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2019 Papua protests

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2019 Papua protests
Part of the Papua conflict
Protesters marching in Sarmi Regency
Date19 August 2019 – 23 September 2019
(1 month and 4 days)
Location
Various cities and towns across Papua and West Papua provinces, smaller rallies across other Indonesian cities
Caused by
GoalsPapuan Independence
Status
  • Internet in Papua shut down by Indonesian authorities
  • Indonesian government rejects calls for independence referendum
  • Protests continue despite government ban[1]
Parties
Free Papua Movement
Papuan students
Pro-independence Papuans
Lead figures
Casualties and losses
31–33 dead[a]
2 dead[b]

A series of protests by Papuans in Indonesia began on 19 August 2019, and mainly took place across Indonesian Papua, as a response to the Surabaya arrests of 43 Papuan students for alleged disrespect of the Indonesian flag. Many of the protests involved thousands of participants, and some grew from local protests in Surabaya to demanding an independence referendum for the whole region. In several locations, the protests turned into general riots, resulting in the destruction of government buildings such as in Wamena, Sorong and Jayapura. Clashes between violent protesters and police resulted in injuries, with over 30 people killed from both the clashes and the rioting.

In response to the rioting, the Government of Indonesia had implemented an internet blackout in the region. A Reuters reporter from the Jakarta bureau described the unrest as Papua's most serious in years.[9]

Background

Map of Indonesian Papua, comprised by the present provinces of West Papua and Papua.

As a successor state of the Dutch East Indies, Indonesia claimed all of the Dutch colonial territories in the Malay Archipelago, including Papua, formerly known as Netherlands New Guinea. The sovereignty over the region was transferred to Indonesia in 1969 following the controversial "Act of Free Choice". In the years that followed, a low-intensity insurgency has occurred across the region. After December 2018, tens of thousands of civilians around Nduga Regency were displaced following increased military presence and fighting with separatist fighters due to a massacre of workers constructing the Trans-Papua Highway. In an attempt to reduce tensions in the region, the Indonesian government granted increased autonomy to provinces comprising the region, with sitting president Joko Widodo (Jokowi) visiting the region six times since he was sworn into office in 2014.[10]

Timeline

August

15 August rallies

On 15 August 2019, the anniversary of the 1962 New York Agreement and coinciding with a discussion on Papua in the Pacific Islands Forum in Tuvalu,[11][12] protests by Papuans were held across several cities in Indonesia, including Jayapura, Sentani, Ternate, Ambon, Bandung, Yogyakarta, Jakarta, and Malang.[13] Various Papuan student groups joined the protests, which proceeded peacefully in Yogyakarta and Jakarta but saw dispersal by authorities and several protesters arrested in other cities, though they were released soon afterwards. In Bandung, civil militias forced the protesters to change the rally's location.[14] In the city of Malang, Papuan protesters clashed with counter-protesters and later fans of the football club Arema Malang, with racist slurs from the counter-protesters. Five protesters were reported to be "heavily injured" and virtually all protesters were injured in some way.[15][16]

16 August Incident

On 16 August 2019, around the celebrations of the Independence of Indonesia, forty-three Papuan students in Surabaya, East Java were arrested by police following reports that an Indonesian flag was damaged outside the building they lived in.[17] According to police accounts, the building where the students stayed was stormed by police as a crowd was gathering outside the building preparing to assault it.[18] Civil militias from the Islamic Defenders Front and the Pancasila Youth were reported to be present at the location and had attacked the students verbally and physically.[19] Allegedly, the mob had yelled "Monkeys, get out" at the students.[20]

Protests grow

On 19 August, a crowd of what was estimated by an AFP reporter to be "several thousand" began protesting in Manokwari, the capital of West Papua province. The protest turned into a riot which resulted in the local parliament building being torched. According to Indonesian officials, three police officers were injured by rock-throwing protesters.[21] Aside from public facilities, some private property were also torched.[22] Some of the protesters were carrying the Morning Star flag - the old flag of Netherlands New Guinea used by Free Papua movement - while crying out pro-independence slogans.[18] In Indonesia, the action is punishable by up to 15 years of prison.[23] West Papua's vice governor Mohamad Lakotani [id] remarked that the city's economy was completely paralyzed by the protests.[24] According to a spokesman from the National Committee for West Papua, a female protester was shot in the ankle during the protests at Manokwari. Indonesian Armed Forces told media that 300 soldiers were deployed to Manokwari on 21 August,[25] with an overall count of 1,200 security personnel across the week.[9]

Jayapura, the region's largest city and the provincial capital of Papua, saw hundreds of protesters who forcefully took down the Indonesian flag in front of governor Lukas Enembe's office.[23] Protesters also blocked the road to the city's Sentani Airport.[26]

In the city of Sorong, protests also occurred with reported gunshots.[27] In response to the "monkey" slur in Surabaya, some of the protesters dressed as monkeys.[20] A mob invaded the Domine Eduard Osok Airport and threw rocks at the airport's glass windows, damaging the terminal building.[28] The attack also temporarily disrupted the airport's operations.[29] Aside from the airport, the city's prison was also torched, resulting in the escape of 258 convicts and injuring some prison guards,[30] though on 23 August a prison official noted that most of the escaped prisoners simply were attempting to escape the fire and check for their families, and that most of the escapees have returned to prison.[31]

Around 4,000-5,000 protesters rallied in the mining town of Timika, which saw the damaging of a hotel near the local parliament of the Mimika Regency. Further clashes between protesters and police occurred in front of the parliament building, as police dispersed a crowd waiting for Mimika's regent Eltinus Omaleng. Dozens were eventually arrested, charged with damaging of the hotel or coercing a local car repair shop to provide tires for a tire fire. 3 policemen were reported to be injured.[32][33][34]

Thousands of protesters also rallied in the town of Fakfak on 21 August, which saw a local market and office building torched and protesters blocking roads to the Fakfak Torea Airport. Police also fired tear gas on the protesters to disperse the crowds. According to an Indonesian police spokesman, the situation was "contained" and only around 50 people were involved in the torching of the market building. Several people were injured in the protests and clashes.[35][36]

Rallies were also held in the towns of Merauke, Nabire, Yahukimo and Biak.[25][27][37]

Internet blackout

Papuan students in Jakarta also held a rally in front of the Ministry of Home Affairs on 22 August.[38] On the same day, the Indonesian government announced a total internet blackout in both regions of Papua.[39]

More peaceful protests continued, with a peaceful "long march" in Sarmi Regency on 23 August[40] and a pro-independence rally in Semarang the following day.[41] Other rallies protesting the racism were also held in Yogyakarta,[42] Bandung[43] and Denpasar,[44] among others. Some activists noted that the protests were the largest to happen in the region for years.[45]

Protests continued on 26 August, with the West Papuan flag being flown by peaceful protesters in Deiyai Regency numbering 5,000 according to organizers, alongside simultaneous rallies in the Papuan towns of Wamena, Paniai, Yahukimo, and Dogiyai in addition to off-Papua cities such as Makassar.[46] The protest later grew to over 7,000 participants.[47]

On 28 August, protesters in Deiyai demanded Deiyai's regent sign a petition demanding an independence referendum, but according to official accounts a large mob attacked officers guarding the location, and in the ensuing clashes one Indonesian Army sergeant was killed and some officers injured. There were also reports of civilian casualties - according to the Indonesian National Police, two civilians were killed[48] while local media Suara Papua reported six fatalities.[8][49] Local human rights activists reported seven civilian deaths.[4] The police later stated that five protesters were killed following an attempt to seize police weapons.[3]

Escalation of violence

On 29 August, protesters reportedly charged and torched several government buildings and a shopping center. The Indonesian police reacted by firing tear gas and rubber bullets at the demonstrators.[50]

On the morning of 30 August, continued violent protests resulted in the General Elections Commission branch in Jayapura to be torched, burning documents of local representatives elected in the 2019 election. Protesters had also torched buildings and cars the previous day in the city,[9][51] breaking into a prison in Abepura district.[52] That night, a further 1,250 security personnel were deployed to Jayapura.[9]

On the same day, pro-independence protesters occupied the provincial governor's buildings. The protests spread outside the regions of Papua and West Papua, with pro-papuan independence protests even being held in the Indonesian capital of Jakarta.[53][54]

September

Soldiers and militias open fire on demonstrators

On 1 September, three Papuan students had reportedly been shot in their university dormitories by pro-government militia groups. Footage emerged of Indonesian soldiers firing live rounds into nonviolent protesting crowds during the previous week, killing 6-8 demonstrators.[55][56] Indonesian police arrested dozens of demonstrators involved in the protests. Indonesian authorities allege the arrested demonstrators had taken part in the torching of government buildings on 29 August.[57] A young Papuan man was reportedly killed after Indonesian police arrived to disperse a demonstration in Abepura.[54]

Ban on protests

On 2 September, the Indonesian government flew an additional 6,000 police and military servicemen into Papua amidst the internet blackout. Indonesian authorities banned what they deemed were "violent protests" and warned that any person caught "supporting separatism" or "expressing separatist opinions" in public would be arrested and charged with treason.[1] Indonesian immigration authorities announced that four Australian nationals that had allegedly taken part in pro-independence demonstrations would be deported from the country.[58][59]

On the same day, the Indonesian government announced that access to the regions of Papua and West Papua to foreign nationals would be restricted.[60] Indonesian police blocked a pro-independence march on Manokwari.[56]

On Wednesday, 4 September, Indonesian police chief Luki Hermawan accused human rights lawyer Veronica Koman of sparking the Papua protests by using her Twitter account to spread information about the arrest of 43 Papuan students in East Java, stating that "she was very active in spreading provocative news."[61] Indonesia's national police chief vowed to find and arrest suspected activists, and stated that the police "will chase them ... we already know who they are."[62] Later, Indonesian officials submitted an Interpol notice to arrest Koman - who according to police spokesman had left for Australia - following a raid in her deserted Jakarta home.[63]

The United Nations Human Rights Office issued a statement condemning the violence in Papua, calling on Indonesian authorities to restrain nationalist militias targeting protesters and prevent the ongoing by that point intimidation of journalists, human rights defenders and students. The office also called for official dialogue between the Indonesian government and the people of Papua.[64]

On 5 September, the Indonesian government partially lifted the internet blackout that it had imposed on the region, while warning that it could abruptly reinstate it any point, if it deems that the situation had "worsened".[65][66]

Protests resume

One student was reported to have been killed during fresh protests on September 23, with the Indonesian military claiming that protesters had burned down a government office in Wamena.[67] According to the commander of the local military district, 16 civilians were killed and 65 injured with no police or military casualties in the ensuing riots. According to local authorities, the particular set of protests was triggered by a separate racism incident within the city. A Kompas correspondent in Wamena reported that gunshots sounded across the city and that civilians were taking shelter in police stations and military bases.[68] Out of the 16 civilians killed, 13 had come from outside the province, and most deaths occurred as they were trapped in buildings torched by the angry mob.[6] Responding to the protests, the Communication and Information Ministry reactivated the internet blackout in Wamena.[69]

In separate protests and clashes in Jayapura, three protesters were reportedly killed from shots by police, alongside one police officer killed. The clashes in Jayapura occurred between a group protesting at Cenderawasih University which according to authorities was the Papuan Students Alliance,and authorities in addition to pro-military civilian militias.[5]

Refugees

Owing to the rioting and unrest, around 15,000 civilians were evacuated from Wamena, with a further 1,726 internally displaced within the town in early October.[70] Going the opposite direction, around 2,000 Papuan students returned from other cities across Indonesia to their home towns and cities, reporting a feeling of intimidation and danger.[71]

Reactions

Domestic

Responding to the protests, the Indonesian Ministry of Communication and Information Technology implemented an internet shutdown around Sorong, in a move that was stated to be one to combat disinformation,[20] later expanded to cover the entire region.[9] The ministry also reported to have shut down social media accounts which "shared provocative content".[32] The internet shutdown resulted in another protest against the ministry in Jakarta by rights organisations.[72]

On the night of 19 August, President Joko Widodo released a statement urging calm and noted to the Papuans that "it's OK to be emotional, but it's better to be forgiving. Patience is also better.".[73] Joko Widodo also prepared a visit to the region.[20] Coordinating Minister for Political, Legal, and Security Affairs Wiranto also released a statement which promised a "complete and fair" investigation into the incident in Surabaya and added that the situation in Papua was under control.[73] Wiranto further claimed that a "certain party" was benefitting from the chaotic situation.[9] Also stated that he had instructed security forces to avoid repressive measures and not use regular ammunition, and rejected the possibility of a referendum.[52] National Police chief Tito Karnavian claimed that the riots had been caused by, aside from the incident in Surabaya and treatment of the involved students, a hoax about one of the students being killed during their detention.[73]

Deputy Speaker of the People's Representative Council Fadli Zon called for an investigation into parties responsible for the racism incident in Surabaya.[74] East Java's regional police formed a team to investigate the accusations.[75] Bishop of Amboina Petrus Canisius Mandagi [id] called for peaceful protests and remarked that Papuans "should not be savage like those who spout racism".[76] Indonesian Senator from Papua Yorrys Raweyai [id] called for the disbandment of Nahdlatul Ulama's Banser, claiming that the militia's disbandment was a demand from the protesters at Sorong.[77] Papua governor Lukas Enembe visited the Papuan students' building in Surabaya on 27 August but he was turned away by the students, who had been rejecting all visitors such as Surabaya's mayor Tri Rismaharini.[78][79]

Tri Susanti, a Gerindra member and a leader of the Surabaya protests against the Papuan students, publicly apologized following the protests across Papua and denied accusations of physical violence against the students.[80]

West Papuan independence figure Benny Wenda commented that the incident in Surabaya had "lit the bonfire of nearly 60 years of racism, discrimination and torture of the people of West Papua by Indonesia".[45] A spokesperson for the West Papua Liberation Army (a pro-independence armed group) stated that the group had not participated in the protests.[52]

International

 United Nations — UN Human Rights Commissioner Michelle Bachelet urged the Indonesian government to enter into talks with Papuans. She noted that Indonesian authorities had not permitted her to visit Papua, despite agreeing to such a visit "in principle" before the start of the protests.[81]

 Australia — The Australian government urged restraint "by all relevant parties", with the nation's foreign minister stating that Australia was "very concerned" about reports of violence in Papua would "follow up" with Indonesian authorities.[82]

 Solomon Islands — The Solomon Islands filed a joint petition with Vanuatu to the UN Human Rights Commission, in which the countries voiced their "deep concern" for what they deemed to be ongoing at that point violations of human rights and ethnic discrimination practiced by the Indonesian government against Papuans. The two nations also condemned the fact that Indonesian authorities had not yet given access to Papua to the UNHR Commissioner.[83][84]

 Vanuatu — Prime Minister Charlot Salwai criticized alleged human rights abuses perpetrated by the Indonesian government before the United Nations General Assembly, citing Papua as one of the few remaining Pacific territories that have "yet to break the shackles of colonialism". An Indonesian diplomat present at the meeting condemned the Vanuatu Prime Minister's statement and declared that "Papua is, has [been] and will always be, part of Indonesia".[85][86]

Arrests

Following the protests, dozens of people were arrested under various charges. In Jayapura alone, police reported arresting 28 suspects under charges of looting and damaging buildings, among others. Two students in Jakarta who allegedly flew the West Papuan flag were arrested under charges of treason.[87]

Four Australian citizens were deported from Sorong by Indonesian authorities after having found to take part in the protests.[88] On 9 September, police arrested 18 people from the student dormitory of Cenderawasih University in Jayapura.[89]

Notes

  1. ^ 5[3]–7[4] dead during clashes in Deiyai on 28 August, 23 civilian deaths in Wamena from rioting on 23 September, and three shot in Jayapura in the same day.[5][6][7] The majority of deaths in Wamena were non-Papuan civilians.
  2. ^ 1 Indonesian Army sergeant killed in Deiyai on 28 August,[8] and one police officer during clashes in Jayapura.[5]

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