free west papua camp |
Calls are mounting on Australia to use whatever influence it can
muster and urge Indonesia to end the violence in its troubled West Papua
province. Jakarta’s heavy hand threatened to overshadow a visit by Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono who is holding talks with his Australian counterpart Julia Gillard in Darwin this week.
About 10 people have been killed, many more injured, including a German tourist, in the past six weeks.
West Papuan activists have been jailed and one shot dead for raising a
West Papuan separatist flag while Indonesian soldiers are being branded
as trigger-happy and accused of antagonizing relations with
pro-independent locals.
Perhaps the worst cases of bullying in recent times happened in
Wamena where more than 85 homes were torched when troops opened fire on
locals after a soldier was stabbed to death. It was widely believed the
soldier had accidentally knocked down a child while riding a motorbike.
Jakarta annexed the former Dutch colony in 1969 and granted the
resource-rich province more autonomy in 2001 but its military presence
has been a constant sore point with up to 14,000 troops stationed in the
area where the likes of FreeportMcMoRan and BP hold massive mining
interests.
The copper and gold mines have become a widely resented symbol for
resistance leaders behind the Free Papua Movement (FPM) and their
followers who believe their country has been hijacked by outsiders who
give little back to the local community.
But finding out exactly what is happening in the region is close to
impossible due to an Indonesian ban on media coverage from the province
which the Human Rights Law Centre (HRLC) says must be lifted.
The HRLC wants Gillard to press Yudhoyono into lifting the ban and
enter into a process of constructive dialogue that will find an end to
the festering unrest. Police claim that a separatist youth group known
as the National Committee for West Papua (KNBP) is behind the latest
violence.
It’s a charge that the KNBP, whose vice chairman Mako Tabuni was shot and killed on June 14, rejects and it says police were carrying out attacks on unarmed members simply to blacken the group’s name.
Uncorroborated reports say Tabuni was shot in the back of the head by
Detachment 88, an anti-terrorism task force set-up in conjunction with
Australia and the United States to flush out Islamic terrorists in the
aftermath of the 2002 Bali bombing by Jamaah Islamiyah.
Its presence, if true, in West Papua and its reliance on Australia for funding is a worrying sign.
Claims and counterclaims will likely come to a head this weekend when the FPM commemorates its 47th
anniversary with calls to raise the Morning Star flag, a move which
will irritate authorities and illicit a nasty response which will be
justified by claims that police were simply acting in the national
interests.
It’s a scenario that could be avoided if Gillard can entice the
Indonesians to exercise some restraint in a land whose people have
little in common with big business interests or the political
machinations of Jakarta.
Source: http://thediplomat.com/
0 Komentar Anda:
Post a Comment
Your Comment Here