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Southeast Asia
Gas project has West Papuans skeptical
By Prangtip Daorueng
JAKARTA - Indonesia's bid to supply China with liquefied
natural gas (LNG) from West Papua province promises to be among the biggest money earners for this cash-strapped country, but it excites few in the
poverty-stricken province.
In fact, distrust and fear is the reaction of many in resource-rich West
Papua, which lies at the eastern end of the Indonesian archipelago.
In late April, Indonesia submitted its final tender to the Chinese
government to win the US$2 billion contract for natural-gas
production in West Papua's Bintuni Bay, a project between the world's third-largest oil group, Britrish Petroleum (BP), and Indonesia's state-owned oil and
gas company Pertamina.
A number of high-ranking Indonesian officials, including President
Megawati Sukarnoputri, have been to China and assured Beijing that the
Jakarta supports the so-called Tangguh LNG project.
Exploration has shown that the supply of liquified gas in the bay could
last 15-20 years, with an annual supply of up to 3 million tonnes. Plant
construction by BP is to be completed by 2006.
This project would bring huge income to the central Indonesian
government, adding to the three billion dollars sent to Jakarta annually
from the provinces. But many West Papuans feel that real benefit from the project is likely to go, as in the past, to Jakarta instead of their province, which remains
among the poorest despite being home to many multinational investments.
"No investments in Papua are for us Papuans. All the dollars go to the
pocket of people in the government, not us. The only thing we have in
return is violence," says a Papuan student in Jakarta, referring to
military efforts to quell a long-running separatist campaign.
Indeed, many activists have security and environmental fears about the
natural gas project, given bitter experiences with past foreign investments
drawn to the island of New Guinea, the western half of which is West Papua
and has one of the largest tracts of tropical rain forest left in the world. West Papua's forests cover some 24 percent of Indonesia's total forested
area. The province has huge supplies of oil, gas and copper underground and
under the sea.
"This BP project has a high risk of repeating what Freeport has been doing," said Nur Hidaryati, mining campaigner of Jakarta-based non-government organization (NGO) Indonesian Forum for Environment (WALHI). "BP has made a lot of promises. Freeport did the same thing, but they never come true," she added, referring to the large copper-mining project of the US-based Freeport McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc, which began in West Papua in the '60s. Rights activists have long alleged that the firm has moral responsibility for several cases of kidnapping and murders of locals by the military guards hired to protect the operation areas. The firm, the biggest taxpayer in Indonesia, denies these charges.
BP has announced its intention to involve the community in its security
measures to avoid the same problem as Freeport, but critics say this is
unrealistic. In its report, the British-based environmental group Down to Earth
expresses doubt about this, saying that company protection has long
generated lucrative income for the Indonesian military, so it is difficult
to stop its involvement. It also questions the record of BP's main partner Pertamina, which is in
partnership with US gas and oil company Exxon Mobil in restive Aceh
province. There, conflicts between the Acehnese community and Exxon Mobil emerged
partly because Indonesian troops paid to guard the installations committed
rights abuses, many of them recorded and published by rights groups. Last year, Exxon Mobil had to suspend operations at the Arun gas site
for four days because of attacks allegedly by the separatist Free Aceh Movement
(GAM). Since the security arrangements will depend on external factors outside
company control, it will be difficult for BP to keep its promise to involve
the community in its work, the Down to Earth report says.
So far, BP has hired military and security advisers to work on a
"community-based security" program that will prevent future
confrontations between soldiers and armed rebels in West Papua. "There is great concern that the Indonesian military will initiate
conflict in nearby areas in order to justify the need for a strong security
presence at the site," the report says. "Villagers have expressed fear
about the military in various meetings with BP staff."
A human-rights activist in Irian Jaya said that BP is unlikely to be able to
completely prevent the military from taking part in the project: "When it
comes to operations on the ground of both the corporations and the
military, information is always sealed from the outside world.''
Troop presence can be seen in every level of business in West Papua. For
example, most logging companies, many with military links, have notorious
reputations for using force against locals. Troops are now paid to guard
several logging operations, including sawmills, throughout the province. Tensions could also rise if more logging interests go to Papua,
especially now that the forests in Kalimantan are in decline. According to the Jakarta-based Tempo magazine, no fewer than 50
companies operate and collectively control 11.8 million hectares of forest
in West Papua, while the equivalent figure in Kalimantan is 10 million
hectares.
Environmentalists are also worried that like the Freeport project, the
BP undertaking will displace tribal people from their traditional land.
Around 500 villagers living around Bintuni Bay BP's project will be moved
from their homes in Tanah Merah to a newly created village 3.5 kilometers to the
west.
"We fear local conflict from the moving as well," said Hidaryati. "As we
know, Papuans live on tribal customary laws in which traditional territory
is taken seriously. If a tribal group is moved to the territory of another,
there is tendency to conflict between the two."
"But when the government creates a development project, they just look
at the map but forget that there are people living there too," she
explains, adding that more consultation by BP with the locals could help.
Already, frustration among villagers is rising because they have not
even been told about when are moving, the mining network Jatam stated. As well, compensation for their land is based on a 1997 survey of land prices by local
government, and is artificially low.
(Inter Press Service)
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