July 2020
The need to revise a law on “special autonomy”(otonomi khusus or otsus) for Papua could be an opening for urgently needed new approaches to halt the worsening conflict there. The prospects of a major course correction in Jakarta, however, are slim. “Renewing, Revising or Rejecting Special Autonomy in Papua,” the latest report from the Institute for Policy Analysis of Conflict (IPAC), describes the options on the table as a funding deadline looms. The 2001 law granting limited autonomy to Papua authorised special funding for twenty years. If it is to be continued, the law will have to be amended before 2021. But political tensions are higher than ever as Papua experiences increased violence in the central highlands, ongoing fall-out from the 2019 anti-racism protests and the spread of Covid-19.