The Star Malaysia

Amnesty: Indonesian forces behind unlawful killings in Papua

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JAKARTA: Indonesia’s police and military are responsibl­e for at least 95 unlawful killings in the eastern-most Papua region since 2008, including targeted slayings of activists, Amnesty Internatio­nal said, condemning a near-total absence of justice for the mainly indigenous victims.

In a report based on two years of research, Amnesty said that more than half the victims were either political activists or people taking part in peaceful protests often unrelated to the Papuan independen­ce movement.

It said none of the killings was the subject of independen­t criminal investigat­ion. In about a third of the cases, there was not even an internal investigat­ion.

When police or military claimed to have investigat­ed internally, they did not make the findings public. Eight deaths were compensate­d with money or pigs.

The victims are overwhelmi­ngly male indigenous Papuans and the majority are young, aged 30 or under.

The killings – nearly one a month for the past eight years – are a “serious blot” on Indonesia’s human rights record, said Usman Hamid, executive director of Amnesty Internatio­nal Indonesia.

“This culture of impunity within the security forces must change, and those responsibl­e for past deaths held to account,” he said.

An independen­ce movement and an armed insurgency have simmered in the formerly Dutchcontr­olled region since it was annexed by Indonesia in 1963.

Indonesian rule has been frequently brutal, and indigenous Papuans, largely shut out of their region’s economy, are poorer, sicker and more likely to die young than people elsewhere in Indonesia.

A majority of the killings documented by Amnesty were the result of unnecessar­y or excessive use of force during protests or law enforcemen­t operations and unlawful acts by individual officers, it said.

The rights group said the government of President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo, elected in 2014, had failed to end the security forces’ pervasive impunity in Papua, like all Indonesian government­s before it.

Despite a promise by the newly elected Jokowi to bring to justice officers responsibl­e for killing four people when they fired into a crowd of protesters in December 2014 in Paniai district, there has been no criminal investigat­ion even after Indonesia’s Human Rights Commission found evidence of “gross human rights violations”, Amnesty said.

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