https://jakartaglobe.id/context/indonesia-slams-un-human-rights-office-over-planned-papua-visit

*Indonesia Slams UN Human Rights Office Over Planned Papua Visit*

BY :SHEANY

JUNE 20, 2018

*Jakarta.* Indonesia has criticized the United Nations High Commissioner
for Human Rights, saying that his regional office in Bangkok should first
coordinate with the government before sending a mission to Papua, instead
of demanding immediate access.

"It is deeply regrettable that the staff members of his regional office in
Bangkok, instead of coordinating the planned visit with Indonesian
authorities, have unilaterally set the dates and areas to visit in Papua
and West Papua, while demanding immediate access," Hasan Kleib, Indonesia's
permanent representative to the United Nations in Geneva, said in a
statement
<http://mission-indonesia.org/2018/06/19/statement-delivered-by-h-e-mr-hasan-kleib-permanent-representative-of-the-republic-of-indonesia-general-debate-agenda-item-2-oral-update-with-the-high-commissioner-of-human-rights-geneva-19-jun/>
on
Tuesday (19/06).

The statement, delivered during a general debate session at the United
Nations in Geneva, came in response to a remark by UN human rights chief
Zeid Ra'ad al-Hussein, who said the government's invitation to his office
to visit Indonesia's easternmost provinces had not yet materialized.

"In Indonesia, I am concerned that despite positive engagement by the
authorities in many respects, the government's invitation to my office to
visit Papua – which was made during my visit in February – has still not
been honored," Zeid said
<https://www.ohchr.org/en/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=23206&LangID=E>
during
the 38th session of the Human Rights Council on Monday.

During his three-day visit to Indonesia in February, Zeid expressed concern
over the excessive use of force by Indonesian security forces, harassment,
arbitrary arrests and detentions in Papua. He was in the country at the
time to meet with government officials, who invited his office to visit the
country's poorest region.

According to Hasan, the UN human rights chief informed the Indonesian
government that his regional office in Bangkok would represent him on the
visit.

In a follow-up, Hasan said staff of the regional office "misleadingly
acted" as if a mutually agreed schedule was already in place for the visit,
but that the Indonesian government had yet to grant them access. He added
that this conduct was deplorable.

Hasan said Indonesia is still committed to invite Zeid or his office to
visit Papua but asserted that the regional office in Bangkok must respect
the principles of consent by the host government in the future.

For years, political grievances and an active independence movement in
Papua have generated headlines, in spite of the government's focus on
economic development to improve the situation.

In a report
<http://jakartaglobe.id/news/govt-must-address-policy-miscalculations-papua-report/>published
in November last year, the Institute for Policy Analysis of Conflict said
Papua has suffered human rights violations in the past, while there are
ongoing issues of torture, excessive use of force, lack of accountability
and restrictions on civil liberties.

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