Armed militants holding
hostage 1,300 residents in two villages, near the giant Grasberg copper mine in
eastern Indonesia’s Papua province
Boy Rafli Amar,
the provincial police chief, told Anadolu Agency that the group, since Tuesday,
had not allowed residents to leave the two villages in Tembagapura
sub-district, Mimika Regency.
“They have
robbed the residents. There have been reports of rape and incidents of shooting
at ambulances,” he said.
Gen. Tito
Karnavian, the country’s police chief, said the armed group, active since 2012,
consists of 20-25 people.
"(They)
carry at least five to 10 weapons," Karnavian said, according to local
media outlet kompas.com.
The group was
using miners in the villages as hostages to avoid police arrests, Karnavian
said.
Gen. Gatot
Nurmantyo, the military chief, accused the separatist Free Papua Organization
(OPM) of the hostage situation, according to local news outlet Kompas.com.
Sebby Sambom,
spokesman of the West Papua National Liberation Army (TPNPB), the military wing
of the Free Papua Organization, accepted they were not letting people leave the
villages as the security forces were about to launch a counter-terror operation
in the area.
"The
authorities are about to evacuate 1,300 civilians to Timika to vacate the
locations that will be the target of the operation," Sambom said as quoted
by local media outlet wartaplus.com.
Hundreds of
security personnel have gathered in Mimika, since Monday, for a counter-terror
operation against the militants.
Papua has been
home to a low-level insurgency ever since the former Dutch colony was
transferred to Indonesian rule in 1963.
Despite being
rich in natural resources, the province is among the most impoverished. It has
witnessed political arrests and alleged human rights abuses by security forces
over the last few decades.
Late in October,
a shootout with the militants in the province left a policeman dead and six
others injured.
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