Tag: Murder in West Papua

  • Questions raised over bodies found in West Papua

    Five bodies have been found in the highlands of Indonesia’s West Papua, with residents alleging them to be victims of a military attack.

    Five bodies have been found in the highlands of West Papua, with residents alleging them to be victims of a military attack. Photo: Supplied.

    Papuan news outlet Tabloid Jubi reports the bodies were found on Thursday in a village in Nduga regency, where violence has flared since last year.

    A youth leader from the regency, Samuel Tabuni, is quoted as saying the victims, two of whom were teenagers, were shot by Indonesia’s military.

    Military spokesperson, Eko Daryanto, told Tabloid Jubi he had not received a report of the shooting.

    Meanwhile, Indonesia’s President Joko Widodo said the government would review Papua’s special autonomy laws to improve conditions for Papuans, the state-news agency Antara reported.

    That comes after a request from Papuan leaders who met with the president in Jakarta last month.

    Source: RNZ

  • Solider Jailed For Triple Murder in West Papua

    Pasifik.news – By Adam Boland – July 21, 2016

    An Indonesian soldier has been jailed for 20 years for the gruesome murders of a mother and her two children in West Papua.

    The Jakarta Post reports 28-year-old Semuel Djitmau killed the trio with a cleaver as they walked to a village in Bintuni in August 2015. The children were aged just six and two.

    He this week fronted a military tribunal which condemned his actions.

    “What the defendant had done was ruthless and inhumane, violated human rights and was against the spirit of the military of protecting the people,” said presiding judge Lt. Col. James Vandersloot.

    The tribunal said Djitmau had displayed no remorse.

    The victims’ family had wanted the death penalty but the sentence was the maximum possible because the solider was charged with theft and murder rather than premeditated murder.

  • Indonesian Army Kills Five Civilians as West Papua Independence Campaign Strengthens

    By Scott Mitchell

    Indonesian troops opened fire in West Papua and killed five civilians during disturbances on Monday, as Indonesia faces growing pressure over its occupation of the region.

    The exact events that led to the deaths are difficult to trace, especially given media censorship and inconsistent reporting inside West Papua. It has been established that the shootings occurred in Paniai, where locals gathered to demonstrate at Karel Gobay Square. At least five people have been reported dead, with at least 12 wounded.

    The cause of the protests is unclear. Local media quoted community leaders claiming that the unrest was provoked by the beating of a 12-year-old boy on Sunday night, while military spokesperson Rikas Hidayatullah claimed it was a political demonstration against the electoral commission.

    The crowd “ran amok,” according to Hidayatullah, who added that the incident happened after the “police asked the military to help them.”

    Activists for West Papuan independence began circulating a number of horrific pictures, that they claimed were taken at the scene of the shootings, on blogs and Twitter.

    Indonesia occupied West Papua in 1963, following a colonial Dutch government. Ever since, the national Morning Star flag of West Papua has been banned and independence supporters have been suppressed. An estimated 100,000 West Papuans have died as a result of the occupation.

    West Papua is a valuable strategic asset for Indonesia. It is home to the world’s largest known deposit of gold at Grasberg Mine, and is also a major palm oil producer.

    Indonesia argues it secured the province fairly after a vacuum of internal leadership left the country completely ungoverned with no central authority. The UN did grant Indonesia control of West Papua in 1963, on the condition that a plebiscite on self-determination was held within six years.

    Journalists face jail for reporting on Indonesia’s separatist rebels. Read more here.

    In 1969, Indonesia organized a vote that surveyed 1,026 handpicked West Papuans. They voted to join Indonesia, and the other 800,000 West Papuans — who were considered “too primitive” and not consulted — were forced to go along with it.

    News broke of Monday’s tragic shooting in Paniai just as West Papuan independence activist organizations announced they had unified after negotiations in Vanuatu. The new body, called the United Liberation Movement for West Papua, has been set up with the ambition of being recognized by the Melanesian Spearhead Group, an intergovernmental organization that advances the interests of the Melanesian peoples of the Pacific.

    Topics:asia & pacific, war & conflict, indonesia, west papua, papua, independence, tni, melanesia, south east asia, oceania, protest, human rights, colonialism

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