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Indonesia & East Timor Digest

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February 1, 2006

Green Left Weekly - February 1, 2006

Kerryn Williams – The arrival on Australian shores of 43 West Papuan refugees on January 18 has put the spotlight on the long suffering – and determined resistance – of the people of West Papua.

Green Left Weekly - February 1, 2006

Sarah Stephen – Among the 43 West Papuan asylum seekers who were transferred to Christmas Island on January 18 are four family groups. They are living in community detention, under close guard.

Aceh Kita - February 1, 2006

Adi W and Radzie, Banda Aceh – Hundreds of students from the Acehnese Alliance of Private Collage Student Executive Councils (Aliansi BEM PTS Aceh) held a demonstration on Wednesday February 1 protesting the central government's removal of a number of crucial articles in the Draft Law on a Government for Aceh (RUU-PA).

Jakarta Post - February 1, 2006

Hera Diani, Jakarta – Like goldfish, people seem to have a memory span that is all too short.

This tendency might be forgiven in love – which can not only cause blindness but a faltering memory. But in other matters, like environmental destruction and deforestation, can we afford to makes the same mistakes ad nauseum.

Detik.com - February 1, 2006

Nur Raihan, Banda Aceh – The Acehnese Alliance of Private College Student Executive Councils (BEM PTS) believes that the Draft Law on a Government for Aceh that was submitted to the to the House of Representatives by the Home Affairs Department has disappointed the Acehnese people.

January 31, 2006

Agence France Presse - January 31, 2006

Jakarta – Indonesia's President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has made a deft move in nominating the country's airforce chief as the next boss of the powerful but reforming armed forces, analysts say.

Associated Press - January 31, 2006

Jakarta – Protesters disrupted a concert by a US hip-hop artist touring Indonesia at the US Embassy's invitation, an embassy official and witnesses said Tuesday.

Asia Times - January 31, 2006

Bill Guerin, Jakarta – Indonesia has scored a major victory in the war on corruption after the return to the country of a crooked banker who fled before being sentenced in absentia to eight years in jail.

Sydney Morning Herald - January 31, 2006

Tom Allard – The Indonesian military is using the same tactics of terror in West Papua that were employed during its bloody reign in East Timor, and Australia should step in to mediate a peace settlement, warns separatist Herman Wainggai.

Reuters - January 31, 2006

Jakarta – Indonesian police are investigating possible links between a purported new militant network with al Qaeda, with initial indications showing it was set up by two key Malaysian radicals, police said on Tuesday.

The Australian - January 31, 2006

West Papuan asylum seekers on Christmas Island have told Greens senator Kerry Nettle their families have been terrorised by Indonesian security forces since their journey to Australia.

The Courier-Mail (Queensland) - January 31, 2006

Greg Poulgrain – Ten US members of Congress have described the arrival on Australian shores by canoe two weeks ago of 43 asylum seekers from West Papua as a flight to freedom.

Financial Times - January 31, 2006

Shawn Donnan, Jakarta – Since his government last year brought about what looks like the end of the separatist conflict in Indonesia's tsunami-wracked Aceh province, President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has drawn effusive praise internationally.

January 30, 2006

Melbourne Age - January 30, 2006

Andra Jackson – A group of West Timorese is seeking asylum in Australia from Indonesia claiming they have been pressured into carrying out attacks against Christians in their village.

Jakarta Post - January 30, 2006

Jakarta – Dozens of high school students protested about the dangers of lead pollution in the air at the National Monument in Central Jakarta on Saturday.

Jakarta Post - January 30, 2006

Makassar – A soldier was killed and three seriously wounded when a police truck rammed into a crowd of people amid a dispute between military troops and police officers in Manado, North Sulawesi.

Wirabuana military commander Maj. Gen. Arif Budi Sampurno, overseeing security in Sulawesi, ordered an investigation into the incident that took place early Sunday.

Jakarta Post - January 30, 2006

Jayapura – A man was arrested by Jayapura Police officers Saturday, allegedly for hoisting the outlawed Morning Star flag, the symbol of the Papuan independence struggle.

Jakarta Post Editorial - January 30, 2006

The government submitted the final draft of its Aceh government bill to the House of Representatives on Thursday, a major step following the historic peace agreement signed in Helsinki last August by Indonesia and the Free Aceh Movement (GAM).

The Australian - January 30, 2006

Sian Powell – In September 1999, a young East Timorese woman was brought to a militia post in Gleno. In the days immediately after the independence ballot, she was at the mercy of men who had lost the fight to keep East Timor within Indonesia.

Dow Jones Newswires - January 30, 2006

Phelim Kyne, Jakarta – Investors in New York have asked US investigators to determine whether millions of dollars allegedly paid by mining giant Freeport to Indonesian military officers in Papua province amounted to bribery.

Detik.com - January 30, 2006

M. Rizal Maslan, Jakarta - Around 25 people from the Papuan Anti-Militarism People's Front (FRPAM) arrived at the offices of the National Human Rights Commission (Komnas HAM) on Jalan Latuharhari in Menteng, Jakarta, at around 11am on Monday January 30.

Radio Australia - January 30, 2006

Australian refugee advocates say they are alarmed by the Indonesian Government making a direct request to Prime Minister John Howard for the return of 43 Papuans.

Indonesian President Suslio Bambang Yudhoyono has assured Mr Howard that the group will not be prosecuted if they are returned.

January 29, 2006

Melbourne Age - January 29, 2006

Russell Skelton – Australia and Indonesia are headed for a diplomatic crisis over the fate of 43 West Papuan asylum seekers whose claims of persecution now appear likely to be recognised.

Australia West Papua Association (Sydney) Press release - January 29, 2006

The Australia West Papua Association calls on the new Defence Minister, Brendan Nelson, to re-think the plan to renew ties or train with the Indonesian military and in particular the Indonesia special forces Kopassus. Without going into any great detail of its past history, Kopassus has been notorious for its role in human rights abuses in East Timor and West Papua.

January 28, 2006

Agence France Presse - January 28, 2006

Jakarta – Three more children have contracted polio in Indonesia, bringing the total cases to 302 since the crippling disease resurfaced last year, the United Nations Children Fund ( UNICEF) has said. Indonesia will hold another nationwide immunisation drive targetting 24 million children under five on Monday in a bid to eliminate the virus, UNICEF said in a statement Saturday.

Jakarta Post - January 28, 2006

Rendi Akhmad Witular, Karawang, West Java – President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono appealed to labor unions Friday not to use welfare issues for political means, which could jeopardize efforts to improve the country's investment climate.

Yudhoyono said protests on labor problems should be conducted within the law and peacefully to avoid tarnishing the image of local workers.

Jakarta Post - January 28, 2006

Jakarta – Regional administrations are using the money paid out to schools under the national fuel compensation scheme as an excuse to cut back on their education budgets, a study has found.

Jakarta Post - January 28, 2006

Tiarma Siboro, Jakarta – The final draft of the government's bill on Nanggroe Aceh Darussalam opens the possibility for the redrawing of its borders, which would violate the peace agreement signed by Indonesia and the Free Aceh Movement.

Jakarta Post - January 28, 2006

Suherdjoko and Andi Hajarmurni, Semarang/Makassar – Incessant rain over the last three days has inundated several cities in Central Java and South Sulawesi, forcing thousands of residents to flee their submerged homes for higher ground.

January 27, 2006

Jakarta Post - January 27, 2006

Jakarta – The group of junior high school students waited impatiently on the side of the road on busy Jl. Plumpang, North Jakarta. And waited.

Jakarta Post - January 27, 2006

The International Crisis Group's Southeast Asia project is analyzing recent developments of terrorism in Indonesia, which most recently saw a bomb explosion kill seven people in Central Sulawesi on New Year's Eve.

Jakarta Post - January 27, 2006

Tb. Arie Rukmantara, Jakarta – Primum non no cere – above all, do no harm – is the rule for all physicians when they treat patients.

But the reality here is often different, with doctors prescribing patients many medicines they do not need and which could have significant side effects. Their patients, meanwhile, are none the wiser, especially if they are children.

Radio Australia - January 27, 2006

A group of Papuan asylum seekers being held in immigration detention on Australia's remote Christmas Island is expected to meet their lawyers for the first time this weekend.

Jakarta Post - January 27, 2006

Jakarta – Four hunger-strikers seeking adequate compensation for their properties acquired by the government for a transmission line project received a dead chicken and a threatening note Thursday.

The chicken carcass and letter were wrapped in a plastic bag and found in front of compound where they were protesting in Central Jakarta, witnesses said.

TAPOL - January 27, 2006

The Hon John Howard MP
Prime Minister of Australia
C/o Australian High Commission UK
Strand London WC2B 4LA

27 January 2006

Dear Prime Minister Howard,

We write concerning the plight of the 43 men, women and children refugees from West Papua who arrived on the Australian mainland by boat on 18 January.

Jakarta Post Editorial - January 27, 2006

Infrastructure development can be dilemmatic at times. The construction of a power network in southern Java, for example, has been met with resistance by residents in West Java and Yogyakarta. Already months behind schedule – it was scheduled to be completed last October – the network is meant to complement the overloaded northern Java power network.

Jakarta Post - January 27, 2006

Aboeprijadi Santoso, Brussels, Helsinki – A reception on Jan. 20 at the Indonesian ambassador's residence in Helsinki, thousands of miles from Aceh, provided an occasion that symbolically highlighted the success, so far, of Aceh's peace process.

Jakarta Post - January 27, 2006

Leony Aurora, Jakarta – Businesspeople, arguing that power rates are already higher than those in neighboring countries, are threatening to refuse to pay proposed additional charges, even if it means having their power cut off.

January 26, 2006

Suara Merdeka - January 26, 2006

Semarang – At least 300 farmers in the plantation area of Rumpun Sari Kaligintung owned by PT Perkebunan Nusantara (PTPN) IX, have complained about the company to the governor. They are demanding that the government revoke the company's business permit (HGU) because they believe it has implemented a system of forced cultivation on local farmers.

Jakarta Post - January 26, 2006

Ridwan Max Sijabat, Jakarta – The long-awaited labor court has been promoted as a fairer, faster and less expensive means to settle industrial disputes, which are likely to rise amid tough economic times.

The Australian - January 26, 2006

Sian Powell, Jakarta – Relations between Indonesia and East Timor have soured, with Jakarta canceling President Xanana Gusmao's visit to deliver a report alleging Indonesian crimes against humanity.

Mr Gusmao had planned to deliver the 2500-page report to Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono tomorrow on his way home from the UN in New York.

Jakarta Post - January 26, 2006

Jakarta – Malls decked out in festive red and restaurants offering special delicacies for the upcoming Chinese New Year are cold comfort when one's citizenship is still questioned, Chinese-Indonesians say.

Jakarta Post - January 26, 2006

Wahyoe Boediwardhana, Malang, Kupang – Flash floods swept through the East Java cities of Malang, Kediri and Jombang on Wednesday, leaving one person dead and destroying dozens of residences as well as public buildings.

Jakarta Post - January 26, 2006

Jakarta – Unlike the old system for handling industrial disputes under the Regional and Central Committee for Settlements of Industrial Disputes (P4D and P4P), the new one based on the labor court cuts through complicated legal proceedings.

Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Center for Human Rights Press Release - January 26, 2006

Washington, D.C. – The West Papua Advocacy Team at the Robert F.

Jakarta Post - January 26, 2006

Jakarta – Taking an industrial dispute to the labor court will figure at the end of a new, expedited process of seeking a settlement.

If a dispute does reach the court after negotiations and mediation have failed, judges will be obliged to study cases registered with the court within seven days and required to finish trying them within 30 days.

Jakarta Post - January 26, 2006

Aguswandi, Banda Aceh – The fundamental problem facing Muslims and others seeking to understand Islam is not that there are too many versions of Islam. There is only one Islam, but there are a thousand possible interpretations of its texts and precepts. All lay people claim to possess the indisputable truth, all claim that no version but their own can be true.

Jakarta Post - January 26, 2006

Hera Diani, Jakarta – Every morning, traffic-jammed commuters throughout Jakarta get something to think about, as street vendors weave through the lines of cars, flashing posters of pouting models, posing in flimsy lingerie.

In the city's Glodok electronics center, pirated pornographic DVDs are often in plain view and the sellers yell out the movie names to passersby.

Jakarta Post - January 26, 2006

Anissa S. Febrina, Jakarta – While public sympathy is rarely on the side of a firm that lays off workers, the fact is that Indonesian employers have long had it far from their own way.

January 25, 2006

Melbourne Age - January 25, 2006

Andra Jackson – A Catholic bishop has warned that Indonesian authorities are "trying to get to" the 43 West Papuan asylum seekers on Christmas Island.