Papuans gather during a protest in Sorong at Indonesia's West Papua province, Oct. 29, 2009. Hundreds of people stage a protest call on a referendum for Papua independence. (Sumitro Sunanto/Reuters)

Indonesia: Raise a flag, go to prison

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Happy independence day in West Papua?

By Peter Gelling - GlobalPost
Published: December 1, 2009 10:55 ET

JAKARTA, Indonesia — In several cities across West Papua, Indonesia’s last frontier of separatist instability, hundreds of demonstrators raised the Morning Star independence flag Tuesday in protest of what they say is more than 40 years of colonial occupation by Indonesia.

Police confirmed that at least 13 people had been arrested for raising the flag, a crime that carries a sentence of up to life in prison. Amnesty International estimates that dozens of other Papuans had been arrested previously this year for hoisting the flag, some of whom were beaten during and after their arrests.

Amnesty International also reported that at least one person had been killed, beaten to death by police, in April during another independence demonstration. Local media reports seeping out of the remote province Tuesday said police violently dispersed a protest in the capital of Jayapura. Other reports said police opened fire on or near a crowd, but that could not be independently verified.

The protests marked the 48th anniversary of when the Free Papua Movement first declared independence from the Dutch.

Information from within the resource-rich province of Papua, which occupies the western half of the island of New Guinea, is often difficult to come by. The foreign news media is banned from traveling to Papua under threat of deportation or even prosecution. Two Dutch video journalists who shot a Papuan protest in March were arrested, detained and swiftly deported.

But reports in the last year suggest there remains a sustained separatist presence in Papua and violence appears to be increasing. Several clashes between the Indonesian military and independence fighters preceded Indonesia’s national parliamentary elections in April, tensions that were only further stoked by the arrival in March of Nicolas Jouwe, the 85-year old founder of the Free Papua Movement who now lives in the Netherlands.

Jouwe came at the request of Indonesian authorities, who said at the time they hoped to begin discussions on a possible settlement of the decades-old conflict, one of President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono’s central campaign pledges. No discussion ever took place.

Indonesia took over Papua from the Dutch in 1963 and in 1969 formalized its control over the region after a vote of some 1,000 Papuan community leaders that was widely thought to be rigged. The United States, which viewed Indonesia as an important ally against communism, backed the vote. A small group of armed rebels and other independence advocates have waged a low-level separatist campaign ever since.

Indonesia has long struggled to quell independence movements across the sprawling archipelago. East Timor became independent in 2002 after 24 years of Indonesian control and several years of United Nations administration. After East Timor voted for independence in 1999, Indonesian militias led a scorched-earth campaign that killed more than a 1,000 civilians and burned an estimated 70 percent of the country’s infrastructure.

A separatist movement in the northern-most province of Aceh battled the Indonesian military for almost 30 years before agreeing to a peace deal after the crippling tsunami in 2004.

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Posted by AndrewJ on December 1, 2009 18:04 ET

Yesterday the Jakarta Globe reported Air Marshal Sagom Tamboen said no other country in the world would allow the raising of a flag that had secessionist connotations, “We will prevent such flag raisings".

My response was that the United States still allows people to fly the Confederate and Texas flags, both the Aboriginal and Eureka flags are flown in Australia, Italy allows the Sicilian flag, and the list goes on.

Who is West Papua ? The colony which was traded in the 1962 New York Agreement; a deal which the NSC and McGeorge Bundy coerced President Kennedy into, a deal which benefited Bundy's friend Robert Lovett and the Freeport corporation which wanted Papua's vast gold & copper wealth.

I'm hoping the Global Post will rescue investigative journalism, because our world needs to know the truth about global issues instead of believing the easy sound bite. So Thank you to Philip Balboni, Charles Sennott, and Peter Gelling for what I hope are many clear and trustworthy reports.

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