Flag raisers in Timika to go on trial + Three persons accused of torturing police declared suspects.

Bintang Papua, 2 December 2011
Flag raisers in Timika to go on trial
Three persons accused of torturing police declared suspects
.[The article is illustrated by a photo of the chief of police in Papua, Police Inspector-General   BL Tobing waving a small poster.]

Jayapura:  Five people who were  involved in a Morning Star flag-raising incident in Minika are due to go on trial, while the police say they are interrogating another five people to be called as witnesses, according to the public relations chief at a press conference in Jayapura on Friday.

The five were named as: Larius Dolame, Norbertus Timang, Marel Magai, Eli Maiseni and Marinus Pigai. The five are being interrogated by the police in Mimika, and the following items of evidence have been seized: one wooden pole,  two Morning Star flags and a knife.

The day before, at around 11am, hundreds of people gathered on Timika Field to celebrate the 50th anniversary of Papuan Independence. According to the police, they did not have a permit to do so, or to hold prayers in celebration of the the anniversary.

As the crowd assembled, they unfurled one flag on the pole, and used another two flags  in a dance  and to run round the field. According to the police, there were no casualties during the security operations there.

{ Note: West Papua Media has a list of names of people who have sustained gunshot wounds – they are: Fero (Veronika) Anggaibaik; Viktor Wamang; Alpinus Uawang;  Jemago Elas; and Hilary Piligame}

{in A separate incident} Police identified three persons as suspects for torturing  a member of the police force in the district of Nimbokrang, Jayapura. The police chief told journalists on Friday that 15 people had been traken into custody, of whom three have been declared suspects and will go on trial before a court. They will face charges under Article 214, para 2 of the Criminal Code for resisting state officials while on duty, facing a possible five-year sentence. The three were identified by their initials, TT, YT and JKT. and are currently in police custody.

The director of the Bhayangkari Hospital  told journalists that police officer Napitupulu was in a stable conditions. ‘His condition has improved. Yesterday an arrow that had pierced  his thigh was removed and injuries on his face had been cleaned.’

The police chief said that the security situation in Papua after 1 December was conducive, especially as the month of December is when the Christian community will  be celebrating Christmas.

According to Markus Haluk, chairman of the Association of Highland Students , AMPTI, six people were injured by gunshots and were being treated at Timika Caritas Hospital . However this was denied by the public affairs spokesman of the police of Papua. ‘No one was shot,’ he said. ‘On the contrary, five of our members were wounded,’ he claimed.

Troops burn down churches and villages in Puncak Jaya

by Westpapuamedia.info

December 4, 2011

According to credible local sources in Puncak Jaya, Indonesian troops razed a civilian village while conducting a massive offensive against National Liberation Army guerrillas of Goliat Tabuni.

Undercover local human right sources have claimed that at 1530 local time on December 3, that two platoons from the “Coconut” brigade of Gegana Brimob anti-terrorist police, set fire to a church, houses, and guard houses in the village of Wandenggobak.

Brimob Gegana is a specialised highly mobile bomb and anti-terrorist unit that receives funding, arming and training by the Australian Government, and is trained by the Australian Federal Police at the joint Australia-Indonesian Jakarta Centre for Law Enforcement Cooperation.  Standard weaponry used by Gegana include the AusSteyr rifle, manufactured by Australian Defence Industries.  It is not known if the flamethrowers used to burn down the church were amongst those supplied by Australia.

The church burning against civilians occurred as reprisal for an attack by Tabuni that left two Brimob officers dead earlier in the day.  Gegana Brimob police officers Bripda Ferly and Bripda Eko were killed, with Bripda Syukur being treated for minor thigh grazing.

Civilian casualties have been reported, though not verified at this stage.  It is not known if villagers were in any of the buildings, or seeking shelter in the church at the time it was razed by Indonesian police.

These reports are based on contact with two regular and established credible sources.  The usual standard for claiming fact verification for West Papua Media is our three independent source rule, but we are still awaiting further detailed reports from the area.  Papuan, Indonesian and international journalists have been banned from the area in Puncak Jaya where the offensive is occurring which has been informally declared as a Military Operations Area (Daerah Operasi Militer/ DOM)

The offensive has allegedly started after the guerrilla forces of Tabuni allegedly launched attacks on military targets on December 1, after a massive nonviolent flagraising ceremony in Tingginambut.

However, other credible sources in Wamena have sent appeals saying that Tabuni is close by Wamena.  “After General Tabuni started war on December 1 … Our international highlanders are feeling deeply traumatised …  ordinary people are starting to arm themselves with traditional weapons on the streets”, a translated SMS message sent to West Papua Media early on December 4 claimed.

The situation is tense at time of writing.  Please stay tuned for further developments.

Related articles:

Breaking News: REPORTS OF MAJOR TNI OFFENSIVES IN PUNCAK JAYA AND PANIAI

BREAKING NEWS
SATURDAY DECEMBER 3

2100 Papua time.

by westpapuamedia.info

UNCONFIRMED REPORTS:  INDONESIAN ARMY LAUNCHES SIMULTANEOUS, MASSIVE OFFENSIVES AGAINST  WEST PAPUAN ARMED FIGHTERS.

UNCONFIRMED reports have been provided to West Papua Media detailing simultaneous and massive Indonesian military offensives that have been launched against National Liberation Army/Free Papua Movement (TPN/OPM) armed struggle guerrilla units in Puncak Jaya and Paniai districts, just two days after security forces were restrained by international attention and nonviolent movement discipline from taking threatened brutal crackdown actions on peaceful flagraisers.

In Puncak Jaya – in the sub-district of Tingginambut – reports to West Papua Media from credible sources have claimed that at least one full battalion of  Kostrad soldiers (1500 combat soldiers),  plus two companies of Kopassus special forces who were deployed to Yakuhimo and Wamena ahead of the December 1 demonstrations and flagraisings, were launching a full-scale military assault on villages in the highlands.  Local human rights sources have also claimed heavy weaponry, artillery, helicopters and fixed wing aircraft are being  used in the assault, greatly increasing the risk for civilian casualties to occur.

Significant exchanges of fire have been reported from Tabuni’s forces, and according to unconfirmed reports, casualties have been sustained on both sides.

The villages around Tingginambut have been subject to regular and ongoing full-scale military punishments and raids in the hunt for the TPN forces of Goliat Tabuni, who has carried out regular attacks against Indonesia security forces personnel.

The reported offensive comes after video was released showing Tingginambut hosted a ceremony raising the banned Morning Star on December 1 attended by over a thousand local people.  Local human rights sources have claimed via SMS that a major offensive against Tabuni had been prepared  for several weeks, but that TNI were waiting for a mass act of civil nonviolent resistance to occur in order to extend an offensive against civilians in villages that are sympathetic to the Free Papua guerrillas.

Meanwhile, In the Paniai district to the west of Puncak Jaya, reports are also filtering out that a simultaneous assault is occurring on the Paniai/Enarotali TPN/OPM units of Jhon Yogi.  Local sources in Paniai have indicated that a mixed battalion of Army and paramilitary police Brimob troops are currently trading heavy gunfire with Yogi’s forces.  No information is available on the amount or nature of casualties at this stage, however the assault is taking place in a populated area of farmers gardens.

Further updates to come.


ANY JOURNALISTS OR HUMAN RIGHTS MONITORS THAT CAN ASSIST IN MAKING ENQUIRIES INTO THESE REPORTS WOULD BE PROVIDING A CRITICAL SERVICE.  PLEASE CONTACT WEST PAPUA MEDIA at editor@westpapuamedia.info or +61450079106 IF YOU GET ANY UPDATES.  THIS IS A DEVELOPING STORY.

Indonesia Pressured Us: PEPERA (Act of “free” Choice) 1969 Testimony

by Papuan Voices [Merauke] — via EngageMedia.Org

Dec 01, 2011

Witnesses talk about what really happened during West Papua’s (supposed) Act of Free Choice (or in Indonesian Penentuan Pendapat Rakyat, PEPERA), in July 1969. The testimonies reject the Indonesian government’s claim that the people of Papua willingly voted to be integrated with Indonesia. They say people were intimidated, tricked and even killed during the process. Mama Rosa Tambaib was the woman who read out the PEPERA statement of integration, and Elias Yos Moiwend helped the Indonesian Armed Forces to socialise PEPERA to villagers.

07:36
Video information
Produced by Papuan Voices [Merauke]
Contact write the producer
Produced Nov 29, 2011
Copyright 2011, by the Contributing Authors. Cite/attribute Resource. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License Creative Commons License

Indonesian police deny claims of four civilians being shot: Radio Australia interview with West Papua Media

http://www.radioaustralia.net.au/pacbeat/stories/201112/s3382006.htm

Updated December 2, 2011 09:49:07

The unofficial independence day in the Indonesian province of Papua wasn’t without violence.

Four civilians are believed to have been shot and wounded by police and military after they were caught celebrating 50 years of the Free Papua Movement yesterday.

But police in the Indonesian province are denying the claim.

They say one officer was left severely injured after he was attacked by around 15 armed men in the city of Timika.

But the National Police did confirm they dispersed a mass gathering in Timika after a Morning Star flag was raised to commemorate the day.

Presenter:Geraldine Coutts
Speaker:Nick Chesterfield, Editor of West Papua Media

CHESTERFIELD: Look we’ve received some pretty honest assessments of what’s going on, we’ve got a network of stringers all over West Papua and we have witnesses on the ground in Timika. We’ve got a list of names of people who’ve been shot and their injuries, so it’s pretty clear that the Indonesian police did storm the gathering and shoot people. We’ve actually got five people who were shot, including people who were shot in the head. Now the police have been usually denying all attacks and then admitting it and then trying to change the narrative of it, so pretty much every act of violence that’s been occurring in West Papua over recent weeks. But it is a concern that five people were shot in Timika, and it is absolutely confirmed that the actions by the protestors on the ground were completely non-violent and they were not attacking police in Timika.

COUTTS: Alright the five that were shot, there were no deaths?

CHESTERFIELD: Not at this stage but people have been shot in the head and upper body and there has been some pretty significant injuries. So yeah it’s not just bullet grazes.

COUTTS: So they are death threatening as well?

CHESTERFIELD: Well certainly two of the victims have life threatening injuries, yeah.

COUTTS: Now are the celebrations likely to be ongoing or is that it, just a one-day affair?

CHESTERFIELD: It generally is a commemoration on December 1, now it happened in at least 15 centres across West Papua. It is the 50th anniversary of the establishment of the Republic of West Papua, which was the transitional arrangement towards independence, it was created by the Dutch. Now it was officially recognised by the Dutch as a transitional republic. So it’s certainly not just the anniversary of the formation of the Free Papua Movement, but the formation of independence in West Papua, which was taken away less than a year later with the invasion of West Papua by Indonesia.

COUTTS: Quite early in the day we were getting reports that the Morning Star was raised up a flag pole on the highest point possible. Was that taunting the Indonesian military by doing that, because it is illegal?

CHESTERFIELD: It is illegal under Indonesian law currently, but it was also made legal under international law by President Wahid in 2000 where the Morning Star flag was allowed to be flown. It is a cultural symbol as well as political symbol, so the acts of subversion and rebellion that they put on the raising of the flag are actually invalid under Indonesian law. But certainly the act of raising the flag on top of Carstensz Pyramid or Puncak Jaya as the Indonesians know it, was an act of solidarity with the Papuans by an international climber. It was certainly not done as a provocation to the Indonesian military, but rather recognition that it is West Papua’s land and West Papua’s flag should be flying across the top of its mountain.

COUTTS: Is there any evidence at this stage that the Indonesian government is releasing its grip even slightly on the West Papuans given the extent and the lack of use of Freeport over so many years?

CHESTERFIELD: Look one of the key things about events yesterday and the restraint shown by the Indonesian security forces in not cracking down, there was a briefing the other day in Jayapura by the police to all police officers to, to use a colloquial statement, to not do the wrong thing and not react with violence in any situation, because they knew that the world was actually watching. Now it is actually a testament to several things, it’s a testament to the discipline of West Papuan people in not responding to Indonesian provocations yesterday, but it’s also understanding that the international community was actually paying attention and Indonesia knows what it’s doing in Papua is wrong. It’s not really loosening its grip as such, the Indonesian military itself is trying to tighten its grip on its business operations across Papua, including the protection rackets that it runs around the Freeport mine. But certainly it has been unable to influence events in West Papua and Freeport, like the strike that’s been ongoing at the Freeport mine since July, been unable to influence it very effectively at this point to force Freeport back to production. So it’s certainly trying to increase the blood that it draws from Papua, but it’s not having very much success at this point, and certainly dialogue within Jakarta’s elite is actually starting to ask what value is the total cost of the occupation of Papua.

http://www.abc.net.au/ra/pacbeat/stories/m2055615.asx

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