http://www.theage.com.au/world/west-papuan-leader-held-by-police-20130513-2jiau.html

West Papuan leader held by police
  Date  May 14, 2013 
  a.. 
 
Michael Bachelard
West Papuan independence movement leader Victor Yeimo was detained and 
allegedly beaten by police on Monday as another prominent Indonesian national 
politician warned Western countries against supporting separatists in the 
troubled province.

But police spokesman Senior Commissioner I Gede Sumerta Jaya denied that Mr 
Yeimo and three other protesters had been harmed, saying they were simply 
detained for up to 24 hours because they had failed to secure a proper permit 
for a rally.

The rally was held to protest against the fatal police shooting of three 
protesters in demonstrations on May 1.

Mr Yeimo, the leader of the unarmed KNPB separatist movement, was detained 
after police said the rally was disturbing traffic, and that its organisers had 
failed to nominate how large it would be.

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About 200 protesters were outnumbered by 700 police and 22 police trucks, the 
province's Baptist Church leader, Socratez Yoman, said.

But, asked if the four protesters were beaten, Commander Gede said: ''The 
police now are different. We don't do that.

''Because their violations carry a penalty of less than one month, we cannot 
arrest them, but we have the right to question them for 24 hours,'' he said.

In Jakarta, Ramadhan Pohan, the deputy secretary-general of President Susilo 
Bambang Yudhoyono's Democratic Party, again reinforced how sensitive Indonesian 
politicians are about West Papua and its 50-year-old separatist movement.

Mr Ramadhan, who is also the deputy chairman of the national parliament's House 
Commission I, which oversees foreign relations, referred to the appearance of 
exiled independence leader Benny Wenda at the TEDx conference in Sydney in 
early May and called for Australia to be more sensitive.

''Australia or any friendly countries must be sensitive about Indonesia's 
problem [of separatism],'' he said.

''If later [it is proved] that Australia does support [Benny Wenda] the 
Government must be firm in cutting off diplomatic ties. The unitary state of 
the Republic of Indonesia is a non-negotiable situation.''

A spokesperson for Australia's Department of Foreign Affairs said: ''As is 
widely recognised by the Indonesian government, the Australian government does 
not support independence for Indonesia's Papuan provinces''.


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