Wednesday, October 9, 2024

1) TPNPB-OPM attacks TNI Post in Intan Jaya, 1 TNI Soldier dies


2) Nabire police alleged covering up suspect’s death after being tortured during custody

3) West Papua: Indonesia deploys more troops to protect colonial interests




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1) TPNPB-OPM attacks TNI Post in Intan Jaya, 1 TNI Soldier dies

Last updated: October 9, 2024 5:15 pm
Author: Hengky Yeimo
Editor: Syofiardi

Timika, Jubi – TPNPB-OPM (West Papua National Liberation Army-Free Papua Organization) attacked the TNI/Polri Post in Titigi Village, Sugapa District, Intan Jaya Regency, Central Papua Province, Monday (7/10/2024) at 11.10 Papua Time. The attack resulted in the death of a TNI soldier.

Information about the attack was conveyed by Aibon Kogoya, Commander of Makodam III Battalion Dulamo TPNPB Intan Jaya Regency.

"This shooting was really carried out by me and my men, shooting one TNI member from Satgas Yonif Raider 509/ Balawara Kostrad, part of the Habema Operations Command at the Titigi Post," Kogoya told Jubi by telephone, Tuesday (8/10/2024).
Kogoya said the action he and his troops took was not to ask for anything from Indonesia, other than asking the Indonesian government to stop bringing in foreign investors or companies to Papua.
"Then close all companies that are working on and stealing the wealth of the Papuan Indigenous People," he said.
Kogoya said that Papuans know that murder, torture, looting, and theft on Papuan land are only for the interests of the capitalist economy, and these companies are the source of human rights violations for the Papuan people.
"With this statement there is no response from Indonesia, so there is only one word, war until Papua is independent," he said.
Regarding the attack on the TNI Post, Kogoya said that on his troops' side there were no casualties or property.
"At 11.30 the TNI fired back at two villages, namely Titigi and Ndugusig, right where civilians were active. Until now we have not checked the condition of the civilians in the two villages," he said.
Kogoya said the TPNPB-OPM hoped the TNI would not torture civilians indiscriminately and damage community property. "If you want to guess, let's be on the Trans Papua Road," he said.

Chronology from the police
Regarding the incident, Intan Jaya Police Chief Kompol Dr Subekti Wibowo SH MSi on Monday (7/10/2024) afternoon said the gunfire between Task Force Yonif 509/BY and TPNPB-OPM at the Task Force Post in Titigi Village, Sugapa District, Intan Jaya Regency occurred on Monday (7/10/2024) at 11.15 WIT.
"In the incident, one Task Force [TNI] personnel, Private Illham Jaya, was seriously injured and was declared dead. Private Ilham Jaya was born in Atampone, December 13, 2000," he said.

Police Commissioner Subekti explained the chronology of the incident. Initially, at around 08.00 WIT, the patrol team carried out a cleanup of the Ambush Sector. After that, the team returned to the Titigi Post with a safe report.
"At around 11.00 WIT when logistics were being collected near the Titigi Post, Private Ilham Jaya who was in the last position was shot by OPM," he said.
At 11.10 WIT, he said, first aid was given, but Private Ilham could not be saved. At 11.20 WIT, the evacuation of the body was carried out with a force of 12 people.
"This shooting incident is the second time and shows the pattern of OPM attacks that take advantage of the situation when members of the Task Force are carrying out their duties," he said.
Police Commissioner Subekti estimated that the shooting was carried out by a group led by Joshua Maiseni. "Joshua Maiseni and his friends are still around Titigi Village," he said.
Military observer Made Supriatma said that victims continue to fall in Papua, both on the TNI/Polri side and the TPNPB-OPM. However, the biggest victims are civilians.
"This is what we all need to pay attention to, the number of people displaced from their homes according to data in early 2023 was around 60 thousand. Maybe now it is even bigger considering the expansion of the conflict area," he said.
According to Supriatma, the Papua conflict requires a different approach. The problem of IDPs (Internally Displaced Persons), he said, is actually not a domestic problem for Indonesia, but could become an international problem.
"Countries that are committed to democracy and human rights should be able to intervene directly to fix this problem. The Papua conflict cannot be allowed to drag on, because it will become a big problem in the future," he said. (*)

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Human Rights Monitor

2) Nabire police alleged covering up suspect’s death after being tortured during custody

On 3 September 2024, Mr Yeremias Magai, 34, a catechist at Stasi Kristus Raja Damai Nabire and a member of the Nabire District Government Pamong Praja Unit, reportedly died during custody at the Nabire Regional Police, Papua Tengah Province. His death followed a violent arrest related to his alleged involvement in the murder of a security guard named Supriyono, who was killed on 23 August 2024. Mr Magai was detained alongside his colleague, Mr Ken Boga, who faced the same allegations. Mr Boga alleged that both men were subjected to torture during police interrogation. Mr Magai eventually succumbed to the injuries he sustained as a result of the torture. Mr Magai’s relatives reported the case to the National Human Rights Commission (Komnas HAM), seeking legal action against the police.
The chronology of events leading to Mr Magai’s death paints a harrowing picture of the police brutality in West Papua. After their arrest, both suspects were subjected to severe torture while in custody. According to Mr Boga, the two men were blindfolded and beaten with bare hands and heavy tools, including a hammer. Mr Boga recounted witnessing the horrific moment when Mr Magai was beaten to death in front of him. Despite having his eyes covered with tape, Ken managed to watch the torture through a small gap to comprehend the extent of the violence being inflicted upon them. He described how both were tortured into confessing to the murder of Supriyono, despite their innocence.
On 4 September 2024, at approximately 5:00 am, the family was informed and subsequently found Mr Magai’s body at the mortuary of Siriwini General Hospital. The body had been dressed and placed in a coffin arranged by the police (see photo on top, source: independent HRDs). Although the family considered a protest by bringing his body to the police station, they opted instead to bring the body home and prepare the burial.
The Nabire Police Chief attempted to justify the police actions with inconclusive CCTV footage. Still, the family remained unconvinced, asserting that the evidence presented did not match Mr Magai’s physical characteristics. Mr Magai’s relatives are pursuing legal accountability for the acts of torture resulting in his death. They reported the case to the National Human Rights Commission (Komnas HAM), seeking legal action against the police (see photo below, source: Jubi). The Nabire Police chief denied that his men had used torture during custody to force a confession and announced he would meet with Komnas HAM to seek clarity.

Relatives found marks of the torture on Mr Yeremias Magai’s body …………..     https://humanrightsmonitor.org/case/nabire-police-alleged-covering-up-suspects-death-after-being-tortured-during-custody/



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3) West Papua: Indonesia deploys more troops to protect colonial interests

Ali Mirin
 October 9, 2024Issue 1416 World

The Indonesian military announced the deployment of five battalions — an estimated 5000 soldiers — to occupied West Papua on October 2 to protect key government projects and help the expansion of industrial development.

Indonesian army general Agus Subiyanto said the soldiers will “assist the government in accelerating development and improving the prosperity of the Papuan people”, the Jakarta Globe reported on October 3.

Subiyanto said that the troops will secure key government projects, such as the food security program covering more than 1000 hectares of crops in Merauke Regency, southeastern West Papua, and road construction projects across Papua.


The military will also be involved in land-clearing for the world’s biggest deforestation project to grow sugarcane and rice in Merauke. This is part of Indonesia’s efforts to secure its future food security — President Joko Widodo has described Merauke as Indonesia’s potential “food barn”.

The sugarcane project is a land grab in a region with rich biodiversity — home to half of New Guinea’s bird species and endemic animals — which Indonesia forced through with forged licences and military pressure. It is located next to the Merauke Integrated Food and Energy Estate, which has destroyed millions of hectares of ancestral land over the past decade.

Thousands of Indonesian soldiers were already deployed throughout West Papua, including Nduga, Yahukimo, Maybrat, Intan Jaya, Puncak, Puncak Jaya, Star Mountain and the PNG-West Papua border. The deployment of five battalions is part of a wider militarisation of West Papua, which poses a significant risk to Indigenous Papuan tribes, clans and families.

Indonesia’s hidden frontier wars against the Indigenous Papuans are an insidious agenda masked by the euphemisms of “development”, “prosperity” and “security”.

The Indonesian government’s creation of regencies, districts and provinces in Papua is an important tool for implementing its policy of control and occupation in the region.

Jakarta has divided West Papua into six provinces — Papua, West Papua, South Papua, Mountain Papua, Central Papua and West Papua Daya — 42 regencies and 755 districts. The newly created Indonesian colonial administrative regions were expected to attract large numbers of Indonesian settlers with administrative and technical skills to further Jakarta’s agenda.

Indonesian settlers have already caused a stark demographic disparity in West Papua, which is a major concern for those working to protect the rights of Indigenous Papuans.

Depopulation

The Indonesian population in Papua was 36,000 in 1971, while the Indigenous Papuan population was more than 887,000. By early 2022, there were 2.3 million Indigenous Papuans out of a total population of 5.77 million.

As a result, Indonesian settlers are increasingly influencing parliamentary politics and governance — they control 14 of the 42 regencies in Tanah Papua.

The administrative regions have also caused complex communal conflicts, undermining unity. Human Rights Monitor (HRM) reported that the proposal to build these centres has disrupted local family, clan and tribal networks, undermining their traditional systems of subsistence agriculture, ancestral homelands and Indigenous land tenure.

This situation has shattered trust between family members, clan networks and tribal affiliations, leaving people vulnerable. The Indonesian military exploits the conflicts to advance their colonial ambitions, further dividing Papuan families.

The administrative centres are a method of taking control of West Papuan territory, which are secured by the Indonesian military to crush any Papuans who resist.

Al Araf, Indonesian lecturer at Brawijaya University’s law faculty and a military observer, said that “Papua is still occupied by the Indonesian government as a colony and a conflict zone that needs to be reinforced by military force.”

HRM reports that more than 76,000 Indigenous Papuans are still displaced since the current Indonesian military crackdown began in 2018.

ReliefWeb reported that many Papuan children are being born on the run in the jungle; many old and injured people have died and been buried; and young people are being captured, tortured and brutally executed, while their mothers suffer unspeakable abuse and trauma.

World Council of Churches’ Commission on International Affairs director Peter Prove, speaking to a forum held as a side event of the UN Human Rights Council session in Geneva on October 1, said that the situation in West Papua “probably qualifies as the worst and longest standing human rights and humanitarian crisis that most people have never heard of — and we haven’t heard of it for a very specific reason”.

“It’s not an accident; it’s a deliberate consequence of the lack of access that Indonesia allows for representatives of the international community to the territory.”

'Slow motion genocide'

The Permanent Peoples’ Tribunal (PPT) held public hearings at the Queen Mary University of London from June 27–29, organised by the Centre for Climate Crime and Climate Justice in partnership with a coalition of international and Indonesian human and environmental rights organisations.

The PPT details a range of violations committed by Indonesia in West Papua, including: taking Indigenous Papuan land while employing racial discrimination that leads to the loss of Indigenous culture, traditions and knowledge; using violent repression, such as unlawful detention, extrajudicial killing and population displacement, as a means of expanding industrial development; destroying ecosystems, contaminating land and poisoning river systems; and colluding with national and foreign companies to cause environmental damage.

Scholars have described this as “slow-motion genocide” and “cold genocide”, enforced by the substantial Indonesian military forces in West Papua that interfere in almost every facet of Papuan life.

Jakarta’s overarching policy for West Papua is what settler-colonialism scholar Patrick Wolfe has called the “logic of elimination” — the mechanism by which settler-colonial societies seek to eliminate Indigenous populations to gain control of land and resources.

The deployment of five new battalions in Merauke is best understood in terms of Wolfe’s logic of elimination.

West Papua remains an unresolved international issue, having been on the UN decolonisation agenda since the 1950s, prior to Indonesia’s May 1963 invasion. The situation is exacerbated by the international community’s lack of awareness of the continuing plight of West Papuans, whose sovereignty is entangled in the UN decolonisation framework.

It is critical that West Papuans, their allies and UN member states and legal experts unite to challenge the severe and deadly consequences of Indonesia’s illegal occupation.

[Ali Mirin is a West Papuan academic from the Kimyal tribe of the highlands bordering the Star Mountain region of Papua New Guinea.]



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