Published on Tuesday, November 9, 2010 by Agence
JAKARTA - US President Barack Obama must challenge Indonesia over its abuse and torture of Papuan civilians during his talks in Jakarta this week, human rights activists said on Monday.
"Indonesian military personnel who have received counter-terrorism training in the US will head one day to Papua and torture people there," Papuan tribal representative Markus Haluk told AFP. (AP Photo/Dita Alangkara)
The call came after an Indonesian military tribunal hearing a case of torture was described as a "farce" and a "grand deception" designed to deflect criticism ahead of Obama's arrival on Tuesday.
Top military officers had said the trial Friday in the Papuan city of
President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono had also promised "no immunity" for military torturers after a video of the incident -- in which one victim's genitals are burned with a fiery stick -- was posted online ahead of a visit to Jakarta last week by Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard.
But despite such assurances and repeated statements from military officers, it emerged late Friday from Jayapura that the trial was about a different, less serious case of abuse which occurred in March.
The Sydney Morning Herald, which first reported the existence of the online video of the May incident, said in a report Monday that the Jayapura tribunal had "proven to be a grand deception".
The
"This should be at the top of the agenda when President Obama visits
Obama's 24-hour visit to the mainly Muslim Southeast Asian country comes hot on the heels of the Pentagon's announcement that it would resume ties with
US Defence Secretary Robert Gates announced in
Few Indonesian military officers have faced justice for rights abuses dating back decades, including alleged crimes against humanity in
Papua and the Malukus have underground separatist movements which
"Indonesian military personnel who have received counter-terrorism training in the US will head one day to Papua and torture people there," Papuan tribal representative Markus Haluk told AFP.
Former US diplomat turned Papuan rights activist Edmund McWilliams, of the West Papua Advocacy Team, said the military had murdered "tens of thousands" of Papuan civilians in four decades of Indonesian rule.
The ethnic Melanesian-majority western half of New Guinea island was incorporated into Indonesia after a 1960s vote by a select group of tribal leaders which is seen by many as a sham.
"What we have seen over decades in west Papua are killings that would approach the scale of what we saw in
He said Friday's military tribunal was "bogus" and accused
"It was a classic bait and switch," he said, adding that there was a "degree of
Indonesian military officers and government officials were not available to comment.
© 2010 AFP
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