In the jungles of West Papua with the military wing of the Organisasi
Papua Merdeka.
The
Organisasi Papua Merdeka (OPM) was first created in the 1960s by a group of
comrades who called themselves West Papuan Freedom fighters. The organization
was created to fight the Indonesian Army, which had occupied large parts of
West Papua after the Dutch colonialists withdrew.
The
movement grew rapidly in the late 1970s with fighters joining its ranks in all
major provinces of West Papua. Their operations mainly consisted of attacking
Indonesian patrols. Over the years it started to carry out more sophisticated
attacks on foreign mining companies, such as blowing up pipelines in the
Grasberg mine in Freeport.
It
carried out assaults on civilian aircrafts in Timika, targeted foreign migrant
workers, and kidnapped foreigners and journalists during the infamous Mapenduma incident.
The
militant wing of the OPM allegedly had ties to former Libyan
dictator Muammar Gaddaffi, who had also supplied weapons to the group. Some
senior OPM Commanders underwent training in Libya in the 1990s.
The
diplomatic wing of the OPM also received support from the government of Senegal
in the 1990s and were permitted to open a mission in Dakar.
Today,
the military wing has many splinter groups who operate independently.
Some
factions have agreed to a truce with the Indonesian government; others continue
to wage their guerrilla campaign. By Rohan Radheya
The
Diplomat offers full photo coverage on their site.
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