Sunday, February 11, 2024

1) Pope Francis would find PNG refugee conditions an eye-opener

 



2) Military members alleged of torturing four Papuan students after finding ammunition

3) KNPB activists found guilty – Mr Agus Kosay sentenced to 1 year, Mr Beni Murib sentenced to 10 months imprisonment

4) Police prevent ULMWP Worship ceremony in Jayapura

5) INDONESIA STATE APPARATUS IS PREPARING TO THROW ELECTION TO A NOTORIOUS MASSACRE GENERAL




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1) Pope Francis would find PNG refugee conditions an eye-opener
By Mark Gaetani Feb 11, 2024

The first was a letter from the bishops to Home Affairs Minister Clare O’Neil asking the government to urgently bring to Australia a group of refugees, now 57 following some acceptances by New Zealand, who been taken to the capital of Port Moresby from the Australian-run Manus Island detention facility in late 2021.

The arrangement was made between the PNG government, led by Prime Minister James Marape who visits Canberra this week, and the Morrison government. Details of the “confidential bilateral agreement” have not been made public, despite pressure on the Albanese government and claims of contractual irregularities and a lack of transparency at both ends.

Dennis Richardson’s review of the management of regional processing procurement by the Department of Home Affairs is keenly awaited.

The second document Mr Siwat carried was a survey of the living conditions of several hundred refugees and asylum seekers from the Indonesian province of West Papua, formerly Irian Jaya.

Living, or more accurately existing, in Port Moresby, they are a tiny proportion of the estimated 15,000 people who have fled to PNG over several decades to escape social exclusion, racism and the frequent brutality of Jakarta’s military.

As Mr Siwat said during his visit to St Vincent de Paul Society’s national office, most of the West Papuans live in remote jungle camps close to the border that divides the island of New Guinea from north to south. Easier to visit are those in the capital where Mr Siwat’s team went shanty to shanty, documenting health needs, hygiene and nutritional shortcomings, and lack of educational and work opportunities.

‘They live in one of the most unhygienic and destitute conditions that you can find anywhere in Oceania and the Pacific that host refugees,’ the damning report said. The many privations included 21 families sharing one toilet and one tap, with people sleeping on cardboard. There was flooding, health problems were rife, unemployment was gauged to be 80 per cent.

The bishops’ letter to Minister O’Neil – to which no reply has been received – described the ‘desperate’ circumstances of the other refugees, who had fled from trouble spots such as Iran, Afghanistan and Sri Lanka (Tamils), adding, ‘As you take your vacations, please remember those men who will be wandering the streets without food… their children are suffering along with them.’

That was before rioting broke out in Port Moresby and the refugees, many of whom have severe physical and mental health problems, were again in fear of their lives. Their circumstances include evictions from rented premises, and a lack of food and medical care. Yet they were sent there under Australia’s watch and remain our country’s responsibility.

Pope Francis is one of the world’s most prominent advocates for the welfare of refugees and in the leadup to his proposed visit to PNG in August he will no doubt be well aware of the plight of these disparate but similarly bereft refugee cohorts.

In his message for 2023’s Catholic World Day of Migrants and Refugees, Pope Francis invoked the Gospel of St Matthew, “For I was hungry and you gave me food, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, I was a stranger and you welcomed me…”

While addressing the West Papuan refugee crisis is largely the responsibility of PNG and its neighbour Indonesia, something must be done promptly to resolve the unacceptable situation affecting the refugees abandoned under Australia’s secret deal.

Certainly, we hope that well before Pope Francis’ arrival these long-suffering people, many of whom are now accompanied by family members, including two newborns, will have been brought to Australia for proper humanitarian care. If not, we believe the Pope should be given the opportunity to witness the appalling conditions in which they are living. A visit to some of the West Papuans’ homes would also melt his heart.

MARK GAETANI 
Mark Gaetani is National President of St Vincent de Paul Society Australia

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Human Rights Monitor


2) Military members alleged of torturing four Papuan students after finding ammunition

On 1 February 2024, four students from Hitadipa were arrested in the Sugapa District on their way back home from Nabire to participate in the upcoming elections on 14 February 2024. The students, identified as Mr Elpinus Zanambani, Mr Tenius Wonda, Mr Selianus Sondegau, and Mr Denias Imanuel Agimba, were detained by members of the military near the Sugapa airport and reportedly tortured during interrogation. They were then taken to the Sugapa Police Station, where further violence ensued during the inspection of their belongings. One of the students was found to be carrying nine cartridges of ammunition and alcohol in their bag.
The military denied the allegations of torture. According to Lieutenant Colonel Inf Candra Kurniawan, Deputy Head of Information of Kodam XVII/Cenderawasih, the arrests were made after the suspects were found with ammunition, alcohol, a net bag with Morning Star motifs, and other items considered evidence. Candra clarified that the young men were apprehended by the Yonif 330/Tri Dharma Task Force personnel at Bilogai Post due to their suspicious behaviour while riding their motorcycles. The suspects were subsequently handed over to the Sugapa Sector Police for further investigation. Candra dismissed circulating allegations of arbitrary arrests, emphasizing that the suspects were being processed according to the law.

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Human Rights Monitor

3) KNPB activists found guilty – Mr Agus Kosay sentenced to 1 year, Mr Beni Murib sentenced to 10 months imprisonment

On 1 February 2024, the Jayapura District Court ruled on the case of West Papua National Committee (KNPB) Chairman, Mr Agus Kosay, and KNPB Numbay Secretary, Mr Beni Murib (see photos on top and below, source: independent HRDs), finding them guilty of incitement and the persecution of Mr Ones Kobak on 18 August 2023 . Mr Kosay received a sentence of 1 year in prison, while Mr Murib was sentenced to 10 months. The cases, registered under case numbers 449/Pid.B/2023/PN Jap for Kosay and 450/Pid.B/2023/PN Jap for Murib, were heard by a panel of judges led by Mr Zaka Talpatty. Uniformed and plainclothes police officers closely monitored the court session.
During the trial, the panel of judges noted that Mr Agus Kosay was proven to have caused losses to two groups, both in terms of goods and injuries, leading to his conviction for incitement under Article 160 of the Indonesian Criminal Code (KUHP). The judges sentenced Mr Kosay to 1 year in prison, with the period of detention deducted from the total sentence. Similarly, Beni Murib was found guilty of maltreatment as stipulated in Article 351 KUHP and received a 10-month prison sentence with the same deduction for detention. The judges ordered Mr Kosay and Mr Murib to pay court costs and granted them seven days to file an appeal if they objected to the decision. Previously, the public prosecutor had demanded a sentence of two years imprisonment for Mr Agus Kosay and eight months imprisonment for Mr Beni Murib.
The criminalisation of activists should be viewed with vigilance. It indicates growing restrictions on the freedom of expression, a key element of human rights and democracy. Ultimately, the legal process must adhere to international human rights standards and principles of justice. The prosecution of the KNPB activists raises significant concerns from a human rights perspective. The events leading up to their arrest and legal prosecution are an indicator of the lack of independence of the judiciary in Indonesia and the persistent pattern of criminalization of activists and human rights defenders in West Papua.
The KNPB is a Papuan movement organisation promoting the right to self-determination through a referendum. Their members have committed to non-violent protest by organising peaceful demonstrations and political discussions. In the past decade, the Indonesian police have targeted the KNPB as a subversive pro-independence organisation. KNPB members and supporters are criminalised and have become victims of police violence.

Background

More than seventy police officers detained Mr Agus Kossay, KNPB Chairman, Mr Benny Murib, KNPB Secretary in Jayapura, Mr Ruben Wakla, member of the KNPB in the Yahukimo Regency, and Mr Ferry Yelipele on 2 September 2023. The police officers came to Mr Kossay’s residence in the town of Sentani around 9:00 a.m. The four activists were subsequently detained and interrogated at the Jayapura District Police Station in Doyo Baru. Mr Wakla and Mr Yelipele were released on 3 September 2023 at 8:45 pm without charges.
The police allegedly carried out the arrests because Mr Kossay had not reacted to the police summons about an argument within different KNPB fractions on 18 August 2023. Mr Kossay had honoured the first police summons but later received a second summons, which he did not attend. The arrests were carried out even though both parties called upon the authorities that the incident should be settled internally and outside of the law. On 31 October 2023, investigators from the Jayapura Police in Papua Province transferred Agus Kosay, Chairman of the West Papua National Coalition (KNPB), and Numbay Beny Murib, KNPB Secretary, to the Jayapura State Prosecutor’s Office. The activists were both named suspects in a case related to incitement on 18 August 2023 in Jayapura Regency, Papua
Mr Agus Kosay and Mr Beni Murib at court, 1 February 2024

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Human Rights Monitor

4) Police prevent ULMWP Worship ceremony in Jayapura

On 7 February 2024, the police intervened to disrupt a thanksgiving service and inauguration of the working structure of the United Liberation Movement for West Papua (ULMWP) in Jayapura City, Papua Province. The event, scheduled for 10:00 am local time, faced tight police control, with a heavy presence of law enforcement vehicles and officers surrounding the venue. Tensions escalated when police prohibited attendees from putting up billboards. The authorities forcibly dismantled tents and prevented the event from proceeding as planned.
The police justified their actions by claiming that the ULMWP lacked proper permits and was deemed to be against the state. Heram Sector Police Chief, AKP Frengky Rumbiak, urged the crowd to refrain from actions that could be perceived as harmful and emphasised compliance with state regulations. ULMWP Executive Secretary Mr Markus Haluk responded that he had informed the police of their plans, underlining that only notification, not permission, was required to hold a peaceful assembly.
Mr Haluk condemned the police’s actions as an infringement on democratic space in West Papua, highlighting the ongoing struggle for freedom of expression and assembly in the region. He expressed disappointment at the state’s heavy-handed approach and vowed to coordinate with the ULMWP board to address the situation. Haluk’s remarks underscored the broader issue of state suppression of dissent in West Papua and the need for continued advocacy for human rights and fundamental freedoms in the face of such challenges.

Background

While the freedom of peaceful assembly is widely respected in Indonesia, indigenous Papuans have been looking back on a history of government repression. The police restrict the freedom of peaceful assembly for Papuans and solidarity groups not only in West Papua but also on other islands of the archipelago, mainly if the protesters raise aspirations for self-determination, human rights violations, militarisation, or racial discrimination of indigenous Papuans.
National law requires protestors to inform the police beforehand about an assembly, but protesters do not require a permit from the police. The Indonesian police continue to use the lack of a “police acknowledgment letter” (“Surat Tanda Terima Pemberitahuan” STTP) in response to a “notification letter for a demonstration” as justification to declare demonstrations illegal. Police institutions – in and outside of West Papua – refuse to issue “police acknowledgment letters” (STTP) to prevent particular Papuan civil society groups from enjoying their right to freedom of peaceful assembly.
Organisations such as the West Papua National Committee (Komite Nasional Papua Barat), the United Liberation Movement for West Papua (ULMWP), the Papuan Student Alliance (AMP), and The Indonesian Peoples’ Front for West Papua (FRI WP) are among the groups facing repression, intimidation, and prosecution. Their members and supporters were arbitrarily arrested during peaceful public protests, internal assembly meetings, and preparatory activities, like the distribution of leaflets. Arrests during peaceful assemblies have been accompanied by security force violence against the protesters.

Police preventing preparations for ULMWP worship ceremony

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https://theintercept.com/2024/02/10/indonesia-election-results-prabowo-fraud-stolen-election/

5) INDONESIA STATE APPARATUS IS PREPARING TO THROW ELECTION TO A NOTORIOUS MASSACRE GENERAL

With a vote looming, the government is working to install Prabowo, one of the former dictator Suharto’s top commanders and a longtime U.S. protégé.

Allan Nairn
February 10 2024, 8:31 a.m.

INDONESIA, THE SCENE of two of the 20th century’s epic slaughters, may be on the verge of a return to army rule at the hands of its most notorious general.

Gen. Prabowo Subianto, a longtime U.S. protégé implicated in the country’s massacres, once mused to me about becoming “a fascist dictator” and is now a serious threat to assume the presidency.

For Prabowo, as he is known, to be elected in February 14’s first round of voting, he must get 50 percent-plus-one of the accepted ballots in the three-way vote and receive at least 20 percent of the votes in 19 of Indonesia’s 38 provinces.

In 2001, I met and interviewed Prabowo twice, discussing army massacres — including one, in Dili, East Timor, which I happened to survive — and democracy in Indonesia.

“Indonesia is not ready for democracy,” he told me in those meetings. The country, he said, needs “a benign authoritarian regime.”

Prabowo expressed support for army rule. He praised a recent coup in Pakistan and mused about making a similar move in Indonesia. “Do I have the guts?” he asked rhetorically. “Am I ready to be called a fascist dictator?”

Prabowo has since repeatedly attempted coups and failed twice in presidential elections.


Today, however, he has the state apparatus behind him, mobilized by the incumbent civilian President Joko Widodo, known as Jokowi, who had previously privately discussed with his staff trying the general for war crimes.

The levers of state power are playing a pivotal role in the campaign. Local officials are being threatened with prosecution if they do not back the general. And across the country, army and police are instructing people to vote for Prabowo, a directive with special weight for poorer people who live at their mercy. Government-distributed bags of rice and cooking oil are turning up across the country with Prabowo stickers. Families who need to get the provisions must sometimes pick them up at Prabowo campaign offices.

Many polls say this state-run partisan campaign has Prabowo hovering near 50 percent, but some officials in the Jokowi government tell me they don’t want to leave it to chance.

At an internal meeting last Wednesday, army and intelligence officials discussed the existence of a plan to, if needed, use the state apparatus to do electoral fraud, according to two people familiar with the scheme. The prepared procedure involves police and “babinsas” — the army’s eyes, ears, and hands at the neighborhood level — receiving and distributing money to fix precinct-level tabulation sheets, as well as, in some cases, the computer data entry below and at the administrative district level, with an option for hacking the internal system of the electoral commission.

Campaign officials have in the past boasted to me of using such tactics in local places where they have sway. Their application on a national level by the state would have potentially large implications — helping to cede Indonesian democracy, once again, to despotic rule.

“The American”

The heir of a wealthy banking family, Prabowo holds hundreds of thousands of acres of plantation, mining, and industrial properties. He was the son-in-law of the late dictator Gen. Suharto, who, with U.S. support, ruled Indonesia for 32 years.

Suharto seized power in a 1965 coup, toppling Sukarno, the country’s founding civilian president and a leader of the Non-Aligned Movement. Then, with the CIA providing a death list of 5,000 names, Suharto and his army killed 400,000 to a million Indonesian civilians.

In 1975, after a meeting with President Gerald Ford and Henry Kissinger, Suharto — with their weapons and go-ahead — invaded neighboring East Timor. There, the Indonesian armed forces killed one-third of the Timorese population. It was, in proportional terms, the most intensive slaughter since the Nazis.

Prabowo, as Suharto’s son-in-law, was a senior commander of the massacres in occupied East Timor. In one, at Kraras in 1983 on the mountain of Bibileo, “several hundred” civilians were murdered, according to a United Nations-backed inquiryOpens in a new tab. Prabowo also personally tortured captives; one told me of Prabowo breaking his teeth.

Prabowo described himself to me as “the Americans’ fair-haired boy.” He worked hand-in-glove with the U.S. as he carried out massacres, torture, and disappearances — so closely that his fellow officers, he said, sometimes mocked him as “the American.”

Initially trained by the U.S. at Georgia’s Fort Benning and North Carolina’s Fort Bragg — today known as Fort Moore and Fort Liberty, respectively — Prabowo spoke to me in detail of his work with the Pentagon, including the Defense Intelligence Agency, to which he said he reported at least weekly.

According to Pentagon documents, he brought U.S. troops to Indonesia on dozens of occasions, a presence that helped to facilitate at least two covert U.S. operations. Prabowo told meOpens in a new tab that the U.S. troops he brought in did “reconnaissance” for “the invasion contingency” — the preparation of U.S. plans for a possible invasion of Indonesia.

From Massacres to Cuddly Cartoon

When I met Prabowo in summer 2001, he offered a comment on a Timor massacre — this one not his — which I survived: the Santa Cruz massacreOpens in a new tab of November 12, 1991. At the Santa Cruz cemetery on November 12, 1991, the Indonesian army murdered at least 271 Timorese civilians. The soldiers fractured my skull with the butts of their U.S.-supplied M16s after my failed attempt to block them as they marched on the crowd.

Prabowo told me that Santa Cruz was an “imbecilic” operation because the army had done it in front of me and other outside, surviving witnesses. “Santa Cruz killed us politically,” Prabowo said. “It was the defeat.”

“You don’t massacre civilians in front of the world press,” he explained. “Maybe commanders do it in villages where no one will ever know, but not in the provincial capital.”

After Santa Cruz, we were able to report and mobilize support, helping to get U.S. Congress to end the flow of arms to Indonesia — a key to the government’s downfall, Suharto’s security chief later griped to me.


In 1998, with Suharto hobbled by the arms cutoff and facing growing demonstrations, Prabowo abducted 24 democratic activists, 13 of whom he “disappeared.” He also engendered a campaign of murder, arson, and rape, mainly against ethnic Chinese residents.

When we spoke, Prabowo blamed some of the 1998 crimes on his rival — Gen. Wiranto, who now supports him — but he did not attempt to deny his own role in running the anti-Chinese riots. “There were 128 fires at one time,” he saidOpens in a new tab with what might be called pride. “This was an operation: planned, instigated, controlled.”

The bid to quell protests, however, failed, and Suharto fell. Less than 70 hours after a new president was in office, Prabowo staged a failed coup attemptOpens in a new tab.

In ensuing years, Prabowo continued to be involved in killings of civilians, including in AcehOpens in a new tab and West Papua. When he ran for president in 2014, Prabowo styled himself like Benito Mussolini. He rode a stallion into a cheering stadium. A key supporter dressed in Nazi SS garb.

In 2017, acting under a religious pretext, Prabowo and his generals backed a coup movement, with crucial involvement by a street militia aligned with the Islamic State. In 2019, when he ran for president again, that militia, the Front Pembela Islam, waved black ISIS flags at Prabowo rallies. He campaigned from the open-topped car of the self-described “president of ISIS Indonesia.”

This time around, though, Prabowo has changed tack. In ads and on TV, he presents himself as a gemoy, a cuddly cartoon character.

Jokowi’s Reversal

The main reason Prabowo is finally on the cusp of achieving power is the arm-twisting support he is getting from Indonesia’s current president. The dynamic came as a surprise to many because it was Jokowi who beat Prabowo in 2014 and 2019, with the support of many massacre survivors and human rights advocates.

Jokowi publicly spoke about not returning to dictatorship, and his administration, behind the scenes, discussed trying Prabowo and other generals for war crimes, though the attempt never came to pass.

Under sustained pressure from Prabowo and the generals, Jokowi’s position evolved. He slowly increased domestic repression and his interests and theirs came to converge.

In 2016, Jokowi’s government organized an event called the Symposium, where survivors of the U.S.-backed 1965 slaughter were given the chance to talk about it publicly. This event so enraged the army that Jokowi had to go to the military’s headquarters and prostrate himself, but the president’s groveling failed to calm the army.

It was after that Prabowo’s generals and the ISIS-linked groups staged the quasi-religious mass demonstrations with the covert aim of bringing Jokowi down. I exposed this in a 2017 piece in The Intercept, drawing on army documents and interviews with coup leaders, and the coup momentum later dispersed.

When, in 2019, Prabowo tried the electoral route again, the ISIS-linked groups gave him an effective street organization. This mobilization took a hit, though, shortly before election day, when I published the minutes of a meeting at Prabowo’s homeOpens in a new tab where he and his generals made plans for imprisoning political opponents, referring back explicitly to the Suharto era. Their undoing was the plan to curry favor with the U.S. by arresting the Prabowo campaign’s own clerics and Islamists.

Prabowo lost the 2019 election but announced he’d won, and his men took to the streets. Though Jokowi publicly rejected the rioters, the looting and burning helped seal his acquiescence to the massacre generals.

According to intermediaries from both sides, Jokowi reached out to Prabowo in the hope that bringing him inside would finally end the riots and coup attempts. Instead of putting Prabowo on trial, Jokowi put him in the government, making Prabowo the minister of defense. There, Prabowo continued the policy of killing civilians in West Papua, and the riot and coup threats did indeed evaporate as Jokowi had hoped.

As his term drew to a close, Jokowi explored options for extending his own legal mandate, but when these routes were blocked, he cut a deal with Prabowo and lent him his son, Gibran, as a running mate. 

The other key for Prabowo has been the acceptance of Indonesia’s oligarchs. Among them is Tomy Winata, a business magnate famed as a patron of the generals, who complains, including to me, that he is often labeled a “gangster.” In an interview, Winata, who told me he has homes near the White House and in Los Angeles, said he is “neutral” in the election but speaks highly of Prabowo.

“Prabowo is quite OK, excellent,” he told me. “I need a strong person to rule the country.”

Winata said he had known Prabowo since he was in the field as an army commander, when he found the general “charming.” When I asked Winata about Prabowo commanding army massacres, he replied, “I’ve heard that” — but he questioned whether such killings had actually happened, since he hadn’t witnessed them himself.

Winata didn’t hesitate in his response to a question about who he thought would win the election: “Me,” he said. “A wins, I profit; B wins, I profit; C wins, I profit.” He had a point there. None of the three contenders is likely to challenge the rule of the rich. Only one, however, made his name by personally mass-murdering civilians.CONTACT THE AUTHOR:

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