Other Updates

 
4

Tempo Magazine March 12 - 18, 2002 Dracula's Curfews 

4The National Women's Human Rights Commission (Komnas HAM Perempuan) decided to centre this year's celebration of International Women's Day, 8 March, in Timika, Papua,
4

Tempo Magazine March 12 - 18, 2002 Murder Probe Investigating the Red Berets: The investigating team is certain it knows the murderer of Theys Eluay. 

4Free Papua group campaigns for lawsuit against UN's role in 1969 vote 
4Jeremy Corbyn MP, vice chair of the all-party Parliamentary Human Rights Group, called a press conference on Thursday
4A NUMBER OF EUROPEAN AMBASSADORS VISIT PROVINCIAL GOVERNMENT AND THE DPRD PAPUA
4Press Release by TAPOL, the Indonesia Human Rights Campaign, 22 March 2002
4Indonesian army chief urges Irian Jaya not to listen to separatists
4The National Women's Human Rights Commission (Komnas HAM Perempuan) decided to centre this year's celebration of International Women's Day, 8 March, in Timika, Papua,
  

Press Release by TAPOL, the Indonesia Human Rights Campaign, 22 March 2002

TAPOL has today written to the Foreign Office protesting at the failure ofthe ambassadorial mission of the EU to meet leaders of the Papuan Presidium Council.

This follows leaked information from Jayapura last week that the governor of Papua, Joop Salossa, had been instructed to prevent the EU ambassadors from meeting the PDP because such a meeting might reflect negatively of the recently introduced special autonomy for Papua.

TAPOL was informed that a letter was sent to the PDP by the Spanish embassy in Jakarta, on behalf of the European Union, as holders of the EU presidency, saying that such a meeting could not take place.

In its letter to Ben Bradshaw, minister at the British Foreign Office, TAPOL said:

'It seems to us outrageous that efforts were made to prevent the ambassadors from meeting the PDP leadership and that the EU chose to comply with such pressure. There can be no justification whatever for the EU ambassadors not to meet the PDP leadership, bearing in mind that this 
organisation is widely representative of opinion in West Papua whose views on all matters, including the question of special autonomy, should be heard by the EU. The failure of the ambassadors to meet the PDP leadership undermines the very legitimacy of the mission.'

TAPOL called on the British Government to ensure ensure that the EU makes every effort to consult the PDP leadership on all matters related to the present situation in West Papua, including their views on Papua’s current special autonomy status. 

TAPOL, the Indonesia Human Rights Campaign

   

1999 | 2000 | 2001 | 2002 | 2003 | 2004