’.
Jakarta policy-makers and
abusive security forces are not the only source of the problem. Local Papuan
elites have not helped by competing with each other for spoils. Over the past
five years civil society groups have demanded a ‘dialogue’ with Jakarta but
lacked the focused agenda to drive one. And while willing to meet with these
groups, senior Indonesian government officials have also been wary of anything
that smacks of negotiation with a separate party. This is especially the case
after Indonesia’s experience with two other separatist areas: East Timor, which
voted to break away in 1999, and Aceh, where a negotiated peace in 2005 led to
the former guerrillas dominating local politics.
Jokowi’s predecessor,
Soesilo Bambang Yudhoyono, tried several initiatives that were well intentioned
but ultimately failed. One was the creation of a government unit intended to
coordinate programs across ministries in Papua with a focus on improving
education and infrastructure. Hampered by resistance from the bureaucracy and
poor leadership, it was disbanded not long after Jokowi’s inauguration.
A second was a draft law on
enhancing special autonomy, known as Otsus Plus, an effort to improve the 2001
law that after more than ten years had clearly failed to deliver benefits for
Papuans. A draft law written by advisers to the two provincial governors
focused too much on unrealistic increases in the value of central government
transfers to Papua, but also included creative provisions on affirmative action
for indigenous Papuans and protection for customary land and natural resource
rights.
Proposals such as reserving
smallholder plots in plantations, requiring resource investors to obtain the
consent of indigenous communities and provide shares in compensation, and
allowing communities to limit the in-migration of outsiders might all have
restored a sense of meaningful local political autonomy absent from the 2001
law. But in the end, Otsus Plus also failed through a combination of disputes,
delays and public anger over the lack of any consultation with civil society.
A third initiative in
Yudhoyono’s second term was a series of meetings with the main advocacy group
seeking dialogue, the Papuan Peace Network (JDP). The meetings were exploratory
rather than substantive, producing no policy changes before Yudhoyono left
office. Their main success was to secure acknowledgement
that dialogue — however it might be defined — was an important tool
in conflict resolution.
It is now Jokowi’s turn to
look for solutions. But the situation on the ground is changing in a way that
complicates matters for Indonesia’s new president.
Expanding palm-oil
plantations and mines, legal and illegal, have brought in more non-Papuan
migrants and increased Papuan migration across clan boundaries, sometimes
bringing conflict in their wake. Local elections have pitted clans against one
another, starting new feuds. The OPM has increased its attacks on soldiers and
police, especially in the highland districts of Puncak Jaya and neighbouring
Lanny Jaya. In response, the military and police increased their presence,
adding a new police command in West Papua at the end of 2014. More and more new
administrative districts have been carved out of existing ones in a way that
threatens to further disperse the limited pool of capable civil servants.
Early proposals by Jokowi’s cabinet
ministers have done little to signal a new approach. They include
suggestions to revive the old unpopular policies of transmigration and to
increase administrative division. Vice President Jusuf Kalla, who helped broker
the Aceh peace, has a long-standing interest in working toward a ceasefire with
the OPM but earlier failed attempts have now given way to other priorities.
Without a coherent policy that would
address Papua in all its complexity, many are concerned that the new
president will be pressured by conservative advisers who stress the ‘security
approach’ to Papua.
If the new administration
wants concrete ideas, it could do worse than to look back at Otsus Plus and
start a new conversation on how to ensure that future large-scale development
of Papua’s vast natural resources does not crowd out Papuans themselves. In the
meantime, the problems continue to fester.
Cillian Nolan and Sidney
Jones are the Deputy Director and Director of the Institute for
Policy Analysis of Conflict (IPAC), Jakarta.
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