Special Autonomy Regulations in Papua Province for the Realization of
Community Welfare
Endang Sulistyaningsih
1
, Isharyanto
1
and Hartiwiningsih
1
1
Doctoral Program at Universitas Sebelas Maret of Surakarta
Keywords:
Special Autonomy, Papua Province, Community Welfare.
Abstract:
The mandate of 1945 Constitution of the Republic of Indonesia which was formulated in Law Number 32
of 2004 about Regional Government regarding the implementation of autonomous regional governments and
special autonomy regions is not easy to realize. This is based on the conditions of an area such as geographical
conditions, natural wealth, level of soil fertility, total population, quality of population, and number of intellec-
tuals. We can take Bali as an example. Bali is an area that has many tourism places such as Jimbaran Beach,
Besakih Temple, Uluwatu Temple, Tanah Lot, Kuta Beach and others. The customs, religion and culture of
Bali are like a routine for Balinese. As a region that has various types of specificity, Bali actually wants its
area to get recognition as an area with special autonomy. However, this specificity has not been granted by
the Government of the Republic of Indonesia. The province of Papua, which is located on the eastern edge of
Indonesia, is the widest province with a wealthiness of natural resources. However, in reality, various policies
in centralized governance and development there, have not fully fulfilled the sense of justice, people’s welfare,
the realization of law enforcement and respect for human rights in Papua Province, especially for the Papuan.
This condition resulted in disparities in almost all sectors of life, especially in education, health, economy,
culture and social politics. Therefore, the government tried to overcome these problems by giving special
autonomy to the Papua Province. In 2001 the government passed Law Number 21 of 2001 concerning Special
Autonomy for the Province of Papua in order to implement equal welfare for the people there. Considering the
tendency of more and more regions to wish to become special autonomous regions or special regions, scientific
review with discussion of issues on how the basis, criteria and guidelines in granting special autonomy to an
area in Indonesia is very necessary. Normative legal research methods are used to answer this problem. The
approaches used are statute approach, historical approach, and comparative approach. After the legal material
is collected, it is analyzed qualitatively juridically. This research shows that in addition to being regulated in
Article 18B of the 1945 Constitution of the Republic of Indonesia, it can also be found in Law Number 32 of
2004 concerning Regional Government.
1 INTRODUCTION
The founders of the Indonesian have noble goals and
ideals in protecting the entire nation and homeland
of Indonesia, advancing public welfare, educating the
lives of the nation and participating in carrying out
world order based on independence, peace, and social
justice. In realizing these goals and ideals, a pattern
of government is needed as a system and instrument
for the state to implement it.
Indonesia is an archipelago. This geographical
condition affect the lives of people who live there to
create different cultures and customs. This diversity
sometimes become a problem for the state in carry-
ing out a centralized government, so it is necessary
to form a government in the regions as an extension
of the central government in realizing the ideals of
Indonesia which is a welfare for all Indonesian peo-
ple. The formation of government in the regions is
balanced with the authority (power) in managing the
household itself in accordance with the needs of each
region.
The long journey of regional autonomy based on
regulation in Indonesia began in the Dutch colonial
period. Decentralisatie Wet in 1903 and the 1922
Bestuars Hervormings Wet were the regulations ap-
plied at that time. During the New Order period, sev-
eral regulations concerning regional autonomy such
as Law Number 1 of 1945 on Regulation about the Po-
sition of Regional National Committees, Law Num-
Sulistyaningsih, E., Isharyanto, . and Hartiwiningsih, .
Special Autonomy Regulations in Papua Province for the Realization of CommunityWelfare.
DOI: 10.5220/0009882002410246
In Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference on Applied Science, Engineering and Social Sciences (ICASESS 2019), pages 241-246
ISBN: 978-989-758-452-7
Copyright
c
2020 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
241
ber 22 of 1948 on Stipulation of Basic Rules Regard-
ing Self-Governing in the regions that Regulating and
Managing their Own Household, Law Number 1 of
1957 on the Principles of Regional Government, Law
Number 18 of 1965 on the Principles of Regional
Government. During the New Order era, Law Num-
ber 5 of 1974 on the Principles of Regional Govern-
ment was born.
During the Reformation, various concepts of re-
gional autonomy began to keep up with the times.
Regulations that have been created include Law Num-
ber 22 of 1999 on Regional Government, Law Num-
ber 25 of 1999 on Financial Balance between the
Central and Regional Governments, Law No. 32 of
2004 on Regional Government, Law No. 33 of 2004
on Financial Balance between Central Government
and Regional Government, Perpu No. 3 of 2005 on
Amendments to Law No. 32 of 2004 on Regional
Government, Law No. 12 of 2008 on the second
amendment to Law No. 32 of 2004 on Regional Gov-
ernment, Law No. 23 of 2014 on Regional Govern-
ment, and Law No. 9 of 2015 on the Second Amend-
ment to Law No. 23 of 2014 on Regional Govern-
ment.
The series of changes in regulations on regional
autonomy aim to enable the relevant region to regu-
late and manage its own household affairs. This is
intended to further improve the effectiveness of gov-
ernance in the framework of service to the commu-
nity and the implementation of development that is
oriented towards improving the welfare of the com-
munity by paying attention to the interests and aspira-
tions that grow in the community.
The province of Papua which is geographically lo-
cated at the eastern end of the Indonesian territory is
the widest province with abundant natural resources.
However, various policies in centralistic governance
and development have not fully fulfilled the sense of
justice, people’s welfare, law enforcement and human
rights in the Papua Province. This condition made
a disparity in almost all sectors of life, especially in
education, health, economics, culture and social poli-
tics. For this issue, the government tried to overcome
these problems by providing policies about Special
Autonomy in Papua Province. In 2001 the govern-
ment passed Law Number 21 of 2001 on Special Au-
tonomy for the Province of Papua in order to imple-
ment equal welfare for the people there.
Other problems occur in Papua Province usually
are related to human rights violations. On December
8, 2014 there were murders of four (4) students in Pa-
niai, the persecution experienced by Blasius Simagay
at the 2014 Bade, Yeremias Kaipman’s foot shooting
in Merauke in 2015, the persecution of Xaverius Tam-
baip and Ronald Ambungun in Merauke in 2016, the
persecution of Oktovianus Beteop in Merauke 2017,
the murder of Isak Kua and the sexual abuse of a sister
from Isak Kua in November 2017 (Papua, 2017).
2 PROBLEM FORMULATION
Based on the background description, we can formu-
late a problem as follows: What is the implementation
of Papua Province special autonomy arrangement in
realizing the welfare of the Papuan people?.
3 REVIEW OF LITERATURE
State and law cannot be separated, as Hans Kelsen as-
serts that there is ”Identification of State and Law”
(Kelsen, 2007), then Kelsen said that ”As a political
organization, the state is a legal order, but not all le-
gal orders are state. (Kelsen, 2007) Indonesia stated
in its constitution that ”the State of Indonesia is a rule
of law. (Article 1 paragraph (3) of the 1945 Consti-
tution of the Republic of Indonesia NRI amendments
3). In Indonesian literature there are several promi-
nent figures who write the notion of rule of law, They
are:
1. Mr. Muhammad Yamin defines the rule of law
as a state that carries out a government that is
not in accordance with the will of those who hold
power, but according to written rules made by the
people’s representative bodies which are legally
formed, in accordance with the principle “The
laws and not menshall govern” (Yamin, 1952).
2. Soediman Kartohadiprodjo, rule of law as a coun-
try where the fate and independence of the peo-
ple in it are guaranteed as well as possible by law
(Kartohadiprodjo, 1953).
3. Wirjono Prodjodikoro, the one who provides an
understanding of the rule of law as rulers and gov-
ernments as state administrators in carrying out
state duties bound to the applicable legal regula-
tions (Prodjodikoro, 1973).
4. Joeniarto, the rule of law as a country where the
actions of authorities must be limited by applica-
ble law (Joeniarto, 1981).
5. Sri Sumantri said that there were four elements of
the rule of law:
(a) The Government in carrying out its duties and
obligations must be based on law or legislation.
(b) There is a guarantee of human rights (citizens).
ICASESS 2019 - International Conference on Applied Science, Engineering and Social Science
242
(c) There is a division of powers in the country.
(d) There is supervision from the judicial body
(rechter-lijke controle) (Soemantri, 1992).
3.1 Regional Autonomy and
Autonomous Regions
The 1945 Constitution of the Republic of Indonesia
stated that the Republic of Indonesia is a unitary state
(Rechstaat), not a state of power (Machstaat). This
means that the highest sovereignty or power in the
state is not based on the power alone but is based on
the law in the sense of the legal mind (Rechtsidee)
which contains the noble ideals of the Indonesian peo-
ple
The 1945 Constitution of the Republic of In-
donesia affirms that regional government is organized
based on the principle of deliberation or democracy.
This means that administratively the implementation
of government is carried out by making a decen-
tralization policy which then creates autonomous re-
gional government units. This is labeled as regional
governments that regulate and manage their affairs
based on the aspirations and interests of the local
community (Sukriono, 2013).
Autonomy comes from Greek, auto which means
self and nomous which means law or regulation,
autonomy in the original sense is the legal self-
sufficiency of social body and its actual indepen-
dence. So, there are two essential characteristics
of autonomy, legal self sufficiency and actual inde-
pendence. In relation to politics or government, re-
gional autonomy means self-government or the con-
dition of living under one’s own laws. So regional
autonomy is an area that has a self-government le-
gal self-sufficiency that is regulated and managed by
own laws. Therefore, autonomy focuses more on as-
pirations than conditions. Autonomy contain several
meanings as follows:
1. Autonomy is a condition or characteristic for
”not” controlled by other parties or external
forces.
2. Autonomy is a form of ”self-government”, it has
the right to govern or self-determine
3. The government itself is respected, is recognized
and guaranteed, there is no control by other par-
ties towards regional functions (local or internal
affair) or against a minority of a nation.
4. The autonomous government has sufficient in-
come to determine its own destiny and fulfill the
welfare of (Shiddiq, 2003). For the principle of
autonomy and the implementation of decentral-
ization in the relations between the central gov-
ernment and regional governments, M. Yamin
(Mahfud, 2012) wrote that“ a democratic consti-
tution arrangement requires solving power of gov-
ernment in its own central part and also requires
the division of power between main and regions
government. The principle of democracy and the
decentralization of government power is in oppo-
sition to the principle of wanting to gather every-
thing at the center of government.
What is said by M. Yamin concludes that regional
autonomy and decentralization are part of countries
that embrace democracy. Long before Indonesia’s
independence, M. Hatta (Mahfud, 2012) also said
that According to the basic of public sovereignty,
the right of the people to determine their fate is not
only at the top of the government, but also at each
place, city, village and region. With such circum-
stances, each section or class of people gets an au-
tonomy (making and carrying out its own regulations)
and zelbestuur (carrying out the regulations made by
the higher Council). Such conditions are very impor-
tant, because the needs of each place in one country
are not the same, but different.” Therefore, autonomy
must be one of the joints of a democratic government
structure. This means that in democracies, local gov-
ernments are required to obtain autonomous rights.
The existence of regional government also improves
the freedom of the regional as a characteristic of a
democratic state (Mahfud, 2012)).
The term autonomy means independence but not
as independent state, so the top government gives
freedom or independence to the autonomous region as
an accountability. The accountability itself has two el-
ements. First, is an assignment to be carried out. Sec-
ond, giving trust to the government in the region in the
form of authority to think and determine how to com-
plete the task. Thus, it is to encourage or stimulate
the region to try to develop their own abilities that can
generate auto-activities and enhance their self-esteem
at its best (Mahfud, 2012).
Autonomy is a given freedom for a government
to take care their own region without neglecting the
position of the regional government towards the cen-
tral government to carry out the functions assigned
to them. Therefore, efforts to build a balance must
be considered in the context of the power relations
between the central and the regions (Mahfud, 2012).
This means that regions must be viewed in two posi-
tions, as regional organs to implement autonomy and
as agents of the central government to conduct central
affairs in the regions. Regional autonomy is also de-
fined as the authority of autonomous regions to reg-
ulate and manage the interests of local communities
according to their own initiative based on the aspira-
Special Autonomy Regulations in Papua Province for the Realization of CommunityWelfare
243
tions of the community in accordance with the legis-
lation (Widjaja, 2002).
Regional autonomy is an effort to realize democ-
ratization where people’s aspirations or interests from
each region can be accommodated properly. Regional
autonomy allows the local wisdom of each region
to walk in harmony with the initiatives and of the
people in the region. Framework of democratiza-
tion and limitation of power is known as the princi-
ple of separation of power. The most popular theory
about this problem is the idea of separation of state
power developed by a French scholar named Mon-
tesquieu. According to him, state power must be sepa-
rated into legislative, executive and judicial functions
(Busrizalti, 2013).
Linked to the Montesquieu theory, regional auton-
omy is a mechanism to regulate the state power that
is distributed vertically in a ”top-down” relationship.
As it is known that the separation of powers and the
division of power are both a concept of separation of
power. Academically, it can be distinguished into nar-
row and broad sense. In a broad sense, the concept
of separation of powers also includes the notion of
power division commonly referred as the ”division of
power”. Separation of power is the concept of hor-
izontal power relations, while the power sharing is
vertical. Horizontally, state power can be divided into
several branches of power that are linked to the func-
tions of certain state institutions, such as legislative,
executive and judicial branches. In the concept of
power distribution (distribution of power or division
of power) the power of the state is divided vertically
in a ”top-down” relationship” (Busrizalti, 2013). Re-
gional autonomy in the context of democracy aims to
create checks and balances in the political system.
3.2 Welfare State
Welfare State as an ideal model of development fo-
cused on improving welfare through giving a more
important role to the state in providing universal and
comprehensive social services to its citizens. So, the
focus of the welfare state system is to create a sys-
tem of social protection that is institutionalized for
every citizen as an illustration of the citizens’ rights
and state obligations (Suharto, 2007).
Welfare state can be described as the influence of
human desire of a security, peace, and prosperity. In
the 1945 Constitution of the Republic of Indonesia,
social welfare becomes a special title of CHAPTER
XIV which includes Article 33 on the economic sys-
tem and Article 34 concerning the state’s concern for
the weak groups (the poor and neglected children) and
the social security system. This means that Indone-
sia is a country that adheres to the welfare state with
a model of Participatory Welfare State which in the
social work literature is known as Welfare Pluralism.
This model emphasizes that the state must continue to
take part in handling social problems and the imple-
mentation of social security.
3.3 Theory of Legislation
Good legislation must have a foundation in its for-
mation, according to Bagir Manan (Manan, 1992) the
foundation in the preparation of legislation are: First,
the juridical foundation (juridische gelding); Second,
the sociological foundation (sosiologische gelding);
and Third, philosophical foundation. Jazim Hamidi
also said that, good legislation must meet the follow-
ing requirements: Philosophical foundation (filsofis-
che grondslag); sociological foundation (sociologis-
che grandslag), juridical basis (rechtsground), politi-
cal basis, ecological, medical, economic, etc (Hamidi
and Sinaga, 2005).
Philosophical foundation here is that the law al-
ways contains ideal norms by a society for an ide-
als state of life. Sociological foundation means ev-
ery legal norm as outlined in the law must reflect the
demands of the community’s needs for legal norms
that are in accordance with the reality of public legal
awareness. Political foundation means that the con-
stitutional referral system must also be described ac-
cording to the ideals and basic norms contained in the
1945 Constitution of the Republic of Indonesia as a
source of basic policies or legal politics to establish
the relevant law. Juridical foundation, in the formula-
tion of each law, must be placed on the ”Considering”
consideration section.
4 DISCUSSION
The 1945 Constitution of the Republic of Indonesia
affirms that regional government is held based on the
principle of deliberation or democracy. This means
that administratively the implementation of govern-
ment is carried out by making a decentralization pol-
icy. Therefore, an autonomous regional government
unit was born, it is the regional government that reg-
ulates and manages its affairs based on the aspira-
tions and interests of the local community (Sukriono,
2013).
The formulation of regional government was in
accordance with the mandate of Article 18 of the 1945
Constitution of the Republic of Indonesia, it has pro-
duced many other laws and regulations in regional
governance, including Law No. 1 of 1945, Law No.
ICASESS 2019 - International Conference on Applied Science, Engineering and Social Science
244
22 of 1948, Law No. 1 of 1957, Presidential Decree
Number 6 Year 1959, Law Number 18 of 1965, Law
Number 5 of 1974, Law Number 22 of 1999 and Law
Number 32 of 2004 (Sunarno, 2012).
In organizing regional autonomy, the regional
government has rights as stipulated in Article 21 of
Law Number 32 of 2004 on Regional Government,
those are:
a Arrange and manage their own government af-
fairs;
b Choosing regional leaders;
c Choosing regional apparatus;
d Managing regional wealth;
e Collecting local taxes and regional retribution;
f Get profit sharing from the management of natural
resources and other resources in the area;
g Get other legitimate sources of income;
h Obtain other rights stipulated in the legislation.
The regional obligations in the implementation of
regional autonomy are regulated in Article 22 of Law
Number 32 of 2004 on Regional Government:
a Protect the community, maintain the unity, har-
mony and integrity of the Republic of Indonesia;
b Improve the quality of people’s lives;
c Develop a democratic life;
d Realize justice and equity;
e Improve basic education services;
f Provide health care facilities;
g Provide appropriate social facilities and public fa-
cilities;
h Develop a social security system;
i Develop regional planning;
j Develop productive resources in the area;
k Preserve the environment;
l Manage population administration;
m Preserve socio-cultural values;
n Establish and establish laws and regulations in ac-
cordance with their authority;
o Other obligations stipulated in the legislation.
The rights and obligations of the region are real-
ized in the form of regional government work plans.
They are translated into regional revenues, expendi-
tures and finances that are managed efficiently, effec-
tively, transparently, accountably in the regional fi-
nancial management system.
Law Number 21 of 2001 Special Autonomy for
Papua Province is a rule or policy given by the Cen-
tral Government as an effort to improve its develop-
ment in various aspects such as economic, education,
health and infrastructure. Philosophically, the Special
Autonomy Law is made as a step to equalize Papua
with other regions in Indonesia It is a protection mea-
sure for the basic rights of indigenous Papuans whose
basic rights are neglected and marginalized since they
have joined Republic of Indonesia.
The result of this stipulation of Special Autonomy
is a different treatment given by the Government to
the Papua Province. This means that there are fun-
damental things that only apply in the Province of
Papua and do not apply in other provinces in Indone-
sia, along with that there are also things that apply in
other areas that are not enforced in Papua Province.
However, the implementation of Special Auton-
omy also faced some obstacles and disruptions such
as, the slow issuance of Government Regulations of
the Special Autonomy Law (PP No. 54 of 2004 on the
Establishment of the Papuan People’s Assembly; the
form of Perdasi and Perdasus: weak consistency over
protection and enforcement of Human Rights (HAM);
conflicts in the division of West Irian Jaya province,
Issuance of Presidential Instruction No. 1 of 2003. In
addition, there are limitations and weakness of human
resources (HR) of Papua in responding to the bigger
authority and responsibility as contained in the Spe-
cial Autonomy Law.
5 CLOSING
The making of regional autonomy policy in the form
of Special Autonomy is an effort to develop regional
autonomy in the framework of the constitution guar-
anteed by Article 18 paragraph (1) of the 1945 Con-
stitution of the Republic of Indonesia, mainly in gov-
ernment units that are special. Thus, if a synergy is
created between normative ideals as contained in the
substance of the Special Autonomy Law with the real
attitude and consistency of both the central govern-
ment and the Papuan government and all components
of the Papuan community, then undoubtedly Special
Autonomy can be a solution and the best alternative
policy in realizing all Papuan’s desires in Republic of
Indonesia.
Special Autonomy Regulations in Papua Province for the Realization of CommunityWelfare
245
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