The death
toll resulting from the latest violent protests in Indonesia's West Papua
region has risen to 32, as President Joko Widodo appealed
against the spread of fake news that provoked the clashes.
Reports say that as many as 4,000 people have been forced to evacuate due to the violence in Wamena on Monday |
Ahmad
Kamal, police spokesman in Papua province, told Al Jazeera on Tuesday that 28
demonstrators were now confirmed killed, and 66 others injured during the
protest on Monday in the city of Wamena.
That
brings the death toll to 32 including the three demonstrators and one military
officer, who were confirmed killed on Monday in Jayapura, Papua's capital city.
Late on
Monday, the president, also known as Jokowi, appealed to residents of West
Papua "not to be provoked by a hoax", the common term used in
Indonesia to refer to fake news.
Jokowi also appealed to the demonstrators not
to destroy government properties, following reports of damage to public and
private properties in Wamena.
Meanwhile, Indonesia's
national news agency, Antara, confirmed on Tuesday that "no less than
16 non-native Papuans and one native Papuan resident" were killed in
Wamena, while 66 others were injured "by
the rioters brandishing machetes and arrows".
Lt Col
Candra Dianto, a military district commander in Wamena, told Antara that those
who were injured were rushed to the local hospital for medical treatment.
Candra was
also quoted by Antara as saying that a "gun battle" erupted between
Indonesian security personnel and a group of "armed separatists" in
Wamena on Monday, leading to the deaths.
"Military
and police personnel will trace and evacuate other students that may have still
been trapped in their houses, and kiosks that the brutal rioters had set ablaze
when they run amok," Antara reported.
There
have been reports that as many 4,000 people have been forced to evacuate due to
the latest clashes. Al Jazeera could not independently confirm the report at
time of publication.
Kamal,
the police spokesman in Papua province, said in an interview with Al Jazeera
that Monday's clashes were triggered by "fake news" claiming that a
teacher in a Wamena school, called SMA PGRI Wamena, used racial slurs against a
student.
President Joko Widodo |
The
rumour quickly spread through SMS message, angering other students across the
city of Wamena.
"We
are now looking for the student who first spread the message, we want to ask
for a clarification," Kamal said.
Kamal
said that some civilians in Wamena had fled their homes and sought shelter at
local police and military stations, as well as the local legislative building,
for fear of getting caught in the violence.
Kamal,
however, insisted that they had not received any reports of demonstrators
suffering from gunshot wounds.
But Yance
Wetipo, 18, a student in Wamena told Al Jazeera, said he witnessed one of the
students getting shot.
"I
saw with my own eyes, the students were throwing rocks. The police looked
confused and panicky, and they fired tear gas to the right and left direction
of the protesters, then one of my friends was shot in his chest," he said.
Kamal
said police were looking into reports that some of the demonstrators were from
the National Committee for West Papua (KNPB) - the largest indigenous youth
group that pushed for independence.
The group
has been a frequent target of police operations.
Ones
Suhuniap, the KNPB’s spokesman, however, denied the allegations, saying the
group had never issued any instructions to take any action.
"The
anti-racism demonstration in Papua was spontaneously organised movement by the
Papuans," Ones said in a statement sent to Al Jazeera.
Indonesia's
West Papua is the poorest region in the country. It was a Dutch colony
until the early 1960s when Indonesia took control, cementing its rule with a
controversial referendum.
The government in Jakarta maintains that the
region, which occupies the western half of the island of Papua New Guinea, is
part of the country because it was under the Dutch East Indies, which forms the
basis of the country's modern-day borders.
A
low-level armed rebellion by indigenous Papuans has been rumbling for years against the central
government in Jakarta.
In December, violence
also erupted, killing 17 people, prompting a military crackdown that forced
35,000 civilians to evacuate.
Since the
latest round of violence that erupted in mid-August, several people have been killed during
protests in Jayapura.
Since then,
the government
has deployed thousands of troops to the region and arrested
activists to quell the protests.
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