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Bridging West Papua Through Dispossession

a day ago
  • #Infrastructure Politics
  • #Settler Colonialism
  • #Indigenous Resistance
  • The Youtefa Bridge, part of Indonesia's Trans-Papua network, is presented as unifying infrastructure but functions as a settler-colonial tool that extracts and occupies indigenous lands in West Papua.
  • Infrastructure in West Papua, like the bridge, terraforms socio-ecological landscapes, reducing Papuan identity to static, exoticized units within state multiculturalism while dispossessing local agency.
  • Youtefa Bay is governed by customary law (Manjo) with Tobati-Enggros communities practicing gendered stewardship of mangroves (Tonotwiyat), which are vital ecologically and culturally, especially for women.
  • Bridge construction caused environmental damage, including mangrove loss and ecosystem degradation, and undermined Tobati-Enggros women's authority and livelihoods by encroaching on sacred female spaces.
  • The project faced local resistance over environmental and land compensation issues, with the state depoliticizing conflicts to streamline construction through remote planning and precast components.
  • Indonesia uses infrastructure to enforce public space logics, replacing communal rights with private property, accelerating land sales, and promoting tourism while eroding indigenous sovereignty.
  • West Papuan resistance is a 'generative refusal,' seen in everyday acts like road blockades or waste collection, challenging colonial dispossession and nurturing alternative futures beyond state control.
  • Historical resistance, from the Koreri movement to the Free Papua Movement, has evolved into a Pan-Pacific struggle for self-determination, countered by Indonesia's attempts to co-opt Melanesian interconnectedness.
  • The bridge symbolizes Indonesia's militarized development, anticipating Papuans as threats to be integrated into a capitalist economy, forcing a choice between indigenous identity and national citizenship.