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Subject: Act Over Papua Rights Abuses, Activists Urge RI Govt
The Jakarta Globe November 17, 2009
Activists Want Indonesia to Act Over Papua Rights Abuses
by Markus Junianto Sihaloho
Activists on Monday urged the government to push the police in their
stalled investigations of a number of human rights violations in Papua,
particularly the murder of Opinus Tabuni, who was killed in August 2008.
Haris Azhar, deputy chairman of the Commission for Missing Persons and
Victims of Violence (Kontras), said that nothing significant had been
turned up in police investigations into the murder of Opinus, which began
last December.
"The government should take a stance in terms of legal enforcement
in this case, and other human rights violations," Haris said.
Opinus was shot and killed as he attended a celebration of the United
Nations International Day of the World's Indigenous People in Wamena on
Aug. 9, 2008.
Shots were fired after a small number of participants raised the
Morning Star, the flag of the West Papuan pro-independence movement,
triggering chaos in the middle of the festival.
An investigation team from the National Commission on Human Rights (Komnas-HAM)
found that local military and intelligence officers were present at the
incident.
Haris also said the Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) had received
reports of violence perpetrated by police officers against people holding
peaceful demonstrations in Papua.
Most recently, he said, police officers attacked a demonstration being
held by members of the motorcycle taxi community and the Bau Bau Legal Aid
Institute in Bau Bau city, Papua, last month, injuring six protesters.
Though an internal police inquiry is being conducted into the case,
Haris said a criminal investigation was necessary.
"Papuans will always be targeted through such violent acts if the
attacks are not seriously investigated by security agencies," he
said, adding that police needed to complete their investigations into the
murder of Opinus as they were obligated to do so.
Ridha Saleh, deputy chairman of Komnas-HAM, agreed, saying on Monday
that the police needed to finish their investigations into any human
rights violation, particularly the Opinus Tabuni case.
He said Komnas-HAM had already handed over results of its own
investigation into the murder, along with the commission's
recommendations, to President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and the National
Police.
Separately, Army spokesman Brig. Gen. Christian Zebua said the military
would not influence investigations of criminal cases, including those
occurring in Papua.
"If evidence is found that a soldier had a hand in the incident,
we will respect all legal procedures," Zebua said.
Meanwhile, it was reported that a Morning Star flag flew for 30 minutes
in front of the Papuan People's Consultative Assembly in Jayapura on
Monday, before the police removed it and arrested three people.
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