http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/home/indonesia-detains-ukrainian-tourist-in-restive-papua/559361
Indonesia Detains Ukrainian Tourist in Restive Papua
December 02, 2012

 Indonesian plain clothes police officers question Ukrainian tourist Artem 
Sapirenko (2nd L), 36, before detaining him in the town of Manokwari, in 
Indonesia's restive Papua region on December 1, 2012. Indonesian police in 
restive Papua on December 1 detained a Ukrainian tourist attending a prayer 
session to commemorate the 51st anniversary of the region's movement for 
independence. (AFP Photo/Abdul Muin







Indonesian police in restive Papua on Saturday detained a Ukrainian tourist 
attending a prayer session to commemorate the 51st anniversary of the region’s 
movement for independence.

Artem Shapirenko, 36, was detained by police in the town of Manokwari in 
western Papua where around 50 people took part in a prayer at the traditional 
leaders council building. It was unclear why he had been held.

Shapirenko, wearing a Bob Marley T-shirt, held his fist in the air and yelled 
“Free Papua” in Indonesian as police officers ushered him into their vehicle, 
said an AFP reporter in Manokwari.

A photocopy of the man’s tourist visa, obtained by the police, showed it had 
expired in July this year.

“A Ukraine citizen, Artem Shapirenko, is undergoing questioning at police 
headquarters and is cooperating,” Manokwari police chief Ricko Taruna Mauruh 
told AFP.

Papua declared independence from the Dutch on December 1, 1961, but neighboring 
Indonesia took control of the region with force in 1963. It officially annexed 
Papua in 1969 with a UN-backed vote, widely seen as a sham.

The separatist Free Papua Movement (OPM), which formed in 1965, also marks the 
birth of its organization on the December anniversary, when rallies and 
commemorations are held across Papua.

Police had beefed up security ahead of the anniversary and arrested three youth 
activists in the city of Jayapura, capital of Papua, according to a provincial 
police spokesman.

Jakarta keeps a tight grip on Papua and foreign journalists are de facto banned 
from reporting in the region.

More than 170 people are imprisoned in Indonesia for promoting separatism, most 
of them from Papua or the Maluku islands in eastern Indonesia, according to 
Human Rights Watch.

Agence France-Presse


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