Event

“Human Rights in Indonesia – The Right to a Clean, Healthy and Sustainable Environment”

During the 61st session of the UN Human Rights Council, in Geneva, Switzerland, international human rights and faith-based organizations will convene a side event on 4 March, titled Human Rights in Indonesia – The Right to a Clean Environment.”

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The United Nations Office in Geneva, Switzerland, housed at the historic Palais des Nations, Photo: Ivars Kupcis/WCC

The United Nations Office in Geneva, Switzerland, housed at the historic Palais des Nations, Photo: Ivars Kupcis/WCC

The event is being organized by the World Council of Churches and Franciscans International, with support from several partner organizations.

The discussion will focus on the grave human rights and environmental implications of Indonesias Merauke National Strategic Project in South Papua Province, also known as the Merauke Food and Energy Development Zone, and the operations of the Grasberg Mine, the world’s largest combined copper and gold mine. 

Designated in 2023 as a Special Economic Zone by Indonesias Coordinating Ministry for Economic Affairs, the Merauke Food and Energy Development Zone spans approximately two million hectares—an area nearly half the size of Switzerland—within Merauke Regency, which covers 4.5 million hectares in total.

The project includes large-scale sugarcane plantations, a sugar factory, a bioethanol development initiative, and the creation of one million hectares of new rice fields. If fully implemented, it risks becoming the largest deforestation project in the world.

The project area overlaps with 858 hectares of natural forests and peatlands that support unique biodiversity, some found nowhere else on earth. The region is also home to thousands of Indigenous West Papuans whose customary lands and livelihoods are directly affected.

Land clearing began in May 2024 and has already resulted in the destruction of customary forests and critical ecosystems. Peatland degradation and forest loss are expected to significantly increase carbon emissions, contributing to global climate change while degrading local air quality.

In central Papua, the trade of metals from the Grasberg Mine is producing severe environmental harm through widespread deforestation and river pollution, with an estimated 200,000 tonnes of toxic mining waste dumped into local rivers every day. For the Indigenous West Papuan communities living downstream, the consequences are severe. Rivers once central to fishing and transport have been choked with sediment. Forests they relied on for hunting have vanished under mounds of waste. People suffer from skin diseases and serious health conditions due to heavy metal contamination in the water they use daily for drinking, cooking, and bathing.

The side event will raise awareness of the massive scale of the Merauke National Strategic Project and the  human rights and environmental impacts at local and global levels of the Project and the Mining activites 

Speakers will urge the government of Indonesia to immediately suspend the project pending a comprehensive re-evaluation to ensure compliance with its international human rights and environmental obligations.

The event will also call for full recognition of the rights of Indigenous Peoples in Merauke Regency under the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, and advocate for the return of customary lands to Indigenous communities and the restoration of forests, peatlands, swamps and rivers that have been damaged or destroyed.

 

Join live online here, Wednesday 4 March, 13:00-14:00 CET

Learn more about the WCC work on "Human dignity and rights"

WCC Commission of the Churches on International Affairs

Ecumenical Indigenous Peoples Network