1) OPM Fighters ‘Tired of Living in the
Jungle,’ Ready to Settle in Villages, Papua District Head Claims
2) West Papuan 'massacre': investigating lawyers ask what
Australia knew
3)
ICJ calls for official inquiry into Biak massacre
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Another story about defecting OPM which regularly appears one or twice a year and in the past has been a stunt by the security forces.
Joe
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http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/news/papua-district-head-claims-100-members-leave-opm/
1) OPM Fighters ‘Tired of Living in the Jungle,’ Ready to Settle in Villages, Papua District Head Claims
Jayapura. The head of Papua’s Puncak Jaya district claimed on Thursday that the majority of the members of the local Free Papua Movement (OPM) faction — known as the National Liberation Army and led by Goliath Tabuni — have decided to leave the group and return to their villages.
“According to the confessions of underlings of Goliath Tabuni, they’ve grown very tired of living in the jungle for years,” district head Henock Ibo told local journalists in the Wamena district center on Wednesday. “They’ve gotten very, very tired.”
The OPM is an an outlawed militant separatist organization.
Henock said that as many as 100 of Goliath’s men had participated in a Dec. 11 Christmas celebration in Puncak Jaya, along with local officials and residents. He said his administration had invited Goliath to join in the event, which also marked the district head’s one-year anniversary in office, but the separatist leader refused to show up.
Henock said that those 100 men had returned to their villages and were learning to live like the other villagers.
He said his administration would train them to become members of the local public order agency (Satpol PP) and would build 100 homes for them.
“The Papua governor is also helping to build habitable houses for them,” Henock said, according tolocal media site bintangpapua.com.
Ferry Marisan, director of Papua-based rights group Elsham, expressed doubts over Henock’s claim.
No media reports have quoted any of the supposed former OPM member, Ferry said.
“That’s a one-party claim by the district head,” he told the Jakarta Globe. “We cannot be sure of that yet.”
With 100 member gone, Henock said, Goliath’s OPM group would consists of only 15 members.
“I think the [security] situation will improve now,” he said
The Papua Legislative Council in Jayapura said they welcomed the news and praised officials in Puncak Jaya for their work.
“We need to appreciate the Puncak Jaya district head for continually establishing communications with [the OPM members], so that they have now chosen to return among the people,” council deputy speaker Yunus Wonda said on Thursday.
He said the government needed to continue to direct attention toward the former OPM members so that they would not return to the separatist group.
Yunus urged Indonesian security personnel to make efforts to understand local culture and the character of the Papuan people in dealing with separatist movements.
“We wish for synergy to be built and, more importantly, [there should be] no suspicion of one another,” Yunus said. “Don’t focus on power. If there’s a problem, settle it well by building communications.”
The OPM, which fights for the independence of Papua and West Papua from Indonesia, is divided into factions, including one led by Goliath, which Indonesian security personnel have accused of being responsible for a string of attacks against police and soldiers over the past few years.
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Two high-profile lawyers involved in a “citizens’ tribunal” that found Indonesian security forces tortured and killed unarmed civilians in West Papua 15 years ago have questioned what the Australian government knew about the incident.
Scores of people on the West Papuan island of Biak were killed, mutilated and tortured by Indonesian security personnel on 6 July, 1998, the Biak Massacre Citizens Tribunal found this week.
The former NSW director of public prosecutions Nick Cowdery, who acted as counsel assisting to the Sydney tribunal, said it was difficult to believe that news of a well-planned attack had not reached Australia via defence intelligence in the days beforehand.
The tribunal found the Indonesian military had co-ordinated with the police, navy, and local and regional officials to plan a violent rampage against demonstrators for West Papuan independence.
“This was not something that suddenly happened on one day, it was something that built over a period of days,” Cowdery said at the launch of the tribunal’s findings on Monday night.
“It’s impossible to think that the [planning of the attack] was not more widely known at that time.”
The Australian president of the International Commission of Jurists, John Dowd, who was presiding jurist at the tribunal, said it was clear from a previous investigation into the deaths of five journalists at Balibo in East Timor in 1975 that Australian intelligence had long monitored communications of the Indonesian military.
In his role at the ICJ, Dowd was part of the investigation that led to an Australian coronial inquest into the deaths of the Balibo five.
“We know from our investigation into the Balibo deaths that the Australian Signals Directorate were listening in,” he said.
Dowd said evidence heard at the tribunal from victims of mutilation was some of the most horrific testimony he had encountered in his career.
Cowdery said: “People were murdered in cold blood, scores of them, if not hundreds.
“[The victims] have been living with it for 15 years. Their families have been torn apart, their society has been torn apart.”
The tribunal is demanding that Indonesia undertakes an independent investigation and prosecute those responsible.
Dowd said the findings would be formally presented to the Indonesian ambassador to Australia and to the Abbott government.
A spokesperson for the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade declined to say whether the Australian government had known the Indonesian military was planning an attack.
“When the Australian government became aware of the reports of violence in Biak on 6 July, 1998, we raised our concerns directly with the Indonesian government. This included high-level representations by then foreign minister Downer during his visit to Jakarta on 8-10 July 1998, with then Indonesian foreign minister [Mr Alatas] and then commander of the Indonesian armed forces [General Wiranto]," the spokesperson said.
- Tags:
- West Papua,
- Indonesia,
- Australia,
- Human rights,
- Asia Pacific
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3) ICJ calls for official inquiry into Biak massacre
Updated at 3:10 pm on 19 December 2013
The Australian president of the International Commission of Jurists is calling for the Indonesian Government to hold an inquiry into the massacre on the West Papuan island of Biak 15 years ago.
In July 1998, Indonesian soldiers launched a dawn attack on Papuans who had staged a peaceful demonstration, calling for independence.
The University of Sydney's Centre for Peace and Conflict Studies hosted a citizens' tribunal in July and has now released its findings, saying scores of unarmed civilians were killed, buried in mass graves, or dumped at sea.
It also found people were beaten, tortured, arbitrarily detained and sexually abused.
The tribunal's presiding jurist, John Dowd, says the Indonesian Government should hold an independent judicial inquiry.
"There has clearly been a policy of cover up and cover up does not help anybody including the Indonesian military. We want them to know that this sort of conduct cannot occur in the future and that's why we want proper penalties, proper hearings, to see that justice is done."
John Dowd says the people responsible for the massacre should face criminal proceedings.
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