West Papuan Deaths by Neglect
The woodcarvings of the Asmat
people of Papua are world famous. But it has been the shocking reports of the
death of over 65 infants mainly from malnutrition and measles that have turned
the spotlight on the regency’s health conditions. Hundreds more including
several adults are being treated at a hospital in the capital Agats as medics
and aid pour in.
The Health Ministry has just
revived its “Flying Health Care” program to help address the measles outbreak
and the complications exacerbated by malnutrition, including pneumonia —
although too late for dozens of grieving families.
The rapid response will
hopefully save lives. However the warnings and reports of low immunization
coverage and malnutrition reached the Health Ministry in September, officials
said. What happened between September and January? Apart from low immunization
coverage — not only against measles — many breastfeeding women were known to be
malnourished.
As in the 2009 reports of
famine in neighboring Yakuhimo, the remoteness of villages has been cited as
one reason for difficult access to health services. Over 100 died in the
highlands back then, blamed on a failed harvest, not famine, the government
said. In Agats district, villagers can only reach the nearest health facility
by an hours-long boat journey along the river, when the only boat in their
hamlets is not being used for other purposes.
In Jakarta the blame game
quickly began, with the Health Ministry insisting that under regional autonomy
the primary responsibility lay with the local governments — and Papua’s
provinces and regencies have received huge sums of special autonomy funds,
derived from their rich natural resources, for education and health services.
How often local authorities
attempted to implement mobile health services is unclear, as many communities
will forever be “remote” from their capitals in Papua, located in part of the
world’s second-largest island. One third of Asmat’s population is categorized
as living below the poverty line.
So given the four months
or so since the warnings of a health crisis were first raised, maybe the real
question is: Who really cares? Would a much smaller outbreak not cause much
greater uproar among netizens if it occurred, say, in Java or Sumatra?
Indonesians are whipped up instantly not by the conditions of our chronically
poorest province, but anytime a separatist flag is raised. Few question the
arrest, torture and shooting of Papuan protesters, without questioning why
anyone in a poor province would demand independence. As critics among Papuans
reiterate, most Indonesians care about the rich land much more than their
Melanesian brothers and sisters living too far from the capital and other more
developed areas.
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