Indonesia Human Rights Committee
Box 68-419
Auckland
20 August 2006
West Papua Supporters to target Pacific Islands Forum who must address the situation of a people threatened with
genocide.
The participants at the successful weekend seminar "West Papua: the Hidden Pacific Conflict" unanimously resolved to
take the West Papua issue to the leaders of the Pacific Island Forum nations who will be meeting in Tonga in October.
The resolution calls for the Pacific Islands Forum to grant observer status to West Papuan representatives and for the
Pacific Islands Forum to mount a fact-finding mission to visit West Papua.
Seminar speakers West Papuan Baptist leader Socratez Sofyan Yoman and Australian academic John Wing both emphasise that
the people now believe that the word 'genocide' is appropriate to their situation. West Papuans say that only this
strong word reflects the direct and indirect threats to their survival as a people.
The seminar participants agreed that the indigenous Melanesian people of West Papua have been gravely disadvantaged by
being left out of the Forum deliberations. They have many problems which are to some extent shared by their neighbours:
environmental devastation, illegal logging and an epidemic of HIV/Aids. But what is worse the West Papuan people carry
the additional burdens of living with ongoing military and intelligence operations as well as displacement from their
traditional lands to make way for a continuous stream of new transmigrants.
The Forum has expressed concern about human rights abuses in West Papua in recent years, but was inexplicably silent on
the issue in 2005. This year the plight of the Papuan people was highlighted by 43 asylum seekers who braved a dangerous
sea journey to escape deadly persecution. The Forum leaders cannot continue to ignore this human tragedy on their
doorstep.
Ends