Letter to Australia on Papua Asylum Seekers
20 January 2006
Prime Minister John Howard
c/o Embassy of Australia to the United States
1601 Massachusetts Ave, NW
Washington, DC 20036-2273
Via facsimile: 202-797-3168
Dear Prime Minister Howard:
We strongly urge your government to respond with compassion and in compliance
with legal and international obligations with respect to the 43 West Papuan
refugees seeking asylum who arrived at Port York on January 17. While Australia
is to be commended for its timely and successful efforts to assist these men,
women, and children after their harrowing journey, it is equally important that
they now be accorded the full rights and privileges which accrue to their
refugee status.
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| Banner brought by West Papuan asylum
seekers. Photo from Torres News. |
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The circumstances of their plight, especially the systemic human rights
violations which impelled them to make this arduous voyage, are not in question.
International human rights organizations, the media, and West Papuan rights
organizations now under threat have convincingly documented the widespread and
intensifying abuse in West Papua carried out by Indonesian authorities,
primarily by the military and police. In December 2003, Yale Law School
published a report that addressed both the scale and seriousness of the
situation in West Papua. It said in part:
The Indonesian military and security forces have engaged in widespread
violence and extrajudicial killings in West Papua. They have subjected Papuan
men and women to acts of torture, disappearance, rape, and sexual violence, thus
causing serious bodily and mental harm. Systematic resource exploitation, the
destruction of Papuan resources and crops, compulsory (and often uncompensated)
labor, transmigration schemes, and forced relocation have caused pervasive
environmental harm to the region, undermined traditional subsistence practices,
and led to widespread disease, malnutrition, and death among West Papuans….Many
of these acts, individually and collectively, clearly constitute crimes against
humanity under international law.
The military and police operate with impunity within Indonesia's corrupt
judicial system. Increasing military deployment and continuing development of
"militia" to intimidate the local population, as well as the central
government's plan to divide the province, have led to a potentially volatile
climate. The marginalization of West Papuans in their own land, reflected in a
dearth of fundamental health, education and other basic services as noted in
recent World Bank reporting, has created intolerable conditions.
It is certain that the 43 West Papuan refugees would face persecution should
they be sent back to Indonesia. We urge you to ensure that they have the fair
hearings to which they are entitled.
Thank you for your consideration.
Sincerely,
Karen Orenstein, Washington Coordinator
East Timor and Indonesia Action Network
Bama Athreya, Deputy Director
International Labor Rights Fund
Kevin Martin, Executive Director
Peace Action and Peace Action Education Fund
Emily Goldman, Senior Program Officer
Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Center for Human Rights
Mary Anne Mercer, Deputy Director
Health Alliance International
Joseph K. Grieboski, President
Institute on Religion and Public Policy Secretary General, Interparliamentary
Conference on Human Rights and Religious Freedom
Additional signers
Joseph Roberson, Executive Director
Church World Service Immigration and Refugee Program
James Vijayakumar, Area Executive for Southern Asia
Common Global Ministries of the United Church of Christ and the
Disciples of Christ
Sharon Silber and Eileen B. Weiss, Co-Founders
Jews Against Genocide (Rev.) Jim Kofski, M.M.,
Asia/Pacific and Middle East Issues
Maryknoll Office for Global Concerns
see also
Members of U.S. Congress Expresses Concern
About Papuan Refugees
Australia sends Papuan refugees to distant island detention camp
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