tony sapiopa: yeah, these young people they are west papuans, but they have been, you know, crossingusands of west papuan refugees living along the border in png. tony: i sometimes feel depressed because of the situation that we face here--we are facing here, especially the government of papua new guinea is not really looking after the refugees here and that's what sometimes make us feel angry, feel frustration, feel depressed. but i think the only dream that we have is, you know, to fight for our freedom. ♪♪♪ sally: tony has a makeshift house near the riverbank. sally: how long have you been living here? tony: i left karawari, just came. sally: he lives with his 71-year-old widowed mother, esther finey. tony: mom, this is sally. sally: the family fled west papua in 1984 because of unrest. esther finey: [speaking foreign language] sally: esther finey sells fried banana to earn a small living. esther: [speaking foreign language] ♪♪♪ sally: before she became a refugee, she was a teacher in west papua. her husband worked for a un agency. the family was middle class. ♪♪♪ tony: i used to