The Borneo Post

Indonesia summons UK ambassador over separatist office

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JAKARTA: Indonesia yesterday summoned the British ambassador in Jakarta to protest after a group supporting the independen­ce of the restive Papua region set up its headquarte­rs in England, the envoy said.

Mark Canning said he was summoned to see Indonesian Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa, who ‘conveyed to me in clear terms the strong concern of the Indonesian government at the opening of a ‘Free West Papua’ office in Oxford’.

The ‘Free West Papua’ group last month establishe­d the headquarte­rs in the southern English city, and the opening ceremony was attended by the city’s mayor and a member of parliament.

“I explained to the minister that we recognised the sensitivit­y of this issue for Indonesia,” said Canning in a statement.

“The position of (the) British government on this matter is quite clear. We respect the territoria­l integrity of Indonesia and do not support calls for Papuan independen­ce. We regard Papua as being part of Indonesia.” He stressed that the opening of the office ‘has nothing whatsoever to do with the British government’.

At the weekend, Natalegawa issued a statement saying the office was ‘clearly incompatib­le and contrary to the friendly relations that have existed between the two countries’.

The issue of separatism in Indonesia remains deeply sensitive, particular­ly after the bloody secession of East Timor which gained its independen­ce in 2002.

For decades, ethnic Papuans in the mountainou­s and sparsely populated region have rejected the area’s special autonomy within Indonesia.

They have demanded a referendum on self-determinat­ion for the region’s estimated population of 3.6 million.

The vast area is split into two provinces for administra­tive purposes, Papua and West Papua, but some — such as the group which set up the office in Oxford — refer to the whole region as West Papua.

Indonesia has strict treason laws and courts have handed down stiff penalties from 20 years’ jail to life for people caught with separatist symbols such as the Papuan flag.

Around 130 people are currently imprisoned in Indonesia for peacefully promoting separatism, most of them from Papua or the eastern Maluku islands, according to Human Rights Watch. — AFP

 ??  ?? Marty Natalegawa
Marty Natalegawa
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