Nine shot dead in Indonesia's restive Papua, say police
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[July 16, 2022]
(Reuters) -Nine people were shot dead in
Indonesia's easternmost region of Papua in an attack believed to be
perpetrated by armed separatists, police said on Saturday.
Police in the provincial capital of Jayapura told local media the
incident, the deadliest in recent years, occurred on Saturday morning in
the remote highland area of Nduga.
"It's true there was an attack on civilians that resulted in 10 (people
sustaining) gunshot wounds, nine of whom died," Faizal Rahmadani,
director of criminal investigation at the Papua regional police, told
state news agency Antara.
Authorities were investigating the incident but had prioritised
evacuating civilians, he said.
Reuters could not immediately reach the Papua police spokesperson for
comment.
Saturday's attack comes days after protests about a new law that will
see the region divided from two into five provinces, with the addition
of South Papua, Central Papua and Highland Papua provinces.
The government says the new administrative regions will accelerate
development, improve the delivery of public services and create more
opportunities for Papuans to join the civil service.
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But critics say the move will give Jakarta more power
over the far-flung, resource-rich region, where a low-level battle
for independence has been waged since the area became part of
Indonesia after a controversial United Nations-supervised vote in
1969.
The West Papua Liberation Army, which the government
has designated as a terrorist organisation, this month rejected the
administrative carve-up, threatening to shoot dead any officials
involved.
"Jakarta's divide-and-rule strategy was opposed across the board in
Papua .... Papuans are concerned that more non-Indigenous Papuans
will arrive, further marginalizing them in their own land," said
Veronica Koman, an Indonesian human rights lawyer with Amnesty
International Australia, of the deadliest attack since 2018.
"It is likely Papuan armed fighters today sent a message that more
non-Indigenous Papuans are not welcome."
A report by the Institute for Policy Analysis of Conflict this week
said the West Papua Liberation Army had "unleashed an unprecedented
level of violence in Papua" since its "Declaration of War" in 2018,
primarily driven by the group's ability to acquire more weapons.
(Writing by Kate LambEditing by William Mallard and Mark Potter)
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