Eyes Shut : West Papuans in Exile - A Photographic Project
Eyes Shut
West Papuans in Exile - A Photographic Project
From Rohan Radheya - http://rohanradheya.com/
Eyes Shut : West Papuans in exile...
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Dutch
Surinamese photographer Rohan Radheya has spent two years
photographing West Papuans in exile...
His first piece called Mirroring West
Papua (see image left) was published in The Jakarta Globe.
Radheya has travelled through West Papua as one of very few
foreign journalists to visit the territory. He has met with
prominent independence leaders including leaders of the
TPN-OPM, the armed wing of the OPM in West Papua that fights
for independence.
In the following Q&A Radheya
talks about his new project, called Eyes Shut and the
current situation in West Papua under Indonesia's new
president Joko Widodo... Images on this page are from the
Eyes Shut photograph series.
Eyes Shut : Behind the Scenes
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Question : Your work
about West Papuans in exile often have a unusual, and
artistic approach for instance your piece called Mirroring
West Papua. Tell us about the nature of these projects and
how you invent them....
I have never invented
these projects on my own...
Everything I do is copied and
inspired from other photographers..
Most photographers
try to create their own styles...
I have been trying to
develop my own style for nearly a decade now...
In the
end I always failed, because I was always inspired by the
work of others before I set out to cover a certain
project.
I ended up keeping their visuals in my mind and
in this way copying them...
I finally came to realize
that every story needs its own approach and is definitely
not limited to a photographer’s own style or
perspective.
A story is so much bigger then a
photographers ego....
I am trying to copy the work of
other photographers, and match their styles with the right
stories...
West Papua is one of the most forgotten places in the world.
With the crisis elsewhere in the world in
Iraq, Syria, Gaza and Ukraine, Western powers have their
handful...
They cannot afford another conflict and the
press restriction in West Papua is a convenient thing
..
The idea with the creative approach towards the West
Papua story is to rise above all the general headlines, and
still manage to send the word out.
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Question : Tell us about your new project called Eyes Shut...
With a new
Indonesian president just coming into office the signs are
that the situation in West Papua is becoming worse by the
day....
The Indonesian Government announced that it is
shifting its main military base from the neighboring
Indonesian port Island of Makassar into West Papua
itself.
Furthermore activists report that, major
crackdowns, detentions, and killings on the streets of West
Papua have intensified..
My good friend Simon Sapioper
who is a prominent West Papuan politician told me the other
day that:
(quote)
"While the world focuses
elsewhere, and turns its back to West Papua,
West
Papuans all over the world, feel abundant and left alone
once again
We close our eyes and pray for the best...What
can we do?"
The way he said this, touched me in a
manner that I can never forget....
The West Papua issue
is one of the longest ongoing conflicts in the world
...
Its a fact, that the world has shut its eyes for West
Papua.
West Papua is one of the world's richest countries
in natural resources...
Its home to the biggest copper
and gold mine in the world: The Grasberg Mine.
The US owned Freeport-McMoRan corporation operates The
Grasberg mine and is making profits in the millions every
day...
Western powers have huge investments in West
Papua’s natural resources and support the Indonesian army
with its oppression of the Free West Papua campaign.
I
think that the situation in West Papua reveals, the true
face of Western diplomacy...
It shows that we have
learned nothing from our colonizing past and that we
continue to close our eyes for our own history...
Thus
the concept: Eyes Shut - from both sides.
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Question : What motivates and inspires you to photograph West Papuans in exile?
West Papua was a former Dutch colony...
So
is Suriname, where I come from.
The Dutch eventually did
it right with Suriname and other colonies such as Indonesia
and South Africa...
But the manner how they dealt with
West Papua is a thing of shame...
Many West Papuans are
living here in the Netherlands...
Some are my
neighbors...
Indonesia earns it reputation as the largest
economy in South East Asia partly through West Papua’s
resources...
I think West Papuans have big
potential...
I think that they have been a victim of a
brutal and unrighteous occupation....
If they would be
given fair chances, they would be major players in Asia &
The Pacific today.
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Question : How would you describe your relations with The West Papuan people that you photograph...
I see them as my
friends...
They have always embraced me as their own and
never made me feel like a outsider.
I always try my upmost best to make them look good and strong.
West Papuans are
incredible hospitable, sweet, humble, and generous
people.
Question :
Does that affect your judgement
as a journalist?
Yes maybe it does, but I think I can
afford that because I am not a real reporter...
I am just
a simple photographer and I just take pictures.
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Question : You have
travelled trough West Papua as one of the very few foreign
journalists...
Are the guerillas losing the war against
the Indonesian army?
That's a complicated
question...
Yes and no...
Indonesia has one of largest
armies in the region.
They are equipped and trained by The US & Australian government.
The TNI [The Indonesian Army]
has been fighting the military wing of the OPM for almost 50
years now...
The OPM of Goliat Tabuni is severely
outnumbered, and their equipment consists of simple homemade
guns & traditional bows and arrows, and guns they manage to
snatch away from Indonesian soldiers...
They are using
poisoned arrows and spears and then confiscate weapons of
the soldiers.
Despite this they have been successful in
fighting an almost 50 years long insurgency...
They are
experts in guerilla-warfare especially in the jungles and
the highlands.
They know the territory better then
anyone...
The territory where they are fighting the OPM
is almost three times the size of The Netherlands...
Most
Indonesian soldiers who are stationed in West Papua are very
afraid of the highlands where the OPM is based.
The Indonesian press portrays an complete different picture where the OPM are rebels with machetes fighting an modern army in the 21st century.
Most soldiers stationed in
Puncak Jaya come from hot climates such as Jakarta and
Java...
Temperatures in the highlands can drop as low as
below zero...
The geography brings many other
complications including altitude sickness, hallucination,
stress, adrenaline and some of the world's strangest
diseases.
Mutilation of Indonesian police men and Indonesian soldiers, including cutting of ears, and noses and maiming have occurred in West Papua. Most Indonesian censored media do not want to let you know about this.
Its
degrading in eyes of national audience...
The Indonesian
army is an army of national pride...
I’ve worked in
Burma, where the Burmese army has a similar fear with the
ethnic rebel factions.
I think its natural...
If you
are going into a stranger's territory, it's always more
scarier than if you are fighting at home, no matter how well
you are equipped...
I think that fear is the cause for
the TNI’s brutal repression of West Papuans...
I think
that both sides want to exceed each other in that
cruelness...
Especially the rebels, because it's a
personal thing for them...
The TNI responds twice that
hard, and so the cycle is continuous.
Most of the rebels
are poor farmers who are displaced by the natural resource
exploitation in the highlands...
Some of them don't even
have proper footwear...
The Grasberg mine dumps thousands
of toxic liters of waste in the nearby rivers, which has
caused a disaster for nearby forests, rivers and hill-tribes
who are dependent by the environment...
The displacement
is a major reason why many join the OPM and start fighting
against The Indonesian army.
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Question : The numerous
internal factions within the Free West Papua movements, have
led to division, and quarreling among The West Papuans
leaders....
What is the cause of this, according to
you....
I think to understand this problem you need to
understand the history of West Papua’s referendum and the
birth of PEMKA...
Old timers like Jacob Prai, and
especially Oom Nicolaas Jouwe play a crucial role
in this...
Nicolaas Jouwe who was part of the first governing & representing body of the OPM wanted to make a compromising deal with the Indonesian Government.
When his comrades came to know about this, they demanded his resignation.
Jouwe was offended by this, and started to speak against the governing body.
He managed to take Jacob
Prai, with him and the two eventually started
PEMKA....
The first governing body never stopped
struggling for independence, while PEMKA later became
divided and divided...
The first governing body consisted
of prominent leaders such as Seth Rumkorem and were
systematically put on hit lists of Indonesian death
squads.
Rumors were that Jouwe had exposed their whole
organization...
The leaders eventually had to
flee.
This became a reason the organization fell into
shadow of PEMKA, with no one left to govern it inside West
Papua...
The leaders eventually carried on their
campaigns from The Netherlands and Sweden, while PEMKA,
managed to still operate inside West Papua and win moral
support of the people...
This was a reason many West
Papuans turned towards PEMKA....
Jouwe eventually went to
the other side.
Later he became an advisor to the Indonesian government and denounced a struggle for an Independent West Papua...
The divide remains between these
the two branches, but through different
representatives...
While almost all of the splinters
groups claim leadership in the Papuan struggle almost all
of them ground this on a moral basis rather than a grounded
one.
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Question : There are hundreds of tribes in West Papua...
Is a tribal war likely to break out if West Papua would gain independence in the future for instance how it went in PNG?
I think that is an ultimate justification for an occupation that is totally baseless, illegal and totally ungrounded.
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Question : Have Western powers failed the people of West Papua?
Yes of course...
The occupation in Papua is a deliberate and
systematic repression which is eventually orchestrated from
the West...
The notorious Indonesian death squad Densus
88 (a.k.a Detachment 88), which is operating in West Papua,
was founded, funded and trained by the US & Australian
Governments.
Much of this is happening in the name of
fighting Islamic fundamentalists in Indonesia...
Their
operations in West Papua consist of assassinating,
kidnapping and jailing West Papuan activists and put an end
to the rebellion and the TNPBP of Goliat Tabuni.
Densus 88
was designed right after the Bali Bombings to fight Jemaah
Islamiyah...
It was years active in West Papua before the
head commissioner of the Papua region eventually came out in
the open and announced Densus 88 was carrying out secret
operations and trained police forces in West Papua.
This
was years, after they were officially active...
Either
the Indonesian government downplayed their Western
counterparts, and used their money for something entirely
different, or the Western powers knew about this all
along.
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Question : What is the right step for reconciliation in West Papua?
I think
West Papuans are seriously divided and need to
unite...
On the other hand I don't think its their
fault.
Human rights organizations such as Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have repeatedly used the word genocide in their reports on West Papua.
I think
that this genocide takes place on two fronts...
One is
the actual genocide and the other is the colonization of
West Papua.
The Indonesian Government has created systematic campaigns to brainwash the minds of West Papuans.
The situation in West Papua is very similar to
the situation in Tibet...
Its based on divide and rule
tactics...
The government creates job opportunities to
bring migrant workers from rural Indonesia into West
Papua...
80% of the people in West Papua's capital
Jayapura are currently Indonesian migrant workers,
outnumbering the 20% native Papuans who were once the
majority...
Many activists and political prisoners warned
about this...
including Filep Karma - West Papua's most
prominent political prisoner - who once said, if we don't
step up against this, we will be wiped out...
Activist
leader Victor Yeimo of the KNBP told me that most of the
core leaders of the OPM were almost always assassinated in
the month of December and always just a few days before
Christian holidays...
Prominent leaders such as Mako
Tabuni, and Kelly Kwalik among dozens of others...
The
colonization of West Papua is more than just a war against
factions...
Its against identity, religion, belief and
most importantly heritage...
Most West Papuans don't know
about the real history of West Papua...
Furthermore most
Indonesians don't know about the oppression that takes
place in the far East of their Federation.
This is because Indonesian schools, teach an complete different history about West Papua.
I think West Papuans, need to unite under a single umbrella if they ever want to see a independent West Papua.
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Question : Which is?
I am not a West Papuan and so it is none of my business.
I think that is for the Papuans to decide.
Outsiders who want to help and contribute, need to
understand that setting up their own organization and giving
their opinion can be taken very sensitively...
This can
lead to further division between West Papuans which will
disadvantage reconciliation.
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Question : What are your plans for the future?
I will keep dedicating myself for West Papuans and their struggle.
Unconditionally and through artistic and creative ends.
Many Thanks
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All photographs By
Rohan Radheya - Eyes Shut : West Papuan Exciles © Rohan
Radheya
2015
ENDS