had both positive and negative impacts on local
residents including the Mimika-Kamoro tribe. One
of the negative consequences was binge drinking
and the intoxicated habits of Mimika-Kamoro youth,
which eventually affected their daily life behavior
and created a higher possibility to carry out
premarital sexual behavior (Tumuka, 2011).
In addition, the Mimika-Kamoro tribe has
currently encountered the high number of
HIV/AIDS cases, which has been an ongoing issue
for 19 years up until 2015. Discovering they are
infected by HIV was difficult to accept, as facing its
stigma and discrimination were quite challenging.
Fortunately, as policies, strategies and commitment
were enforced by governments and several parties,
Mimika District were able to independently prevent
HIV infection and took care of their own HIV/AIDS
patients.
Based on data obtained from the National AIDS
Commission of Mimika District, there were three
patterns of HIV transmission. Sexual intercourse
was the highest path of HIV transmission in Mimika
District since 2014, which accounted for 442 cases.
The second path was transmission through pregnant
mothers who passed HIV/AIDS to their children and
lastly through contaminated syringes. Results also
showed that HIV/AIDS infection was dispersed
equally in every age group, in which actively sexual
age group (15-29 years old) held the highest figures,
followed by the over 30 years old age group.
Furthermore, HIV/AIDS infection cases based on
gender show that women have a higher rate of cases
than men, with 206 cases and 201 cases respectively.
These numbers will only decrease if premarital
sexual behavior is controlled among men and
women. As mentioned before, sexual intercourse
was one HIV transmission paths, including mothers
infected with HIV who will pass it down to their
children. This statement is indeed supported by the
National AIDS Commission of Mimika (2015)
which found that since 2001, HIV cases in children
significantly increased every year specifically in
2009 by approximately 16 cases and 2015 with 15
cases.
Aside from data mentioned above, if HIV cases
are divided based on tribal groups it consisted of two
majority groups namely Papua tribe and Non-Papua
(immigrant). Data showed that 8 out of 10 patients
infected with HIV were Papua tribe locals and the
rest were Non-Papua (immigrant). The Papua tribe
itself was divided into three sub-tribes comprising
Mimika original tribe (i.e. Amungme-Kamoro tribe),
five kinship tribes (i.e. Dani, Moni, Mee/Ekari,
Damal and Nduga), and other non-classified Papua
tribes. Results predicted that 4 out of 10 patients
infected with HIV came from five kinship tribes,
followed by 2 patients originally from Mimika tribe
itself, and the rest from non-classified Papua tribes.
In summary, elevated cases of HIV/AIDS in Mimika
District, including Mimika-Kamoro tribe, were due
to individual values shifting which happened among
the Timika local community.
Data obtained by the Health Department of
Papua Province stated that as per July 2017, the
number of HIV/AIDS cases in Papua province
reached 28,771 cases, consisting of 10,134 cases of
HIV and 11,060 cases of AIDS. Among those cases,
26,525 (99.08%) of them were in reproductive age
(i.e. 15-49 years old), while 14,684 (54.9%) of them
were women in reproductive age who suffer from
HIV/AIDS. The department invites all components
of the community to collaboratively discuss and plan
a mitigation strategy against HIV/AIDS in Papua
(Data of Health Department of Papua Province,
2017).
False internalization of tradition and culture in
daily life will affect individual attitudes and
behavior towards the virtues of the culture itself. As
stated by Papua anthropologist, Rumansara (1999) in
his article entitled "Tenggeng Dance as a Premarital
Sex Media among Lani Culture and the Influence to
Sexual Transmitted Disease and HIV/AIDS" sexual
behavior among youth society influenced the
development of HIV/AIDS. Furthermore,
Rumansara also stated that the infiltration of new
culture to Central Papua mountain region has an
effect on shifting culture especially through
Tenggeng dance, which is recently known as one
media causing sexually transmitted disease (STD),
HIV and AIDS. Tenggeng dance was acknowledged
in venues where youth gathered and interacted with
each other including a dance that could end in sexual
intercourse freely in Hona I (i.e. where Tenggeng
dance usually took place).
HIV/AIDS is considered a national disaster for
Papua’s local communities. Every individual needs
to be concerned and take action on it. Moreover,
Papua local communities were required to cease
their binge drinking habit that could lead to
premarital sexual behavior. The endangered
situation in Papua local communities, because of
HIV/AIDS, could be resolved as they shifted their
unhealthy behavior (i.e. binge drinking and
hedonistic lifestyle) to living a holy life in front of
God, human beings, ancestors and the universe.
ICP-HESOS 2018 - International Conference on Psychology in Health, Educational, Social, and Organizational Settings