The activists were held in several places, including Jayapura, Sentani, Merauke, Manokwari, Timika and Sorong – Jubi |
Jayapura, – The detention of more than 1,500 Papuan
independence supporters on May 2 for “lacking a permit to hold a rally”
speaks volumes of the government’s stubbornly problematic approach to
dealing with dissent in the restive territory of Papua. This approach
has for decades provided impunity for security forces, despite their
abuses against Papuans and turned dozens of those exercising their
universal rights to freedom of expression and association into political
prisoners.
President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo has promised Papuans a change,
beginning with “an open dialogue for a better Papua”. But aside from the
release of a few political prisoners, there has been barely any signs
of meaningful change on the ground in Papua.
Jokowi’s December 2014 pledge to thoroughly investigate and punish
security forces implicated in the death of five peaceful protesters in
the Papuan town of Enarotali that month has remained unfulfilled. And
the Indonesian bureaucracy continues to obstruct international media
from freely reporting in Papua despite the President’s May 2015
declaration to lift the decades-old restrictions.
Last month the government announced a new approach to Papua’s long
history of serious rights abuses and lack of accountability: It was
going to try to resolve them.
On April 20 chief security minister Luhut Pandjaitan opened a
one-week meeting in Jakarta, which was attended by more than 20 human
rights activists and ethnic Papuan officials from Papua and West Papua,
along with officials from the National Police, the Attorney General’s
Office ( AGO ) and various ministries.
The meeting followed increasing international scrutiny of Indonesia’s
human rights record in Papua, including a September 2015 proposal by
the Pacific Islands Forum, a political grouping of 16 Pacific nation
states, for a possible human rights “fact finding mission” in Papua.
The meeting aimed to develop a roadmap to investigation and
resolution of a number of the region’s most serious human rights abuses.
The initiative was a follow-up to Jokowi’s commitment in December 2014
to seek an end to human rights violations in Papua.
The government has compiled a 17-page report detailing 11
high-priority human rights cases in Papua that it aims to solve. They
include the Biak massacre in July 1998, when security forces opened fire
on participants of a peaceful flag-raising ceremony on the island, the
military crackdown on Papuans in Wasior in 2001 and Wamena in 2003 that
left dozens killed and thousands displaced and the forced disbandment of
the Papuan People’s Congress in October 2011 that left three people
dead and hundreds injured.
The government has also prioritized individual cases such as the
disappearance of Aristoteles Masoka, the driver of murdered Papuan
leader Theys Eluay in November 2001. Although Eluay’s body was found
inside his car, and seven Army Special Forces soldiers were convicted in
2003 for the murder, Masoka has never turned up.
The list is an encouraging sign that the government recognizes the
role of the security forces in human rights abuses in Papua and the need
for accountability. However, mass killings that took place between the
1960s and 1970s, including a military operation in 1977-1978 against
Free Papua Movement ( OPM ) insurgents that allegedly involved
indiscriminate aerial bombings and strafing, have been deliberately
omitted.
Papuan activists have also called for investigations into the killing
of anthropologist-cum-musician Arnold Ap in April 1984 and rights
abuses linked to the Indonesian security forces in the lead-up to the
July 1969 UN-sponsored referendum that resulted in a much-contested
unanimous vote for continued integration with Indonesia.
The government’s plan to resolve these cases involves deploying
agencies including the National Police, the AGO, the National Commission
on Human Rights ( Komnas HAM ) and the military police to investigate.
The plan specifies the need for compensation for survivors and victims’
families for incidents in which the evidence clearly indicates the
culpability of government officials and security forces.
Insp. Gen. Paulus Waterpauw, the Papua Police chief, has promised to
prosecute individuals implicated in those abuses. The government has yet
to publicly disclose a timeline for these investigations.
Papua’s troubled history and ongoing serious human rights abuses
demand a meaningful government response to both address the crimes of
the past and to enact measures to prevent future abuses. The ongoing
low-level conflict with the small and disorganized OPM obligates the
government to ensure security for the population.
Security forces repeatedly fail to distinguish between violent acts
and peaceful expression of political views. The government has denounced
flag-raisings and other peaceful expressions of pro-independence
sentiment in Papua as treasonous. Heavy-handed responses to peaceful
activities have resulted in numerous human rights violations.
In the past eight years, Human Rights Watch has documented dozens of
cases in which police, military, intelligence officers, and prison
guards have used unnecessary or excessive force when dealing with
Papuans exercising their rights to peaceful assembly and association.
The government also frequently arrests and prosecutes Papuan
protesters for peacefully advocating independence or other political
change. More than 35 Papuan activists are in prison on treason charges.
Human Rights Watch takes no position on Papuan claims to
self-determination, but opposes imprisonment of people who peacefully
express support for self-determination.
Papuans are likely to be skeptical of Luhut’s plan to resolve past human rights abuses unless the positive rhetoric is matched by meaningful investigations and prosecutions for those crimes. (*)
This article was published by The Fifth Column
Source : tabloidjubi.com
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