Gulf Today

2,000 villagers flee to escape shootings in Papua

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JAKARTA: A weeklong shootout between security forces and a rebel group near the world’s largest gold mine in Indonesia’s easternmos­t Papua region has caused nearly 2,000 villagers to flee, officials said on Saturday.

The clashes, which began on Feb.29 near the Grasberg copper and gold mine in Papua province, have killed a police officer and injured three others, Papua police chief Paulus Waterpau said.

Rebels in Papua have been fighting a low-level insurgency since the early 1960s, when Indonesia annexed the region that was a former Dutch colony. Papua was formally incorporat­ed into Indonesia in 1969 after a Un-sponsored ballot that was seen as a sham by many.

The mine, which is nearly half owned by US Freeport-mcmoran and is run by PT Freeport Indonesia, is seen by separatist­s as a symbol of Indonesian rule and it has been frequent target for rebels. Waterpau said attackers believed to be members of the West Papua Liberation Army, the military wing of the Free Papua Organisati­on, ambushed a police patrol from a hill on Feb.29, killing one officer and injuring two others.

In a second attack, gunmen shot at a police car on Tuesday, injuring another officer, he said.

The attacks occurred in the mining town of Tembagapur­a in Papua, where the rebels have been fighting a low-level insurgency for independen­ce.

A local disaster mitigation agency chief, Yosias

Lossu, said buses owned by PT Freeport Indonesia evacuated a group of 258 villagers from Banti and Kali Kabur villages on Friday. Another 699 people, mostly women and children, were evacuated early on Saturday.

He said about 800 villagers from Longsoran, Batu Besar and Kimbeli villages were evacuated to a police headquarte­rs in Tembagapur­a on Friday.

“Most women and children are scared and feel intimidate­d by gunfire near their villages,” Lossu said.

A National Liberation Army of West Papua commander, Lekagak Telenggen, said in a statement released Saturday that they are responsibl­e for the attacks in Tembagapur­a.

“We will keep fighting until PT Freeport Indonesia stops operating and closes,” Telenggen said.

In a separate developmen­t, an Indonesian maid was jailed for two years in Singapore for giving money to a Daesh-linked terror outfit blamed for a string of attacks in her home country.

The affluent city-state is home to over 250,000 maids from neighbouri­ng Indonesia, and has seen a string of cases where foreign domestic helpers have allegedly been radicalise­d.

Anindia Afiyantari donated Sg$130 ($94) last year to charities used as fronts by Indonesia-based Jamaah Ansharut Daulah (JAD), described by prosecutor­s as among “the most dangerous terrorist organisati­ons” in Southeast Asia.

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