http://www.asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2623&Itemid=175


Papuan Independence Leader Claims Abuse 


Written by Rebecca Henschke and Mohammad Ilham, Jakarta, Indonesia   
 Thursday, 05 August 2010

 In rare interview, jailed activist Filep Karma says torture is common 



Papua's most famous independence leader Filep Karma, considered a prisoner of 
conscience by Amnesty International, was jailed for 15 years after raising the 
Morning Star independence flag at a political rally in 2004. In a recent rare 
interview he claimed he is suffering mental and physical abuse in prison.

Karma is one of 48 political prisoners currently detained in Papua, something 
he believes is undemocratic. 

"My understanding is that Indonesia is a democracy and according to the law 
here, in order to hold a demonstration you don't need to have a license, but 
you need to inform the police of your activities three days before the event. I 
did that but they terrorized us in a nation that is meant to be democratic - a 
nation where freedom of speech is meant to be protected. So I want to know, is 
this nation controlled by terrorists?" asked Karma.

After it was annexed in 1969, Papua officially became part of Indonesia, but 
there have been calls for independence since and a low-level separatist 
conflict has been underway for decades. Foreign journalists are largely 
restricted from reporting in the province and the International Red Cross was 
ordered out of Papua last year after it visited political prisoners.In this 
interview, conducted without the permission of the authorities, Karma claims 
prison guards abuse him on a weekly basis. 

"I have been punched, kicked and pulled but what hurts is the mental torture we 
are subjected to. An officer told me then that when I entered the prison I lost 
all my rights, including human rights. You only have the right to breathe, eat 
and follow orders. He even went as far as to say that my life was in his 
hands," said Karma. 

Human Rights Watch recently released a report detailing torture and abuse of 
political prisoners in the country, including the case of Ferdinand Pakage who 
lost sight in one eye due to a beating by a guard. 

The head of the Papuan branch of the Human Rights and Justice Ministry, 
Nasarudin Bunas, confirms the beating took place. 

"Yes, it was very clear that Ferdinand Pakage was beaten by a guard. That's the 
truth. We are processing the case and the guard who did it is being 
investigated by the police. But yes, the guard who did it is still working in 
the jail and we are in the process of moving him, but we have to work slowly 
because we lack staff. We cannot control the prison guards all the time and I 
can't be there all the time," said Nasrudin.

He says the government is trying to change the culture of abuse in prisons. 

"We still have a problem with Papuan guards who get drunk and come to work and 
beat up prisoners. That's a problem and we are working on that. Those who like 
to get drunk and beat prisoners and don't want to work in the new system will 
be fired," he said.

Nasarudin says his local office of the ministry will send a petition to 
President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono to have 32 political prisoners in Papua 
released. Human Rights Watch and Amnesty international are also lobbying for 
their release. 

Phil Robertson, the deputy director of the Asia division of Human Rights Watch, 
says the detention of political prisoners in Papua is contrary to the 
Indonesian Constitution, which guarantees the freedom of expression. While the 
government argues the prisoners are being held because they are threat to 
national security, Robertson says the recent report neither supports nor 
negates the independence struggle and focuses only on human rights.

"Nothing in this report either supports or negates the claims of these 
activities for political separation. What we are talking about is solely the 
peaceful expression of political aspiration which should not be criminalized," 
he said. 

Filep Karma says he has been offered a pardon from the Indonesian government if 
he abandons his independence struggle, something he won't do. 

"If I accepted that, it would mean that I am sorry and did something wrong. No 
way! I did nothing wrong. What I said was the truth and my right as a Papuan. 
We are not invading another island to create another nation. We are aspiring to 
our right over our land. We were born here and this is our land of our 
ancestors. We are a different race to rest of Indonesia. Western Javanese view 
Papuans as half animal. When I lived in Java, people would call me 'monkey.' 
That was very painful. What's the point of being part of a nation where we are 
not treated as human?" he said.

Papua is rich in natural resources and is the home of the world's largest gold 
mine controlled by the US Company Freeport McMoran, yet the province remains 
one of the less-developed parts of Indonesia. 

Filep Karma refused to give details on the strength or size of the Papuan 
separatist movement, but an analyst from the Brussels-based International 
Crisis Group says it is no match for the Indonesian security forces. Karma too, 
is pessimistic about the Papuan struggle.

"If there are no changes by 2020 I think ethnic Papuans will be extinct. The 
Indonesian government is slowly killing Papuans through poison, alcohol, 
killings, stealing our ancestral land and suppressing our economic rights in 
the way our Aboriginal Australian and American Indians brothers and sisters 
were crushed. Our land is rich in natural resources and that is what the 
government wants. We must rise up! We must shout loudly for our rights. We must 
fight for independence or be destroyed!" said Karma.

This article was first broadcast on Asia Calling, a regional current affairs 
radio program produced by Indonesia's independent radio news agency KBR68H and 
broadcast in local languages in 10 countries across Asia. You can find more 
stories from Asia Calling at http://www.asiacalling.org.

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