http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,25690451-2703,00.html

Papuans 'tortured by Indonesian army'
Stephen Fitzpatrick, Jakarta correspondent | June 26, 2009 

Article from:  The Australian 

INDONESIA's controversial special forces, which are trained by Australia, have 
been accused of new human rights abuses in the troubled province of Papua.

In a report by US-based Human Rights Watch, off-duty members of the elite 
Kopassus branch of the Indonesian army are said to have tortured and abused 
Papuans. 

The claims coincide with a rise in reported violence in the province and a 
visit this week by presidential candidate Jusuf Kalla to the resources-rich but 
services-poor region. 

The report documents the claims of several residents in the town of Merauke, 
southeastern Papua, who say they were beaten by plainclothes soldiers in 
Kopassus headquarters. 

Under a memorandum signed in January by Australia's Defence Force Chief Angus 
Houston and his Indonesian counterpart, Djoko Santoso, Kopassus troops are 
among those trained by Australia's military. 

The report calls on Australia, the US and other countries to reconsider their 
military co-operation with Indonesia. 

Military spokesman Vice-Marshal Sagoem Tamboen rejected the abuse claims, 
suggesting HRW's informants "could be just fighting amongst themselves, and 
then blaming our soldiers". 

He said concerns over Kopassus abuse should be reported to military police, 
although the HRW report documented one complainant being told by regular police 
it was "too dangerous for them to do anything". 

The elite special branch, whose implication in human rights atrocities goes 
back to 

the communist purges of 1965-66, is led by Major General Edhie Wibowo, 
brother-in-law of President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono. 

General Wibowo is also the son of one of the special forces' great heroes, the 
late Sarwo Edhie Wibowo, who was heavily involved in the 1965-66 anti-communist 
purge that accompanied the overthrow of founding president Sukarno. 

As Kopassus chief at the time, Wibowo Sr was responsible for enforcing the 
so-called "act of free choice" by which Papua was incorporated into the 
Indonesian state. Papuan activists claim they were coerced into that 1969 
decision. 

The new report documents claims by Merauke residents of being kicked, punched, 
whipped with hoses and forced to eat raw chillies in the Kopassus barracks. 

One alleged victim, a man named Petrus, 41, said a soldier shouted at him 
during a beating: "You Papuans, one single Kopassus soldier can kill you like 
chickens." 

The report is the second this month from HRW to claim human rights abuses in 
the closed province, where visits by foreign journalists are rarely allowed and 
strictly monitored. 

On June 5, the organisation released a report detailing claims of beatings in 
Abepura prison, in the main northern city of Jayapura. They included claims of 
political prisoners being beaten and tortured, then moved out of sight during a 
visit to the jail by Justice and Human Rights Minister Andi Mattalatta


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