West Papuan activist on trial for treason over independence petition


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West Papuan activist on trial for treason over independence petition

Helen Davidson

Campaigners have called for the release of Yanto Awerkion, 27, who faces six 
years to life in jail if found guil...
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Campaigners have called for the release of Yanto Awerkion, 27, who faces six 
years to life in jail if found guilty in Indonesian court
Tue 9 Jan ‘18 01.14 EST


 Independence campaigners have been jailed in Papua for opposing the rule of 
Indonesia. Photograph: freewestpapua.org


West Papuan independence campaigners have called for the release of an activist 
who has been put on trial for treason after he helped gather signatures for a 
petition.

Yanto Awerkion was arrested for his involvement in a pro-independence petition 
which gathered more than 1.8m West Papuan signatures.

The petition, calling for a free vote on independence, had been outlawed by 
Indonesian authorities but was smuggled out of the region and delivered to the 
United Nations in September.

The 27-year-old man is deputy chair of the Timika branch of the 
pro-independence West Papua National Committee (KNPB). According to his 
supporters he was arrested after getting on stage to speak about the petition 
at an event in May.

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The Free West Papua campaign said Awerkion’s health had seriously deteriorated 
in jail, and he had not been able to see his wife and daughter.

If convicted on the charges relating to sedition and separatism, conspiracy and 
incitement to commit an offence, Awerkion could face a prison term of between 
six years and life.

His trial was scheduled to begin in Timika on Tuesday.

In a video filmed from prison for the Free West Papua movement, Awerkion 
described himself as a political prisoner.

“Because of struggling for Free West Papua, I was arrested by the Indonesian 
military and police, and I remain in prison,” he said.

He called for international diplomats to “unite and urge the world and the 
United Nations to intervene in West Papua and to immediately organise a 
referendum in West Papua”.

A spokesman for the Indonesian embassy in Australia, Sade Bimantara, said the 
rights of people to “peacefully voice their opinions” were protected under 
Indonesian law, but “when laws are broken, the authorities will act to enforce 
the law”.

This included activities supporting or inciting acts that aim to “take over or 
separate a part of the Indonesian territory and the formation of a new state in 
its place”, he told Guardian Australia.

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Bimantara did not detail Awerkion’s alleged actions, but said “separatist 
groups in Papua and West Papua have been found to commit a number of offences”, 
and noted the death of a policeman last year.

Awerkion is not believed to be facing charges involving violence. Bimantara 
said that was a matter for the prosecutor.

The petition asked the UN to “put West Papua back on the decolonisation 
committee agenda and ensure their right to self‐determination … is respected by 
holding an internationally supervised vote”.

West Papua was annexed by Indonesia in 1963, an act formalised six years later 
with a widely discredited UN-supervised vote known as the Act of Free Choice. 
The only voters were 1,063 people selected by the military and compelled to 
vote in favour of Indonesian annexation.

“In the West Papuan people’s petition we hand over the bones of the people of 
West Papua to the United Nations and the world,” exiled independence leader 
Benny Wenda told the UN when the petition was handed over.

“After decades of suffering, decades of genocide, decades of occupation, we 
open up the voice of the West Papuan people which lives inside this petition. 
My people want to be free.”

Indonesian foreign ministry spokesperson Arrmanatha Nasir said at the time the 
petition was “purely a publicity stunt with no credibility”.

The petition also called for the appointment of a special representative to 
investigate human rights abuses but was ultimately rebuffed by the UN’s 
decolonisation committee because West Papua was outside its mandate.

There are frequent reports of mass arrests and violence by Indonesian police 
and military forces against separatists and their supporters, but information 
is difficult to verify because of restrictions on foreign media entering the 
territory.


The leader of the Greens, Richard Di Natale, called for the Australian 
government to make entreaties on behalf of Awerkion and other prisoners, and to 
support West Papua’s calls for a UN-backed referendum.

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