[nasional_list] [ppiindia] Letter to Indonesian President Yudhoyono

  • From: "Ambon" <sea@xxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <"Undisclosed-Recipient:;"@freelists.org>
  • Date: Fri, 10 Feb 2006 22:30:23 +0100

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**http://hrw.org/english/docs/2006/02/10/indone12653.htm

Letter to Indonesian President Yudhoyono 
On lack of access for press and NGOs to Papua
February 10, 2006  
 
President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono  
Office of the President  
Istana Merdeka  
Jakarta 10110  
Republic of Indonesia  
 
 
Dear President Yudhoyono: 

We write regarding recent press reports about what appears to be effectively a 
ban on the foreign media from the province of Papua in eastern Indonesia.  
 
Indonesia's Minister of Defense, Juwono Sudarsono, was reported on February 6, 
2006 in the media stating that the government will maintain curbs on foreign 
media reporting from Papua. He is quoted as saying that:  
 
"We feel that our unity and cohesion are being threatened by the presence of 
foreign intrusion and concerns so there is a balance between international 
concerns and sovereignty that we want to strike very peacefully."  
 
Minister Sudarsono was also reported as stating that the curbs should extend to 
foreign nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) and churches, who he thought might 
create conflict in the province by encouraging Papuans to campaign on issues of 
human rights. He stated that he feared reporters could be "used as a platform" 
by Papuans to publicize the alleged abuses.  
 
These recent statements confirm what has effectively been a ban on access to 
Papua for a wide range of foreign organizations since 2003. The Jakarta Foreign 
Correspondents Club has stated concern that no foreign journalist has had 
official access to Papua in the past eighteen months. In that period there has 
been a significant build-up of troops in Papua with reports of widespread 
displacement of civilians, arson, and arbitrary detention in the central 
highlands region.  
 
Human Rights Watch is alarmed at efforts by the Indonesian government to ban or 
limit press coverage of human rights violations and other issues in Papua. Such 
a ban harkens back to the previous era of autocracy, not the new democracy that 
your government leads.  
 
Human Rights Watch urges the Indonesian government to respect press freedom and 
to allow full press coverage of all issues affecting the province.  
 
Human Rights Watch fears that the lack of access and monitoring by independent 
observers, including the media, will further create a climate in which the 
armed forces and police believe they can act with impunity and commit abuses, 
unreported and away from the public eye. Minister Sudarsono admitted that some 
cases of killing, rapes, and abuses by some soldiers had occurred in the 
province. An immediate imperative will be to remove restrictions on access to 
and within Papua.  
 
The rights to freedom of expression and information are protected under 
international human rights law. The Universal Declaration of Human Rights, 
which is recognized as customary international law applicable to all states, 
recognizes in article 19 the right to "seek, receive, and impart information 
and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers."  
 
Human Rights Watch is concerned about the human rights impact of the increasing 
military presence in Papua. Although the right to freedom of expression under 
human rights law may be restricted during a state of emergency or to protect 
national security, as provided by law and as is necessary, the Indonesian 
government has provided no justifications for the broad-based restrictions on 
access to Papua by the foreign media and nongovernmental organizations, 
including international human rights organizations. Any government-imposed 
restrictions on journalists (as well as NGO workers) should be consistent with 
principle 19 of the widely regarded Johannesburg Principles on National 
Security, Freedom of Expression, and Access to Information (U.N. Doc. 
E/CN.4/1996/39) on access to restricted areas, which provides:  
 

  Any restriction on the free flow of information may not be of such a nature 
as to thwart the purposes of human rights and humanitarian law. In particular, 
governments may not prevent journalists or representatives of intergovernmental 
or nongovernmental organizations, which monitor adherence to human rights or 
humanitarian standards, from entering areas where there are reasonable grounds 
to believe that violations of human rights or humanitarian law are being, or 
have been, committed. Governments may not exclude journalists or 
representatives of such organizations from areas that are experiencing violence 
or armed conflict except where their presence would pose a clear risk to the 
safety of others.
 
 
We fear that restrictions on reporting from Papua are aimed at making the human 
rights situation in Papua largely invisible to the world and reduce 
international pressure to ensure respect for human rights. But as your 
government has learned from its experience in Aceh, silencing or censoring the 
media will only fuel misinformation and create conditions for more abuse. These 
cannot be the goals of a reform-minded democratic government. Aceh is now open 
to critical eyes; unless there is something to hide, we cannot understand why 
Papua should not also be accessible. Human Rights Watch urges the Indonesian 
government to respect press freedom and to allow full press coverage of all 
issues affecting the province.  
 
Thank you for your consideration.  
 
Ken Roth  
Executive Director  
Human Rights Watch 

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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