AWPA: An open letter to the Pacific Islands Forum leaders
Australia West Papua Association
(Sydney)
PO Box 28, Spit Junction,
Sydney, Australia 2088
Media release 16 May 2012
An open letter to the Pacific Islands Forum leaders concerning the human rights situation in West Papua (letter below).
AWPA is urging the PIF Leaders at their
summit in Rarotonga, the Cook Islands
to
discuss the human rights situation in West Papua at the
43rd Pacific Islands Forum in August in Rarotonga.
to raise the human rights situation in West Papua with the Indonesian President and to urge the Indonesian Government to release all West Papuan political prisoners as a sign of good faith to the West Papuan people.
to request permission from the Indonesian Government to allow a PIF fact finding mission to West Papua to investigate the human rights situation in the territory.
to encourage the Indonesian Government to allow greater access for human rights monitors and the international media to West Papua.
to grant observer status to
genuine representatives of the Melanesian people of West
Papua who are struggling for their right to self
determination . We note that the PIF has granted observer
status to Tokelau, Wallis and Futuna, the Commonwealth
Secretariat, the United Nations, the Asian Development Bank,
the Word Bank, American Samoa, Guam, the Commonwealth of
Northern Marianas, and the Africa, Caribbean and Pacific
(ACP) Group of States Secretariat. New Caledonia and French
Polynesia, previously Forum Observers are now Associate
Members with Timor Leste having Special Observer
status.
We believe that the time is now right to bring
representatives of the Melanesian people of West Papua back
into the Pacific community .
The issue of West Papua will not disappear and AWPA believes that it should be of great concern to the Forum that the situation in West Papua could deteriorate further. The West Papuan people have been calling for dialogue with Jakarta for years (under third party mediation ) and AWPA believes the PIF can play an important role in helping facilitate such a dialogue between genuine representatives of the West Papuan leadership and the Indonesian Government. The PIF should place pressure on Jakarta to resolve West Papuans’ issues of concern. Otherwise we will see increasing conflict in West Papua which in turn could affect the region
Joe Collins
---------------------------------------------
Australia
West Papua Association (Sydney)
Open letter to Pacific Islands Forum leaders concerning West Papua
15 May 2012
Dear Pacific Islands Forum leaders
On behalf of the Australia West
Papua Association (Sydney) I am writing to you concerning
the issue of West Papua[1].
AWPA believes that since the
last Pacific Islands Forum (PIF) summit in Auckland, the
situation in West Papua has deteriorated further. We would
like to bring your attention to a number of incidents and
reports that raise grave concerns about the human rights
situation in the territory.
In October 2011 there was a crackdown on the 3rd Papuan Peoples congress where security forces used excessive force when arresting up to 300 Papuans. Up to six people were reported killed and five of the organisers arrested and charged with treason. They received three years in prison for subversion. At no time did these men commit violence and they have been jailed solely for peacefully expressing their political views as is their right under Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. As opposed to the three year sentence given to the five activists, no action was taken against the security force personal who were involved in the brutal crackdown and they received only written warnings.
Amnesty International in
its annual report 2011 on Indonesia states
“The
security forces tortured and otherwise ill-treated
detainees, and used excessive force against protesters,
sometimes leading to death. No adequate accountability
mechanisms were in place to ensure justice or act as an
effective deterrent against police abuses. The criminal
justice system remained unable to address ongoing impunity
for current and past human rights violations. Restrictions
on freedom of expression were severe in areas such as Papua
and Maluku”.
Amnesty International also believes there
are at least 100 political activists in prison for
peacefully expressing their views in areas seeking
independence such as Maluku and Papua.
An article in the
Jakarta Globe (4 January 2012) titled “2011 a Busy Year
for Human Rights Investigations in Papua”
quotes the head of the Papua office of the National
Commission on Human Rights (Komnas HAM) as saying they
“looked into 58 alleged violations of human rights in
2011, and was anticipating investigating at least that many
cases in 2012”, and, “In almost 65 percent of human
rights violation cases in Papua, the perpetrators are TNI
[Indonesian Armed Forces] and National Police
members,”
The Freeport mine is a symbol to West Papuan people of the exploitation of their natural resources from which they receive little benefit. A three-month strike began on the 15 September with workers asking for better conditions. During the strike a number of shootings occurred around the mine. In one incident Petrus Ayamiseba, a worker was killed when Indonesian security forces fired on striking workers in Timika.
A number of military
operations occurred in West Papua in the past year.
A
Military operation in the Paniai region caused the
displacement of thousands of people and villages burned.
According to a report in Jubi (29 December) referring to a
military operation in November and December 2011, “The
operation has been on-going ever since Brimob troops from
East Kalimantan were sent to Paniai in the second week of
November” Jubi also commented that this operation will
continue as the security forces hunt for the OPM who have
moved from Eduda (one of their base camps into woodland
areas following an attack by the security forces. The Free
Papua Organization says 14 of its members were killed during
the attack. At one stage approximately 500 inhabitants of
Dagouto village in Paniai Regency had to leave their homes
and seek refuge following the deployment of 150 Mobile
Brigade officers to their area.
It is now 49 years since Indonesia took over the administration of West Papua from the United Nations Temporary Executive Authority (UNTEA) in 1963 and the people of West Papua still continue their struggle for self -determination. This can be clearly seen by the thousands of West Papuans who marched peacefully in the past year in numerous rallies calling for their right to self-determination and for a referendum. The most recent rallies took place on the 1st May when thousands marched to protest the UN handover of West Papua to Indonesian administration in 1963.
In light of the ongoing human rights abuses in West Papua, AWPA urges the PIF Leaders
to discuss the human rights situation in West Papua at the 43rd Pacific Islands Forum in August in Rarotonga.
to raise the human rights situation in West Papua with the Indonesian President and to urge the Indonesian Government to release all West Papuan political prisoners as a sign of good faith to the West Papuan people.
to request permission from the Indonesian Government to allow a PIF fact finding mission to West Papua to investigate the human rights situation in the territory.
to encourage the Indonesian Government to allow greater access for human rights monitors and the international media to West Papua.
to grant
observer status to genuine representatives of the
Melanesian people of West Papua who are struggling for
their right to self determination . We note that the PIF has
granted observer status to Tokelau, Wallis and Futuna, the
Commonwealth Secretariat, the United Nations, the Asian
Development Bank, the Word Bank, American Samoa, Guam, the
Commonwealth of Northern Marianas, and the Africa, Caribbean
and Pacific (ACP) Group of States Secretariat. New
Caledonia and French Polynesia, previously Forum Observers
are now Associate Members with Timor Leste having Special
Observer status.
We believe that the time is now right to
bring representatives of the Melanesian people of West Papua
back into the Pacific community .
The issue of West Papua will not disappear and AWPA believes that it should be of great concern to the Forum that the situation in West Papua could deteriorate further. The West Papuan people have been calling for dialogue with Jakarta for years (under third party mediation ) and AWPA believes the PIF can play an important role in helping facilitate such a dialogue between genuine representatives of the West Papuan leadership and the Indonesian Government. The PIF should place pressure on Jakarta to resolve West Papuans’ issues of concern. Otherwise we will see increasing conflict in West Papua which in turn could affect the region
Yours sincerely
Joe Collins
Secretary
AWPA
(Sydney)
ENDS