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 Flotilla Leaves Australia for West Papua Protest Voyage

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Flotilla Leaves Australia for West Papua Protest Voyage  Empty
BerichtOnderwerp: Flotilla Leaves Australia for West Papua Protest Voyage    Flotilla Leaves Australia for West Papua Protest Voyage  Icon_minitimema 19 aug 2013 - 20:50

The Jakarta Globe,  August 19, 2013.


A flotilla carrying approximately 50 West Papuan and indigenous Australian protestors bound for the Indonesian territories of West Papua began its journey from Queensland, Australia this weekend. Two boats are currently at sea and a third will leave Australia on August 20.

The protestors, who hope “to reconnect two ancient cultures and to reveal the barriers that keep human rights abuses in West Papua from the attention of the international community,” according to their website, will make landfall in early September, if their voyage goes according to plan.

“This is just a publicity stunt by some elements trying to get attention,” Michael Tene, a spokesman for Indonesia’s Foreign Ministry, told the Jakarta Globe. “It will not affect Indonesia or any other country, and it will not affect our work in the Papua provinces.”

Coordinating Minister for Political, Legal and Security Affairs, Djoko Suyanto, has threatened to deploy the navy and air force. He has also criticized Australia for allowing the flotilla to depart in the first place.

“There should be no nation allowing its soil to be used as a departure point for the movement of a group aimed at disturbing other nations’ sovereignty,” he told the Sydney Morning Herald on Sunday.

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono’s spokesman Teuku Faizasyah said that any help Australia provided to the flotilla “won’t be good for our bilateral relationships.”

After Indonesian independence, West Papua remained a Dutch overseas territory until 1962, when Indonesia and the Netherlands signed the New York Agreement at the UN headquarters, formally ending the Dutch presence in Papua.

In 1969, the Papua provinces agreed to join Indonesia in a referendum of elders, the legitimacy of which has been questioned ever since by a contingent of separatists, some peaceful and some violent.

Human-rights abuses have been frequently documented. The government bars journalists from covering issues related to independence.

Australia was quick to reaffirm its support of Indonesian sovereignty in West Papua.

“[The flotilla's] action is not supported by Australia, it’s extremely ill advised,” Australian Foreign Minister Bob Carr told Radio National, an Australian station, on August 19. “I think this activity by a fringe group of Australians offers a cruel hope to the people of the two Indonesian Papuan provinces; that is, a hope that, somehow, independence for the Papuan provinces is on the international agenda, when it’s not. The world recognizes Indonesian sovereignty as we do.”

Australia will offer the protestors nothing more than normal consular assistance if they end up on the wrong side of Indonesian law, he added.

“Bob Carr’s radio interview this morning represents the most recent comment from the Australian government — the embassy doesn’t plan to say any more on this issue today,” Ray Marcelo, a spokesman for the Australian Embassy in Jakarta, told the Globe.

Izzy Brown, a spokeswoman for the flotilla, refuted Carr’s view that West Papua is not part of the mainstream conversation.

“If he’s talking about it, that means it is on the agenda,” she told the Globe. “I hope that this action can really put West Papua on the world stage. I hope that both the Australian and the Indonesian governments pay attention, and that indigenous rights and indigenous privileges are respected.”

In recent years, protest flotillas have attracted widespread media attention, especially in 2010, when Israeli naval commandos killed nine protestors who were part of an effort to violate Israel’s embargo on the Gaza Strip.

Brown says the protestors hope for the best, but are prepared for the worst.

“The Indonesian navy is a force to be reckoned with,” she said. “If the Australian and Indonesian governments want to avoid a diplomatic incident, they should come to the table to talk about about the situation in West Papua. I hope this will be catalyst to wake up the world.”



(For as long as as Australia --live cattle export worth billions-- and the US--minerals and ore worth billions and Indonesia proffit from what they drag out of West Papua they will never and not even for a month of Sundays, think about giving this treasure trove up! They knew of the richness of West Papua and saw the opportunity to dip in under false pretences after ww2. Do these so-called protesters realy think that their escapedes are going to make any difference? All what it gets them is a lengthy time in the slammer on three day old nasi en wat sop kubis! Suckers!) siK.



*and as after thought, they are just copy-cats of that so-called flottila that went to run the Israeli blockade of Gaza, and look what it got them! The Israelis were ruthless then, we aren't even talking about the honcho's from the TNI*



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Flotilla Leaves Australia for West Papua Protest Voyage  Empty
BerichtOnderwerp: Papua Police on standby for possible visit by 'Freedom Flotilla'    Flotilla Leaves Australia for West Papua Protest Voyage  Icon_minitimevr 23 aug 2013 - 7:38





The Jakarta Post, Jakarta Friday, August 23 2013,


All police units in Papua have been warned of a possible unauthorized visit by foreign ships carrying activists campaigning for a free Papua.

"All units in coastal areas must be on the lookout for illegal visits by foreign vessels," Papua Police spokesman Sr. Comr. I Gde Sumerta Jaya said in Jayapura on Friday as quoted by Antara.

The instruction follows reports that around 50 Papuan and Australian activists are due to arrive in Papua in early September on board three sailing vessels, which together are known as the Freedom Flotilla.

"If the activists enter Indonesian waters, they will be asked to show their documents, such as visas and passports," Sumerta said.

Anyone failing to provide the proper documentation would be detained, he added.

He said the police would continue to coordinate with relevant agencies, such as immigration offices.

Meanwhile, Papua Naval Command chief Commodore I.G. Putu Wijamahaadi said the Navy would continue to carry out its routine operations, Antara reported.

"In our routine operations we use three ships, including the KRI Slamet Riyadi and the KRI Sultan Nuku, in Merauke and other areas of our maritime territory," Putu said on Friday.

He said he believed the Freedom Flotilla would stay in international waters, 12 nautical miles off the Indonesian coast.

"However, if the ships enter Indonesian waters, violating the international law of the sea, the Navy will act in accordance with the law," he added.

Indonesia was a vast archipelago with many international seafaring routes, he said, adding that foreign vessels were allowed to sail through the routes, but only if they complied with certain regulations.

"They are not allowed to stop until they have left our waters. Also, they may not conduct any maneuvers or activities while they are in our territorial waters," he said.



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