By Jim Elmslie, Global Research, January 20, 2017, The Asia-Pacific Journal 15 January 2017
This paper will reconsider previous work on the demographic transition under way in West Papua (the Indonesian provinces of Papua and Papua Barat) in the light of documents received from the Indonesian Statistics Office (Badan Pusat Statistic BPS) that give an ethnic breakdown across the 29 regencies that comprise Papua province and the eleven regencies in Papua Barat. They show that, while the proportion of Papuan people as a percentage of the entire population continues to decline, this process varies widely between different regencies. While some have a strong majority of non-Papuan people other regencies are still overwhelmingly Papuan.
New statistics show indigenous Melanesians are not yet the minority they were thought to be in West Papua.
Indonesia’s Statistics Office has produced an ethnic breakdown of Papua region, based on the last census in 2010 which established an overall population of 3.6 million.
While the proportion of Papuan people as a percentage of the population continues to decline, this process varies widey between different regencies.
The percentage of Papuans has fallen catastrophically in some regions, particularly in urban centres, but Papuans still make up the vast majority in the Highlands.
Using the new data, Jim Elmslie of Sydney University’s West Papua Project has produced a new paper updating his previous work on Papua’s demographic transition.
THE MISS VANUATU COMPETITION IS ON! Daily Post will be profiling contestants for Miss Vanuatu weekly until the crowning in November. Miss Vanuatu is showcasing a range of talents from young and vibrant women determined who will soon be crowned Miss Vanuatu 2016.
Name: Kaylyndella Mala
Age: 18
Island of Origin: Ambae
Occupation: Student at Sorovanga JSS
How did you enter the Miss Vanuatu competition?
I have a friend who is also in the competition who asked if wan interested to join. I then approached Madame Michelle if I can join in the pageant to which she agreed and here I am, competing for Miss Vanuatu 2016.
What do you think Miss Vanuatu is all about?
Miss Vanuatu is a competition where our beauty is put into good use and to showcase the diverse custom and culture from which we are from.
If you were to win Miss Vanuatu 2016, what are your future goals?
If I win the Miss Vanuatu 2016, I will put my effort into helping youth to realise their potential in their communities and make use of their talents to improve their lives as well as for the community which they belong to. I want to be the inspiration for women and girls in Vanuatu that anyone can be in the competition and to dream big.
NAME: Delinson Tari
AGE: 20
ISLAND OF ORIGIN: Ambae
OCCUPATION: Student at USP
How did you enter Miss Vanuatu 2016 competition?
I heard from a friend who is also in the competition and wanted to join. I met up with the president of the competition who confirmed my participation.
What do you think Miss Vanuatu is all about?
It is a competition where contestants show their beauty. It is a platform where women and girls can show their confidence especially in a society usually dominated by men.
If you were to win Miss Vanuatu 2016, what are your future goals?
As I am still a student (a science student), health is the very important aspect of our life, so i believe if I win and become the next Miss Vanuatu, I will improve our health facilities and resources by advocating for help to aid these improvements.
NAME: Melissa Fare
AGE: 20
ISLAND OF ORIGIN: Ambrym
OCCUPATION: Student at USP/ Part-time external Aid at PVIS
How did you enter Miss Vanuatu 2016 competition?
I was asked by the Miss Vanuatu competition committee to part of the show as I have previously took part in some of the beauty pageant in Port Vila
What do you think Miss Vanuatu is all about?
This competition is a full package- brains and beauty, courage and confidence in critical times. You’re not just showing how beautiful you are but how smart and confident you to handle, like I said, critical times and good times.
If you were to win Miss Vanuatu 2016, what are your future goals?
My long term goal is to become a diplomat representing my country. I thought being in the competition, the positives and the negatives but then I looked at it as an opportunity where I can use my talents and learn new things that will build me into a better person and best represent my country, Vanuatu whether in the region or internationally if there is need. I will advocate for women and girls, for children and especially people with special needs in our community and make their voices heard.
West Papua’s youth are being removed to Islamic religious schools in Java for “re-education”, writes Michael Bachelard.
Captive audience … Papuan boys at the Daarur Rasul Islamic boarding school, outside Jakarta, behind locked gates. Photo: Michael Bachelard
Johanes Lokobal sits on the grass that cushions the wooden floor of his little, one-room house. He warms his hands at a fire set in the centre. From time to time a pig, out of sight in an annex, squeals and slams itself thunderously against the adjoining wall.
The village of Megapura in the central highlands of Indonesia’s far-eastern province of West Papua is so remote that supplies arrive by air or by foot only. Johanes Lokobal has lived here all his life. He does not know his exact age: “Just old,” he croaks. He’s also poor. “I help in the fields. I earn about 20,000 rupiah [$2] per day. I clean the school garden.” But in a hard life, one hardship particularly offends him. In 2005, his only son, Yope, was taken to faraway Jakarta. Lokobal did not want Yope to go. The boy was perhaps 14, but big and strong, a good worker. The men responsible took him anyway. A few years later, Yope died. Nobody can tell Lokobal how, nor exactly when, and he has no idea where his son is buried. All he knows, fiercely, is that this was not supposed to happen.
“If he was still alive, he would be the one to look after the family,” Lokobal says. “He would go to the forest to collect the firewood for the family. So I am sad.”
Heavy learning … boys and girls at Daarur Rasul. Photo: Michael Bachelard
The men who took Yope were part of an organised traffic in West Papuan youth. A six-month Good Weekend investigation has confirmed that children, possibly in their thousands, have been enticed away over the past decade or more with the promise of a free education. In a province where the schools are poor and the families poorer still, no-cost schooling can be an irresistible offer.
But for some of these children, who may be as young as five, it’s only when they arrive that they find out they have been recruited by “pesantren”, Islamic boarding schools, where time to study maths, science or language is dwarfed by the hours spent in the mosque. There, in the words of one pesantren leader, “They learn to honour God, which is the main thing.” These schools have one aim: to send their graduates back to Christian-majority Papua to spread their muscular form of Islam.
Ask the 100 Papuan boys and girls at the Daarur Rasul school outside Jakarta what they want to be when they grow up and they shout, “Ustad! Ustad! [religious teacher].”