From ETAN:
Groups Urge U.S. Action on West Papua  Rights as Security Situation Deteriorates
Contact: John M. Miller,  ETAN, +1-718-596-7668
Lynn  Barclay, Land is Life, +1-413-320-9510
Ed  McWilliams, WPAT, +1-575-648-2078
April  10, 2009 - Human rights  organizations have urged the U.S. government and Congress to investigate  and act on the continued violations  of human rights in West  Papua.
The letter from the West Papua Advocacy Team (WPAT), Land Is Life, and the  East Timor and  Indonesia Action Network (ETAN) highlighted the deteriorating security situation  in West Papua.
As the letter was being sent, the security situation in  West Papua continued to deteriorate, with reports of additional armed clashes in  the Papuan capital of Jayapura  as well as the cities of Biak, Nabire and Wamena. Violent mass arrests were also  taking place.
"These developments underscore the urgency of U.S.  Government and Congressional action to address the crisis in West Papua," said  Ed McWilliams of WPAT. McWilliams is a retired senior U.S. Foreign Service Officer who served  in Jakarta. "Washington must press Jakarta to deal with Papuans fundamental  grievances."
The letter called on the U.S. to investigate and condemn  recent human rights violations  and urged "the U.S. Government and Congress... to press for an internationally  facilitated, senior level dialogue between the Indonesian Government and  Papuans, including Papuan civil society, to address long-standing Papuan  concerns and grievances." Among these are calls for demilitarization of the  territory and an end to repression and release of those arrested for peaceful  protest, provision of essential services, and self-determination.
The  letter was also sent to Secretary of  State Hillary Rodham Clinton and key members of Congress on East Asian and foreign  affairs.
A copy of the letter is  below.
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April 9,  2009
Senator John F.  Kerry, Chair, Foreign Relations  Committee
Rep. Howard L. Berman, Chair, Foreign Affairs Committee
In the past week,  the Indonesian military and police have reacted with extreme violence to growing  peaceful, public protests in several cities throughout West Papua. On April 6,  Brimob police shot at least eleven peaceful protesters, four of whom are in  critical condition. A primary-school age child was among the wounded, according  to hospital officials. On April 3, police in the West Papua capital Jayapura, broke into the office of  the Papuan Customary Council, a legally recognized organization representing  over one million Papuans, arresting over a dozen people, an unknown number of  whom remained incarcerated. The police also seized Customary Council office  files and equipment. In Wamena, the police arrested three Papuan  students.
This latest spate of government violence targeting peaceful  protesters follows a series of arrests of dissenters under charges of  "subversion" and "incitement," two provisions of law dating back to the Dutch  colonial era that have been widely criticized by the UN and human rights  organizations.
In recent months, Papuans have been demonstrating in  support of calls for the release of Papuans detained for peaceful exercise of  their rights to assembly and freedom of speech, as documented by international human rights  organizations such as Amnesty  International and Human Rights  Watch among others. Demonstrators also have demanded action to afford  Papuans their right to self-determination, a right denied them in a referendum  organized by the Indonesian government in 1969, widely recognized to have been  rigged.
Indonesian military and police continue to restrict international  efforts to monitor developments in West Papua. Four Dutch journalists last week  were detained and deported notwithstanding the fact they held appropriate visas.  Those few international officials who do manage to enter West Papua endure  disruption of their itineraries by security forces. The 2007 visit by Congressman Eni Faleomavaega and  Ambassador Cameron Hume is one example. Indonesian security forces also threaten  many Papuans who seek to communicate with visiting officials such as UN human  rights official Hina Jilani in  2007. Even Jakarta-based diplomats face bureaucratic hurdles in attempts to  visit West Papua.
The U.S. Government maintains that it respects the  territorial integrity of the  Indonesian state and, on the basis of this policy position, has been reluctant  to address the growing human rights  crisis in West Papua. At the same time, the U.S. Government and the  international community have a responsibility to protect human rights in those  circumstances where a local government either will not protect those rights or  is complicit in their violation.
We call on the U.S. Government and  Congress to investigate this clear evidence of human rights  abuse in West Papua.
The U.S. Government and Congress should also  publicly express to the Government of Indonesia in the strongest terms, their  opposition to these violations of human rights.
We also urge the U.S.  Government and Congress, in concert with others in the international community,  to press for an internationally facilitated, senior level dialogue between the  Indonesian Government and Papuans, including Papuan civil society, to address  long-standing Papuan concerns and grievances. These include calls for  demilitarization of West Papua, an end to repression of Papuans exercising their  human rights and release from detention of those arrested for peaceful dissent,  provision of services essential to health and economic security, and Papuan  self-determination.
Sincerely,
John M. Miller
National  Coordinator, East Timor and Indonesia Action Network (ETAN)
Brian  Keane
Director, Life is Life
Ed McWilliams
West Papua Advocacy Team
cc:  Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton
Sen. Richard G. Lugar, Ranking Member, Committee  on  Foreign Relations Committee
Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, Ranking Member, Committee  on Foreign Affairs
Rep. Eni Faleomavega, chair, Subcommittee on Asia, the  Pacific, and the Global Environment
Rep. Donald A. Manzullo, Ranking Member, Subcommittee  on Asia, the Pacific, and the Global Environment
Sen. James Webb, Chair, Subcommittee on East Asian  and Pacific Affairs
Sen.  Johnny Isakson, Ranking Member, Senate Subcommittee on East Asian and  Pacific  Affairs
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John M. Miller         fbp@igc.org
National Coordinator
East Timor  & Indonesia Action  Network (ETAN)
PO Box 21873, Brooklyn, NY 11202-1873 USA
Phone: (718)596-7668   Mobile phone: (917)690-4391
Skype:  john.m.miller
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