West Papua Report December 2010
*West Papua Report December 2010 - Obama
Visit, Protests, Kopassus threats, SBY to
Papua*
This is the 80th in a series of monthly reports that focus on developments affecting Papuans. This series is produced by the non-profit West Papua Advocacy Team (WPAT) drawing on media accounts, other NGO assessments, and analysis and reporting from sources within West Papua. This report is co-published with the East Timor and Indonesia /Action/ Network (ETAN).
*Summary:
*During his November 9-10 visit to Indonesia, President Obama and President Yudhoyono unveiled a "comprehensive partnership" that strongly reflects Washington's traditional perception of Indonesia as a platform servicing U.S. security and commercial interests. A key element of the "partnership," broadened security ties, comes at the expense of human rights and democratization which are under growing threat from corrupt and unaccountable Indonesian security forces.
Secret Kopassus documents released by investigative journalist Alan Nairn reveal that the targeting of senior members of Papuan civil society is official policy, approved at senior levels. Papuans used the occasion of President Obama's visit to protest the denial of self determination and the continuing devastation of local resources by the U.S. mining giant Freeport McMoran.
Journalists have complained loudly over Indonesian government subterfuge regarding the trial purportedly of security personnel involved in the torture of Papuans. On December 1, Papuans and their supporters in West Papua and in cities around the world celebrated the day in 1961 when the Papuans declared their independence from Dutch colonial rule.
A late November visit to West Papua by President Yudhoyono and many members of his cabinet failed to address long-standing Papuan concerns. A statement by an Indonesian military leader indicates military intent to deepen already substantial military involvement in commercial activities in West Papua.
*Contents:
** Security and Commercial Interests Drive Obama Administration Policy in Indonesia
* Release of Secret Indonesian Military Documents Proves Human Rights Abuse Indonesian Government Policy
* Papuans Risk Arrest and Mistreatment in Appeal to President Obama during His Visit to Jakarta
* Jakarta Authorities Mislead about Trial of Purported Torturers
* Papuans and International Supporters Celebrate Independence Day
* President Yudhoyono's Visit to West Papua Deepens Resentments
* Indonesian Military Leader's Statements Foreshadow Growing Role for Military in West Papua
*Security and Commercial Interests Drive Obama
Administration Policy in Indonesia
*President Obama's brief November 9-10 visit to Indonesia revealed a Washington policy firmly rooted in previous administrations' narrow perspectives. The "comprehensive partnership," formally announced during the visit as the centerpiece of U.S.-Indonesian relations, is reminiscent of decades-old U.S. policy towards Indonesia.
The "partnership affirms the intent to broaden educational exchanges and offers lip-service to purportedly shared global goals related to the environment and democratization. However, at its core, the accord betrays the same lack of vision that characterized U.S. relations with the Suharto dictatorship and its successors: e.g., Indonesia's importance to the United States is as regional leader capable of counter-balancing China, as a market for U.S. goods and (especially) services, and as a source of raw materials and cheap labor.
Missing is any U.S. recognition of the growing challenges to democratization and stability that beset Indonesia. Indonesian democracy is increasingly hostage to an ambitious, corrupt and unaccountable military and police, as set forth in a WPAT letter to President Obama <.
Nowhere is this security force brutality and rogue
behavior more in evidence than in West Papua where video
footage of security force murder, torture and beatings
The "comprehensive partnership" contains, as a
fundamental element, a strengthened and expanded bilateral
security force relationship initially announced by U.S.
Secretary of Defense Gates during a July 2010 visit to
Jakarta. That expanded relationship remarkably includes
collaboration with Indonesian Special Forces (Kopassus) <,
which had been denied U.S. assistance since its infamous
role in the 1998 riots in Jakarta and other major Indonesian
cities. Kopassus's continuing abuses and unaccountability <
as documented in a June 2009 Human Rights Watch report <,
has demonstrated that unit's unwillingness to
reform. Inclusion of security sector cooperation,
including with Kopassus, as a key element of the
"partnership" ignores what had long been bicameral and
bipartisan U.S. Congressional objection < to restoration of
ties with Kopassus. Restoration of ties with Indonesias
special forces, as well as continued U.S. support for
"Detachment 88," < the purported anti-terror unit, credibly
and repeatedly accused of human rights violations, provides
Kopassus and all Indonesian security forces an imprimatur of
U.S. approval that removes critical pressure for reform. The
decision to move forward broadly with U.S. military
assistance also communicates a disheartening message to
Indonesian reform advocates who have pressed for such reform
in the face of security force intimidation up to and
including murder. See also Statement of East Timor and
Indonesia *The November 9
release of a 25-page secret report by a Kopassus task force
in Kotaraja, Papua, conclusively demonstrates that human
rights violations in West Papua is Indonesian government
policy. The document <, released by investigative journalist
Alan Nairn, identify individual senior members of Papuan
civil society and clergy as targets for intimidation and
abuse. The task force alleges without evidence that they
harbor "separatist" goals. While senior Indonesian
government military and civilian officials have long
groundlessly alleged separatist sympathies among Papua's
civil society, the document are unique as they name the
targets for attack and explicitly ordain extralegal measures
by security forces to be employed against them. The report
indicates that such actions are supported at the highest
levels of the Indonesian military. Moreover, calls for
action to impede and prevent Papuans from peacefully
exercising fundamental freedoms including the right of
association and of free speech constitute clear violations
of Indonesia's obligations under the International Covenant
on Civil and Political Rights < and the International
Covenant on Economic, Cultural and Social Rights <, both
acceded to by Indonesia in February 2006. They also violate
Indonesian law affirming these rights. Responding to the
leak, Indonesias armed forces commander confirmed to the
Jakarta Globe < See also Democracy Now!: As Obama
Arrives in Jakarta, Secret Docs Show U.S.-backed Indonesian
Special Forces Unit Targets Papuan Churches, Civilians
< *Papuans Risk Arrest and Mistreatment in Appeal to
President Obama during His Visit to
Jakarta *Hoping to draw the attention of President
Obama and the international media that accompanied his
entourage to Jakarta, Papuans in various cities demonstrated
peacefully. An unknown number of demonstrators in Jayapura
were detained despite the peaceful nature of their November
6 march. In Jakarta, a WPAT team member monitored a two hour
peaceful march of over 100 Papuans to the gates of
U.S.-based gold and copper mine Freeport McMoran. The
protesters carried banners critical of the U.S. and
Indonesian governments for denying Papuans the right of self
determination and also decrying Freeport's decades of
destructive exploitation of Papuan resources and violation
of Papuan rights. During their march the protesters followed
instructions of accompanying police to minimize disruption
of Jakarta's mid-day traffic. Some demonstrators sat down in
the street blocking several lanes of a major Jakarta
thoroughfare near Freeports corporate offices, after they
were denied permission to enter and meet with officials.
Police were initially confused by the tactic but eventually
struck at least one of the demonstrators and briefly
detained three forcing the demonstrators to the side of the
road. *Jakarta Authorities Mislead about Trial of
Purported Torturers * The November 4 court
proceeding in any event was flawed. Three low-ranking
officers of the Pam Rahwan Yonif 753/Arga Vira Tama squad,
based in Nabire, Papua, were sentenced to five months
imprisonment < *Papuans and
International Supporters Celebrate Independence Day
* *President Yudhoyono's Visit to West Papua
Deepens Resentments * Papuan officials publicly
criticized < The President was
accompanied by nearly all members of his cabinet, as well as
people from the anti-corruption commission and the state
finance investigation agency. The President did not meet
with the Papuan Customary Council (DAP) which has been
particularly vocal in its criticism of the Government
reliance on the "security approach" to address political,
cultural and social problems. In July, DAP firmly rejected
Jakarta's "special autonomy" policies, acting at the behest
of thousands of demonstrators in Jayapura and local
constituencies throughout West Papua. *Indonesian
Military Leader's Statements Foreshadow Growing Role for
Military in West Papua *Indonesian daily Republika
on November 23 < According to Suprapto, the TNI
must be given a role to play in support of infrastructure
(development), especially in "isolated regions such as
conflict areas, outer lying islands and along land borders
with other countries." (West Papua is one of the few "outer
islands" with foreign land borders and which is regarded as
a "conflict area.") Suprapto specifically called for closer
coordination between the TNI and key ministries dealing with
forestry and maritime affairs and fishing. The TNI has long
been credibly accused of involvement in illegal logging and
collusion with illegally operating foreign fishing vessels,
especially in and around West Papua. Notwithstanding
legislation requiring the TNI to divest itself of an empire
of legal and illegal businesses by fall 2009, the TNI
continues to evade civilian control through maintenance of a
major flow of funds outside the civilian-controlled
budgetary process; i.e., through its business
empire. ENDS
*Release
of Secret Indonesian Military Documents Proves Human Rights
Abuse Indonesian Government Policy
that his troops conduct intelligence
gathering operations in Papua. According to the newspaper,
Adm. Agus Suhartono rejected the idea that gathering
intelligence among civilians was wrong, saying all
intelligence operations in Papua served to detect and
prevent separatist threats. He added the operations were
always carried out by officers sent over from the
militarys central command, including from Kopassus and
other elite units.
Indonesian and
international media reporting on the eve of President
Obama's visit to Indonesia initially claimed that Indonesian
justice had acted with unusual speed in the case of the
security personnel shown torturing two Papuans in video
footage that circulated widely in October (see November West
Papua Report <). In Jakarta a WPAT member heard
international and Indonesian journalists express
consternation that Indonesian authorities had misled them
about the identity of the security personnel who appeared in
court in Jayapura November 4. Describing the event as
"classic bait and switch" and "a red herring <," the
journalists explained that in reality the police personnel
who appeared in court were not the ones involved in the
torture videos but rather were personnel who had been shown
beating villagers in separate video footage that had
surfaced at the time of the torture videos. Journalists
claimed to us that they had been deliberately misled, "they
wanted to make the story go away before the Obama visit,"
said one Jakarta-based journalist.
for their beating of bound Papuan
villagers in March 2010. Second Lt. Cosmos was sentenced to
seven months in prison by the same court. The sentences were
more than the three months proposed by military prosecutors
but in the eyes of most observers were not commensurate with
the seriousness of the crime. Indonesian courts regularly
sentence Papuans charged with peaceful protest to
imprisonment for ten to fifteen years.
On December 1, Papuans and their supporters in
West Papua and in cities around the world celebrated the day
in 1961 when the Papuans declared their independence from
Dutch colonial rule. The day was marked with peaceful
demonstrations at the Indonesian embassy in Washington D.C.
where Amnesty International rallied on the sixth anniversary
of the arrest of prisoner of conscience Filep Karma.
Demonstrations were also held in New Zealand, Australia and
elsewhere.
President Yudhoyono's late November visit to
West Papua. Weynand Watori, head of the Provincial
Legislature's (DPRD) Commission A said the visit decried the
President's unwillingness to engage in a dialogue with the
people. Watori noted specifically the President's failure to
address human rights violations or the people's rejection of
special autonomy as proposed by the central government but
never effectively implemented.
carried comments by Indonesian Armed
Forces (TNI), Major General Suprapto that indicated TNI
intent to expand its role in the exploitation of natural
resources. His remarks suggest strongly that the TNI is
eyeing an expansion of its already significant commercial
activities in West Papua.