Violence and torture against Papuan detainees
16 September 2011: FIFTEEN PAPUANS MISTREATED AND TORTURED
BY ARMY AND
POLICE
*TAPOL strongly condemns the use of
violence and torture against Papuan
detainees*
A
report has been released following a joint investigation
into the
mistreatment and torture of a group of 15
Papuans in connection with two
criminal incidents that
occurred recently in West Papua. The report,
published
by Papuan church leaders, the NGO network Foker and the
Papua
Human Rights Commission, states that 15 Papuans
were arrested in
Jayapura on 31 August and were
mistreated and tortured for nine hours by
a joint force
of military and police. They were reportedly beaten with
rifle butts, punched, kicked in the stomach with army
boots and
subjected to continual verbal abuse in an
attempt to force them to
confess to the as yet unsolved
murders at Nafri and Skyline in Jayapura.
One of the men
said he had been threatened with death if he failed to
confess to owning items including a bullet and some
documents which he
said he had not seen before, and
another was reportedly tortured until
he confessed to
the murders and named another of the men as his
accomplice. During police interrogation, the two were
threatened with
death if they did not confess to the
crimes. They were then charged with
the murders and
remain in detention.
After the remaining thirteen men were
released, they said that they had
also been forced to
lie on their backs on the ground facing the blazing
sun
for seven hours. They further commented that they felt as
though
they were being treated like cattle. They were
deprived of water and
food for lengthy periods while
being beaten and tortured and no
attention was paid to
the injuries and bruises that they suffered during
their
ordeal. They said that they were weak and in some cases fell
ill
as a result of their treatment but were denied
access to a toilet and
ordered to urinate and defecate
out in the open.
Apart from the appalling treatment to
which they were reportedly
subjected, the detainees were
arrested without arrest warrants and
during their
interrogation, they were not accompanied by lawyers despite
the associated requirement for persons in detention when
they are given
notice that they are about to be
questioned.
Moreover, according to legal requirements they
should have been released
within 24 hours, a binding
requirement for persons who are held without
being
charged for any crime. They were in fact held for 27
hours.
TAPOL strongly condemns the atrocious treatment of
these Papuans. We
call on Komnas HAM, the National Human
Rights Commission, to conduct an
investigation into the
treatment of these Papuan detainees. TAPOL also
calls on
the Minister of Justice and Human Rights to call to account
all
those persons who were responsible for using extreme
violence and
torture against this group of men.
The
government of Indonesia should make it absolutely clear that
all
persons who work for government agencies within the
military and the
police, including those which were
involved in the detention and
mistreatment of these
fifteen men should at all times treat persons
being held
in detention without resorting to violence and torture and
should be instructed to refrain from using such methods
or face
dismissal if they do
so.