The death toll from a
cholera outbreak in Indonesia's easternmost province has risen to 172
Wednesday as reports of violence against migrants accused of spreading
the disease are being reported, according to local church leaders.
Local church workers said that at least 172 residents from 19 villages
in two different sub-districts on Papua's Kamuu valley have died from
severe diarrhoea and vomiting believed to be caused by cholera since
early April, the state-run Antara news agency reported.
Benny
Giay of the Synod of Protestant Churches Denominations, flanked by
other local church leaders, expressed deep concern about the tragedy
and blamed local authorities of ignoring the issue and not implementing
prevention measures against the disease.
The long delay in
government action provoked indigenous Papuans to attack newcomers to
the region last week as they believed the disease had been
intentionally spread by them to decimate the indigenous population.
'Indigenous people vandalized houses belonging to the new migrants
based on the assumption the migrants were to blame for the outbreak,'
Antara quoted Giay as saying at a press conference on Wednesday.
He said local Papuans were suspicious the government was deliberately neglecting the outbreak.
Brother Budi Hermawan of the Jayapura Archdiocese said earlier that the
churches have deployed medical teams to affected villages but could not
cover all of the large, remote area due to insufficient personnel and
drugs.
The source of the outbreak, which began in April, was
still unknown, but the disease appeared to be spreading via drinking
water from a river and products in markets in the highland region.
Local health authorities and the provincial government were briefed on
the crisis in May but failed to act, leading to a more severe outbreak,
Hermawan said.
'The residents' condition in the affected
areas was very desperate because there are still no efforts being made
by local government authorities,' Hermawan was quoted as saying.
Giay and Hermawan did not explain why both of them were just disclosing the attacks days after the incident.
Papua province was incorporated into Indonesia in 1963 and Papuans
voted for Indonesian rule on the former Dutch colony on the western
half of New Guinea six years later in a UN plebiscite that was widely
seen as a sham.
Indonesia in 2003 granted Papuans special
autonomy for the province, but it remains the least developed in the
country despite being home to rich natural resources worth billions of
dollars.