“President
Widodo deserves credit for recognizing that Papua’s problems demand the urgent
attention of his new government. But Widodo should recognize that this
government can’t just spend its way out of Papua’s problems and needs to
address an abusive status quo rooted in the persistent human rights violations
in Papua.”
(New York) – Indonesian President Joko Widodoshould use his first
official visit to Papua and West Papua provinces on
October 23, 2014, to endorse specific measures to address the serious human
rights problems in Indonesia’s easternmost island, Human Rights Watch said
today.
Widodo plans to visit Papua and West Papua provinces three days after his
inauguration. He has promised to devote “special attention”
to Papua and plans to improve health care and education as a means to ease
“political tensions” in the resource-rich area.
Papua presents particular governance
challenges for the Widodo government. The ongoing low-level conflict with the
small and poorly organized Free Papua Movement (OPM) places responsibilities on
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 caused numerous human rights violations.
In the past three 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 60 Papuan activists are in prison on treason charges. Filep
Karma, a civil servant, is serving 15 years for raising the Morning Star flag –
a West Papua independence symbol – in December 2004. The United Nations Working
Group on Arbitrary Detention said that Karma was not given a fair trial and
asked the Indonesian government to immediately and unconditionally release him.
Indonesia rejected the recommendation. Human Rights Watch takes no position on
the right to self-determination, but opposes imprisonment of people who
peacefully express support for self-determination.
Government restrictions on access by foreign
journalists and human rights monitors to Papua foster a climate in which
security forces can commit abuses out of the public eye, making investigations
more difficult. The government blocks international media from freely reporting
in Papua by limiting access by foreign reporters to only those the government
gives official permission to visit. The government rarely approves such
applications or indefinitely delays processing, hampering efforts by journalists
and civil society groups to report on breaking events.
Two French reporters from
Franco-German Arte TV, Thomas Dandois and Valentine Bourrat, detained in Papua
since August 6, 2014, went on trial on October 20 on charges of
“abusive use of entry visas.”
“President Widodo
deserves credit for recognizing that Papua’s problems demand the urgent attention
of his new government,” said Phelim Kine, deputy Asia director. “But
Widodo should recognize that this government can’t just spend its way out of
Papua’s problems and needs to address an abusive status quo rooted in the
persistent human rights violations in Papua.”
Widodo should adopt
measures that will have immediate impact in addressing human rights in Papua,
including:
1.
End restrictions on access to Papua for
independent observers, including allowing international journalists and human
rights organizations to visit Papua without specific permission or approval.
Dismissing charges against Dandois and Bourrat would indicate a commitment to
end the obstacles to foreign media access;
2.
Comply with the UN Working Group on
Arbitrary Detention’s 2011 request for the immediate and unconditional release
of Filep Karma and other political prisoners in Papua; and
3. Order the Indonesian military,
including the Special Forces (Kopassus), to immediately cease the unlawful
surveillance of peaceful activists, politicians, and clergy, and to ensure that
civilian authorities in Papua retain responsibility for basic law enforcement.
Widodo’s government
should also take measures in the longer term to address human rights abuses in
Papua, including:
1. Review the 2007 Government Regulation
No. 77, which bans the use of “separatist flags” in Papua, the Moluccas Islands,
and Aceh; and
2. Order an independent and impartial
investigation into various allegations of human rights violations in Papua,
including killings, torture, rape, and arbitrary arrest and detention. Such an
investigation should lead to appropriate prosecutions of security force
personnel implicated in serious abuses.
President Widodo has
a unique opportunity to address Papua’s festering rights problems by addressing
the impunity and isolation that fuel abuses,” Kine said. “Widodo’s challenge is
to deliver meaningful action, not more empty government rhetoric, to tackle the
issues facing Papua’s people.”
Source: http://www.hrw.org
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