The West Papuan farmer showed me scars on his head
he claimed police caused nearly two years ago
His eyes were still bloodshot after a beating by rifle
butts, boots and rattan sticks. The left eye, scarred on its edge, seemed
slightly out of place.
The 35-year-old still gets headaches and has a partial loss
of sight. After the beating, he said he was locked in a paddy wagon with 14 others,
and left without food, water, medical attention or a toilet for 26 hours.
Local independence leader Buchtar Tabuni, 34, said he has
had to live and hide in the jungle after police stopped him on the way to a
soccer game last June. They kicked him and beat him with rifle butts and
threatened to bury him alive in a cemetery. Because he has not stopped
politicking, he fears a police "killing team" may shoot him in the
street.
Both men were talking about a provincial police force in the
Indonesian territory that New Zealand trains.
Some Papuans say that by helping local police, New Zealand
is party to the brutal suppression of human rights in the region, where the
United Nations has urged Jakarta to hold accountable those responsible for
violence.
The farmer seemed what he claimed: a market gardener hosting
young people from his former highlands village while they studied in Jayapura,
the largest city. Nothing he said was critical of Indonesian sovereignty.
Speaking through translators, the farmer said: "They
broke the door in. They fired pistol shots into the sky outside and two
policemen inside shot pistols into the ceiling. There were 15 of us in the
house - me and 14 students.
"They used their boots to jump on me. I was beaten on
and off from 3am to 10am with rifle butts and wooden sticks. They were yelling,
'You are OPM. You are stupid'.
"At 11am we were taken to police headquarters. I had
blood all over my face. They kept us in the police van at the back. No food, no
water, no toilets. Next day at 1pm we were let out."
Unlike the farmer, Tabuni was radically political and said
he was threatened to make him stop speaking out.
"There was a Polisi [police officer] on each side and
they pinned an arm each with their backs. Behind me another one was grabbing my
hair and pulling my head back. When we drove past a cemetery they said they
could easily bury me alive in there.
"They said, 'You Papuans are not capable of creating
anything but you want freedom. Why you want to be free? Papuans can't even make
good food - you can't even make spices.'
"Maybe it is time New Zealand is thinking about
Papuans. New Zealand government funds to Indonesia should stop."
For "spreading separatist propaganda" he had been
jailed twice.
Victor Mambor, chairperson of the Alliance of Independent
Journalists of Papua said one of his employees, Ardiansyah Matra'is, was killed
at Merauke in 2010. The journalist had written a series of articles about
illegal logging by military officers.
"His motorbike was by a bridge. Police say he jumped
into river to commit suicide. But when his body was found in the harbour ...
hands tied together, feet tied together, his body beaten. Ardiansyah was dead
before going in the river."
Mambor summed up New Zealand's police training as "aid
that kills".
"The Polisi here kill the people - they don't make
investigations. New Zealand needs to stop."
Few independent accounts of alleged human rights abuses in
West Papua exist because Jakarta restricts access to observers. A 2005 report
Genocide in West Papua? by John Wing, co-ordinator of the Centre for Peace and
Conflict Studies at Sydney University, claimed more than 100,000 Papuans had
died since Indonesia took control from the Dutch in 1963.
And eight months ago the UN High Commissioner for Human
Rights, Navi Pillay said that "serious allegations of human rights abuses
by law enforcement officials persist."
The New Zealand aid project started in 2009 when police
officers set up programmes in six West Papuan centres.
New Zealand's Jakarta Embassy website quotes senior police
liaison officer Tim Haughey saying that for the past four years, officers had
been "talking with and 'walking the beat' with their Indonesian
counterparts, sharing the Kiwi style of community policing ..."
"It means talking to business owners and pedestrians,
meeting with community groups and organisations and finding out their concerns
and issues for many of the local community this is the first time that they
would have sat down with the police and discussed issues affecting them."
In West Papua I could not quiz local police or speak to
other officials because I was interviewing illegally on a tourist visa, having
arrived on the pretext of bird watching.
But several Papuans raised disturbing claims about the
effect of the programme.
Paul Mambrasar, of the Institute for Human Rights Study and
Advocacy of Papua said he had seen "no evidence police were applying the
knowledge" of New Zealand training.
Referring to the June 2012 killing of Mako Tabuni, secretary
general of National Committee for West Papua, or KNPB, Mambrasar said: "A
doctor said when they [the police] took Mako from the hospital there was only
one bullet hole. When they took him back, there were many holes."
Mambrasar and others described how West Papuan police chief
Inspector General Tito Karnavian was carrying out a new and brutal crackdown on
Melanesian separatists. Karnavian received part of his military training in New
Zealand, and has a masters degree in security studies from Massey University.
Septer Manufandu, co-ordinator of the Civil Society Coalition to Uphold Law and
Human Rights in Papua said that in September 2012 he discussed community
policing with New Zealand Ambassador David Taylor and questioned whether it was
helping Papuans.
Manufandu had been investigating alleged torture to KNPB
members around West Papua after police raids last year. He said police pulled
suspects fingernails out with pliers or squashed their toes with table legs.
Complaints his group made had been ignored, with the Jayapura police commander
saying it was a "normal situation to get information".
During my visit, a church leader and mediator, Dr Neles
Tebay, said although Indonesia had committed to improve dealings with Papuans,
the problem was local military and police. Aid to these agencies was often
counter-productive.
"Generally speaking the Indonesian Government is closer
to New Zealand than to Australia. Australians are considered as a more arrogant
neighbour. Kiwis are more friendly."
Talks with the pro-independence Free Papua Movement (OPM)
was the only way of settling the conflict, he said. New Zealand was in a good
position to back that.
The New Zealand Government has taken a cautious approach
towards Papua. Prime Minister John Key said after meeting Indonesian Trade
Minister Gita Wirjawan in April 2012 that West Papua was "a very complex
issue".
Behind the scenes, however, concerns have been raised about
the programme.
A January 2011 diplomatic cable released under the Official
Information Act to Auckland human rights activist Maire Leadbeater and headed
"Indonesia: Aid Monitoring Visit to Papua 18-23 November 2010"
stated: "We highlighted the community policing project as a flagship in
the province ... This was welcomed by the heads of police and the military in
Jayapura, by the police commander in Wamena and by the Governor and other
political figures. One Wamena non-government organisation argued that as the
police were agents of 'violence against Papuan children' we should expect
criticism if we engaged with them.
"We responded that we had registered a variety of
concerns about police; our view was that it was better to try and find ways to
improve their performance and lift community understanding of their role also,
rather than ignore extant problems."
Asked for comment, the Indonesian Embassy in Wellington did
not address specific Papuan claims but described them as "a collection of
negative opinions by sources that are mostly unreliable".
"In the words of New Zealand's Foreign Minister Murray
McCully, community policing is one of the aspects that New Zealand is
world-class at," the statement said.
Mr McCully said in a statement a review of the pilot work
found it "supportive of the Indonesian National Police's reform efforts
and provided practical skills and training.
"The NZ Government believes it is better to work with
Indonesia to help instil principles of civil policing and community engagement
rather than to observe and criticise from a distance. We welcome the Indonesian
Government's instructions for the police and military to work in accordance
with the law and with respect for human rights."
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