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An Island of Contrasts
The population of West Papua is estimated at approximately 1,800,000.
There is estimated to be 770,000 migrants now living in the province,
mainly landless Javanese, sponsored and unsponsored, encouraged to move
to West Papua under the government's Transmigration program. Under this
national program of population resettlement, the province of West Papua
is now the largest recipient of migrants transported from other islands
such as Java, Bali and Sulawesi. The most extensive migration program
in history, the Indonesian government's Trans-migration program has
contributed to West Papua having one of the country's highest provincial
population growth rates. There is also considerably greater pressure
on the natural environment due to land clearance, legal and illegal,
poaching and encroachment by settlers into nature reserves.
West
Papua's population was 85 per cent Christian before the annexation.
This number has declined in the past few years.
The province has the
poorest health standards of all twenty seven Indonesian provinces,
including the highest infant mortality and maternal mortality rates.
The average yearly provincial health department budget is only AUD
$1.3 million. According to a 1995 United Nations index, of all the
ASEAN countries Indonesia has the lowest quality of life, yet the
statistics for Irian Jaya are by far the lowest in the country. This
index includes longevity, measured by life expectancy, knowledge,
measured by years of schooling, and standard of living, measured by
purchasing power.
"All indigenous peoples ... have the right to
establish and control their educational systems and institutions
providing education in their own languages, in a manner appropriate
to their cultural methods of teaching and learning."
The people of West Papua are composed of various language groups,
such as the Dani of the Baliem Valley in the central highlands,
the Asmat of the southern, coastal region and the Ekari of the
Wissel Lakes region. There are at least 250 main languages spoken
by the indigenous people, reflecting the isolation and small
numbers of many of the tribes. However, the long term policy
of the Indonesian government is the universal use of Bahasa
Indonesia, the national language of Indonesia. This is taught
in West Papua's schools from grade one onwards, whereas in other
provinces of Indonesia the first three years of instruction at
primary level are given in the local vernacular. The percentage
of illiteracy for West Papua is nearly double the national average
and quoted as 30.5 with a rate of 81.5 in the highlands district.
The destruction of West Papua's culture and environment is taking
place with the full knowledge of the governments of the Western
nations, protecting the business interests of numerous large
multi-national corporations active in West Papua. Throughout the
period of Indonesian government rule, President Soeharto and his
associates have exploited the resources of West Papua in the worst
tradition of military-based, authoritarian governments, and have
sought to keep the issue hidden from the outside world. With a
highly controlled Indonesian press and restrictions on movement
within the province, geographical remoteness and difficulties of
access have combined to make West Papua the silent genocide of modern times.
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"Indigenous peoples have
the right to determine
and develop priorities
and strategies for
exercising their right
to development. In
particular, indigenous
peoples have the right
to determine and develop
all health, housing
and other economic
and social programmes
affecting them and
as far as possible, to
administer such programmes
through their own
institutions."
Draft Declaration
on the Rights
of Indigenous
People, The United
Nations Commission
on Human Rights
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