Ref:  Koq tak kelihatan orang Papua yang turut demo?

http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/news/oxford-free-west-papua-office-furore-smolders-on-in-indonesia/

Oxford ‘Free West Papua’ Office Furore Smolders on in Indonesia 
Golkar questions West’s support for Indonesian control of Papua, citing East 
Timor precedent

By Ezra Sihite & Carlos Paath on 4:32 am May 8, 2013.
Category News, World
Tags: Indonesia diplomatic relations, Indonesia-UK, OPM Free Papua Movement, 
Papua 
 
Jakarta protestors draw parallels between Indonesian Papua and British-occupied 
Northern Ireland. (EPA Photo/Adi Weda)

Noises of fury over the launching of a Free West Papua Campaign office in 
Britain continued to emerge from the Indonesian government on Tuesday, although 
one lawmaker was more philosophical.

Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa said he could not understand why the British 
government was unwilling to take steps against the Free West Papua office, 
opened in Oxford last month.

“We see this as completely at odds with the enthusiastic friendship between our 
two nations, and hope they can understand why we feel so upset,” Marty said at 
the State Palace on Tuesday.

The minister said he assumed that the office had been established in accordance 
with Oxford local regulations, but asked that the British government 
nevertheless step in.

“One more time, we’re asking the British government to try to understand why 
this cannot be tolerated, what they’re doing,” Marty said.

But a prominent Indonesian lawmaker said that government should not be 
surprised by the development.

“The integrity of the Unitary State of Indonesia is in our own hands,” People’s 
Consultative Assembly (MPR) Deputy Speaker Hajriyanto Thohari said in Senayan 
on Tuesday.

“We can’t leave it up to other nations. Of course the government has to stay on 
guard,” the senior Golkar Party figure added.

“We often hear that officially, international leaders, including from the big 
Western governments, say they’re supportive, that Papua is a part of 
Indonesia,” he said.

“But look at the case of the exit of East Timor from Indonesia in the old days. 
How much the Western nations said they supported our sovereignty. But along the 
way, due to the interference of foreign nations, the province was lost,” 
Hajriyanto said. “The West is always like that, you can’t trust them 
completely.”

Indonesian media has reported that the campaign office belongs to the Free 
Papua Movement (OPM), an armed paramilitary organization operating from various 
hotspots of dissent across Papua and West Papua provinces.

The Free West Papua Campaign, however, is an organization comprised 
predominantly of British citizens with the stated aim of highlighting the human 
rights situation in Papua and campaigning for a referendum on the future of the 
region.

The launching of the campaign office was attended by the local member of the 
British House of Commons for Oxford East, Andrew Smith, and an Indonesian-born 
Papuan, Benny Wenda.

Benny was granted political asylum by the British government following his 
escape from custody while on trial for what his supporters say were trumped-up 
charges designed to silence the Papuan leader.

Benny’s arrest came shortly after four Indonesian Special Forces (Kopassus) 
soldiers abducted and murdered popular pro-independence figure Theys Eluay.

During his 2002 trial on charges carrying a possible 25 year prison sentence, 
Benny escaped from detention with the help of sympathizers and made it across 
Indonesia’s border with Papua New Guinea. With the help of human rights 
activists, he made his way to Britain.

In 2011 the Indonesian government sought Interpol’s help by issuing a red 
notice requesting Benny’s arrest and extradition to Indonesia.

The red notice was however rejected by the international police organization in 
2012 after an investigation concluded that the allegations against Benny were 
“politically motivated and an abuse of the system.”

After he was summoned on Monday by the Indonesian government, British 
ambassador Mark Canning issued a statement intended to defuse the tension.

“The position of [the] British government on this matter is quite clear. We 
respect the territorial integrity of Indonesia and do not support calls for 
Papuan independence. We regard Papua as being part of Indonesia.


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