Journalists Document Life in Rural Papua
Anita Rachman | September 27, 2011
Eighty percent of Papuans live in villages, often without access to clean water, education and health care. (Photo courtesy of the Voice of Papuan Women Tabloid) Related articles
OPM Blamed for Attack On Motorcycle Driver 7:24pm May 19, 2012
Papua Ojek Driver Shot Dead 4:44pm May 17, 2012
Update: One Dead, Four ‘Critically-Injured’ in Papua After Brawl with Brimob 12:33pm May 16, 2012
Al-Jazeera Says China Has Expelled Reporter 6:30pm May 8, 2012
No Fiction Pulitzer Given for First Time in 35 Years 11:33am Apr 17, 2012
Post a comment
Please login to post comment
Comments
Be the first to write your opinion!
Eighty percent of Papuans live in the approximately 3,000 kampongs spread across the country’s largest province, so any meaningful understanding of how Papuans live must start at the village level.
That was the reasoning that inspired a group of journalists from the Voice of Papuan Women Tabloid (TSPP) to travel from village to village for more than two years. They talked to people and looked at the facilities and infrastructure, which the TSPP’s editor in chief, Angela Flassy, says remains predictably underdeveloped.
Their findings from 34 villages, initially published weekly in the TSPP, were first collected into a book in 2009, “From Village to Village: The Journalistic Journey of the Voice of Papuan Women Tabloid.”
Now a second book covering 13 villages is set to hit shelves.
Paskalis Keagop, a senior editor at the TSPP, says the team of eight journalists checked on basic infrastructure such as “schools, puskesmas [community health centers], roads, bridges and markets. We also visited two mining areas.”
He adds that in the 47 villages visited so far, “the conditions are generally the same.”
“Education and health, these are the basic services that people need but that are lacking in general,” he says.
He cites Wambes village, where residents have to rely on rainwater because of a lack of potable water sources.
According to the account in the book, Frans Abar, the village chief, said that in 2008 the provincial public works office drilled a well to provide a reliable water source, as well as a reservoir to store the water — only the officials never handed the keys to the well or reservoir to the village residents. No one in Wambes was involved in the process.
Frans said it was difficult to find clean water in the area, especially during the dry season, forcing residents to resort to “living from rainwater.”
Over in Puay village, the book tells of a shortage of a different sort: of teachers, doctors and nurses. The village has only one school, a state elementary school. Even then, the students can count themselves lucky if teachers show up three days a week.
“Teachers don’t want to live in the village. They prefer to say in towns,” said Belsazar Doyapo, the village head.
Puay also has a high number of malaria, tuberculosis and skin disease cases, caused mostly by the consumption of dirty water drawn from Lake Setani. But there are no doctors or nurses at the local health center.
For treatment, residents have to take a two-hour boat ride to the nearest clinic.
Paskalis says many other villages are in dire need of better education and health care.
In a vocational school at a village in Sarmi district, for instance, many students have difficulty reading, he says.
Angela says there are more schools being built across Papua, but few teachers are willing to accept what is widely seen as a hardship posting, and there are not enough books to go around.
“It’s probably not a new story for you, but what can we say? The conditions five years ago, the conditions today and the conditions in the next five years won’t change, I don’t think,” she says.
She points out that in Wambes, the local administration built a library, but the provincial administration did not supply it with any books, magazines or even newspapers. When Paskalis visited the village, he found the library had been overrun by a herd of goats.
But Angela says she disagrees with the idea that the people of Papua live in poverty.
“Because we don’t. Just look at our natural resources wealth,” she says. “The problem is that despite the presence of the government, we don’t feel that it’s actually governing.”
The TSPP team says it has many more villages to visit. It adds that it has no ulterior motive for publishing the books, but is simply sharing Papuans’ stories with the rest of the country.
“The government might see it as criticism,” says Yakobus Wally, a TSPP reporter. “But we don’t actually criticize them. We’re simply describing the reality on the ground.”
- Tomy Winata to Build Jakarta's Tallest Building
- Lady Gaga Angers Thai Fans With Fake Rolex Comment
- Lady Gaga Refuses to Tone Down Her Shows: Manager
- Indonesia Set to Cap Bank Owners’ Stakes: Sources
- President's Son Nearly Attacked by Angry Mob
- Singapore Cabby Jailed for Molesting Indonesian Maid
- Indonesia's Chief Justice Demands SBY Explain Corby Clemency
- National Exams' ‘Fantastic’ Passing Rate Suspicious: ICW
- If You Don’t Like It, Don’t Watch, Djoko Says of Gaga
- Malaysian Authorities Seize Copies of Irshad Manji’s Book
-
7:43pm | Djoko Says ‘I Don’t Care’ Abou...
i would like to hear their respond about dangdut... sigh it's useless anyway to argue against moronic people who fancy nothing but themselves... t -
7:43pm | Malaysian Authorities Seize Co...
I cannot understand how educated people can believe in any religion. All are just as ridiculous. -
7:39pm | Lady Gaga Concert Promoter Has...
From what we read everything is in place except from the Religious Affairs Ministry and MUI... And they refuse to issue the papers. _ -
7:39pm | Lady Gaga Concert Promoter Has...
so they will fill all the normal criteria - but will fail on rerligious grounds then the police can blame the MUI and minister of islam and we know -
7:33pm | Indonesia Denies NGO Allegatio...
that's a double crime. shark fining and the porpoises got caught in a middle of it. and what worse is that the government kept on -
7:29pm | Indonesia Wants 10,000 Child W...
Hear, hear @ Anon... and gratis too. -
7:28pm | Police Arrest Suspect Who Trie...
Quick but not for bekasi church when they were attacked... -
7:26pm | Police Arrest Suspect Who Trie...
So the POLRI can actually move quickly...(in some instances). Their motto ‘Rastra Sewakottama’ (People's Main Servant).
