Penjajah Indonesia ternyata jauh lebih biadab daripada penjajah Belanda. 
Tahanan politik penjajah Belanda masih bisa jalan2 leye2 duduk dibawah pohon 
Sukun, bagaimana dengan tahanan politik penjajah Indonesia? 
 

 
---In GELORA45@yahoogroups.com, <ilmesengero@...> wrote :

 https://www.freewestpapua.org/info/human-rights/ 
https://www.freewestpapua.org/info/human-rights/
 
 
 Human Rights WARNING – the following article contains some disturbing images.
 Ever since the invasion of West Papua over fifty years ago, the Indonesian 
security forces have committed a never ending catalogue of extreme human rights 
violations.
 Over 500,000 civilians have been killed in a genocide against the indigenous 
population. Thousands more have been raped, tortured, imprisoned or 
‘disappeared’ after being detained. Basic human rights such as freedom of 
speech are denied and Papuans live in a constant state of fear and intimidation.
 Genocide 
 ‘Trophy’ photograph taken by an Indonesian soldier after he and his comrades 
murdered Ninuor Kwalik and his 12 year old nephew Daugunme. April 1998
 
 Almost all Papuans will be able to tell you stories of friends or family who 
have been murdered. A paper 
http://www.law.yale.edu/documents/pdf/intellectual_life/west_papua_final_report.pdf
 prepared by the Yale Law School for the Indonesian Human Rights Campaign in 
2004 found “in the available evidence a strong indication that the Indonesian 
government has committed genocide against the West Papuans”.
 A further study 
http://sydney.edu.au/arts/peace_conflict/research/west_papua_project.shtml 
carried out by the University of Sydney  claims that the continuation of 
current practices in West Papua “may pose serious threats to the survival of 
the indigenous people of the Indonesian province of Papua.”
 Many towns and villages have witnessed wholesale massacres of their people. 
One such example was the ‘Biak Massacre‘ in 1998, where over 200 people 
including women and children were rounded up by the Indonesian military, loaded 
onto vessels, taken to sea and thrown overboard.
 Torture 
 A Papuan man is tortured with a machete by an Indonesian solider, during a 
harrowing incident that captured international media attention. October 2011
 
 The use of torture by the Indonesian security forces against the indigenous 
Papuan population is widespread.
 There is much documented evidence of this endemic behaviour and in recent 
years video footage (captured as ‘trophy footage’ by Indonesian soldiers) has 
been leaked and broadcast on international news channels such as Al Jazeera and 
Channel 4 News.
 Watch Channel 4 News report on torture in West Papua 
 Rape Sexual assault and rape has been repeatedly used as a weapon by the 
Indonesian military and police.
 In a public report to the U.N. Commission on Human Rights in 1999, the Special 
Rapporteur on Violence Against Women concluded that the Indonesian security 
forces used rape “as an instrument of torture and intimidation” in West Papua, 
and “torture of women detained by the Indonesian security forces was 
widespread”.
 The Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Centre for Human Rights prepared a full report 
on “Rape and Other Human Rights Abuses by the Indonesian Military in Irian Jaya 
(West Papua), Indonesia”.
 Freedom of Expression 
https://www.freewestpapua.org/info/human-rights/police-arrest-a-man-at-a-ceremony-in-west-papua-to-commemorate/
 Police arrest a man at a peaceful independence demonstration. 
 
 The basic rights to freedom of expression are almost completely denied in West 
Papua. Anyone expressing any criticism of Indonesian rule and in particular 
aspirations for West Papuan independence can expect to be persecuted by the 
police and imprisoned.
 Recently, leading human rights organizations KontraS Papua and the Commission 
for the Disappeared and the Victims of Violence, published a report on the 
increasing tendency of the Indonesian state to charge people peacefully 
expressing their desire for political independence with treason. They state:
 ‘In 2010, cases with a political dimension have characteristically become 
ensnared by the charge of makar, the Indonesian word for treason or rebellion… 
altogether in 2010, 32 people were charged or investigated in connection with 
Article 106 on makar.’
 Political Prisoners 
https://www.freewestpapua.org/info/human-rights/yusak_pakage/
 Yusak Pakage, sentenced to 10 years in prison for attending a West Papua flag 
raising ceremony.
 
 There are currently hundreds of West Papuan political prisoners being held in 
West Papua and across Indonesia. Many are serving long prison terms for 
peacefully protesting against Indonesian rule or for being members of 
organisations calling for West Papuan independence.
 Filep Karma is a particular case in point, serving a 15 year jail sentence 
simply for raising the West Papuan national flag. He is an Amnesty 
International prisoner of conscience. Conditions in the prisons are often very 
poor and maltreatment of prisoners is common with many being beaten and 
tortured while detained. Prisoners have often developed severe health problems 
and been denied access to medical care.
 Lives Lived in Fear 
 Papuans return to find their homes in burnt to the ground by the Indonesian 
army
 
 Many Papuans live in a constant state of fear and intimidation. People living 
in villages across West Papua can at any time be subject to military sweeping 
operations.
 Under the pretence of looking for insurgents, the military have repeatedly 
swept through entire rural areas killing arbitrarily and burning whole villages 
to the ground, destroying subsistence food crops and livestock and forcing 
people to flee into the forests where they are prone to starvation and disease.
 Impunity 
 Indonesian special army force (KOPASSUS) have committed widespread human 
rights abuses in West Papua
 
 Despite public statements that the Indonesian government is improving its 
human rights record, the situation on the ground seems very different. There 
are often limited or no investigations into human rights abuses and if any 
discipline is handed out it is normally of little significance to the 
perpetrators of the abuses. Amnesty International states:
 “Impunity for human rights violations is commonplace. Accountability 
mechanisms to deal with police abuse remain weak, and reports of torture by 
members of the security forces often go unchecked and unpunished. Many victims 
of past human rights violations in Papua are still awaiting justice.”
 Access to Journalists and NGOs 
 Indonesian soliders pose for a ‘trophy photo’ after killing West Papuan tribal 
elder Yustinus Murib
 
 West Papua is currently off limits to international journalists. If discovered 
without permission they are arrested and deported by the Indonesian 
authorities. Some have even been attacked and imprisoned.
 It is clear that Indonesian authorities will stop at nothing to keep the 
ongoing genocide they are directing in West Papua out of the international 
media agenda. West Papua has also become impossible to operate in for many 
NGOs. In 2010 the International Red Cross were expelled, and in 2012 Peace 
Brigades International were forced to leave. International human rights 
organisations such as Amnesty and Human Rights Watch are also denied access to 
West Papua.
 Reports The grave human rights situation in West Papua has been well 
documented by a number of leading NGOs who have compiled multiple damning 
reports:
 Human Rights in Papua – Asian Human Rights Commission 
 Out of Sight – Endemic Abuse and Impunity in Papua’s Central Highlands – Human 
Rights Watch 
 Protest and Punishment – Political Prisoners in Papua – Human Rights Watch 
 Papua Digest – Amnesty International 
 

 
 
 
 



  

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