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Military spokesman Sagom Tamboen said, "no members of the military were among the 17 people detained by police." The shootings were the worst violence at Freeport since the killing of three school teachers, including two Americans, in August 2002 that sparked widespread protests by locals who feel they are not benefiting from the depletion of Papua's natural resources. Freeport employs about 20,000 people in Papua, where it has extracted billions of dollars worth of gold and copper and still has some of the largest reserves in the world. Freeport is one of the top tax payers to the Indonesian government, which is also a minority stake holder. Papua, a desperately poor mountain province, lies some 2,100 miles (3,400 kilometers) east of the capital, Jakarta. Foreign journalists are prohibited from visiting the highly militarized province of around 2.5 million people.
[Associated
Press;
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