Thofilus Itta, 42 years old was found lifeless in his room in Surabaya,
east Java on March 7, 2008. It was strongly believed that the father of
two sons was exhausted after in line for three hours to obtain 5 liter
petrol. Recently there have been 200 meter queues for petrol in
Balikpapan, in East Kalimantan province - a place known as the "city of
oil". In Cimahi, West Java, every day 500 people in line up for
petroleum from early morning to afternoon. The same situation can be
found in various cities of Indonesia.
Queues for petrol, massive electricity black-outs, industry fuel
shortages are current ironic phenomenon in this oil rich country
According to a report issued on January 2008 by Energy Information
Administration, Indonesia’s oil production is 1.1 million barrel a day.
Indonesia was also known as a first-rank natural gas producer in Asia
Pacific. Unfortunately more than 90% of energy industries are controlled
by foreign corporations. Indonesia only owns 20 out of 137 companies of
oil and gas.
ExxonMobil, the World biggest oil corporation gain $40.6 billion profit
in year 2007 equal to Gross domestic Product of 120 country.
Responding to this situation, affiliate organisations of the National
Liberation Party of Unity (PAPERNAS) have been organising series of
public meetings and mass actions to demand the nationalization of the
oil and mining industries. PAPERNAS will continue this round of actions
up to May 2008.
On March 3, 2007 at Bandar Lampung, Lampung, around 600 people - mostly
farmers and urban poor - attended a Papernas public gathering to demand
the nationalization of mining and oil industries for people’s welfare.
In Lampung, 3.2 million out of its 8 million population are living below
the poverty line.
On March 10, 2008, the following mass actions to demand the
nationalisation of oil and mining industries was held in three cities;
Ternate, Maluku province; South Sulawesi province and Pekan Baru, Riau
Province.
In the East Indonesian island-town of Ternate, hundreds of students
united as the Coalition for Women’s Concerns clashed with police in
front of the North Mollucas’ Regional Assembly (DPRD) during a protest
to demand the nationalisation of mining companies operating in the area.
Five students were wounded, two of whom were badly injured and had to be
taken to the hospital.
The clash started when police prevented some students from meeting with
members of North Mollucas’ Regional Assembly. The coalition, initiated
by the National Students’ League for Democracy (LMND), also demanded
that the government reduce prices of basic goods. Due to this incident
at the end of the protest they also demanded that the Police Chief resign.
Meanwhile, in the city of Makassar - located at the southern tip of
Indonesia’s K-shaped island, Sulawesi - dozens of students from LMND
carried out a protest in front of PT Inco’s office to demand
nationalisation of oil, gas, and mining companies in Indonesia. More
than 60 per cent of PT Inco’s shares are owned by the world’s second
biggest nickel-producer, Canada-based Vale Inco; about 20 percent, owned
by several Japanese companies; and the rest, sold in the Stock Exchange.
PT Inco’s operational plant in Sorowako, South Sulawesi, is notorious
for creating land and water pollution, ecosystem damage, carrying out
forced eviction, and therefore causing impoverishment and health
problems among the local communities.
Students asked permission from security personnel to enter the company’s
office but were refused. In their statement, they demanded that the
government should have the courage to nationalise the company or at
least to renegotiate the contract of work to bring more benefit to the
people of South Sulawesi, to fund development, particularly education.
Three decades since the start of its commercial production, PT Inco has
not only given little royalties to the Indonesian government, but the
company has also broken promises to provide free health care, education,
electricity, clean water services and priority in employment.
In Pekan Baru, Riau Province, 800 people from PAPERNAS and Riau Peasant
union (STR) gathered at Chevron’s old artesian well and then convoyed to
Chevron offices. The protestors demanded the nationalization of oil
industries to provide electricity facilities in Riau and also free
education and health.
Chevron has been operating in this part of Indonesia for many years,
extracting 500 million barrel per year. Yet the local Bengkalis and
Kampar Regions have had no access to electricity since shortages of oil
supply and facility in electricity power plant.
On 12 March 2008 in Jakarta 80 workers from The National Front of
Indonesian Workers’ Struggle (FNPBI) conducted a theatrical action in
front of the ExxonMobil office in Sudirman, Jakarta. They queued up with
empty bottles and jerry cans demanding the nationalization of oil and
mining industries.
Dominggus Oktavianus, Chairperson of FNPBI saidd in his speech to the
protest action:
"The situation has become an emergency, people are lining up for
petroleum, we have the phenomenon of blackouts in many cities,
industries are crying out for diesel fuel, all while the giant
corporations have full control of abundant energy resources in their hands.
"They gain abundant wealth while the people who own the land desperately
line-up for oil, starving, trapped in illness and ignorance.
"Therefore the workers in Indonesia must unite with other oppressed
people to take over foreign oil and mining corporations for the people’s
welfare."
FNPBI urged the government to issue a decree to nationalise the mining
industries, to meet country’s need of energy for household,
transportation and industries. FNPBI also urged the government to create
a national industrialisation program.