La
Chronique, Amnesty International, 3 novembre 2014
WEST PAPUA
NEW GUINEA :
Wensislaus Fatuban, a native of Papua New Guinea, has made a series
of short documentary films which show the daily lives of his people,
their history and their repression by the Indonesian army. His films
gave a voice to the Papuan people at the film festival in Douarnenez
in Brittany last August.
Wensislaus
Fatubun : The Eye of the Papuans
by Patrick Chesnet
Thirty
years afterward, Wensislaus has still not forgotten. It
happened in the south of the Indonesian province of West Papua, a
journey of two days from the “big city” of Merauke. Life in the
small village of Yodom centered around trips to and from the
ubiquitous, generous forest, provider of every need. The arrival of
South Korean lumber company brutally intruded on the traditional way
of life. Workers started to fell trees. Word had it that a plantation
of palm oil trees was to take their place.
While the
helpless population watched the destruction of part of their sources
of food, the children in the village had eyes only for the
bulldozers. But what fascinated 12-year-old Wensislaus the most was
the strange object a Korean regularly held up to his eye as if he
were aiming at something. “No one had ever seen a camera,” he
remembers. “When I saw the joyful reactions of the people who saw
their pictures from the camera, I said to myself that me, too, I
wanted to do that.”
His
dream came true some years later when, after studying journalism at
the Catholic University
of Manado, on the island of Sulawesi, Fatubun started work at the
Office for Justice and Peace in the archdiocese of Merauke. “I
began to write reports and use a camera to speak out on the rights of
native peoples and environmental issues. This is how the project
Papuan Voices
started,” he explains. “I wanted this to be a cultural project to
permit the people of Papua to tell their own stories in films. So
other people could learn about them.”
Wensislaus
visited the villages, explained what
a camera was and what purpose it served and convinced the villagers
of its usefulness as a tool. Once a plan for the sequence established
to everyone’s satisfaction, he could film. The result: short
fifteen-minute films posted on Internet in order to reach a maximum
audience. [These films can be viewed on papuanvoices.net
and on YouTube: West Papua Story Teller.] “One of our films tells
the story of a young Papuan woman who became pregnant after a
relation with an Indonesian soldier. This happens to a good number of
Papuan women who find themselves alone to raise their child, cast off
by Indonesians and their own community alike,” says the
producer-film maker. “Another film shows how Papuans are losing
their culture and their identity.”
Fatubun’s
interest is not just in making films: “Each sequence is an
opportunity to talk with the villagers about human rights, the rights
of indigenous peoples and their socio-economic rights. Making a film
is an occasion for us to settle on a strategy with the villagers for
them to claim their rights. Not only by addressing representatives of
the government in meetings organized by the Justice and Peace office
but also more globally using our network.”
There
are indeed reasons to protest. Their land is being taken from them,
they are being colonized by new settlers, they are being forced into
assimilation and being marginalized … This is not to forget the
smouldering war that has been going on since 1963, when West Papua
was de facto
declared a part of the Republic of Indonesia. To this day, Papuan
armed groups have been calling for greater autonomy and even
independence.
Wensislaus
denounces “a creeping genocide,” given the extra judiciary
executions, arbitrary arrests, disappearances and torture to which
the Papuan population is exposed. Amnesty International has regularly
recorded abuses and violations of human rights by Indonesian
authorities in a region off-limits to international non-governmental
organizations and journalists. [Two French journalists with Arte were
arrested this August 6th
and imprisoned for having travelled with tourist visas and contacted
members of an “armed gang of criminals”. They risk a condemnation
of 5 years at their upcoming trial as well as fines of $42,000.]
Last
August at the Douarnenez
film festival, this year centred on Indonesia, Wensislaus was
enheartened by the size of the audience: “Every screening outside
is a chance to tell the world about what Papuans are enduring, to
build new alliances and to add to the contacts of our network.”
There is however another aspect to consider: “The army has
threatened me to stop my work. When I started to receive threats on
my life, I decided to leave West Papua. I now live in Jakarta, where
I continue my fight to make the voices of Papuans heard.”
boleh saya minta email kakak ? ini saya Ronald Fatubun. Kakak masih ingat ?
BalasHapusBoleh kontak di facebook: Papua Storyteller
BalasHapusKK Wens bisa minta email k?..
BalasHapusKk bisa email sa langsung ke sini sa email : julia.moiwend@gmail.com
Thanks kk
salam
Ok diks
BalasHapus