Human Rights Violations
Jayapura, Jubi – Despite the overcast skies following a rainy night, the poignant ceremony bidding farewell to Lukas Enembe, the former Governor of Papua from 2013 to 2023, unfolded solemnly at his residence in Koya Tengah, Muara Tami District, Jayapura City on Friday, December 29, 2023. Enembe’s final resting place was near the Evangelical Church of Indonesia, Dea Pasifik Congregation.
From 10 a.m. until 3 p.m. Papua time, the heartfelt ceremony, led by GIDI President Rev. Dorman Wandikbo, saw Enembe’s casket placed in the center of a field, surrounded by grieving family members. The yard was filled with mourners, some standing outside the long tents due to the overwhelming crowd.
After the service, family, religious figures, legal representatives, and organization members shared their cherished memories of Enembe. Pater John Djonga, a prominent Catholic leader in the Koya region, remembered Enembe as a courageous advocate for his people’s rights, emphasizing Enembe’s call for unity in pursuing justice for Papua’s people.
Pater John interpreted the cloudy weather as a sign of both the people of Papua and the natural environment mourning Enembe’s passing on December 26, 2023. Enembe’s legacy lives on through his wife, Yulce Wenda Enembe, and their three children—Astrac Bona Enembe, Eldorado Gamael Enembe, and Dario Alvin Nells Isak Enembe.
Yulce Wenda expressed deep gratitude for their shared life and sought forgiveness for any mistakes before her husband’s casket was taken to the burial site.
“Thank you for being with us on this journey, guiding our family and our children. If we erred, forgive us. Farewell peacefully. You are now with the Lord,” she said
The procession to Enembe’s burial site, about a kilometer from his residence, was a solemn march. Mourners gradually departed from the residence around 4 p.m. (*)
On Behalf of the ULMWP and the West Papuan people I offer my condolences to the family of Governor Lukas Enembe. Today we remember Enembe and his legacy, as a powerful Governor who fought for West Papuan interests against the Indonesian colonial system that has been imposed on us for the last 50 years.
Earlier this year, Indonesia wrongly imprisoned Governor Enembe, without sufficient evidence and on clearly political grounds. Enembe’s imprisonment was because he advocated for his people – by opposing the colonial ‘Special Autonomy law’, opposing the divide-and-rule tactic of creating three new provinces in West Papua, and condemning the humanitarian crisis Indonesian militarisation has inflicted on West Papuans.
Governor Lukas’ treatment is not new to us. Before him, many Governors and other West Papuan leaders have either been falsely imprisoned, poisoned, or even murdered by the Indonesian state. At least sixteen leaders have died in mysterious circumstances since 2020, many of them alone in hospital.
Thank you to Governor Lukas Enembe for everything you did for West Papua, for protecting West Papuans and the Lani people, for helping restore our dignity and national identity even while under colonial rule. You left a good legacy in West Papua and throughout Melanesia. May you Rest in Peace.
I send my condolences and sympathy to Governor Lukas’ family and loved ones who are mourning today in West Papua and around the world.
Benny Wenda
President
ULMWP
Their mandate, according to a statement from Fiji’s government on Wednesday, is to meet with Indonesia’s president to discuss problems in its Papuan provinces – a region that has a 760-kilometer (472-mile) border with Papua New Guinea and that is often referred to as West Papua.
Fiji’s Prime Minister Sitiveni Rabuka “believes that this initiative is a crucial step forward,” the statement said. Governments of Melanesian nations “reached a consensus that sending a ministerial envoy, as opposed to a bureaucratic-level envoy, would be the most effective approach to addressing the West Papua issue,” it said.
Indonesia last month canceled a regional meeting on the human rights situation in its Papuan provinces because the top leaders of Melanesian nations weren’t attending it.
The appointment of envoys also follows a decision in August by the Melanesian Spearhead Group – which comprises Fiji, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Vanuatu and New Caledonia’s Kanak independence movement – to deny membership to an umbrella organization of Papuan independence groups.
Rabuka and senior ministers of the spearhead group countries met earlier this week in the Cook Islands, where the 18-nation Pacific Islands Forum is holding its annual summit. Papua New Guinea was represented at the spearhead group meeting by its Deputy Prime Minister John Rosso.
At the August meeting, the Melanesian leaders affirmed Indonesia’s sovereignty over the Papua region and agreed to create space for dialogue with Jakarta, according to a communique. Some analysts say that approach reflects the success of Indonesia’s efforts to build influence with Pacific island nations that it dwarfs in population, economic size and military strength.
Indonesia’s President Joko Widodo visited Papua New Guinea in July and promised 55 million kina ($15 million) for upgrading a Port Moresby hospital, including its chronically overcrowded mortuary, and 2,000 scholarships for study at Indonesian colleges and universities.
Papua New Guinea’s Prime Minister James Marape said during Widodo’s visit he wanted to boost trade with Indonesia, which has been minimal for decades.
Poorly armed Papuan fighters – collectively known as the West Papua National Liberation Army – have battled Indonesia since the early 1960s, when it took control of the western half of New Guinea island from the Dutch. A separate nonviolent independence movement is regarded as treasonous by Indonesian authorities who have imprisoned key leaders.
Papuans, culturally and ethnically distinct from the rest of Indonesia, say they were denied the right to decide their own future. Indonesian control was formalized in 1969 with a U.N.-backed referendum in which little more than 1,000 Papuans were allowed to vote.
Documented and alleged killings and abuses by Indonesian military and police, from the 1960s until the present day – along with impunity and the exploitation of the region’s natural resources and widespread poverty – have fueled resentment of Indonesian rule.
Frank Makanuey, a second-generation member of the substantial West Papuan diaspora in Papua New Guinea, said dialogue is welcome, but Rabuka and Marape must not shrink from pressing West Papuans’ right to self determination and their rights as indigenous peoples.
“This is the conversation they must bring before the presence of the Indonesian president,” said Makanuey, who is general secretary of Papua New Guinea’s People’s National Congress Party.
The Pacific Conference of Churches said discussions between Indonesia and the envoys will need to involve the United Liberation Movement for West Papua – the umbrella organization of independence groups – to have legitimacy.
The faith group’s general secretary, James Bhagwan, said an eminent persons group including civil society representatives should be part of the envoy process for transparency.
Rabuka said the envoy role is an extension of his efforts to nurture the concept of the Pacific Ocean as a zone of peace.
The envoy roles complement a 2019 call from Pacific island nations for the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights to conduct a mission in the Papuan region, Fiji’s statement said.
The Melanesian Spearhead Group “remains committed to finding a peaceful and diplomatic resolution to the West Papua issue and looks forward to engaging in meaningful discussions with Indonesia to address this pressing concern,” it said.
Source; BenarNews
Indonesia cancels West Papua rights meeting with Melanesian nations, delegate says
West Papua independence activist Benny Wenda (blue shirt) is pictured amid Morning Star independence flags at the opening ceremony for the 7th Melanesian Arts & Culture Festival in Port Vila, Vanuatu, July 19, 2023.
Stephen Wright/BenarNews
UPDATED at 6:26 a.m. EDT on 2023-10-10
Indonesia canceled a regional meeting this week on the human rights situation in its Papuan provinces on the grounds that the leaders of Melanesian nations weren’t attending it, a member of Papua New Guinea’s delegation said on Tuesday.
The canning of the meeting comes after the Papuan independence movement had its application to become a full member of the Melanesian Spearhead Group rejected in August. The U.N.-recognized organization comprises the Solomon Islands, Papua New Guinea, Vanuatu, Fiji and New Caledonia’s indigenous Kanak independence movement.
Indonesia, an associate member of the Melanesian group, has lobbied against the liberation movement’s membership aspirations for at least a decade.
“I am disappointed that the meeting was canceled by the Indonesian government at the last moment,” Powes Parkop, the governor of Papua New Guinea’s National Capital District, told BenarNews.
Leaders of the Melanesian Spearhead Group nations agreed at a summit in August to create “space” for dialogue with Indonesia on the human rights situation in its Papuan provinces – often known as West Papua – rather than encouraging the independence movement, which has strong grassroots support in Melanesian countries.
Possible measures included an annual parliamentary dialogue between Indonesia and Melanesian nations.
Poorly armed Papuan fighters – collectively known as the West Papua National Liberation Army – have battled Indonesia since the early 1960s, when it took control of the western half of New Guinea island from the Dutch.
Papuans, culturally and ethnically distinct from the rest of Indonesia, say they were denied the right to decide their own future. Indonesian control was formalized in 1969 with a U.N.-backed referendum in which little more than 1,000 Papuans were allowed to vote.
National Capital District Governor Powes Parkop (left) receives Prime Minister of New Zealand Chris Hipkins (right) at Port Moresby International Airport on May 21, 2023, ahead of the Forum for India–Pacific Islands Cooperation Summit in Papua New Guinea. [AFP]
Documented and alleged killings and abuses by Indonesian military and police, from the 1960s until the present day – along with impunity and the exploitation of the region’s natural resources and widespread poverty – have fueled resentment of Indonesian rule.
The Papua New Guinea government’s invitation to Parkop to be a member of its delegation said that Indonesian President Joko Widodo had called for Melanesian leaders to “have a historical meeting with him on West Papua issues.”
He was about to leave Papua New Guinea for the meeting that was scheduled for Wednesday in Bali, alongside a summit of island and archipelagic states, when he was informed of the cancellation.
Parkop said he spoke to Indonesia’s Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi and her explanation for the cancellation was the nonattendance of the leaders of Melanesian nations.
“I have impressed on her to allow dialogue to commence initially with those MSG leaders like myself … who have been pushing this agenda and not to wait for prime ministers,” said Parkop.
“I am hopeful that this meeting will take place soon so we can see progress toward resolving the long standing political and human rights issue in our region.”
Abdul Kadir Jaelani, the director general for Asia, Pacific and Africa at Indonesia’s foreign ministry, said the leaders of Melanesian countries couldn’t attend because of domestic priorities.
“Therefore, the dialogue is currently difficult to hold,” he told BenarNews. “Indonesia is always open to dialogue with any country.
“Of course, any dialogue should be conducted in accordance with international principles such as sovereignty and territorial integrity.”
This handout picture taken on Sept. 10, 2019 and released by the Indonesian Presidential Palace shows President Joko Widodo (right) meeting with some 61 Papuan and West Papuan religious and student leaders, customary and communities chiefs at the state palace in Jakarta. [AFP] Papuan groups that peacefully advocate for independence from Indonesia suffered a setback in August when the Melanesian Spearhead Group denied the United Liberation Movement for West Papua’s application for full membership.The official communique from the August summit was not released publicly, but a copy seen by BenarNews said leaders could not reach a consensus on West Papuan membership, which meant it could not be approved.
It reiterated long standing international calls for Indonesia to allow a U.N. human rights delegation to visit the Papua region.
Fiji’s Prime Minister Sitiveni Rabuka had earlier in the year made a public show of support for West Papua and Vanuatu is a longstanding bastion of support for the independence movement.
But Papua New Guinea, which has a 760-kilometer (472-mile) border with Indonesia and is dwarfed in both military and economic strength by the Southeast Asian country, has made improving relations with Jakarta a foreign policy priority.
Solomon Islands Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare, formerly a supporter of West Papuan independence, said earlier this month that self-determination is an internal matter for Indonesia’s Papuan provinces.
“Melanesian politics are pretty fluid, a change of governments will result in a different conversation about self-determination and human rights in the region,” Hipolitus Wangee, a researcher at Australian National University, told BenarNews.
“There is another chance for the ULMWP application as long as the Indonesian government fails to address the root causes in West Papua.”
Charley Piringi in Honiara, Stephen Wright in Wellington, and Pizaro Gozali Idrus in Jakarta contributed to this report.
A West Papua pro-independence leader says Indonesia is ramping up its repression of peaceful activists while people mobilise in favour of the province gaining full membership of the Melanesian Spearhead Group (MSG).
Benny Wenda said ten activists were arrested earlier this week while handing out leaflets advertising a peaceful rally to support his United Liberation Movement for West Papua (ULMWP) gaining full membership of the sub-regional group.
Wenda said the next day, rallies in Jayapura and Sentani were forcefully disbanded and 21 people arrested.
He said at the rallies activists were demanding that their birthright as a Melanesian nation be fulfilled.
He said West Papua is entitled to full membership of the MSG by “our ethnic, cultural, and linguistic ties to the rest of Melanesia”.
“If Melanesian leaders needed further proof of the necessity of ULMWP full membership, then Indonesia has provided it,” he said.
“Only as full members will we be able to expose grave abuses such as these arrests on the international stage, and to defend our identity as a Melanesian people.
“Indonesia claims that they are entitled to membership of the MSG because they represent other Melanesian populations. If that is the case, then why are these populations staying quiet? Indonesia cannot claim to represent West Papuans in the MSG, because we already have representation through the ULMWP.”
Wenda is demanding on behalf of the ULMWP and the West Papuan people “that no further arrests are made of Papuans rallying peacefully for full membership”.
He said Indonesia had nothing to fear from West Papuans returning to “our Melanesian family”.
“At the same time, they must understand that West Papuans are speaking with one voice in demanding full membership. All groups, ages, genders and tribes are totally united and focused on achieving our mission. We will not be deterred.”
The MSG is due to meet in Port Vila, Vanuatu, this month, although the dates have not yet been announced.
Last wee, the Indonesian President Joko Widodo visited Papua New Guinea (PNG) with trade, border arrangements and education foremost on the agenda.
However, as reported by RNZ Pacific, one topic that was not discussed was West Papua despite the countries sharing a 760km border.
An estimated 10,000 West Papuan refugees live in PNG, escaping a bloody conflict between armed separatists and the Indonesian army.
Source: RNZ
‘This is nothing short of ethnic cleansing. They are systematically wiping us out’
Steve Sweeney talks to West Papuan independence leader BENNY WENDA about the struggle against brutal Indonesian occupation, his experiences of racist persecution and his pledge to make West Papua ‘the first green state in the world’ after liberation
It HAS been an incredible journey for exiled West Papuan leader Benny Wenda.
From a childhood spent living in poverty in the mountains where he witnessed his auntie being raped by Indonesian soldiers to a daring escape from prison in 2002, his “long walk to freedom” culminated in his election as the territory’s interim president as part of a government-in-waiting in an historic vote on December 1 2020 — West Papua’s national day.
Our conversation takes place over WhatsApp — coronavirus means we cannot meet at his Oxford home where he has lived since being granted political asylum in 2003.
Before we proceed with the interview he tells me that the Morning Star “is the media of West Papua,” laughing as he explains that our articles are shared all over social media and in WhatsApp groups.
To explain; the Morning Star is also the name of the West Papuan flag, its display partially banned by the occupying Indonesian authorities, with scores jailed for raising it during the 2019 uprising, which was triggered by racist taunts of West Papuans by police on university campus.
It was first raised in December 1961 after the liberation from Dutch colonialism, but before the territory came under the administration of the United Nations in October 1962.
Under the country’s Special Autonomy Law, which expires later this year, the flag can be raised as long as the flag of Indonesia is raised at the same time and it is higher than the Morning Star.
In practice Indonesian forces see the Morning Star as a symbol of West Papuan independence — a cause that Wenda says the movement is coming close to realising — and those who display it are harshly punished.
One day the Morning Star will be raised in a free and independent West Papua, Wenda hopes, saying his people have been crying out for support for more than 50 years.
The West Papuan leader explains that his own personal journey is symbolic to that of the West Papuan people.
They have lived under Indonesian occupation since the 1969 so-called Act of Free Choice, Wenda explains, in which just over 1,000 residents — including his own father — were forced at gunpoint to ratify the annexation of their land by Jakarta.
Some 500,000 people, mainly West Papuans, have been killed since then, which Wenda and others say is a genocide which has been ignored, and even perpetuated, by world powers.
“When I was a child I wasn’t aware of the wider world, even outside of my own community in the Central Highlands,” Wenda tells me as he explains how he became involved in the liberation movement.
“I didn’t know there were other people out there. I thought it was just my clan, my tribe and my mum, dad, auntie and uncle,” he continues. “But suddenly we were surrounded by the Indonesian military.”
Wenda was born in 1974 in the Baliem Valley, some five years after the formal annexation of West Papua, officially a province of Indonesia that sits on the western peninsula of the island of New Guinea.
Three years later major operations were carried out by the Indonesian military in a bid to quell the nascent independence movement and a rebellion by his tribe, the Lani.
“They [Indonesian soldiers] were carrying out searches. I didn’t understand why,” Wenda tells me.
“We were just living peacefully, in harmony with our nature. I was only going to the garden with my parents. But one time I went beyond the mountains with my auntie and my mum, and we were confronted by the military.”
He proceeds to describe the harrowing story of how the soldiers first racially abused his mother and then raped his auntie in front of his eyes. He was just five years old.
“My mum was screaming but I couldn’t do anything. We had to hide in a bush. This is my childhood memory,” he says, saying that he believes his auntie died because of the trauma.
Wenda himself was injured during Indonesian bombing raids, impairing his growth. Many of his family members were killed.
The Indonesian attacks caused mass displacement, with Wenda saying that he and his family became refugees, hiding in the jungle. It is a practice that continues today with thousands driven from their homes and taking shelter in the mountains.
But even there they are not safe. Indonesian planes frequently strafe their hideouts and have been accused of dropping chemicals onto the West Papuan civilians who have taken refuge there.
Wenda said the racism that triggered the 2019 uprising is systemic and ingrained into Indonesians from a young age.
West Papuans are Melanesian and many identify as black. His experience in school was typical of that of his fellow West Papuans, although as a child he didn’t understand it.
“I was in primary school and a girl told me that I smelled, so the next day I scrubbed and washed my body to make sure I was clean.
“I went into the same class the next day, and she looked at me and then spat in my face.
“But I stood up for myself and banged the table and said: ‘Yes, I am black. But I am a human being just like everybody else’.”
This defiant stance was to continue when the future West Papuan leader went to university to study politics. But he soon found that he ran into difficulties when he questioned the nature of the relationship between Indonesia and West Papua.
He spent long periods in the library trying to find out how his homeland became part of Indonesia.
Wenda says he was puzzled as “we wear clothes like them, we dress like them,” but they would attack us just for being different.
In classes he began to question why West Papua wasn’t an independent nation allowed to govern itself or allowed to make decisions that benefited its own people.
“I became suspicious,” he explains, “But my lecturers kept saying to me: ‘Benny, I think you need to be careful with that subject’ and I was curious why.”
Of course the answer is deeply rooted in imperialism. The Dutch had always argued that West Papua was ethnically different from the rest of its former colonies in the Dutch East Indies and believed it shouldn’t form part of the new Indonesian nation.
But the US had other ideas. It was the height of the cold war and president John F Kennedy wanted to ensure that his Indonesian counterpart General Sukarno came under Washington’s influence. The rights and lives of the West Papuans were an irrelevance.
Sukarno was acutely aware of the geopolitics and agreed to aid from the Soviets as he established the new Indonesian nation in order to gain US support in his bid to crush political opponents.
He manoeuvred the US and its junior partner Australia into backing his takeover of West Papua.
Arrests of Papuans who spoke out started soon after and the oppression led to the start of the armed struggle, which saw auxiliary units clash with Indonesian troops.
But early success was short-lived and UN forces soon left and the West Papuans were abandoned.
In 1965, the US was tied up in the Vietnam war. But the US used its links through the military and backed a coup led by General Suharto on the pretext of restoring security. With the full support of the US, the new regime destroyed the Indonesian Communist Party.
The CIA handed over extensive list of communists and other leftists, including trade unionists who were to be targeted and wiped out.
It is estimated that somewhere between 500,000 and three million people were killed in the ensuing bloodshed. Emboldened by the support from the US, Suharto moved his attention to West Papua, knowing that his plans wouldn’t be opposed.
Military operations included the aerial bombardment by helicopters and troops on the ground, going into areas that had never had contact with Indonesians previously, including Wenda’s Highland home. Some 500,000 have been killed in violent acts of oppression that continue today.
Wenda was elected as a leader of the West Papuan people after leaving university, he explains, first of his tribe, the Lani people, and then as the secretary-general of the Demmak tribal assembly.
It is a dangerous position to hold. A number of leading figures in the West Papuan liberation movement have been killed, including Theys Eluay who was brutally murdered by Indonesian security services in 2001. Wenda himself is subjected to regular death threats.
In 2002, Wenda was arrested and jailed after leading a march for independence. But he managed to escape from prison and make his way to Papua New Guinea. From there, with the help of an NGO, he made his way to Europe and eventually Oxford where he now lives with his family.
Of course there are other interests that stand in the way of West Papua’s bid for independence from Jakarta. It is home to the world’s largest gold and copper mine, run by a subsidiary of the US firm Freeport-McMoran.
The Anglo-US oil giant BP is developing a massive natural gas field in West Papua which is expected to be generating revenues of around £55 million a year.
“We’ve been sacrificed for the interests of big mining companies and others,” Wenda tells me.
“West Papua has so many natural resources, it’s the richest place on the planet. This is why BP and Rio Tinto want to exploit our lands.
“But they are, of course, directly or indirectly supporting Indonesia, because they’re paying a big amount of tax that is using to buy weapons to use against my people.”
He explains that the mining companies have never asked for permission to operate in West Papua and it is a situation he says needs dealing with.
Whole swathes of West Papua are being deliberately depopulated by Indonesia where it sees economic opportunities, with villages being burned to the ground.
The attacks have been met with resistance. The United Liberation Movement for West Papua (ULMWP) has a military wing, the West Papuan Army, which Indonesia brands a terrorist group in a bid to smear the independence movement.
But, Wenda says, “the world should not be fooled by this.” He explains that his people have lived on their land for tens of thousands of years and before Indonesian forces arrived there was no mass killings or pollution.
Now West Papua has become a hunting ground for the Indonesian army, he says.
“The mining companies need to be accountable to us, to our forests, to our mountains to our rivers,” Wenda says, as he declares that West Papua will be “the first green state in the world” after independence.
This is something the West Papuan leader believes is coming with the election of a government-in-waiting in December 2020, with Wenda as interim president a significant step towards making this a reality.
Indonesia reacted with horror at the announcement which was carried in major newspapers across the world, a rarity when it comes to international coverage of the West Papuan freedom movement.
But President Joko Widodo has ignored appeals to sit round the table for negotiations with Wenda, refusing to recognise the provisional government and describing it as “a farce” while continuing to deny the aspirations of the West Papuan people and their “inalienable right to self-determination.”
Instead Wenda says, the Indonesian government has escalated the killings, jailing and oppression of West Papuans, threatening those who support the so-called government-in-waiting.
His six-point plan, which includes a map to peace and independence from Indonesia’s illegal martial law in West Papua, has been met with silence from Jakarta, but Wenda insists that the declaration on December 1 is evidence of a “legitimate governance structure capable of running our own country.”
Support is growing among the international community, with former colonial rulers the Netherlands becoming the 83rd country to add its voice to those calling for Indonesia to allow the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights to be allowed into West Papua.
The Dutch also acknowledged a petition signed by half-a-million people opposing the renewal of the Special Autonomy Law, calling for a referendum on independence.
But Indonesia continues to block access to West Papua to the UN, NGOs and journalists, as Wenda says it doesn’t want the world to see the crimes being committed against his people.
He described what is happening to his people as “nothing short of ethnic cleansing. They are systematically wiping us out.” Wenda says more than 500,000 West Papuans have been killed since the 1969 annexation.
“It’s a slow-motion genocide,” he says.
But he continues to dream and insists that one day his people will be free. Until then he urged readers of the Morning Star to continue to “raise the voice of the voiceless” and support the people of West Papua.
Source: https://morningstaronline.co.uk/
Indonesia’s former coloniser, the Netherlands, has become the 83rd international state calling for the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights to be allowed into West Papua.
Following questions posed by parliamentarians from seven Dutch political parties, Dutch Foreign Affairs Minister Stef Blok said this week that, “it is important to have such a visit” by the High Commissioner “as soon as possible”, reports the United Liberation Movement for West Papua (ULMWP).
Minister Blok also noted that the Dutch government was aware of a large number of organisations opposing the renewal of Indonesia’s “Special Autonomy” provisions in West Papua.
A petition signed by more than half a million people was still being circulated inside the country.
The parliamentary questions and government statement follow a hearing of the Dutch Foreign Affairs Committee in November 2020, at which members of the ULMWP – including Interim President Benny Wenda – addressed Dutch MPs.
Eighteen states in the Pacific Islands Forum (PIF) called for the UN High Commissioner to be allowed in to West Papua in August 2019.
More than 79 countries in the Organisation of African, Caribbean and Pacific Group of States (ACP) echoed the call in December 2019, and last November the UK government added its voice.
With 83 countries now calling for Indonesia to grant UN access, the pressure on Jakarta is becoming immense.
The High Commissioner’s office has said that it still aims to secure access to West Papua, but that obstacles are being placed in its way by the Indonesian state.
On November 30, the High Commissioner’s office put out a strongly worded statement condemning human rights abuses in West Papua.
The ULMWP announced the formation of a Provisional Government of West Papua in December, pledging to retake the country and reclaim Papuan sovereignty. The provisional government is leading international efforts to secure a vital UN visit to West Papua, and will continue to increase the pressure on the Indonesian government.
January 13, 2021 in News – The Netherlands has become the 83rd international state calling for the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights to be allowed into West Papua.
Following questions posed by parliamentarians from seven Dutch political parties, the Dutch Foreign Affairs Minister stated on January 12 that, ‘it is important to have such a visit’ by the High Commissioner ‘as soon as possible’.
The Minister also noted that the Dutch government is aware of a large number of organisations opposing the renewal of Indonesia’s ‘Special Autonomy’ provisions in West Papua. A petition signed by over half a million people is still being circulated inside the country.
The parliamentary questions and government statement follow a hearing of the Dutch Foreign Affairs Committee in November 2020, at which members of the United Liberation Movement for West Papua, including Interim President Benny Wenda, addressed Dutch MPs.
Eighteen states in the Pacific Islands Forum called for the UN High Commissioner to be allowed in to West Papua in August 2019. Over 79 countries in the Organisation of African, Caribbean and Pacific Group of States echoed the call in December 2019, and last November the UK government added its voice. With 83 countries now calling for Indonesia to grant UN access, the pressure on Jakarta is becoming immense.
The High Commissioner’s office has said that it still aims to secure access to West Papua, but that obstacles are being placed in its way by the Indonesian state. On November 30 last year the High Commissioner’s office put out a strongly worded statement condemning human rights abuses in West Papua.
The ULMWP announced the formation of a Provisional Government of West Papua in December last year, pledging to retake the country and reclaim Papuan sovereignty. The Provisional Government is leading international efforts to secure a vital UN visit to West Papua, and will continue to increase the pressure on the Indonesian government.
Source: ULMWP Website
January 13, 2021 in News – The Netherlands has become the 83rd international state calling for the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights to be allowed into West Papua.
Following questions posed by parliamentarians from seven Dutch political parties, the Dutch Foreign Affairs Minister stated on January 12 that, ‘it is important to have such a visit’ by the High Commissioner ‘as soon as possible’.
The Minister also noted that the Dutch government is aware of a large number of organisations opposing the renewal of Indonesia’s ‘Special Autonomy’ provisions in West Papua. A petition signed by over half a million people is still being circulated inside the country.
The parliamentary questions and government statement follow a hearing of the Dutch Foreign Affairs Committee in November 2020, at which members of the United Liberation Movement for West Papua, including Interim President Benny Wenda, addressed Dutch MPs.
Eighteen states in the Pacific Islands Forum called for the UN High Commissioner to be allowed in to West Papua in August 2019. Over 79 countries in the Organisation of African, Caribbean and Pacific Group of States echoed the call in December 2019, and last November the UK government added its voice. With 83 countries now calling for Indonesia to grant UN access, the pressure on Jakarta is becoming immense.
The High Commissioner’s office has said that it still aims to secure access to West Papua, but that obstacles are being placed in its way by the Indonesian state. On November 30 last year the High Commissioner’s office put out a strongly worded statement condemning human rights abuses in West Papua.
The ULMWP announced the formation of a Provisional Government of West Papua in December last year, pledging to retake the country and reclaim Papuan sovereignty. The Provisional Government is leading international efforts to secure a vital UN visit to West Papua, and will continue to increase the pressure on the Indonesian government.
Source: ULMWP Website