Thu, Dec 3 2009 8:15 am 

Asia

Indonesia: Raise a flag, go to prison

By Peter Gelling

JAKARTA, Indonesia - In several cities across West Papua, Indonesia's last 
frontier of separatist instability, hundreds of demonstrators raised the 
Morning Star independence flag Tuesday in protest of what they say is more than 
40 years of colonial occupation by Indonesia.

Police confirmed that at least 13 people had been arrested for raising the 
flag, a crime that carries a sentence of up to life in prison. Amnesty 
International estimates that dozens of other Papuans had been arrested 
previously this year for hoisting the flag, some of whom were beaten during and 
after their arrests.

Amnesty International also reported that at least one person had been killed, 
beaten to death by police, in April during another independence demonstration. 
Local media reports seeping out of the remote province Tuesday said police 
violently dispersed a protest in the capital of Jayapura. Other reports said 
police opened fire on or near a crowd, but that could not be independently 
verified.

The protests marked the 48th anniversary of when the Free Papua Movement first 
declared independence from the Dutch.

Information from within the resource-rich province of Papua, which occupies the 
western half of the island of New Guinea, is often difficult to come by. The 
foreign news media is banned from traveling to Papua under threat of 
deportation or even prosecution. Two Dutch video journalists who shot a Papuan 
protest in March were arrested, detained and swiftly deported.

But reports in the last year suggest there remains a sustained separatist 
presence in Papua and violence appears to be increasing. Several clashes 
between the Indonesian military and independence fighters preceded Indonesia's 
national parliamentary elections in April, tensions that were only further 
stoked by the arrival in March of Nicolas Jouwe, the 85-year old founder of the 
Free Papua Movement who now lives in the Netherlands.

Jouwe came at the request of Indonesian authorities, who said at the time they 
hoped to begin discussions on a possible settlement of the decades-old 
conflict, one of President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono's central campaign pledges. 
No discussion ever took place.

Indonesia took over Papua from the Dutch in 1963 and in 1969 formalized its 
control over the region after a vote of some 1,000 Papuan community leaders 
that was widely thought to be rigged. The United States, which viewed Indonesia 
as an important ally against communism, backed the vote. A small group of armed 
rebels and other independence advocates have waged a low-level separatist 
campaign ever since.

Indonesia has long struggled to quell independence movements across the 
sprawling archipelago. East Timor became independent in 2002 after 24 years of 
Indonesian control and several years of United Nations administration. After 
East Timor voted for independence in 1999, Indonesian militias led a 
scorched-earth campaign that killed more than a 1,000 civilians and burned an 
estimated 70 percent of the country's infrastructure.

A separatist movement in the northern-most province of Aceh battled the 
Indonesian military for almost 30 years before agreeing to a peace deal after 
the crippling tsunami in 2004.

The central province of Maluku has also sustained a small independence movement 
throughout the years. Two people were just arrested last week for raising 
separatist flags, days before the president traveled to Ambon, Maluku's 
capital, to usher in the province's World Peace Week.

Papua, however, represents the last real threat to the country's unity. Papua 
is home to the world's largest gold mine, owned by the American company 
Freeport-McMoran. Shootings, which have killed several people, including one 
Australian, along the road leading to the mine have plagued the company in 
recent months. Police have blamed separatists for those attacks.

Despite its massive store of natural resources, Papua's development lags far 
behind that of the rest of the country. It still lacks basic public health 
programs, reliable electricity and water supplies.

As a concession to independence advocates, in 2001 legislators in Jakarta 
passed an autonomy law aimed at giving the region more local control and a 
greater share of mining, gas and timber revenues. Human rights groups, however, 
say the law has never been fully implemented and a portion of the funds have 
gone missing in a web of corruption.

In a letter to a newly appointed police chief in Papua, Amnesty International 
called for an investigation into the series of arrests and beatings at 
pro-independence rallies.

"We would like to raise to your attention a pattern of unchecked human rights 
violations by police in the Nabire district over the last year," the 
organization wrote. "We would like to request that you take the lead in 
ensuring that independent, impartial and effective investigations into these 
reports be conducted immediately."

Human Rights Watch called for an investigation into the beating of two men 
arrested in November who flew a makeshift version of the Morning Star flag in 
front of a crowd of no more than 35 people. More than 170 people are currently 
in jail throughout Indonesia for raising flags and other peaceful protests, 
according to Human Rights Watch.

"President Yudhoyono needs to end the arrests of people for simply raising a 
flag," said Elaine Pearson, deputy Asia director at Human Rights Watch. "These 
prosecutions fly in the face of Indonesia's commitments to free expression."

http://www.minnpost.com/globalpost/2009/12/03/13934/indonesia_raise_a_flag_go_to_prison



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