Tuesday, September 3, 2013

1) Freeport Indonesia CEO says force majeure lifted at Papua copper mine


1) Freeport Indonesia CEO says force majeure lifted at Papua copper mine

2) In West Papua, making Mee  music videos
3) The Freedom Flotilla Will Go Down In History

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1) Freeport Indonesia CEO says force majeure lifted at Papua copper mine


JAKARTA, Sept 3 | Tue Sep 3, 2013 12:49am EDT
(Reuters) - The Indonesian unit of Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc has lifted its force majeure at the world's second-biggest copper mine, almost four months after a deadly accident at the remote Papua complex, the local CEO said on Tuesday.
Freeport Indonesia declared force majeure to free itself from obligations to deliver copper concentrate from its Grasberg copper and gold mine on June 12, after a tunnel collapse on May 14 that killed 28 people and forced the mine to halt operations.
"No more force majeure," PT Freeport Indonesia Chief Executive Rozik Soetjipto said in a text message reply to a Reuters question on whether the force majeure had been lifted.
"It was lifted based on mutual agreement with each individual client."


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2) In West Papua, making Mee  music videos
Veronika Kusumaryati, Contributor, West Papua | Feature | Tue, September 03 2013, 12:57 PM
Martinus You is an aspiring artist. During the day, he works at an NGO in the mining city of Timika. At night and on the weekends, however, he can be found writing songs in his native Mee language at home or in church.

Hailing from the highlands of West Papua, Martinus grew up in Nabire. “I was fostered by a Bugis family. When I attended junior high school, I got close to a Bugis friend. He was no good at school, so I helped him a lot with lessons. He told his parents. Then they asked me to live with them.”

Martinus and his fellow musicians have just finished shooting three music videos for their upcoming album. His group, Akawe, performs pop songs written in Mee. “Most of our songs are about our experiences as orphaned children.” The music, which features minimal acoustic guitar accompaniment, evokes Latin or Spanish rhythms.

The language of Akawe’s songs is spoken by those living in Paniai and in all the places where the Mee have spread in West Papua. The videos feature typically Mee youths wearing penis gourds (koteka) while playing the guitar, dancing in the river and even while portraying rich and poor characters.

One video tells the story of a poor boy who has lost his father. The boy must break up with his girlfriend, who is in love with a rich man (Martinus), who can be seen walking to his car wearing only a koteka and modest headdress.

“Why do we have to be ashamed?” Martinus asks. “The koteka is our culture. We have to be proud to wear one.”

In June, the band performed live at a television studio in Mimika to an amused audience. Even in the big city, men wearing koteka are considered exotic.

Several other ethnic groups living in the highlands, such as the Dani, Nduga, and Amungme people, also wear koteka. However, younger generations of Mee have left their penis gourds behind, preferring to wear “modern” clothes like other Papuans or the ubiquitous transmigrants from Java and Sulawesi.

Seen as a mark of a “primitive” past, koteka today can only be found in souvenir shops and rely on the old generation to maintain their existence.

Martinus’ insistence to wear a koteka in the band’s videos and when performing live is partially a marketing move. “There have been a lot of videos featuring songs from Papua, but none of them have shown a koteka. The koteka is unique to Papua, so why we don’t show them? […] A koteka can make our performance distinct. If we follow the existing model, we won’t be unique. We won’t sell.”

In West Papua, local musicians have been able to eke out a living in cities such as Biak, Serui, Manokwari, Asmat and Boven Digul, producing CDs and karaoke VCDs featuring local music and gospel music in local languages. As digital copies of the songs easily circulate over cell phones, the musicians have been trying to make money through videos. “People won’t buy music if there is no video for it,” Martinus says.

He’s worked as a cassette seller and has a grasp of what people want. Akawe’s videos are local. Two were shot by a river near Timika with a concrete bridge on the background. “We shot on the Pindah-Pindah River because it resembles Paniai, with its foggy mountains and rivers. However, there must be no coconuts, no nut trees and no clothed people. We in the highlands don’t have nut trees, so we can’t shoot on a beach or forest here.”

Martinus and his cameraman (a local wedding videographer) have been bucking stereotypes about Papuans. They are an ethnic group that has a good reputation in Papua as a well educated and entrepreneurial people. Mee are also noted for moving to cities such as Jayapura, Timika, and Nabire to run businesses or to be professors or writers. It is said that the Mee has more authors than all of Papuan ethnic groups.

“We don’t have much resources in the mountains, so a lot of us go to the cities to have a better life,” Martinus says.

The band has been inspired by the singing and dancing that is part of the Mee tradition. Their music is inspired by the conviviality of a yuwo, or pig-roast party, when people buy and sell animals and noken bags, fish and shrimps caught from Tigi and Tage Lakes nearby and fresh produce from their gardens. As young people sing and dance to attract the opposite sex, the old people recall their hunting and gardening experiences.

Martinus said that his songs were inspired by his life as a poor kid in Epouto. His mother worked in the family’s garden, as did many Mee in the highland, while his father spent time fishing in Tage Lake. After his father died when Martinus was a teenager, he found it hard to find a Mee woman to marry.

“We have to pay a very expensive dowry.” At that time, Martinus had been working as a taxi driver in Nabire — “the first person from the highland that could actually drive a taxi”, he proudly states.

In the Mee culture, a man must provide at least 10 pigs to his future wife. Given that a single pig can cost more than Rp 10 million (US$910), marriage is not for those who have nothing in their pockets.

“In those days, parents arranged the marriage. Today, everything is different. People can get married if they love each other. Those days, we had to have money. If we didn’t, we wouldn’t be able to get married,” Martinus said.

Things, however, have been changing in the Papua highlands. Not only have young men declined to wear koteka, social structures and traditional culture have undergone a profound transformations.

On one hand, people have quickly adopted technology such as cell phones, music players and the Internet as well as Indonesian democracy and a “modern” economy, among other things. On the other hand, communities have been struggling to maintain their communal identities. While decades of militarization and marginalization have made this struggle harder, West Papua is not merely a setting for tribal wars and insurrections.

Akawe is one of the many local proofs that Papuans have never simply been passive objects upon which greater forces have acted. Martinus is proud of what he has created, albeit realistically.

 “We want to sell the CDs to the Mee community in Paniai and to the Mee diaspora across Papua,” he says. “We want to show that once we had this culture. Maybe someday our children will look at us proudly.”

Akawe’s album is scheduled be released in October.
— Photos By Veronika Kusumaryati And Onny Wiranda
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3) The Freedom Flotilla Will Go Down In History

By Shirley Shackleton

Shirley Shackleton was on board the Lusitania when it sailed to East Timor in 1992 to protest the Indonesian occupation. She offers words of solidarity for the West Papuan Freedom Flotilla
When I heard the shadow foreign affairs spokesperson Julie Bishop comment recently on the Freedom Flotilla sailing peacefully to West Papua, I experienced a moment of déjà vu. In Bishop’s opinion, "If this Freedom Flotilla breaches Indonesia's territorial sovereignty, Indonesia is entitled to use whatever means it wishes to protect it.”
In 1992 I sailed on the Lusitania Peace Ship to East Timor, which had similar objectives to the Freedom Flotilla, and was blocked by warships, a military plane, three helicopters, and threats to “shoot us out of the water”. The rhetoric at that time was similar to that which is being promulgated at present. We were insulted and threatened in what were obvious canards.
Nevertheless youthful volunteers came from France, Guinea-Bissau in Africa, Japan, Germany, Canada, Cape Verde, China, Indonesia, Holland, Austria, Vietnam, Italy, Brazil, India, Sweden, the United States of America, Britain, Australia and Portugal. Some of the volunteers on board had not been born when Indonesia invaded East Timor.
Reports from 2 March 1992 quote Australia’s ambassador to Indonesia, Philip Flood, as saying, “Australia will not sacrifice good relations with Jakarta”. He threatened to take “appropriate measures” if “they [the peace mission members] act illegally”. Apparently it didn’t occur to Flood to suggest to the Indonesian dictator Suharto that it would be unwise from public relations point-of-view to sink a civilian ship.
We wanted to alert the world to the parlous situation in East Timor by walking from Dili port to the Santa Cruz cemetery to place flowers on the graves of victims of the Santa Cruz massacre.
To have the guts to protest without being armed is a frightening affair. Twenty-one years ago, on 10 March at 11am, a RAAF plane flew over us. At 2.40pm an Indonesian Caribou aircraft swooped us twice. At 5pm two more aircraft made two more sweeps. Next morning, 11 March, I woke at 4am to see the outline of eight warships and a frigate following us. When the sun came up one student rubbed his eyes and exclaimed, “I’ve never seen a more exciting sunrise”.
The parallels between the present Flotilla and the Lusitania are obvious. One sincerely hopes for as good an outcome. After negotiations our captain turned his ship. He instructed us to make our way to the stern where we threw our wreaths and flowers. At no time had anyone on the Lusitania made so much as a rude gesture towards the bullying warships. As we sailed back to Australia many voiced their pleasure to have taken part. I overheard a Japanese girl and a German youth promising to work all the harder for freedom for the Timorese from Javanese oppression.
I heard a report that thousands of Timorese had flooded into Dili to welcome the Lusitania. The boost to Timorese morale had clearly rattled the occupying army. We had struck a blow against the dictatorship’s capacity to rely on propaganda. It also helped to instil immense pride both in Portugal and East Timor and among the passengers who returned to their homelands to great acclaim.
When I went to the South Melbourne Market to replenish my empty refrigerator I was not allowed to pay for a single item. All kinds of articles including a silk shirt were pressed on me. I was with one of my nephews and when I protested he wisely counselled me, “I think you should just accept, Shirley”.
Another consequence of the Lusitania which I hope will be repeated for the Flotilla was that even school children knew the truth about East Timor after we returned.
For the West Papuan Flotilla the truth is again very simple: money is the root of all evil. The same morning as Bishop made her comments, news broke that America has agreed to sell Apache helicopters worth $500 million to Indonesia. Who is likely to invade Indonesia? Tonga? Tasmania?
I don’t know anything about Julie Bishop except her chosen field of work, but I don’t believe for a moment that she can be as ignorant of the plight of the subjugated citizens of West Papua as her comments suggest. She is backed up by Foreign Minister Bob Carr, who is quoted as referring to the protestors as “fringe activists” in several reports.
As far as my experience as an activist is concerned, Carr is guilty of tautology.
Perhaps the brave souls manning the flotilla are aware that Australian foreign aid to Indonesia is$647 Million – a 350 per cent increase over seven years. Australia also provides military and other hardware above this amount. Indonesia’s expenditure on military is $8 billion – a 300 per cent increase over the same seven years.
Australia gives more foreign aid to Indonesia than the whole of Africa and the Middle Eastcombined. Australia’s aid to Indonesia has increased while aid in all other areas including Pacific neighbours has been cut.
In other words, Australian taxpayer dollars could be helping to finance the purchase of Apache attack helicopters for the Indonesian military – the same military that is responsible for hundreds of thousands of deaths in occupied West Papua.

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