Three Indonesian soldiers were
killed in an ambush by separatist militants armed with small-arms and
spears/bows in the Nduga district of Indonesia's Papua province on 7 March. The
attack was claimed by the Tentara Pembebasan Nasional Papua Barat (TPNBP), or
West Papua National Liberation Army, the armed wing of Papuan separatist
organization Organisasi Papua Merdeka (OPM).
The increased tempo of attacks
indicates that some Tentara Pembebasan Nasional Papua Barat (TPNBP) components
have adopted a more aggressive strategy, most notably the faction led by
Ekianus Kogoya, which claimed the December 2018 attack and was blamed by the military
for the 7 March 2019 ambush. Various Organisasi Papua Merdeka (OPM)-affiliated
factions have waged a persistent low-level insurgency in Papua since the 1960s
against perceived Indonesian occupation and exploitation of the country's
mineral wealth; the threat has never previously escalated beyond sporadic
guerrilla operations. Notably, IHS Markit recorded 14 separatist attacks in
2018 - more than the previous four years combined - and three to date in 2019.
The TPNBP also claimed a 2 December 2018 attack that killed 19 construction
workers involved in building the 4,300 km Trans Papua Highway, a high-profile
government development initiative linking Sorong in West Papua to Merauke in
Papua.
Increased spending on
infrastructure and other development projects by Indonesian President Joko
"Jokowi" Widodo is not turning the population against the insurgents.
In fact, the government's development initiatives and the state's heavy-handed
response to separatist activism are already exacerbating local anti-government
sentiment. The 2 December 2018 attack, for example, was conducted the day after
more than 500 protesters were arrested for participating in pro-independence
rallies, and notably, more than 20,000 people were reportedly displaced in the
military operation that followed the attack. Projects such as the Trans Papua
Highway are also viewed by Papuan activists as an attempt to extend the state's
reach into previously inaccessible interior regions. This said, there have been
no clear indications that continued popular support for independence or at
least self-determination has translated into increased TPNBP recruitment.
The TPNBP's reliance on
traditional weapons to supplement a shortfall of military-grade weaponry
indicates that the group is unable to properly equip its existing fighters, let
alone equip and integrate any substantial intake of new recruits. The TPNBP's
claims of several thousand members are likely to be exaggerated; authorities
have claimed that Kogoya's faction probably comprises fewer than 50 fighters.
This reflects the group's longstanding lack of funding. The majority of funds
from diaspora sources are likely still prioritizing political pro-independence
activism over insurgent groups. Although low-level extortion has targeted some mining
operations in Papua, there are no indications that the group has sought to tax
the local population, on which it is reliant, at least for passive, if not
rudimentary, logistical and intelligence-gathering support.
The Trans Papua Highway and the
Grasberg mine (operated by Freeport Inc.) are the primary commercial targets at
risk in the coming months. These two sites are symbolic of Indonesia's
perceived exploitation in Papua, and attacks targeting them to date do not
indicate an increasing risk to commercial assets more broadly in the country.
Given limited capability, the majority of insurgent attacks will still focus on
security forces and those being directly deployed in construction work for the
highway project given their accessibility. Aviation risk is also elevated for
low-flying aircraft in the region because of deliberate targeting or
misidentification. Following the ambush on 7 March 2019, military helicopters
recovering the bodies of soldiers were engaged by ground fire; no major damage
was reported to the helicopters.
Indicators
of changing risk environment
Increasing risk
- An election win for opposition presidential
candidate Prabowo Subianto will indicate the formation of a new government
that is more likely to favor a heavy-handed military response against the
TPNBP than the current Jokowi administration.
- A heavy-handed state response to TPNBP
violence, extended to political pro-independence activism and civilian
population, will probably increase popular support for militancy as the
most viable method of achieving objectives.
- TPNBP operations increasingly targeting the
Trans Papua Highway will probably provoke further military deployments and
direct confrontation with insurgents and risk further alienating the local
population.
Decreasing risk
- Prominent pro-autonomy/independence diaspora
figures clearly distancing themselves from TPNBP operations and use of
violence more generally will probably undermine the group's appeal and
local support networks.
- Increasing international pressure on the
Indonesian government to limit its military response, particularly from
Australia, the European Union, and the United Kingdom, will encourage more
development-focused initiatives as a means to further assimilation in Papua.
- The Indonesian state moderating its military
operations against the TPNBP, thereby de-escalating the security situation
and delegitimizing the TPNBP's use of violence to achieve political
objectives, will further deter any recruitment to the TPNBP.
Posted 14
March 2019 by Deepa Kumar, Senior Analyst – Asia-Pacific
Country Risk, IHS Markit and
Matthew Henman, Associate Director, Jane’s
Terrorism and Insurgency Center (JTIC)
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