Saturday, April 11, 2026

1) The humanitarian cost of Indonesia’s refusal to allow a UN Human Rights visit to West Papua




2) Indonesian Police Go on Killing Spree, as Crackdown Escalates in West Papua  
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1) The humanitarian cost of Indonesia’s refusal to allow a UN Human Rights visit to West Papua 

April 9, 2026 in Communique

Indonesia has refused the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights access to West Papua since 2019. This round-up details the human rights abuses Indonesia has committed in West Papua during that time. 

The ULMWP urges world leaders to renew the outstanding demand for UN High Commissioner for Human Rights visit to West Papua, in the wake of the Dogiyai massacre of six West Papuans, including two minors, by the Indonesian police.

Since 2019, 111 UN member states – a clear majority of the UN General Assembly – have demanded a visit to West Papua by the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR). The first of these demands was made in August 2019 by the Pacific Islands Forum (PIF), who labelled West Papua ‘the festering human rights sore’ of the Pacific region. Despite this pressure, Indonesia has consistently and deliberately blocked UN access to West Papua.

More than six years have passed since the initial state-level demand for a UN visit was made. To underscore the urgency of a UN High Commissioner for Human Rights visit, the ULMWP has provided a breakdown of how the human rights situation in West Papua has deteriorated since 2019.


  • At least 107,039 West Papuans are currently displaced by Indonesian military operations – perhaps one in fifteen West Papuans has been a refugee since 2019;
  • More than 20,000 West Papuans were displaced in 2025 alone;
  • A minimum of 1110 West Papuans have died as a result of internal displacement, from disease, malnutrition, or as a result of inadequate medical facilities;
  • Only localised or temporary returns home have been documented, such as 353 returnees in Maybrat in 2022;
  • Some IDPs have been displaced more than once, such as 900+ in Intan Jaya who were forced to leave their homes a second time in mid-2025;
  • Indonesia has at times bombed makeshift refugee camps in West Papua, including in Puncak in February 2026.

  • It is impossible to verify the true number of West Papuans killed by Indonesian security forces, due to Indonesia’s strict media and NGO reporting ban, and routine misinformation spread by the Indonesian state in the wake of killings;
  • However, it is likely that at least 653 West Papuans have been killed since December 2018 (the numbers below are minimum estimates);
    • 2019: 278 
    • 2020-2021: 93 
    • 2022: 33 
    • 2023: 81 
    • 2024: 40 
    • 2025-2026: 128 so far
  • Mass killings are common and accountability is effectively non-existent. Emblematic mass killings during this period include:
  • Fifteen civilians massacred in Soanggama village, Intan Jaya, in October 2025;
  • Up to fifteen civilians executed during a military raid in Intan Jaya in May 2025;
  • ‘Bloody Wamena’: Ten Papuans murdered by security forces (pictured above) in Wamena in February 2023;
  • Ten Papuan civilians massacred in Yahukimo and Fakfak in September 2023;
  • Fifteen killed in Kiwirok in 2021.

Militarisation:

  • As of December 2025, at least 83,177 security forces were stationed in West Papua, roughly one for every twenty-two Indigenous Papuans;
  • This figure includes 56,517 soldiers and 26,660 police, but does not include forces temporarily deployed to West Papua from other regions of Indonesia, so the real number is likely to be higher;
  • At least 40,000 additional troops have been deployed to West Papua since 2019;
  • Hundreds of military posts have been established in West Papua during this time; while no hard figure is available for the entire territory, we know that 31 checkpoints were established between July and September 2025 in Intan Jaya alone;
  • Indonesia is using a range of technologically advanced weaponry on West Papuans, including Brazilian‑made EMB‑314 Super Tucano fighter jets, Chinese blowfish drones, and UK-made sniper rifles.

Environmental destruction:


  • Ecocide in occupied West Papua has increased dramatically since 2019, as Indonesia seeks to use West Papua to secure its future food and energy security;
  • Indonesia launched the largest deforestation project in human history in West Papua in 2024 – a 3-million-hectare rice and sugarcane food estate in Merauke (pictured above), since expanded to the entire South Papua Province;
  • The Merauke food estate – covering an area the size of Wales – is set to release an additional 780 million tonnes of CO2 into the atmosphere, more than doubling Indonesia’s existing emissions;
  • Wabu Block, a 1.8-million-hectare gold mine in Intan Jaya, has been under construction since 2021, and continues to displace communities and militarise the Papuan highlands;
  • In 2024, BP completed an expansion of its Tangguh gas field in West Papua, which will now supply 35% of Indonesia’s entire gas supply.

Secrecy is the key weapon Indonesia uses to maintain its genocidal and ecocidal rule over West Papua. By keeping its occupation hidden from the world, Indonesia is able to get away with its crimes with near total impunity, while continuing to expropriate West Papua’s huge mineral wealth. Only international intervention, beginning with a UN Human Rights visit, can stop this suffering. Indonesia must face serious diplomatic consequences until the UN High Commissioner access to West Papua is finally allowed to visit West Papua.


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2) Indonesian Police Go on Killing Spree, as Crackdown Escalates in West Papua  
BY PAUL GREGOIRE PUBLISHED ON 11 APR 2026


Members of the occupying Indonesian police went on a murderous rampage in the West Papuan village of Moanemani, located in Dogiyai Regency at around 10 am on 31 March 2026, which involved officers firing randomly into a local marketplace, prior to the police assault shifting to neighbouring Ikebo village, where officers started indiscriminately shooting upon Papuan houses.

The number of people injured is unknown, however, five West Papuans were shot dead. The Indonesian police commenced applying collective punishment to the villagers of Moanemani and Ikebo, after the body of a murdered police officer, who was an Indigenous West Papuan, was found in front of Ebenezer Church in Moanemani. And no one is sure who killed the officer.

This callous attack on villagers comes at a time when Indonesian president Prabowo Subianto has been cracking down on West Papuans within their own Melanesian homelands, particularly in the regencies of Yahukimo, Intan Jaya, Paniai, Maybrat, and now Dogiyai. This marks an escalation of attacks on villages that commenced in Nduga regency in 2018, under the former Jokowi government.



Indonesia commenced administering West Papua in 1963, following the former Netherlands colonisers exiting and the UN brokering a deal, which was to permit the West Papuans to hold a referendum on independence. But in seeking to maintain control of the resource rich region, Indonesia held a 1969 vote where 1,026 Papuans voted to remain with Jakarta at gun point.

The recent random shootings on the part of Indonesian police reveals the circumstances that West Papuans have lived under since the 1960s, and the escalation in violence against the locals is in keeping with a Prabowo presidency, as the former Suharto-era army general earnt himself a reputation for perpetrating war crimes against the East Timorese and West Papuans.

Escalating occupier aggression

Footage of the recent incident supplied by the United Liberation Movement for West Papua (ULMWP), shows armed and heavily uniformed Indonesian police emerging from a police van and chasing unarmed West Papuan civilians deeper into a residential area, shots can be heard and buildings can be seen ablaze in the distance.

Those gunned down and killed, included 19-year-old Siprianus Tibakoto, 20-year-old Yosep You, 60-year-old Ester Pigai, who suffered from paralysis, along with 14-year-old Martinus Yobee and 19-year-old Angkian Edowai. And on 1 April, 14-year-old Maikel Waine and 11-year-old Maikel Pekei continued to be in a critical condition, after being shot by Indonesian police.

“Indonesia’s actions in Dogiyai are both a crime against humanity – a grave act of colonial violence – and a breach of international law,” insisted West Papuan provisional government president Benny Wenda. “Shooting indiscriminately into homes and a public market is a form of collective punishment, while the intentional killing of civilians is a war crime.”

This latest incident comes after Jakarta had been dropping bombs upon a makeshift refugee camp in Puncak’s Kembru District, causing West Papuans, who were already displaced to have to relocate once more. And there are currently 105,000 West Papuan villagers displaced in the highlands, due to the ongoing attacks on these unarmed people living in the planet’s third largest rainforest.

“What the carnage in Dogiyai demonstrates is that Indonesia views all West Papuans as legitimate targets,” Wenda further set out. “Elders, women, and children: no one is safe from the murderous vengeance of the Indonesian security state. The massacre triggered a wave of internal displacement, as terrified civilians fled into the mountains and surrounding villages.”

EU priorities profit over rights

A key issue for West Papua achieving its independence is due to the reluctance of other nations to raise the issue of the occupied Melanesian peoples, so as to not rock the boat with Jakarta. And Wenda recently pointed to the International Parliamentarians for West Papua (IPWP) analysis of the September 2025 established EU–Indonesia Free Trade Agreement (FTA) as an example.

IPWP considers that in signing off on the FTA, the European Union has effectively approved the ongoing environmental destruction and rights abuses caused by Indonesia in the Melanesian region. The West Papuan environment and its people’s rights were not considered during negotiations, yet a fair amount of LNG, palm oil and metals are sourced from West Papua by EU nations.

Prabowo first paid a visit to West Papau after becoming president in November 2024, with a key part of his tour being a visit to Merauke district, which is the site of the world’s largest deforestation project, with the clearing of an eventual 2 million hectares set to take place in order to facilitate giant sugarcane plantations.

In its assessment of the EU-Indonesia FTA, IPWP pointed out that the sustainability impact assessment of the free trade agreement with Indonesia made no mention of West Papua whatsoever, and this is while unprecedented deforestation and environmental destruction are being perpetrated in the Melanesian region.

The IPWP further charged the EU with failing to take the plight of the West Papuan people into any consideration when finalising the trade agreement. The parliamentarians pointed to the fraudulent 1969 UN-brokered referendum, which saw a little over 1,000 Papuans vote to stay with Indonesia, and they wondered why this was not an issue for European negotiators.

United in denial of self-determination

Wenda questioned in February, why, despite the fact that Indonesia has been carrying out attacks on unarmed West Papuan villages for coming on eight years now, Indonesia’s permanent representative to the United Nations, Sidharto Reza Suryodipuro, was appointed to the position of president of the UN Human Rights Council in January.

The UN was further presented with a copy of the West Papuan People’s Petition back in 2019. This is a document that calls upon the UN to facilitate a new and legitimate vote on self-determination. The petition has been signed by 1.8 million West Papuans, or 70 percent of that Indigenous population. And yet, there has been no movement on this issue ever since.

“I reiterate our demand for Indonesia to allow the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights to visit West Papua,” said Wenda, who has been exiled from his homeland for decades. “Over 110 countries – a clear majority of the UN member states – have now demanded this visit, but Indonesia continues to refuse.”

“Dogiyai is not an isolated incident: every day brings a new atrocity,” the president of the West Papuan provisional government in waiting made clear in ending.

“How long will the world allow this to continue before Indonesia is made to suffer genuine diplomatic consequences for their refusal?”



PAUL GREGOIRE 

Paul Gregoire is a Sydney-based journalist and writer. He's the winner of the 2021 NSW Council for Civil Liberties Award For Excellence In Civil Liberties Journalism. Prior to Sydney Criminal Lawyers®, Paul wrote for VICE and was the news editor at Sydney’s City Hub.


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Friday, April 10, 2026

1) Indonesian military massacres West Papuans in latest round of violence



2) Indonesia’s democracy faces a quiet return of military power 
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Green Left

1) Indonesian military massacres West Papuans in latest round of violence

Wednesday, April 8, 2026

1) Deadly unrest in Indonesia's Papua region draws rights scrutiny


2) Arbitrary detention of seven pupils in Sinak, Puncak Regency


3) Military members detain gold panner without warrant in Dekai, Yahukimo


4) Arbitrary detention of five Papuans at Old Sentani Market in Jayapura Regency


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 https://www.ucanews.com/amp/deadly-unrest-in-indonesias-papua-region-draws-rights-scrutiny/112706

1) Deadly unrest in Indonesia's Papua region draws rights scrutiny 
Jakarta deploys team as activists warn of possible extrajudicial killings  
UCA News reporter 
Updated: April 08, 2026 05:45 AM GMT


T he Indonesian government has dispatched a team 
to prevent further conflict following deadly riots 
in Papua, triggered by the killing of a police 
officer and followed by the deaths of at least five 
civilians in what rights groups describe as 
revenge actions. 

Human Rights Minister Natalius Pigai said the team visited the riot site in Dogiyai regency, Central Papua province, to open dialogue with various parties.


They are currently holding intensive meetings with various elements, including community

members, victims, tribal chiefs, church leaders and regional officials, said Pigai, a Catholic and an indigenous Papuan, on April 6.

We are awaiting a complete report from the team before releasing it to the public, he added.

The unrest began after the body of police officer 

Jufentus Edowai was found in a ditch in front of Kingmi Ebenhaezer Church in Moanemani on March 31.


A group calling itself the Papuan People's Solidarity 

said its investigation found that joint police and 

military forces carried out a revenge 

operation through April 2.

The joint forces conducted pursuit, sweeping and indiscriminate shooting in all directions. They combed public roads, residential areas and civilian villages, the group said in a statement.

The group said five civilians were killed, including a 70-year-old woman and two children aged 

11 and 12. Three others were seriously injured.

The violence prompted protests in which residents attacked a police station in Dogiyai.

Dogiyai Deputy Police Chief Adjunct Commissioner Ngarifin said the station was damaged.

The roof was riddled with arrows. In addition, a shop near the police station was burned, he said, adding that two officers were injured.

Police have not identified suspects in the killing of their colleague.

Wirya Adiwena, deputy director of Amnesty International Indonesia, said the killing of a law enforcement officer was a serious crime and those responsible must be brought to justice.

However, he said the response — involving 

heavy gunfire and pursuit operations that left civilians dead — suggests the possibility of extrajudicial killings. 

This incident confirms that civilians remain the most vulnerable group caught in the cycle of conflict, without adequate protection from the state, he said.

Amnesty International is calling for an independent fact-finding team and urging the government to review its militarized approach in Papua.

The Dogiyai violence comes amid a worsening human rights situation in the region.

In a March 26 report, Human Rights Monitor said that since January, more than 107,000 civilians across several regions have been internally displaced due to military operations and armed conflict.

Church leaders and non-governmental organizations have repeatedly called for a halt to military operations in civilian areas and for humanitarian access.

A Papuan man, who requested anonymity for security reasons, told UCA News the incident is part of a long pattern in which the deaths of security personnel in Papua trigger a disproportionate response against civilians — a cycle that has never been fully and independently investigated. 

He said the government's deployment of a 

human rights team had been met with caution.

For some, this is a positive signal from the central government. For others, it remains to be seen 

whether the government will truly listen this time or simply act to calm the situation temporarily, he said.

Christian-majority Papua has experienced decades of violence since the 1960s, when Indonesia assumed control from Dutch colonial rule following a referendum widely criticized as rigged.

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2) Arbitrary detention of seven pupils in Sinak, Puncak Regency

On 22 March 2026 at approximately 5:00 pm, military members and Marine Corps personnel reportedly detained seven Papuan civilians, primarily pupils, in the Sinak District, Puncak Regency, Central Papua province. The detainees, consisting of one female and six males, namely,  Ms Meri Murib,18, Nikanus Murib, 17, Erendis Murib, 17, Ois Tabuni, 18, Yusmin Murib, 10, Tendis Tabuni, 18, and Urundi Murib, 18. As of 25 March 2026, four detainees had been released, while three individuals remained in detention without confirmed legal status.

According to the information received, the group was traveling from Oneri District to the Gigobak Village to attend school exams scheduled for the following day when they were intercepted by joint military personnel. The group was immediately detained without arrest warrants being presented at the time of apprehension, and without indication that the individuals were engaged in any unlawful activity. Following the apprehension, the detainees were taken into custody at an undisclosed location. Ms Meri Murib, Tendis Tabuni, Urundi Murib, and Yusmin Murib were later released whereas Nikanus Murib, Erendis Murib, and Ois Tabuni reportedly remain detained, with no clear information regarding access to legal counsel or formal charges.

Human rights and legal analysis

The detention of minors and students in this context raises serious concerns under international human rights law. The deprivation of liberty appears to be arbitrary, as defined under Article 9 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), due to the absence of legal basis, lack of warrant, and failure to inform the detainees of the reasons for their arrest. The involvement of children, including a 10-year-old minor, further engages protections under the Convention on the Rights of the Child, particularly Articles 37 and 40, which prohibit unlawful or arbitrary detention of children and require that detention be used only as a measure of last resort.

Furthermore, the disruption of access to education for students travelling to participate in school exams may constitute a violation of the right to education under Article 13 of the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. The arbitrary detention of persons, particularly minors, also raises concerns regarding compliance with Indonesian domestic law, particularly provisions under the Indonesian Criminal Procedure Code (KUHAP) governing lawful arrest procedures, including the requirement of an arrest warrant and prompt notification of charges.

Detailed Case Data
Location: Gigobak / Gogobak, Sinak, Puncak Regency, Central Papua, Indonesia (-3.8363934, 137.7736217)
Region: Indonesia, Central Papua, Puncak, Sinak
Total number of victims: 7

#Number of VictimsName, DetailsGenderAgeGroup AffiliationViolations
1.Meri Murib
female18 Indigenous Peoples, Studentarbitrary detention
2.Nikanus Murib
male17 Indigenous Peoples, Studentarbitrary arrest
3.Erendis Murib
male17 Indigenous Peoples, Studentarbitrary arrest
4.Ois Tabuni
male18 Indigenous Peoples, Studentarbitrary arrest
5.Yusmin Murib
male10 Indigenous Peoples, Studentarbitrary detention
6.Tendis Murib
male18 Indigenous Peoples, Studentarbitrary detention
7.Urundi Murib
male18 Indigenous Peoples, Studentarbitrary detention
Period of incident: 22/03/2026 – 22/03/2026
Perpetrator: , Indonesian Military (TNI)

Perpetrator details: military members and Marine Corps

Issues: indigenous peoples, women and children

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3) Military members detain gold panner without warrant in Dekai, Yahukimo

On 10 March 2026, Members of the Indonesian Marine Corps arbitrarily detained indigenous gold panner, Mr Anton Payage, at the Marine Corps post on Seradala Road near the Nami River gold panning site in Dekai District, Yahukimo Regency, Papua Highlands Province. Mr Payage was apprehended while travelling to a traditional gold panning location. The grounds for the arrest remain unclear, and no warrant was presented at the time of apprehension.

According to the information received, Mr Anton Payage and other passengers were travelling together in a single vehicle towards the Nami River gold panning site when they were stopped by members of the Yahukimo Marine Corps unit around 11:30 am. The arrest occurred directly in front of a Marine Corps post on Seradala Road. While multiple individuals were reportedly present in the vehicle, only Mr Payage was apprehended. Witnesses indicate that the security forces did not provide any explanation for the arrest, nor did the security force personnel present an arrest warrant.

Human rights and legal analysis

The arrest raises serious concerns under international human rights law, particularly regarding the prohibition of arbitrary detention. Under Article 9 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights(ICCPR), to which Indonesia is a State Party, any deprivation of liberty must be lawful, necessary, and accompanied by clear legal grounds. The failure to present an arrest warrant, provide reasons for the arrest, or ensure prompt access to legal counsel suggests a violation of these standards. Furthermore, the targeting of civilians engaged in subsistence economic activities such as gold panning raises concerns about discriminatory or security-driven policing practices in West Papua.

Under Indonesian domestic law, the arrest also appears to contravene provisions of the Criminal Procedure Code (KUHAP), which requires law enforcement officials to present an arrest warrant and clearly state the reasons for arrest, except in cases of flagrante delicto. There is no indication that such conditions were met in this case. The involvement of military personnel in civilian law enforcement activities further raises concerns regarding the militarisation of policing functions and the lack of accountability mechanisms.

Given the broader pattern of similar incidents in Yahukimo Regency, this case may form part of a wider practice of arbitrary detention carried out by Indonesian security forces, particularly in areas associated with natural resource extraction or alleged separatist activity.

Detailed Case Data
Location: 4J38+JV, Kokamu, Dekai, Yahukimo regency, Highland Papua, Indonesia (-4.8958868, 139.6171251) Marine Corps Post near Nami River
Region: Indonesia, Highland Papua, Yahukimo, Dekai
Total number of victims: 1

#Number of VictimsName, DetailsGenderAgeGroup AffiliationViolations
1.Anton Payage
maleadult Indigenous Peoplesarbitrary detention
Period of incident: 10/03/2026 – 10/03/2026
Perpetrator: Indonesian Military (TNI), Indonesian Navy (TNI-AL)
Issues: indigenous peoples


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4) Arbitrary detention of five Papuans at Old Sentani Market in Jayapura Regency

On 12 March 2026, Indonesian security forces arbitrarily apprehended Mr Oksal Kobak, 28, Mr Yos Payage, 36, Mr Simion Payage, 29, Mr Menase Heluka, and Mr Oser Kobak at the Old Sentani Market in Jayapura Regency, Papua Province. The arrests were reportedly carried out without the presentation of warrants, and some individuals were subsequently designated as suspects. Only two of the detainees were released without charges on 13 March 2026. 

According to the information received from local human rights defenders, security forces arrived at the Old Sentani Market in a vehicle at approximately 07:24 pm on 12 March 2026 and immediately apprehended five individuals. No explanation or legal documentation was provided at the time of arrest. The operation appeared indiscriminate, with individuals taken into custody without prior summons or evident criminal conduct. 

While Mr Menase Heluka and Mr Oser Kobak were reportedly released on 13 March 2026, others remained in detention. Families and community members had not received formal notification regarding the charges, legal basis for detention, or the physical condition of those detained as of 15 March 2026.

Human rights and legal analysis

The conduct of the detentrions raises substantial concerns under international human rights law. The failure to present arrest warrants, provide reasons for arrest, and ensure prompt access to legal counsel constitutes a violation of the right to liberty and security of person under Article 9 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR). The apparent incommunicado detention further increases the risk of ill-treatment or torture, contrary to Article 7 ICCPR and the Convention against Torture (CAT). The lack of transparency and denial of family access also contravenes fundamental safeguards against arbitrary detention and enforced disappearance.

Under Indonesian law, the described actions violate provisions of the Indonesian Criminal Procedure Code (KUHAP), which requires that arrests be based on sufficient preliminary evidence, accompanied by an arrest warrant (except in flagrante delicto situations. Moreover, detainees must be informed of the reasons for their arrest. The authorities are further obligated to notify families and ensure access to legal representation without delay.

Detailed Case Data
Location: CGJ3+FW5, Jl. Ps. Lama Sentani, Dobonsolo, Kec. Sentani, Kabupaten Jayapura, Papua 99359, Indonesia (-2.568861, 140.5048707) Pasar Lama Sentani
Region: Indonesia, Papua, Jayapura Regency, Sentani
Total number of victims: 5

#Number of VictimsName, DetailsGenderAgeGroup AffiliationViolations
1.Oksal Kobak
male28 Indigenous Peoplesarbitrary arrest
2.Yos Payage
male24 Indigenous Peoplesarbitrary arrest
3.Simion Payage
male29 Indigenous Peoplesarbitrary arrest
4.Menase Heluka
maleIndigenous Peoplesarbitrary detention
5.Oser Kobak
maleIndigenous Peoplesarbitrary detention
Period of incident: 12/03/2026 – 12/03/2026
Perpetrator: , Indonesian Security Forces
Issues: indigenous peoples