Indonesia deploys 1,000 soldiers as Papua hit by fresh unrest

Indonesian policemen disperse protesters in Timika, Indonesia's restive Papua province.
Indonesian policemen disperse protesters in Timika, Indonesia's restive Papua province.
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AFP, Manokwari :
Violent protests erupted anew Wednesday in Indonesia’s restive Papua region, with a market torched and street battles breaking out between police and demonstrators as more than 1,000 security personnel were deployed to contain the unrest.
Jakarta has called for calm in its easternmost territory-where an insurgency against Indonesian rule has simmered for decades-following riots triggered by the detention of dozens of Papuan students in Java at the weekend.
On Wednesday, as many as 5,000 people protested in and around the city of Timika, where an AFP reporter saw demonstrators throw rocks at the local parliament building and try to tear down its fence.
The crowd, which also reportedly pelted shops and homes with rocks, dispersed as riot police fired warning shots.
Indonesian media reported police arrested 45 people, including some they accused of masterminding the protests and damaging buildings.
Hundreds also marched through the streets of Sorong city, and hoisted the banned Papuan flag in the town of Fakfak on the western end of the island, which is divided between Indonesia and
the nation of Papua New Guinea. Police fired tear gas to disperse crowds in Fakfak after they set fire to a market and destroyed ATMs and shops, local media reported.
Indonesia’s chief security minister Wiranto, who goes by one name, headed to Papua late Wednesday in a bid to quell tensions, while President Joko Widodo was also expected to visit.
Several cities in resource-rich Papua were brought to a standstill this week, including Manokwari, where businesses and the local parliament building were set ablaze by angry demonstrators.
Authorities are hunting for more than 250 inmates who had escaped from a prison in Sorong that was torched during the riots.
Several police officers had been injured, authorities said, and there are unconfirmed reports of wounded demonstrators. No deaths have been reported.
Some 1,200 extra police and troops have been deployed to Manokwari and Sorong from other parts of the country, according to the government and Papuan authorities.
But security personnel were not equipped with live bullets, and the situation was “generally under control”, national police spokesman Muhammad Iqbal said Wednesday. The move could nevertheless aggravate tensions, observers warned.
“It’s making Papuans even more angry,” said human rights lawyer Veronica Koman, a frequent commentator on Papuan issues. “I’m really afraid this is getting out of control,” she added. The government has moved to slow down internet connections in parts of Papua to stop the spread of online hoaxes it said could spark more demonstrations.
Anger boiled over at reports that authorities tear-gassed and briefly detained some 43 Papuan university students in the country’s second-biggest city, Surabaya, on Saturday-Indonesia’s independence day.
 “It is sad that the Indonesian government only listens to their decades of frustration when these people retaliated,” said Andreas Harsono, a researcher at Human Rights Watch in Jakarta. Papua has been the scene of a decades-old rebel insurgency aimed at gaining independence from Indonesia, which took control of the former Dutch colony in the 1960s.
Security forces have long been accused of committing rights abuses against its ethnic Melanesian population, who say they’ve not shared in the region’s vast mineral wealth.
Tens of thousands of Papuans have been displaced amid intense fighting between troops and guerrillas after a rebel faction killed 19 construction workers at a remote jungle camp last year.
The employees of a state-owned contractor had been building bridges and roads as part of efforts to boost infrastructure in the impoverished region.
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