Jadi Dubes Selandia Baru, Tantowi Diminta Jernihkan Isu soal Papua

Jakarta – Politikus Partai Golkar Tantowi Yahya siang tadi dilantik sebagai Duta Besar RI untuk Selandia Baru. Komisi I DPR berharap Tantowi bisa menjernihkan isu soal Papua di negara-negara sekitar Selandia Baru atau di kawasan Pasifik.

“Untuk Mas Tantowi, senior sekaligus sahabat saya, jujur, melepasnya agak berat. Beliau banyak memberi warna di Komisi I. Sehingga harapan saya juga cukup tinggi, agar keberangkatan beliau ke Selandia Baru dapat membawa manfaat luas bagi hubungan RI-Selandia Baru,” ungkap Wakil Ketua Komisi I Meutya Hafid dalam perbincangan dengan detikcom, Senin (13/3/2017).

Kepada kolega satu partainya itu, Meutya memiliki harapan khusus terkait dengan missed information soal Papua dari negara-negara Pasifik yang merugikan nama Indonesia. Sebelum menjadi dubes, Tantowi memang merupakan anggota DPR yang bertugas di Komisi I.

“Agar beliau dapat menjadi duta yang baik, terutama dalam isu Papua. Untuk menjelaskan dan meluruskan missed information mengenai Papua yang sering ditangkap salah, terutama di negara-negara Pasifik,” ujar Meutya.

“Ini terutama menanggapi beberapa negara Pasifik yang hampir selalu bicara keras namun salah tentang Papua di forum-forum internasional, termasuk PBB,” imbuhnya.

Meski negara-negara yang kerap mempermasalahkan isu Papua, disebut Meutya, hanya negara kecil dan hanya sedikit, itu dapat mencoreng nama besar Indonesia. Tantowi diminta berperan agar missed information tersebut dibenahi.

“Meskipun mereka negara kecil dan jumlahnya sedikit, jika dibiarkan terus juga mengganggu nama Indonesia di kancah internasional. Saya harap Pak Dubes Tantowi Yahya dapat melakukan pembicaraan khusus dengan negara tersebut yang tidak jauh letaknya dari Selandia Baru,” papar Meutya.

Dia pun menyarankan Tantowi mengajak pemerintah Selandia Baru membantu Indonesia terkait masalah ini. “Atau lebih baik lagi jika dapat mengajak pemerintah Selandia Baru juga menggaungkan ke negara-negara di kawasan mengenai pentingnya komitmen untuk menghargai kedaulatan Indonesia,” Meutya menambahkan.

Hari ini Presiden Joko Widodo melantik 17 duta besar dari 23 yang diajukan ke DPR. Menurut Ketua Komisi I Abdul Kharis Almasyhari, bukan berarti sisanya tidak mendapat rekomendasi dari Dewan.

“Lolos semua, yang dilantik sementara baru 17, karena yang sudah selesai administrasi di negara tujuan dan sudah siap diberangkatkan mungkin baru 17. Sisanya menunggu penyelesaian administrasi di negara penempatan,” ucap Kharis saat dihubungi terpisah, Senin (13/3).

“Hal ini bisa terjadi karena masing-masing negara tujuan berbeda-beda, ada yang cepat selesai, ada yang agak lambat. Sesuai dengan mekanisme di negara tujuan penempatan,” sambungnya.

Sebelumnya, setelah dilantik, Tantowi mengaku mendapat pesan khusus dari Presiden Jokowi. Ia juga menyebut ada tiga tantangan yang harus dihadapi pada tugas barunya, yakni di bidang politik, ekonomi, dan sosial-budaya. Secara politik, dia diakreditasikan juga ke dua negara di Pasifik, yaitu Samoa dan Kerajaan Tonga.

“Saya diminta Presiden menjalin komunikasi yang baik dengan negara-negara tersebut karena kita punya kepentingan politik yang besar di kawasan Pasifik. Bukan hanya soal Papua, tapi juga isu-isu lainnya,” kata Tantowi, Senin (13/3).
(ear/rna)

Uskup Agung di Oceania prihatin masalah HAM Papua

Para Uskup Agung Anglican di Oceania yang
Para Uskup Agung Anglican di Oceania yang

Jayapura, Jubi – Para Uskup Agung Anglikan se Oceania berkumpul di Australia pékan ini. Mereka kemudian mengeluarkan pernyataan bersama terkait persoalan di kawasan Pasifik, diantaranya masalah Hak Asasi Manusia di West Papua, perubahan iklim dan kebudayaan.

Dalam pernyatan bersama yang diterima Jubi (Kamis, 9/3/2017), lima Uskup Agung, masing-masing Uskup Agung Philip Freier dari Australia, Uskup Agung Clyde Igara dari Papua New Guinea, Uskup Agung Winston Halapua dan Uskup Agung Philip Richardson dari Aotearoa, Selandia Baru dan Polinesia, dan Uskup Agung George Takeli dari Melanesia menyebutkan telah mendengar cerita pelanggaran HAM ”mengerikan” di West Papua.

“Seperti terjadi kesewenang-wenangan negara dan cejara telah terjadi pada mereka (rakyat West Papua),” kata Uskup Agung Clyde Igara usai bertemu di Tweed Heads, New South Wales.

Lanjutnya, para pemimpin agama suatu saat bisa saja dihakimi atas kelemahan mereka dalam mendukung keadilan di dunia ini.

“Pada kenyataannya, kita membiarkan apa yang dunia lihat sebagai kelemahan dalam kekuatan sebenarnya, yakni kebodohan,” lanjut Uskup Agung Clyde Igara.

Selain masalah di West Papua, pernyataan bersama lima Uskup Agung Oceania ini memperingatkan ancaman terhadap wilayah Oceania dari perubahan iklim. Secara keseluruhan bangsa Oceania akan kehilangan pulau tempt mereka tinggal beberapa tahun ke depan.

“Advokasi keadilan iklim dan tindakan harus menjadi prioritas yang paling mendesak untuk Anglikan Oceanic,” sebut Uskup Agung Philip Richardson.

Mereka mencatat bahwa ada empat wilayah di Oceania yang meliputi beberapa negara, lebih dari 1000 bahasa, dengan budaya yang kaya dan beragam, terancam karena perubahan iklim. Empat wilayah ini telah lama bersatu melalui jalinan sejarah dan persahabatan panjang, tapi saat ini mereka menghadapi masalah dengan latar belakang ketidakharmonisan.

Pernyataan bersama para Uskup Agung ini juga membahas tantangan pekerja musiman dan mobilitas tenaga kerja di Oceania dan bagaimana mereka kita bisa merespon dengan baik aktivitas pastoral dan perkembangan politik.

“Hubungan kami yang berkembang dengan komunitas Anglikan di seluruh Asia bisa diperdalam dan melihat ke depan untuk pertemuan dari Uskup Agung dari Komuni Anglikan di bulan Oktober 2017,“ ujar Uskup Agung Philip Richardson. (*)

Reporter :Victor Mambor
victor_mambor@tabloidjubi.com

West Papua flag mural in Darwin remains intact despite criticism from Indonesian Consul

Independence activist Piter Elaby
Photo: West Papua independence activist Piter Elaby touches up a mural in Darwin’s CBD on Australia Day, 2016. (ABC News: Felicity James)

The Indonesian Consul to Darwin, Andre Siregar, has denied he pressured the owner of a wall to paint over a mural which features the West Papuan flag, but said he had reported its existence to Jakarta.

“It is something that we respect, we have to respect, but please note that it, itself is offensive to us,” Mr Siregar said.

Mr Siregar said as the Indonesian Government’s representative in Darwin he had conveyed Indonesia’s position on West Papua.

“Of course that is a flag of a separatist group — they want West Papua to be their own country,” Mr Siregar said.

“They ignore the 2.5 million Papuans who have gone to the election and voted, and the 3.9 million Papuans that live there.

“So as the government representative in Darwin I have conveyed this situation to the NT Government, [and] we don’t want them to be ill-informed.”

Mr Siregar told the ABC he was the last to find about the “external pressure” and urgency to remove the mural.

“I guess I found out last, that someone feels pressured, and someone wants their walls clean, someone had to choose someone to blame,” Mr Siregar said.

Mr Siregar said the building’s owner — Carlo Randazzo, the honorary Vice-Consul to Italy — had contacted him about the issue last week.

“He just said ‘we’re going to clean it up’, I said ‘it’s your wall, it’s your wall’ — and he just gave me some updates regarding where it’s been with those people who have painted on it,” Mr Siregar said.

“I’ve also casually spoken to Peter Styles about this, and he as the Minister for Multicultural Affairs, would take note of that. But again I have not really followed up on this discussion.”

Issue flared after ‘external pressure’

The issue of the large depiction of the West Papuan flag in the city’s centre flared after the artists who painted it in June 2015, were told to paint over it by an employee of Randazzo Properties.

The email to the artists cited “external pressures” as the reason for the sudden, urgent removal of the mural.

The mural itself also depicts the Aboriginal flag, and was painted as a symbol of solidarity between the two groups.

Mr Siregar said the Indonesian Consulate respected freedom of expression in Australia, and he had explained to visiting Indonesian officials the West Papuan flag mural did not necessarily reflect the position of Australians.

“Now after eight months there are many Territorians who also came to me and asked me ‘what’s with that flag?’,” Mr Siregar claimed.

Mr Siregar also said Indonesia was working at improving its human rights record.

“If there’s some concerns about human rights, as a developing country we’re all striving to make sure there’s no more human rights violations, even if there were violations, we are committed to rectifying those mistakes.”

Australia PM ino bringim ap West Papua heve long Indonesia President

Radio Australia – Updated 28 February 2017, 13:21 AEDT
Ol pipal blong West Papua itok oli wari tru long pasin em Australian Praim Minista Malcolm Turnbull ino bin toktok wantaim President Joko Widodo long ol human rights isiu long West Papua.
Tupela lida wantaim ibin tokaut long gutpela wokporoman blong kantri blong tupela bihain long wokabaut blong Predisent Widodo long Australia long wiken.
Mr Turnbull i tok Australia bai respektim ol internal affairs blong Indonesia olsem ol ibin tok oraet longen aninit long Lombok Treaty.
Ronny Kareni emi wanpla West Papua Activist long Australia i tok oli wari olsem toktok blong Praim Minista Turnbull bai mean olsem Australia bai no toktok long ol wari blong ol Melanesian pipol blong West Papua.
Ol i sutim tok long Indonesia long bagarapim na kilim dai planti handred tausan pipol blong West Papua.
long Sande ol pipal blong West Papua na ol sapota blong ol ibin mekim protest mas long Sydney, na taste ol protes ibin gohet long Western Australia na tu long Northern Territori long sapotim ol pipal blong West Papua.

Protester arrested outside Indonesian Embassy held in custody overnight for fine-only offences

A protester arrested outside the Indonesian Embassy has been fined and released from police custody after being held for almost 24 hours, under what his defence lawyer has described as unusual circumstances.

Adrian ‘AJ’ Van Tonder, 25, was arrested on Friday morning at the rally in Canberra, where he and his fellow protesters lay in the embassy driveway covered in sheets and fake blood.

Van Tonder, a Melbourne student, was with about 30 people protesting alleged human rights abuses by the Indonesian Government in West Papua.

The group blocked vehicles from entering and exiting by lying across the driveway.

This morning Van Tonder pleaded guilty in the ACT Magistrates Court to obstructing the embassy, refusing to provide a name and address and failing to comply with an order to move on.

He was fined $750 and released.

The combined offences carry a maximum penalty of up to $3,800.

The court heard the other protesters gave their details when asked by police to move on, but Van Tonder remained silent.

Van Tonder’s defence said being held in custody overnight on offences that carry fine-only punishments was “not something that would normally happen” and it was not clear why it had.

Magistrate Robert Cook told Van Tonder the right to protest peacefully should be protected.

“You should engage in it and that’s your right,” he said.

But he warned against ignoring police instructions.

“Ultimately then you leave police with no choice than to remove you physically,” he said.

Claims police trying to appease Indonesian Government

A group of fellow protesters supported Van Tonder in court.

Outside, they said his time in custody was unfair and stressful.

“The last 24 hours have been horrible,” Kiah Dennersterin said.

The protesters claim police are being pressured by Indonesia to arrest activists like themselves.

“Police are trying to appease the Indonesian Government and show they’re being strong against West Papuan activists,” another protester Rebecca Langley said.

“Recently there’s been a bit of tension between Indonesia and Australia regarding their military cooperation and it means eyes are on.”

Member of the West Papuan community Ronny Kareni said the arrest would not silence their message to free West Papua.

“It’s evident that the Australian Government is bowing down to Indonesia’s pressure,” he said.

“[The arrest] will only create more fire and fuel more support from people in the streets.”

The group said they travelled to Canberra from Melbourne to take part in this protest and Invasion Day protests.

ACT Policing was contacted for comment.

Australian unions pledge support for West Papua

The s has renewed a memorandum of understanding with the Federal Republic of West Papua (FRWP), pledging support for the cause of West Papuan self-determination.

The signing ceremony on 15 May was attended by members of the West Papuan community and a number of trade union leaders, including ACTU president Ged Kearney, Victorian Trades Hall secretary Luke Hilakari, Communication Workers Union Victorian branch secretaries Len Cooper and Joan Doyle and Maritime Union Victorian branch secretary Kevin Bracken.

FRWP minister for foreign affairs, immigration and trade, Jacob Rumbiak, told Red Flag that the memorandum, first signed in 2000, is being renewed because there is now greater international recognition of and support for West Papua.

The territory covers the western half of the island of New Guinea, located just north of Australia. It has been under Indonesian rule since the mid-1960s. More than 100,000 West Papuans are estimated to have been killed as a result of the occupation. The Indonesian military acts with impunity, often hand-in-glove with the operators of the Grasberg mine, the largest gold mine in the world.

“I hope that this [renewal] will in turn mean that the ACTU will petition the ALP to change its policy”, Dr Rumbiak said. The Labor Party currently supports Special Autonomy for West Papua. That path was initiated in 2001 but led nowhere. “They should change to support the right of self-determination”, he said.

The memorandum also pledges to “support the application by the United Liberation Movement (ULM) of West Papua for full membership of the Melanesian Spearhead Group”. The United Liberation Movement, of which the FRWP is a part, was formed in December last year to present a common voice of a number of different groups within the West Papuan liberation struggle.

The Melanesian Spearhead Group consists of Fiji, Vanuatu, Papua New Guinea and the Solomon Islands, along with the Kanak and Socialist National Liberation Front of New Caledonia. If the ULM were granted membership of the Spearhead Group, it would be seen as an endorsement of West Papua’s right to self-determination.

[To find out more about the campaign for West Papuan self-determination, visit freewestpapua.org.]

SourceL https://redflag.org.au/

Indonesian minister says Melbourne protester’s actions ‘intolerable’

Retno Marsudi
Indonesia’s foreign minister Retno Marsudi says she has been in touch with Julie Bishop to ensure the case of the trespassing protester in Melbourne is being investigated. Photograph: Darren Whiteside/Reuters

The Guardian – Indonesia’s foreign minister has urged Australian authorities to act against a trespassing protester who climbed on to the roof of the consulate-general in Melbourne and displayed a West Papuan flag.

A video of Friday’s protest shows a man scaling a wall to enter the consulate and climb on the roof to show the flag before climbing down again.

In a statement on Saturday, Indonesia’s foreign minister, Retno Marsudi, said Australian authorities must complete investigations and legally process the “crime perpetrator”, describing the intrusion as “absolutely intolerable”.

“Australia has the obligation and responsibility to immediately process this lawfully and to ensure the security of all Indonesian missions in Australia,” she said.

The minister said she had been in touch with the Australian foreign minister, Julie Bishop, on Saturday to ensure the incident was being investigated and legal process followed.

Victoria police said in a statement they were assisting the Australian federal police following the incident.

Last week, Indonesia temporarily suspended military ties with Australia in a spat over teaching materials at a Perth army base that included reference to the independence movement in West Papua, a sensitive topic for the Indonesian military.

Indonesia backs down in military rift with Australia over ‘insult’

Indonesia has appeared to back down from a decision to suspend all military cooperation with Australia in a row over teaching materials, with a senior minister saying only language training had been put on hold.

The Indonesian military – apparently without consulting the civilian government – had on Wednesday moved to suspend all military cooperation after a special forces commander was offended by material he saw at a Perth military base which insulted Indonesia’s founding ideology and promoted independence for the Indonesian province West Papua.

But following the military’s announcement, leaders of both Australia and Indonesia publicly insisted ties were strong before Indonesian security minister Wiranto announced on Thursday he was giving a “clarification”.

The military “has temporarily suspended cooperation in language training,” Wiranto said, adding it was due to “a small incident that has offended our dignity as a nation”.

But he said Indonesia was not “completely stopping all cooperation”, contradicting the earlier military statement. Indonesian and Australian forces cooperate on a range of issues from border protection to counter-terrorism.

“The suspension is temporary and will be resumed after Australia clearly takes measures to resolve the matter,” he added.

Australia’s defence minister, Marise Payne, had earlier insisted the broader relationship remained healthy and that she expected to be able to resume full cooperation with Indonesia’s TNI.

“The Australian army has looked into the serious concerns that were raised and the investigation into the incident is being finalised,” she said earlier in the day.

“Australia is committed to building a strong defence relationship with Indonesia, including through cooperation in training. We will work with Indonesia to restore full cooperation as soon as possible.”

She said on ABC radio the rift had not threatened Indonesia’s cooperation with Australia’s policy of turning back asylum seeker boats.

Payne conceded her first attempt to contact Indonesia’s defence minister about the suspension of military ties was not made until this week, despite knowing about the dispute in November.

Indonesia’s defence minister, Ryamizard Ryacudu, also earlier played down the suspension saying the broader relationship with Australia was “fine” and that Indonesia “should not overreact”.

The suspension was a military, not a political, decision, he said, and the officer who initially raised the concerns had been reprimanded.

“It was all the doings of some lieutenants,” he said. “They have been reprimanded and punished. Don’t let actions of some low-ranking ­officers affect relations of two countries. That’s not good.”

A spokesman for the Indonesian president, Joko Widodo, said: “This was not a decision of the president.”

Ryacudu was quoted as using the Indonesian word “curut” to describe the officers, the literal translation for which is shrew or mouse, but which is used to disparage a subordinate as insignificant.

Indonesia’s special forces group, Kopassus, trains with the Australia’s Special Air Service troops at the SAS base at Campbell barracks in Perth, and Guardian Australia understands an instructor from Kopassus felt insulted by material on display at the training base in November.

It is believed the Kopassus officer was initially offended by propaganda material about West Papua, a province of Indonesia in which a long-running campaign for independence, and allegations of systemic human rights abuses by the military, are of extreme sensitivity. Senior former military leaders were also insulted as murderers and criminals.

The officer also reportedly saw a laminated piece of paper that ridiculed Indonesia’s founding ideology “pancasila” – which translates as “five principles” – as “panca-gila”. Gila, in Bahasa Indonesia, means crazy.

But broader issues within the Australia-Indonesia relationship have been brought into the open by the spat, with Australia also been forced to deny it has tried to recruit Indonesian military personnel as spies, despite claims by Indonesia’s military chief, general Gatot Nurmantyo. .

 

In a speech in November and revealed by the ABC this week, Nurmantyo claimed Australia had sought to recruit Indonesia’s best and brightest as sources.

“Every time there is a training program – like recently – the best five or 10 students would be sent to Australia,” he said, according to a translation of his

 

“That happened before I was chief so I let that happen. Once I became chief commander of the national forces, it did not happen again … They will certainly be recruited, they will certainly be recruited.”

Again, the contentious issue of West Papuan independence was raised as a major concern.

Payne denied Australia has tried to influence or recruit Indonesian officers for intelligence activities or spying: “That is not the case and it is something which we would not countenance, of course.”

She told ABC radio she had communicated with Ryacudu on number of matters in December and the issue was not raised by him.

The Australian government is understood to have been surprised by the timing of the announcement of the military suspension, as it believed the issue was being managed and its investigation coming to a conclusion.

Indonesia and Australia’s military relationship has improved in recent years, after an at-times troubled history.

The Lombok treaty commits both countries to cooperating in defence, combating transnational crime, counter-terrorism and intelligence-sharing. Australia has sold military hardware to Indonesia and defence and foreign ministers meet regularly.

But relations were shaken in 2013 – and military cooperation suspended – when it was revealed the Australian Signals Directorate attempted to monitor the phone calls of the then president, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, his wife and senior officials.

“Bintang Kejora” Berkibar di KJRI Melbourne, Pemerintah Protes Australia

JAKARTA, KOMPAS.com – Pemerintah Indonesia melalui Kementerian Luar Negeri mengecam keras tindakan pengibaran bendera Papua Merdeka, Bintang Kejora, di Kantor Konsulat Jenderal RI (KJRI) di Melbourne, Australia, Jumat (6/1/2017), sekitar pukul 12.52 waktu setempat.

Juru Bicara Kementerian Luar Negeri Arrmanatha Nasir mengatakan, Pemerintah Australia memiliki tanggung jawab untuk melindungi perwakilan diplomatik dan konsuler yang ada di Australia.

Hal itu sesuai dengan Konvensi Wina thn 1961 dan 1963 mengenai hubungan diplomatik dan konsuler.

“Pemerintah mengingatkan bahwa menjadi tanggung jawab Pemerintah Australia melindungi perwakilan diplomatik. Untuk itu Pemerintah RI meminta kepada.Pemerintah Australia untuk memastikan dan meningkatkan perlindungan terhadap semua properti diplomatik dan konsuler Indonesia,” ujar Arrmanatha saat dihubungi, Jumat (6/1/2017).

Arrmanatha mengatakan, peristiwa pengibaran tersebut terjadi pada sekitar pukul 12.52 siang, saat sebagian besar staff KJRI sedang melakukan ibadah Sholat Jumat.

Pelaku menerobos halaman gedung apartemen tetangga KJRI sebelum memanjat pagar tembok KJRI yang tingginya lebih dari 2.5 meter.

Atas peristiwa itu, Indonesia telah menyampaikan protes ke Pemerintah Australia dan meminta agar pelaku segera ditangkap.

“Pemerintah RI telah menyampaikan protes ke Pemerintah Australia dan meminta agar pelaku segera ditangkap dan dihukum secara tegas sesuai hukum yang berlaku,” kata dia.

Penulis : Kristian Erdianto
Editor : Inggried Dwi Wedhaswary

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