Around 1,700 Papuan activists were arrested on 2 May after they organised and participated in a series of peaceful demonstrations in Jayapura, Merauke, Fakfak, Sorong and Wamena in Papua and West Papua provinces, in Semarang, Central Java province and in Makassar, South Sulawesi province.
The demonstrations were organised by supporters of
the United Liberation Movement for West Papua (ULMWP), a Papuan
pro-independence umbrella group, in support of its application to
gain full membership of the Melanesian Spearhead Group (MSG), a
sub-Pacific intergovernmental organisation. They also commemorated
the 53rd anniversary of the handover of West Papua to the
Indonesian government by the United Nations Temporary Executive
Authority (UNTEA) on 1 May 1963 and coincided with the 3 May
International Parliamentarians for West Papua (IPWP) forum in London
which discussed support for an international supervised referendum
for the Papua region of Indonesia.
In the lead up to the activities, between 29 April
and 1 May, the police forces in Papua and West Papua provinces
arrested around 50 Papuan activists in Jayapura, Wamena and Merauke
when they were distributing flyers calling on people to join the
demonstrations.
On 2 May, the police forces in Semarang, Central
Java province and Makassar, South Sulawesi province arrested around
45 and 42 Papuan peaceful activists respectively.
In West Papua province, the Sorong and Fakfak
district police arrested at least 67 Papuan activists during a
peaceful rally on 2 May.
In Papua province, the local district police forces
arrested around 130 peaceful activists in Merauke and Wamena on 2
May. The Jayapura headquarters police forces arrested around 1,450
activists and detained them in an open field under the hot sun and
ordered them to strip off their shirts.
While most of all those activists who were arrested
were released without charge after one day, these arbitrary arrests
highlight the ongoing repressive environment faced by political
activists in the Papua region.
The widespread use of arbitrary arrest in the Papua
region, apparently as a deterrent to political activism, suppressing
the exercise of the rights of peaceful assembly and freedom of
expression, highlights the failure of the Indonesian government to
make a distinction between peaceful activists who support Papuan
independence through peaceful expression of opinion, and those linked
to armed pro-independence groups which pursue their aims through the
use or threat of violence.
Amnesty International recognizes that the Indonesian
government needs to maintain public order on its territory. However,
it must ensure that any restrictions on freedom of expression and
peaceful assembly are in accordance with Indonesia’s obligations
under international human rights law, including the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights to which Indonesia is a State
party.
Amnesty International is concerned that there may be
further arrests of peaceful political activists in the weeks
preceding the upcoming MSG Summit tentatively scheduled between end
of May and early June 2016, which will address ULMWP’s application
to become a full member of the MSG.
Background
West Papua (also sometimes referred to as Papua) is
the Western half of the island of New Guinea, which comprises two
provinces: West Papua province and Papua province.
The United Liberation Movement for West Papua
(ULMWP) is an umbrella organization established in December 2014 and
made up of different factions of the Papuan independence movement.
The Melanesian Spearhead Group (MSG) is an
intergovernmental organization, founded as a political gathering in
1983, composed of the four Melanesian states of Fiji, Papua New
Guinea, Solomon Islands and Vanuatu, and the Kanak and Socialist
National Liberation Front (FLNKS) of New Caledonia (a French
territory in the South Pacific). In June 2015, Indonesia became an
MSG associate member and the MSG granted the ULMWP observer status.
The International Parliamentarians for West Papua
(IPWP) is a cross-party group of politicians that supports the right
to self-determination in the Papua region. Launched in London, United
Kingdom, in 2008, the group currently has 95 signatories from various
countries around the world.
Amnesty International takes no position on the
political status of any province of Indonesia, including calls for
independence. However, Amnesty International considers that the right
to freedom of expression protects the right to peacefully advocate
independence or any other political solutions that do not involve
incitement to discrimination, hostility or violence. (Victor
Mambor)
Source :
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