Czech Journalist Detained | Free West Papua To Speak Out
1) Czech journalist detained, deported from
Indonesia
2) Free West Papua to speak out on Lini
Day
http://www.cpj.org/2012/02/czech-journalist-detained-deported-from-indonesia.php
CPJ
Press Freedom Online
1) Czech Journalist Detained,
Deported From Indonesia
Bangkok, February 14, 2012--Indonesian authorities detained a Czech journalist on Wednesday, then deported him for reporting without official permission from a restricted area of the country, according to news reports.
Petr Zamecnik was arrested in the West Papuan town of Manokwari after photographing an independence rally in Papua, according to news reports. West Papua and Papua provinces are home to an ongoing insurgency against Indonesian rule.
Police told local journalists that Zamecnik said he was working for a business publication based in Prague and was doing a story on tourist sites in the province, according to news reports. News accounts cited a police spokesman as saying that Zamecnik failed to present proper press credentials to authorities when he was arrested and had entered Indonesia on a tourist visa that barred him from working in the country as a journalist.
Zamecnik was handed over to immigration authorities on the same day that he was arrested, news reports cited police as saying. Two days later, he was flown under police escort to Jakarta, the capital, then deported to the Czech Republic on February 11, an immigration police spokesperson told the Alliance of Independent Journalists, an advocacy group promoting press freedom in Indonesia.
"Indonesia's government boasts of the country's improved credentials as a democracy, yet it continues to suppress media coverage of the conflict in Papua," said Shawn Crispin, CPJ's Southeast Asia representative. "Detaining foreign journalists harks back to the country's authoritarian past, not to its promised democratic future."
Two French journalists were deported from Papua in 2010 for taking video footage of a peaceful demonstration, according to news reports. Indonesian authorities systematically curb news coverage of Papuan resistance movements and the military's often controversial counterinsurgency tactics by requiring foreign journalists to receive seldom-granted special permits from the Foreign and Communications ministries.
February 14, 2012 10:12 AM ET | Permalink
http://www.dailypost.vu/content/free-west-papua-speak-out-lini-day
1)
Free West Papua To Speak Out On Lini
Day
Posted on February 13, 2012 - 1:26pm |
Category:
• Featured Article
By Bob Makin
Supporters of the movement for the freedom of West Papua have applied to make Fr Walter Lini Day (21 February), next week, a day of support for the Melanesian brothers' struggle for independence.
Leaders of the
movement are conscious of the Vanuatu government's moves to
broaden commercial links and armed services cooperation with
Indonesia.
They have also expressed their disappointment
at the treatment meted out to West Papuan leaders who were
recently refused visas at Bauerfield Airport in spite of
their having letters in their possession from the Vanuatu
Ministry of Foreign Affairs saying that their visas would be
issued on arrival.
The meeting discussed that the people
of Vanuatu are well aware of the plight of the West Papuans.
But they are not so aware of the apparently changing
position of the Port Vila government towards West Papuan
liberation.
Vanuatu has continuously supported a move for West Papuan observer status at the Melanesian Spearhead Group (MSG). This was never achieved because it was blocked by the Somare government in PNG. Observer status for West Papua was still the position of Vanuatu last year. However, Prime Minister Kilman has signed a cooperation agreement with Indonesia.
Cooperation is seen by West Papua Freedom Association members as a threat to the security of Melanesia.
Meanwhile, Jakarta insists West Papua is an integral part of Indonesia and therefore Papuan independence cannot be discussed as a colonial issue.
Whilst Indonesia will discuss the Papuan provinces in regional forums, it seems this is mostly related to Djakarta's regional expansion rather than any humanitarian consideration for the West Papuans. In Papua New Guinea in recent times training camps for Muslim extremists have been allowed to become established.
Vanuatu has been supportive of West Papuan independence since the country's own Independence, and the case of the people of West Papua was always supported in international meetings by the late Fr Walter Lini. It is for that reason that the West Papua Freedom Association intends to hold its peaceful demonstration on Fr Walter Lini Day.
The Vanuatu Free West Papua Association was formed in 2000 to ensure Vanuatu governments would remain aware of the feelings of ni-Vanuatu as regards West Papuan independence.
The fact that the Vanuatu Government is moving towards diplomatic relations with Indonesia suggests it has lost touch with the feelings of the community, a meeting on Friday was told by MP Ralph Regenvanu.
The West Papuan international spokesman Dr John Ondowame also addressed the meeting.
One of the points raised at the meeting was that the Council of Ministers has never agreed that Vanuatu should enter into diplomatic relations with Indonesia and the decision to do so seems to be that of only one or two ministers.
The peaceful demonstration planned for Lini Day is expected to make the people's position clear to the present government.
There will be free expression for every point of view and a call on candidates to the forthcoming elections to make their positions, and those of their parties, absolutely clear to everyone.
ENDS