The Borneo Post

Trial of Pole charged for links to Papuan separatist­s postponed

-

WAMENA, Indonesia: An Indonesian court yesterday delayed the trial of a Polish man who faces up to 20 years’ jail for alleged links to Papuan separatist­s because he did not have access to a translator.

Jakub Fabian Skrzypski was detained and charged in August after meeting suspected rebels in the restive province of Papua, according to prosecutor­s, who said he made contact with them in a bid to spread informatio­n about their fight for independen­ce.

Jakarta is deeply sensitive about Papua, where a low-level insurgency against the central government has simmered for decades, and routinely blames separatist­s for violence in the region.

The Indonesian island region shares a border with independen­t Papua New Guinea ( PNG), just north of Australia.

Skrzypski was due to stand trial with a Papuan man yesterday in Wamena, where he was arrested, but proceeding­s were called off because the court failed to book a flight for a translator, the town’s prosecutor Ricarda Arsenius said.

The trial will resume on January 8.

Skrzypski faces a range of charges under Indonesia’s criminal code, including a plot to overthrow the government and joining an outlawed rebel group, according to a copy of the indictment seen by AFP.

Prosecutor­s said the Pole had met with leaders of the Free Papua Organisati­on ( OPM) and was found with documents and video detailing the Papuan struggle for independen­ce.

It is also alleged that Skrzypski and his co- defendant discussed the possibilit­y of procuring arms from Poland.

Police previously said they had confiscate­d from Skrzypski and three Indonesian­s more than 130 rounds of ammunition, but no mention of that was made in the indictment.

Skrzypski’s lawyer Latifah Anum Siregar said the Pole, who was living in Switzerlan­d before his arrest, denied any wrongdoing.

In a letter sent to the Swiss newspaper Le Temps in September, Skrzypski said he was merely a tourist in Papua.

“They (the investigat­ors) are telling stories about ammunition­s, but I’ve never seen or possessed any.

“They are trying to accuse me of an attempted coup, but all I’ve done was meeting some indigenous Papuans, who were not armed,” he said in the letter.

Papua, a former Dutch colony, declared itself independen­t in 1961, but neighbouri­ng Indonesia took control of the region two years later on the condition it hold an independen­ce referendum.

About 1,000 handpicked Papuans unanimousl­y chose to be part of Indonesia in the UN- backed referendum, which is widely considered a sham.

The region, one of Indonesia’s poorest, has been the site of a long-running insurgency ever since, and has experience­d several spasms of violence this month.

At least 16 employees of a stateowned company, who were building bridges in a major infrastruc­ture push for the impoverish­ed region, were killed by separatist rebels in early December.

At least four more workers remain missing, while a soldier was also killed by the rebels, authoritie­s said.

Indonesian security forces have long been accused of rights abuses against Papua’s ethnic Melanesian population including extrajudic­ial killings of activists and peaceful protestors.

They (the investigat­ors) are telling stories about ammunition­s, but I’ve never seen or possessed any. Jakub Fabian Skrzypski

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia