Indonesian Observer
Monday, November 20 - 2000
Traumatized settlers leave Wamena in "Stone Age"
JAKARTA (IO) Thousands of settlers have fled from Wamena town in Irian Jaya
(West Papua), following last month's ethnic rioting that left at least 31 people
killed and dozens badly wounded.
The exodus from Jayawijaya regency has brought activities to a standstill at
local state schools, hospitals and government offices, because just about all
civil servants from the region have left, Antara reported yesterday.
Jayawijaya regency spokesman Jack Rumbekwan and Wamena Senior High School 1
principal Benyamin Hubi said the town is now safe following the October 6
killings, but the civil servants aren't coming back.
They said education, governmental activities, development and social/medical
services have all ground to a halt, not because civil servants are lazy, but
because they have fled.
Thousands of students at elementary, junior and senior high schools in Wamena
are now on holiday because there are almost no teachers left.
The non-Papuan civil servants left the region in small aircraft supplied by the
Mission Aviation Fellowship, Trigana Air Service, Manunggal Air Service, and the
Air Force.
Rumbekwan said it wasn't only non-Papuans who skedaddled after the riots.
He said non-Jayawijaya Papuans from the cities of Sorong, Manokwari, Serui,
Biak, Fakfak, Merauke, Nabire and Jayapura also suffered during the bloody
October attacks and have also left the region and have no intention of going
back.
Many of them have already obtained documents from the government permitting them
to work in other provinces.
War threat
Police have detained several people who were involved in a massacre at Woma
village, 7 kilometers east of Wamena.
The suspects have said they know nothing about politics, but were hired by a
certain pro-independence group to launch the attack.
"If police don't settle the problem, there will be a local war in the
future, between those who agree with independence and groups that prefer
Indonesian unity," said Rumbekwan.
Today there are just a handful of civil servants left in the region. They are
all men, while their wives and children have been sent to Jakarta, Sulawesi or
other regions.
Hubi predicted that Jayawijaya could soon return to the Stone Age. "Although
I'm a native born in Baliem Valley, I can't do anything [for education] here
because all of the other teachers have gone," he said.
Locals with enough money have sent their children to attend lessons in Jayapura
or Sorong, Biak, Manokwari and Serui. "In this current condition, I=92m
afraid this region will be back in the Stone Age in the next few years,"
said Hubi.
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