Papua Not on Agenda in Bali, In Spite of Activists’ Concern
- ) Papua Not on Agenda in Bali, In Spite of Activists’ Concern
- ) RI: No discussion of Papua at ASEAN Summit
- ) Despite political reform, Indonesia abuses persist
- ) Freeport often incites tension, violence in Papua: Komnas HAM
- ) 2 Shootings Near Papua Mine, 1 Freeport Worker Injured
- ) 8 People Killed in Weekend Clash: Papua Activists
- ) Legislator slams TNI operations in
Papua*
---------------------------------------------
http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/home/papua-not-on-agenda-in-bali-in-spite-of-activists-concern/479010 *1) Papua Not on Agenda in
Bali, In Spite of Activists’ Concern* *Jakarta Globe *| November 16, 2011* * * Nusa Dua, Bali. *Despite calls by prominent rights groups, the 19th Asean summit and the sixth East Asian Summit will not discuss the conflict in Papua because it is an Indonesian internal problem, a minister said on Wednesday.
"The problems in Papua are domestic in nature and they have nothing to do with Indonesia’s participation in Asean cooperation,” Djoko Suyanto, the coordinating minister for political, legal and security affairs, told state news agency Antara after presiding over the Sixth Meeting of the Asean Political-Security Community Council.
"Whatever happens in Papua is Indonesia’s problem and will be solved internally.”
Human rights group Amnesty International has urged the Australian and American governments to discuss Papua during the East Asian Summit. US President Barack Obama and Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard are expected to attend the summit and meet with President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono.
"The Asean meeting is very important for the international community, including the US and Australian governments, to pressure Indonesia to overcome the human-rights violations in Papua,” Josef Benedict, an Amnesty International spokesman, was quoted by Australia’s The Age daily as saying on Tuesday.
New York-based Human Rights Watch also urged an immediate investigation into the violence in Papua.
"The Obama administration’s deepening relationship with Indonesia means being frank about Indonesia’s serious human rights challenges,” Elaine Pearson, deputy Asia director at Human Rights Watch, said in a statement sent to the Jakarta Globe. "Indonesian government indifference to mob violence against religious groups and brutality by soldiers against peaceful protesters are good places to start.”
The activists were referring to the recent spate of violence in the restive Papua region, including a violent dispersal of the pro-independence Papuan People’s Congress in Jayapura on Oct. 19 that left six people dead and dozens injured.
The West Papua Advocacy Team and East Timor and Indonesia Action Network, Australia-based groups that support Papuan activists, have also sent an open letter to Obama to "consider the challenges and opportunities posed by the US-Indonesia relationship more realistically than you have up to now.”
"In the past, US restrictions and conditions on security assistance have resulted in real rights improvements in Indonesia. Your administration should learn from this history,” the letter said.
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who was set to arrive in Bali together with Obama, said in Hawaii last week that Washington had "very directly raised our concerns about the violence and the abuse of human rights [in Papua].”
-------------------- http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2011/11/16/ri-no-discussion-papua-asean-summit.html
2) RI: No discussion of Papua at ASEAN Summit
The Jakarta
Post, Jakarta | Wed, 11/16/2011 6:15 PM A
3) Despite political reform, Indonesia abuses
persist Michael Holtz, Associated Press, Papua | Wed,
11/16/2011 5:58 PM A In remote corners of the archipelago,
dozens of demonstrators have been killed in recent months,
and anti-government activists continue to be thrown in jail
for peacefully expressing their views. There are least 100
political prisoners, most in Papua and the Molucca islands,
many of whom complain of being tortured. "Indonesia says,
'We're brothers, we're equal,' But you see? It's
meaningless," said Filep Karma, a prominent political
prisoner with nine years left on his sentence for raising a
pro-independence flag. He said he has endured severe
beatings by guards who mock him for his Christian faith and
spit out insults like "dog." The 52-year-old spoke to The
Associated Press on Oct. 23 from a location that he insisted
remain secret, after he was granted a brief reprieve from
prison to get medical attention. Outside, convoys of
troops rumbled down the road and soldiers stood on street
corners with rifles dangling from their shoulders. Inside,
others in the room nervously checked doors and
windows. Overall, Indonesia has made great strides in
democracy and human rights since Suharto's day. Sweeping
reforms have freed up the media, wiped repressive laws off
the books and led to the direct election of leaders in the
predominantly Muslim nation, making it a potential model for
Egypt and other Arab Spring countries. Obama arrives in
Indonesia for the East Asia Summit on Thursday. To the U.S.,
the nation of 240 million where Obama spent part of his
childhood is a potentially powerful counterweight to China's
growing military and economic influence in the Asia-Pacific
region. The U.S. has launched an aggressive wooing
campaign, ending a ban last year on working with an
Indonesian special forces unit accused of some of the worst
atrocities during East Timor's '90s-era independence
struggle. The ban, hugely embarrassing to Jakarta, was the
final obstacle to normalizing military ties. Abuses
continue, however, in areas including Papua, where the
government has struggled to put down a low-level insurgency
that has claimed tens of thousands of lives, most at the
hands of the military, according to rights workers. "It's
Indonesia's dirty little secret that they still put people
like Filep Karma behind bars," said Elaine Pearson of the
New York-based Human Rights Watch. The international
community shares some of the blame, she said, because of its
eagerness to present the nation as a democratic success
story. Since late July, 34 people have been killed in
Papua and five have been arrested and charged with treason,
which carries a maximum sentence of life, according to
police and rights workers. Days before Karma's interview,
security forces broke up a pro-independence gathering in the
nearby town of Abepura, opening fire on the crowd and
beating participants with batons and rattan canes. Three
people were killed and dozens injured. Bambang Sulistyo, a
spokesman for Indonesia's legal and security affairs
ministry, said Papuans enjoy the same rights as everyone
else to stage rallies, protest or hold a congress. But the
government will not tolerate any movement to separate from
Indonesia or provocative acts like raising a flag known as a
symbol of separatist group. For that reason, he said, the
gathering in Abepura was illegal. "It was deliberately
provocative," Sulistyo said, adding that police fired
several warning shots to control the crowd. Authorities are
still investigating the circumstances around the deaths of
the three civilians. Karma and others who have been
imprisoned complain of severe abuse. "They treat us like
animals," said Yusak Pakage, a Papuan activist who was
arrested in 2004 for killing a government official during a
protest, a crime he says he didn't commit. Pakage was
blinded in his right eye after being brutally beaten by jail
guards, and was released from prison after accepting a
conditional pardon last year. Liberti Sitinjak, current
chief at Abepura prison, denies that inmates are beaten or
otherwise abused. On Monday, 50 members of the U.S. House
of Representatives sent Obama a letter urging him to raise
the issue of abuses in Papua with Indonesian President
Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono during his visit. But during his
own Indonesia trip last month, U.S. Defense Secretary Leon
Panetta said that the U.S. will keep an watchful eye on
rights abuses, but largely supports the government's strong
stance against the separatist movement. Papua is the most
remote region in Indonesia and the last to be relinquished
by its Dutch colonial masters a half century ago. It was
incorporated into Indonesia in 1969 after a U.N.-sponsored
ballot of tribal leaders that has been widely dismissed as a
sham. Activists are regularly given 10 years or more in
jail for anti-government rallies, unfurling banners or
raising pro-independence flags, while soldiers who commit
abuses have received much less time, if any. Even those
captured on video burning genitals of one suspected
separatist in Papua last year and running a sharp knife
across the neck of another were sentenced to just a few
months for "disobeying orders." The seeds of dissent were
sown into Karma - who comes from an upper-class family of
civil servants - in 1965 when Indonesian soldiers arrived at
his home just after midnight and kicked in the door. He was
6 at the time. "They were shouting, 'Wake up! Wake up!' as
they overturned furniture, smashed everyone in sight," said
Karma. "It hurt, deep in my heart," he said. "This is
where it began for me. I started to believe if Papua didn't
get away from Indonesia, we'd all spend the rest of our
lives suffering." Even so, he remained largely removed
from the independence movement until 1998, when he got
involved in nationwide protests that eventually helped sweep
Suharto from power. It was only after taking part in
flag-raising ceremony in his hometown of Biak in July that
year that it dawned on him that Papua might not benefit from
the dramatic changes yet to come. He was injured in both
legs when Indonesian troops opened fire at a rally, and was
thrown in jail for a year on charges of sedition. His
second arrest, the one he's now serving time for, came in
2004. His Christian faith was openly ridiculed in court, and
his 15-year sentence was three times what prosecutors had
demanded. Karma's daughter, Audryne Karma, said the
blood-drenched head of a dog was dropped off on the doorstep
of his lawyers, with a note attached: "We will kill
Karma." "We thought that the Indonesian authorities, wary
of martyring my father, would grant him an early release,"
she wrote in a letter that appeared last month in The Wall
Street Journal. "Instead, they transformed a humble civil
servant into an icon of political persecution." Some
longtime observers remain hopeful, however, that momentum is
shifting and that Karma could be freed early. "There's a
sort of critical mass of key players who are coming together
behind the issue," Eben Kirksey, author of an upcoming book
about the Papuan independence movement, said of
Karma. Karma has rejected several offers to be set free,
saying he will accept nothing short of unconditional
release. "I also want an apology to the people of Papua,"
he said, "because many civilians have been killed by
Indonesian soldiers." -------------------------------- http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2011/11/16/freeport-often-incites-tension-violence-papua-komnas-ham.html
4) Freeport often incites tension, violence in Papua: Komnas
HAM The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Wed, 11/16/2011 5:05 PM A
-------------------------------- http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/news/2-shootings-near-papua-mine-1-freeport-worker-injured/478933
*5) 2 Shootings Near Papua Mine, 1 Freeport Worker Injured*
*Farouk Arnaz* | November 16, 2011 One Freeport McMoRan
employee was injured during one of two shooting incidents
near the US mining giant’s Grasberg mine in Timika, Papua,
police said on Wednesday. "This afternoon, there were two
shootings in Timika,” National Police spokesman Saud Usman
said. "The first one occurred on Mile 51 — there was
shooting directed toward security officers of Freeport’s
mine. There were no victim in this shooting, the only damage
was to the body of the car [they were in].” The second
shooting occurred at Mile 57, Saud said, when an unknown
assailant fired on a Freeport-owned vehicle. An employee
riding in a trailer behind the vehicle was wounded in the
attack. "An employee of Freeport was shot and wounded in
his neck as [the bullet] went through his helmet,” Saud
said. "He is hospitalized in Tembagapura hospital.” Saud
said that police had no leads thus far. "The evidence is
also limited as we could only get the projectile from the
body of the victim and the cars,” he said. "There is no
other [evidence].” There have been several shootings
near the Freeport mine area recently as a contentious strike
between miners and the company has entered its third month
with no sign of resolution in
sight. --------------------------------- http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/news/8-people-killed-in-weekend-clash-papua-activists/479008
*6) 8 People Killed in Weekend Clash: Papua Activists*
*Banjir Ambarita* | November 16, 2011 *Jayapura.* Police
said on Wednesday that a clash with a small armed group in a
gold mine during the weekend was believed to have left one
person dead, but activists claim the death toll could be as
high as eight. Papua Police spokesman Sr. Comr. Wachyono
said local police had clashed with the armed group believed
to be headed by Salmon Yogi at the Tayaga-Baya Biru gold
mine in the district of Paniani, Bogobaida subdistrict, on
Saturday morning. "They were out to attack the mining
location and police were only there to prevent them. An
armed clash could not be avoided,” Wachyono said. He
said that on Nov. 11, the owner of the gold mine, Boy
Rakinaung, received a letter from a group demanding payment
of Rp 40 million ($4,400) and giving him 14 days to pay it.
The letter was then provided to the police, who acted on the
information. This was why, Wachyono said, seven members
of the Baya Biru police had stood guard at the Tagaya bridge
before dawn on Saturday morning. At around 7:30 a.m., a
group of armed men appeared, heading toward the mine, and
gunfire was exchanged. One member of the group was shot and
is believed to be dead. Salmon is a leader of one of the
factions of the Free Papua Organization (OPM), which has
been sustaining a low-intensity, uncoordinated and badly
armed pro-independence guerilla in Papua since the 1960s.
"The identity of the victim who got shot is unknown
because he then fell into the river and his body was swept
away by the strong currents. A search to locate the body is
still ongoing,” Wachyono said. Matius Murib, deputy
chairman of the Papua chapter of the National Commission on
Human Rights (Komnas HAM), said the shooting incident had
left eight people killed. "We have the evidence and we
will soon conduct an on-site identification,” Matius said,
adding that the reason for the shootings remained unclear.
He identified the victims as Matias Tenouye, 30; Simon
Adii, 35; Petrus Gobai, 40; Joel Ogetai, 30; Benjamin Gobai,
25; Marius Madai, 35; Matias Anoka, 40 and Yus Pigome, 50.
"This is a serious human rights violation and the state
should be accountable,” he said. John Gobay, a
respected figure in the Paniai district, said that he had
also heard eight people were killed in the incident.
"This case should be comprehensively investigated by an
independent team because the police often blames the OPM as
triggering the problem,” he said. Komnas HAM chairman
Ifdhal Kasim called on Wednesday for the government to
reduce the number of security personnel, police and soldiers
deployed in Papua to help alleviate the tension in the area
and create a sense of security for the local people. He
said that reducing the number of security personnel would
also lower the potential for mistreatment and abuse of the
local people. "The addition of reinforcement troops will
only have an excessive impact on the potential of human
rights violations taking place,” Ifdhal said. Security
personnel in Papua have been accused of involvement in a
series of human-rights violations, especially against
civilians. The accusations include the shooting of
participants at a pro-independence meeting near Jayapura
last month that left six people dead. Haris Azhar, a
coordinator of human rights group Kontras, said that in the
past two months the police were linked to 18 cases of
violence and torture, and Indonesian Armed Forces (TNI)
members were linked to 40. He also questioned ongoing
military operations in Papua despite not having sought the
approval of the House of Representatives as required by
law. ---------------------------------- http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2011/11/16/legislator-slams-tni-operations-papua.html
*7) Legislator slams TNI operations in Papua* The Jakarta
Post, Jakarta | Wed, 11/16/2011 7:39 AM * * A member of the
House of Representatives accused the government of
conducting illegal military operations in poverty-stricken
Papua, which has seen a spike in violence involving security
officials. The deputy chairman of the House’s Commission
I, Maj. Gen. (ret) T.B. Hasanuddin, said in a House meeting
with researchers from the Indonesian Institute of Sciences
(LIPI) on Tuesday that at no time had the President, or even
the Coordinating Legal, Political and Security Affairs
minister, been involved in the decision-making concerning
military operations in Papua. "If we refer to the 2004
Indonesian Military [TNI] Law, however,” he argued,
"military operations to handle separatist movements should
have a ‘political affirmation’, meaning [those
operations] should first seek approval from the President
and the House.” "The only ones involved in discussing
[military operations in Papua] were the TNI commanders who
were in charge over there.” The government has
repeatedly denied there have been any military operations in
Papua, although the military often collaborated in security
operations overseen by the National Police. TNI spokesman
Rear Adm. Iskandar Sitompul told The Jakarta Post that the
TNI’s tasks in Papua merely consisted of "defending the
borders and assisting the police in upholding domestic
security”. "What Pak Hasanuddin said was right: that all
military operations require approval from the President and
the House,” Iskandar said. "But in reality, there were
never any military operations in Papua. Our tasks there were
purely to defend the RI-New Guinea border and assist the
police if they so requested.” The House’s Commission
I, which oversees defense, foreign affairs and information,
summoned the LIPI researchers, who have conducted intensive
research on Papua and helped develop the so-called "Papua
Road Map” in 2008, to help solve the recent escalating
violence in the country’s easternmost region. The House
also planned to summon the head of the Unit for the
Acceleration of Development in Papua and West Papua (UP4B),
Lt. Gen. (ret) Bambang Darmono, Coordinating Legal,
Political and Security Affairs Minister Djoko Suyanto, as
well as representatives from human rights watchdogs, such as
the National Commission on Human Rights (Komnas HAM) and the
Commission for Missing Persons and Victims of Violence
(Kontras). In the hearing with LIPI, Hasanuddin urged the
TNI to halt their military operations, and he suggested
there be a ceasefire in Papua as a solution for the
worsening conflict in the province. "If there are still
military patrols, raids, or ‘sweepings’ against
indigenous Papuans, such as what happened in Jakarta
recently, I can guarantee 100 percent that any efforts to
start peace talks will not be welcomed by the local Papuan
population.” LIPI researcher Muridan Satrio Widjojo
also slammed the police and TNI "There should
be a thorough evaluation of the deployment of police and TNI
personnel to Papua,” Muridan said.
(sat) ENDS
operations in Papua,
describing both branches of the security forces as the "main
actors” behind the continuing conflict.