Thursday, May 13, 2021

1) Indonesian troops kill Papuan rebel commander


2) Papuan leader arrested for ‘treason’ 

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https://www.startribune.com/indonesian-troops-kill-papuan-rebel-commander/600056770/

1) Indonesian troops kill Papuan rebel commander


By ALFIAN KARTONO Associated Press  MAY 13, 2021 — 10:12AM

JAYAPURA, Indonesia — Two Papuan independence fighters, including a rebel commander, were killed in ongoing clashes between Indonesian security forces and a rebel group in the country's troubled easternmost region, authorities said Thursday.

The clashes began last month in restive Papua province after rebels set fire to several schools and killed two teachers in Beoga village in Puncak district.

Police and military forces launched a joint operation to find the attackers, who authorities believe belong to the West Papua Liberation Army, the military wing of the Free Papua Organization.

A joint military and police force killed two of the Papuan fighters during a battle Wednesday with dozens of rebels who were armed with military-grade weapons as well as axes and arrows in Wuloni village in mountainous Puncak district, said Iqbal Alqudussy, spokesperson for the joint operation.

He said the rebels fled into the jungle and two were found dead by soldiers combing the area. Security forces seized a military helmet, separatist flags, documents and scores of axes, machetes and arrows from the battle scene, he said.

One of the dead men, identified as Lesmin Waker, was a rebel commander who killed a member of the joint security forces in a gunfight two weeks ago, Alqudussy said.

A spokesperson for the rebels couldn't immediately be reached for comment.

Wednesday's clash happened weeks after the chief of Papua's intelligence agency, Brig. Gen. Gusti Putu Danny Nugraha, was killed in a rebel ambush while on a patrol after the guerrillas set fire to an elementary school and houses in a village.

An independence movement and low-level insurgency has simmered in the Papua region since the early 1960s, when Indonesia took control of the former Dutch territory. Papua was formally incorporated into Indonesia in 1969 after a U.N.-sponsored ballot that was seen as a sham by many.

Nowadays, indigenous Papuans, largely shut out of their region's economy, are poorer, sicker and more likely to die young than people elsewhere in Indonesia.


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2) Papuan leader arrested for ‘treason’ 
Susan Price May 13, 2021
 Issue 1308 West Papua


                                                                    Victor Yeimo. Photo: Suara Papua

A Papuan leader sought by Indonesian police over the 2019 Papua “Spring” uprising, Victor Yeimo, has been arrested on suspicion of treason, subversion, or rebellion.

According to a report by CNN Indonesia, translated by indoleft.org for Asia Pacific Report, Nemangkawi Task Force head Senior Commissioner Iqbal Alqudusy confirmed the arrest, telling journalists: “Today, Sunday May 9, 2021 [we] arrested a person on the wanted list in a case of racism and rioting in Papua in 2019.


According to Papuans Behind Bars, Yeimo was the General Secretary of the West Papua National Committee (Komite Nasional Papua Barat, KNPB) until 2018. Currently he is the international spokesperson for KNPB and Papuan People’s Petition (PRP).

According to CNN, the police allege that Yeimo has committed makar and/or has been broadcasting reports or statements that could “give rise to public unrest”. They also allege that he has been “broadcasting unreliable news”.

Yeimo is suspected of insulting the Indonesian national flag, language and state symbols as well as the national anthem and/or incitement to commit a crime under Indonesia’s Criminal Code and Criminal Regulations law.

CNN reported that Yeimo is suspected of instigating riots based on witness testimonies that cited him as the “leader of a Papuan independence demonstration” and of “vandalising” public facilities.

The allegations stem from accusations against him during widespread anti-racism protests in Papua in August and September 2019.

Papuans Behind Bars (PBB) reported that Yeimo was arrested at a kiosk in Jayapura on May 9, without an arrest warrant. His lawyers received arrest and detention warrants the following day, “in breach of Indonesian criminal procedure law which requires an arrest warrant to be presented at the time of arrest”.

RNZ Pacific reports that Yeimo is the latest of a number of Papuans to have been detained over alleged treason following the protests, including the so-called “Balikpapan Seven” who subsequently received jail terms of between 10 and 11 months in East Kalimantan.

During the Balikpapan Seven trials, judges and prosecutors repeatedly focussed on Yeimo when questioning the defendants.

Yeimo has been calling for negotiations between the West Papuan independence movement and Indonesia’s government, saying Papuans would not stop demanding a legitimate self-determination process.

His arrest came as Indonesian military operations in Papua region intensified, in response to the killing of an Indonesian intelligence chief in an ambush two weeks ago.

Indonesian president Joko Widodo ordered a military crackdown in Papua and his government has now formally declared the West Papuan National Liberation Army a terrorist organisation.

These developments have also happened at a time when internet services to Papua have been disrupted.

According to PBB, the Papua police chief reportedly said: “We are looking into all police reports, the process forward will proceed based on each report, let him get old in prison.”

Yeimo has already been interrogated twice without a lawyer present — permissible under Indonesia law for treason charges — and PBB is concerned that Yeimo will be further interrogated and more charges will be laid against him.

“Arresting Mr Yeimo, then digging his past acts through days of interrogation, reflects intention to frame and arbitrarily detain [him],” said PBB.

Yeimo is being held in in a cell, “where the sunlight is only available through ventilation at the top of his cell and from the main door” and has been prevented from having access to family visits.

[Compiled from Asia Pacific Report and Papuans Behind Bars.]


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