Exclusive-Indonesia's troop surge in Papua aims to 'wipe out' armed
rebels: police intel chief
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[May 21, 2021]
By Tom Allard and Agustinus Beo Da Costa
JAKARTA (Reuters) -A new security crackdown
on armed separatists in the central highlands of Indonesia's restive
Papua region will be maintained until they are wiped out, the country's
police intelligence chief said.
Amid a worsening conflict, some 400 extra troops have been deployed to
Papua following the assassination of a senior intelligence official
there and the designation of separatists as "terrorists" by the
Indonesian government last month.
In an interview with Reuters, Paulus Waterpauw, an indigenous Papuan and
head of Indonesian police intelligence, made the strongest remarks yet
about the resolve of Indonesian authorities to suppress the decades-long
armed separatist rebellion in resource-rich Papua.
"The objective is to wipe out those behind these horrible acts of
violence," he said. "This operation will go on until we get the maximum
result. As long as they have not been arrested, we will do our utmost to
incapacitate them and catch them."
Waterpauw cited the killing of 19 road workers in December 2018, the
destruction of schools and health clinics, and attacks on civilians as
some of the "brutal recent events" that had prompted the troop surge.
Sebby Sambom, a spokesman for the Free Papua Organisation, the main
separatist group in Papua, said there were "reasonable reasons" behind
the group's attacks.
"The military and police targeting will not succeed," he added. "Every
year there will be new fighters. They will increase, not decrease."
Papuan separatists say their struggle is legitimate because former
colonial power the Netherlands promised the region it could become
independent before it was annexed by Indonesia in 1963.
Indonesia says Papua is its territory after a 1969 vote supervised by
the United Nations backed Papua's integration. Separatists say that
vote, which involved about 1,025 people, did not reflect their
aspirations.
Waterpauw told Reuters the new taskforce set up to tackle violence in
Papua - known as Operation Nemangkawi - had two prongs. The pursuit and
arrest of armed separatists and a "soft approach" - community
development and increased consultations with religious and community
groups.
Waterpauw said there had been 26 attacks by armed separatists this year,
including three on Tuesday.
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Paulus Waterpauw, head of the National Police Intelligence and
Security Agency, gestures as he talks during an interview at his
office in Jakarta, Indonesia, April 29, 2021. REUTERS/Ajeng Dinar
Ulfiana
Two soldiers were ambushed and had their weapons
confiscated by armed separatists and "were chopped up and mutilated
and killed", he said. In the two other incidents on Tuesday, five
soldiers were wounded.
Human rights monitors and analysts said there had been abuses by
both sides.
"We are continuing to receive credible reports of excessive use of
force by the military and police, including extrajudicial killings,
harassment, arbitrary arrests and detention of indigenous Papuans,”
Ravina Shamdasani, a spokeswoman for the U.N. High Commissioner for
Human Rights, told Reuters last month.
CORRUPTION PROBE
The Indonesian government also has launched a new campaign to
prosecute allegedly corrupt officials in Papua accused of siphoning
off some of the 1,092 trillion rupiah ($76 billion)of funds sent to
the region by the central government since 2001.
This "huge" amount of government funding had not led to major
improvements in the welfare of Papuans, which remain among the most
poverty-stricken in Indonesia, he said.
"In handling the perpetrators suspected of misappropriating state
finances, some regional heads or their staff will be investigated
and processed," he said.
He said the police anti-terrorism unit, known as Detachment 88, had
not yet been deployed to Papua. The "terrorist" designation applied
to separatists will help authorities uncover their funding, he
added.
Earlier this week, Indonesian Security Minister Mahfud MD said the
separatist movement in Papua had three wings: political, clandestine
and terrorist.
"We invite dialogue with the political and clandestine group," he
said.
($1 = 14,367.0000 rupiah)
(Reporting by Tom Allard and Agustinus Beo Da Costa; Editing by
Stephen Coates)
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