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Tampilkan postingan dengan label Jeniifer Robinson. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label Jeniifer Robinson. Tampilkan semua postingan

2/17/2013

Leaks reveal it's past time to speak for West Papua

Jennifer Robinson Lawyer Wikileaks and West Papua
Having been unjustifiably targeted on the ''WikiLeaks Threat'' list in secret US documents leaked in February, I was somewhat surprised to be left off the Indonesian intelligence watch list leaked last month about West Papua. I mean, every man and Naomi Robson was on it. And I've been acting as lawyer to exiled Papuan independence leader Benny Wenda far longer than I've acted for Julian Assange.

Robson's listing was as much a damning indictment of the quality of Indonesian intelligence as a reflection of Indonesia's paranoia about journalists seeing West Papua. While Robson, in safari suit and lizard, was there to ''save'' a child from alleged cannibals rather than to expose human rights abuse by the Indonesian military or report on Papuans' aspirations for independence, she was arrested because that is exactly what she would have seen and - hopefully - reported.

The leaked documents also reveal the penetration of Indonesian surveillance on Papuans: everyone from teachers to taxi drivers is on the Kopassus payroll. I have first-hand experience of it. In 2002 I worked with advocate John Rumbiak (now in exile in the US) at Elsham, a Papuan human rights organisation. As an Australian exchange student at an Indonesian university, I had entry where journalists were denied - but it did not spare me from surveillance or intimidation.

One day I travelled to a remote village to translate for a German friend researching the impact of transmigration on indigenous Papuans. Escorted by an Indonesian priest who offered to ''help'', we were bemused by the robot-like positive responses to our questions. ''It's great,'' they said in unison, ''now we have rice and cigarettes.''

As we left, a woman walked close behind me and whispered - just out of earshot of our Indonesian escorts - ''if you want to hear the truth, come without the intel''.

Later that day I excused myself from the priest's home, saying I needed a walk. I made it only two blocks before being ushered into a Papuan home. ''Please help us. They rape and kill our people. Tell the world.''

Traumatised by the psychological warfare now revealed in the leaked documents, they drew me close to whisper. Their stories were unimaginable; I fought back tears.

After that I saw things anew. Plain-clothes intelligence officers posed as ojek (motorcycle taxi drivers) outside my house, watching who came and taking me wherever I went. Emails were read over my shoulder in internet cafes. Some Papuan friends refused to meet me in public because it attracted unwanted attention. Instead, they jumped over my back fence after dark.

Weeks later I was in court working with defence counsel on the trial of the then political prisoner and independence leader, Benny Wenda. As I left the court building plain-clothes police confronted me and took me in for questioning. I was threatened with deportation, grilled for my ''political'' activity in assisting the defence and released with a warning on condition I apologise to the chief of police.

The conflation of human rights and politics in Papua is not the sole realm of the Indonesian government. The Australian and US governments are equally guilty. I was also given a stern warning by an Australian diplomat that my human rights work risked ''becoming a political football'' for our government and that I was to ''keep [my] head down''. I soon learnt this was characteristic of the spineless and reactionary approach Australia takes to foreign policy on Papua. Similarly, a 2006 US embassy cable published by WikiLeaks condemns claims of genocide, gross human rights violations and environmental destruction in Papua as ''dramatic and vague''.

Rather than seeing human rights as a political nuisance and accusing advocates of embellishment, perhaps the US and Australia ought to push for access for international organisations and journalists so that claims can be properly investigated. In light of the recently leaked documents and the extent of human rights abuse, they should also reconsider military aid to Kopassus.

Judging by the furore over live cattle exports, it appears Australians care more about our cows than a million West Papuans being subjected to a slow-moving genocide. Stand up Naomi Robson (you may as well; you are already on the list). Stand up Australia. Let us see how long we can make Indonesia's next watch list and read it with pride when it turns up on WikiLeaks.

On Twitter: Jennifer Robinson is a human rights lawyer in London.

2/12/2013

Lawyer Jennifer Robinson blasts govt for refusing to let activist speak

Lawyer Jennifer Robinson
A leading human rights lawyer yesterday hit out at a decision banning a West Papua independence activist from speaking at Parliament.

Jennifer Robinson, a member of Julian Assange's defence team, is in New Zealand briefly with Benny Wenda, a leader of the self-determination campaign for West Papua, which is under Indonesian control.

Several MPs wanted Mr Wenda, who lives in exile in London, to speak at Parliament but the new Speaker, David Carter, refused the request.

He reconfirmed his decision yesterday despite a plea from Labour MP Maryan Street, who claimed the decision was made by the Government after advice from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade.

The Speaker's office said the request was declined because the function did not meet guidelines to using parliamentary facilities and hosting guests.

Mr Wenda was expected to speak about alleged human rights abuses in West Papua, and highlight NZ's military relationships with Indonesia.


Miss Robinson said: "It raises very serious questions about the influence Indonesia has on the New Zealand Parliament and the New Zealand Government. To prevent somebody coming to speak - merely to speak and exercise their freedom of expression - in the New Zealand Parliament building of all places ought to be of grave concern to New Zealanders about the influence the Indonesians have in their domestic and foreign policy."

Miss Robinson did not know for certain whether Jakarta would have meddled in the decision, but it made New Zealand seem very reactive to Indonesia's position on hosting a West Papuan refugee. Mr Wenda will now speak today at a seminar at Victoria University on the independence struggle in West Papua.

An Australian, Miss Robinson is based in London and works for several human rights groups. She took part in Mr Wenda's 2002 trial for masterminding a fatal attack on a police station. During the case, Mr Wenda escaped from custody and eventually reached Britain, where he was granted political asylum. He is now a British citizen.

Since 2010, Miss Robinson has been part of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange's legal team.
Yesterday she defended Assange's decision to remain holed up in the Ecuadorean Embassy in London, saying he faced a real risk of ending up in an American military prison if he left the diplomatic enclave.

There was no guarantee Sweden would not deliver him to the United States, where he could face the death penalty. Once in the US, there was every chance he could end up like alleged WikiLeaks whistle-blower and soldier Bradley Manning, who supporters claim has been subjected to degrading treatment in prison.

Miss Robinson also said she had no intention of abandoning Mr Assange, who has seen several high-profile supporters desert his cause.

The latest was the heiress and magazine editor Jemima Khan, who last Friday washed her hands of Mr Assange, comparing him to an "Australian L. Ron Hubbard" after the Scientology founder.

"We have grave concerns should he ever be returned," Miss Robinson said. Asked if she was hanging in with Mr Assange, she said: "Absolutely."

Papua's "cry for freedom" unheard for 50 years - Wenda

Mr. Benny Wenda is an activist for the independence of West Papua from Indonesia.

He currently lives in Britain after being granted political aslyum in 2003 but has been unable the country because of an Interpol ' Red Notice' or arrest warrant sought by the Indonesian government.
That threat has now been lifted and Mr Wenda is on an international tour, talking to politicians and policy makers in the USA, New Zealand, Australia and Melanesia.


Presenter:Geraldine Coutts

Speaker:Benny Wenda, West Papua independence activist

WENDA: That's Indonesia trying to because internationally telling the truth about what really happened, what's really going on and Indonesia tried to silence me two years ago.
 
COUTTS: Alright, you're on a tour, an international tour. What is your message in the countries where you're stopping?
 
WENDA: Yeah, I just carried a simple message. My people cry for freedom last 50 years and even internationally Indonesia is trying to silence me, because I think I was telling the truth and I carry the message of my people, because their world is ignoring them, so I think it's travelling that's raised the issue as well as telling the politician government here in New Zealand and Australia and some other Melanesian countries.
 
COUTTS: And was that as a result of the independent investigation by Fair Trials International that the Interpol 'Red Notice' initiated by the Indonesian Government was lifted?
 
WENDA: Yes, yes, yes, conclusion was that Indonesia just used political motivation to silence me. It is not only happening to me, but it to my people as well, because my people have been silenced for the last 50 years. So I think the time for the world to hear because of my trip to around the world.
 
COUTTS: What form did that Fair Trial International investigation take?
 
WENDA: Yeah, I think they the investigation was also there is a lot of eyewitness, including Jennifer Robertson, who is my lawyer. She's one of the also give testimony and arguments because she was in  a trial in West Papua, so that is a very strong case against Indonesian Government.
 
COUTTS: And other West Papuans, were they called, did they have their say at the trial as well at the investigation?
 
WENDA: No, only the just Fair Trial and Jennifer Robertson, they working together.
 
COUTTS: Well, what does it mean now? Does it actually allow you to go home?
 
WENDA: No, only this is because, only international, so I cannot go back to West Papua until I my people free and myself free and I will go back a free man.
 
COUTTS: You're not allowed to go back or it's self-imposed?
 
WENDA:  No, I cannot go back, because if I go back, I will be arrested and put in the prison. 
 
COUTTS: What are you hearing about what is actually happening in West Papua at the moment?
 
WENDA: West Papua it's really increasing. It's West Papua I call home of the military and that's why Indonesia now more military since the killing of the Michael Tabuni  and it's last year saw about 20 Papuan were killed, so this is more violence that is committed by the Indonesian military and police and this I call a Secret Genocide Committee by Indonesian government, police and military.
 
COUTTS: It's very difficult because of the censorship of the press, it's very difficult to get accurate and up to date information from West Papua. So how do you know what is going on and how reliable are you're sources?
 
WENDA: We are receiving 24 hours information, because in the day and night, we have people on the ground reporting. But because Indonesia able to clamp down on that area, like Amnesty International ban, Red Cross  are banned, peace brigade is banned and even media, international media, like every media are banned. 
 
Since Indonesia occupied, illegally occupied 1963 until today, Indonesia banned. So why Indonesia hiding, why Indonesia call it a democracy, and a moderate the country, then why not journalists allowed in to West Papua. That is the problem. Indonesia really why are they hiding for and that the simple question for the Indonesian Government.
 
COUTTS: Are you asking the countries that you're visiting, you're saying New Zealand, Australia and Melanesia to act on your behalf to a) allow you to go home and also to grant independence?
 
WENDA: Yes, my trip is simply asking for their support, for free my people and then I will go back a free man. Until my people not free, and I never go back and that might here in Melanesian as well as in New Zealand, Australia. Because West Papua is not Asia, it's Melanesian. They are, because Melanesian people are Micronesia, Polynesia. We are connected in the spirit as well as we are the Pacific, so this is the regional issue, so that's why it's an issue of West Papua never go away from mind of Australia and New Zealand, as of Melanesian country so that is a very important that we got my message to tell that, all the brothers and sisters in the Pacific.

NZ opposition MPs criticise speaker’s move to ban West Papuan from parliament

Benny Wenda
The decision by New Zealand’s parliamentary speaker to bar a visiting West Papuan activist from speaking at parliament this week has met with criticism from opposition MPs.

The UK-based Benny Wenda is due in Wellington tomorrow to talk about the plight of the indigenous people of Indonesia’s troubled Papua region.

Speaker David Carter’s refusal stems from advice he says he received from government officials deeming the Wenda visit inappropriate.

The Green Party MP, Catherine Delahunty, says the refusal is disappointing.

And the Labour MP, Maryan Street, says cross-party events should not be dictated to by the level of sensitivity that a government feels about them.
“He is a representative of West Papuans. He is recognised internationally as that. He has been a guest of the UK parliament, the European Union parliament and a guest at the United Nations. Why can’t he be hosted at the New Zealand parliament even if the government does not agree with his position? Parliament is more than government. It’s government and opposition.”
Maryan Street
News Content © Radio New Zealand International

West Papuan campaigner tells of life of struggle against Indonesian rule

Pacific Scoop News: Report – By the PMC news desk

West Papuan independence campaigner Benny Wenda spoke of his people’s harrowing five decades of struggle against Indonesian rule at a public meeting in Auckland last night.

Dressed in a ceremonial Papuan headdress, he was also joined by human rights lawyer Jennifer Robinson, a spokesperson for International Lawyers for West Papua, who spoke about Indonesian legal violations.

Members of the audience in Ponsonby’s St Columba community centre strongly condemned the New Zealand ban on Wenda from speaking at Parliament about the West Papuan plight.

Speaker David Carter reportedly said it’s “not appropriate” for Wenda to hold a public forum at Parliament. He gave no further explanation.

Wenda was stunned by the decision and told a Papua New Guinean journalist, Henry Yamo, who interviewed him at the Pacific Media Centre yesterday that the West Papuan issue was gaining wider attention globally.

Wenda was once arrested by Indonesian forces for promoting the independence of West Papua. He escaped jail a decade ago and was granted political asylum in the United Kingdom.