Dispute over whether those killed were
construction workers or Indonesian soldiers
Deadly violence has
escalated in West Papua
following the shooting deaths of up to 31 construction workers in a central
district of the region and the reported killing of an Indonesian investigator.
The West Papuan
liberation army has claimed responsibility for the attack – the deadliest in
many years in the ongoing independence conflict – but there are otherwise
differing versions of events from Indonesian authorities.
There are fears of
reprisals and violent crackdowns.
There were mass arrests
of hundreds of West Papuan protesters across the region who were marking the 1
December “independence day”, a date considered by some West Papuans as marking
their independence from the Dutch two years before the region was taken over by
Indonesia.
Indonesian media reported
the construction workers were attacked by a group of armed separatists on
Sunday, with differing reports of between 24 and 31 people killed.
Police and Indonesian
military (TNI) were sent to the area but came under fire, local police said,
with one soldier killed and another injured.
The separatist military
arm TPNPB claimed responsibility, under commander Egianus Kogeya, and put the
number of dead in the initial attack on Sunday at 24. Another five TNI soldiers
were killed in further attacks over following days, it claimed.
TPNPB also claimed TNI
forces had launched military actions in response, including bombs dropped on
TPNPB areas.
The Guardian has been
unable to independently verify the details on the incident. In 2015 the
Indonesian president, Joko Widodo, had promised to lift a ban on international
media, but in practice unimpeded reporting in West Papua remains nearly
impossible.
In justifying the attack, TPNPB said the construction workers were
Indonesian military, not civilians, and accused one of photographing their
ceremony marking independence day.
It characterised the attack as an act of self-defence against a military
that has long oppressed West Papuan people, and said the bridge construction
project was for the benefit of police and military movements in the region, not
for the people themselves.
The project is purported to be part of trans-Papua infrastructure works
pledged by Widodo to improve the living conditions in West Papua.
In a translation of a social media post provided to the Guardian, TPNPB
said it had observed the security forces in recent months and TNI had used the
trans-Papua program to carry out attacks against people in Nduga.
Jacob Rumbiak, spokesman for the United Liberation Movement for West
Papua (UMWP), told the Guardian TPNPB “wanted the world to know” that Indonesia
had been attacking West Papuans for 57 years, and they had a right to self
defence.
However Rumbiak said UMWP was a diplomatic group and not connected to
the liberation army.
“We want to solve the problem by peaceful means, with US and UN
involvement, and we are calling on the world to help and support us,” he said.
“We don’t want to fight, we want to sit and talk at the UN, or war will
be coming soon.”
The human rights lawyer Veronica Koman said the lack of access to the
area and limited phone signal meant they were unable to verify anything and
information was “messy
She said the Indonesian
government version was that the liberation army killed civilians, but TPNPB’s
claim that the workers were military was in line with previous information.
“The road workers in West Papua, especially in
that area, have always been the military, TNI, according to previous reports,”
she said.
“It’s getting more urgent
to solve the conflict in West Papua. The government knows the cause of the
conflict is the 1960s history and integration process, but keeps using the
wrong approach to solve the conflict.”
Freeport’s
nearby Grasberg mine – the largest gold mine and second largest copper mine
in the world – has been a flashpoint for protests and deaths in recent years,
including at
least two deaths earlier this year.
Independence activists
have lobbied and fought for a free West Papua for decades, and there are
frequent allegations of violent crackdowns, including extrajudicial killings,
by Indonesian authorities.
Confirmed information is
difficult to obtain from the area, as there are harsh restrictions on
international press entering and operating in West Papua.
On 1 December protests
across the region raised the Morning Star flag – illegal in West Papua.
West Papuan activists
claimed Indonesian authorities arrested almost 600 protesters, including 105 in
West Papua and around 450 in Indonesia, including 233 in Surabaya. All have
been released.
Indonesian authorities
said the Surabaya actions were not arrests, but “secured and questioned”.
Koman said the arrests in
Surabaya were an act of “forced removal”, with protesters sent back to their
home cities against their will.
Koman said there were
more than 100 Indonesians among those arrested, suggesting “the
pro-Independence movement among Indonesians is getting bigger”.
One Australian woman was
arrested and detained, ahead of an expected deportation.
In Surabaya police
reportedly searched the the headquarters of the National Committee for West
Papua on the eve of the rallies. One rally saw clashes between about 300
students and police, resulting in 17 injuries, the Jakarta Post reported.
In 2017 activists smuggled
a pro-independence petition signed by more than 1.8m West Papuans out of the
country and delivered it to the United Nations but was rebuffed
by its decolonisation committee, which said West Papua was outside its
mandate.
In April a West Papuan
activist and organiser of the petition, Yanto Awerkion, was released from
prison after 10
months of incarceration.
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