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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: Indonesia
Eye-witness account of West Papua massacre
"People were shot, bleeding and lying on the ground"
Part 1
By Mike Head
28 November 1998
On July 6, just weeks
after the resignation of General Suharto, the Habibie regime in
Indonesia carried out a massacre of more than 150 people in the
remote West Papuan town of Biak, after hundreds of residents had
participated in raising a West Papuan independence flag.
Indonesia armed forces chief and Defence Minister, General
Wiranto, denounced the flag-raising as a "revolt against
the government" and sent in troops from Ambon island to conduct
a slaughter. Soldiers opened fire with automatic weapons on a
defenceless crowd, hauled residents from their homes, beat and
tortured scores of people, including children, and later used
naval gunships to dump bodies and victims in the sea.
The Howard government in Australia, which sent an army intelligence
officer to Biak later in July to gather information, knows of
these events but has remained silent while the Habibie regime
has covered up the atrocities.
News of the massacre has emerged largely because of the presence
in Biak of two Australian aid workers, Rebecca Casey and Paul
Meixner, who interviewed survivors and took photographs and video
footage of the scene of the shootings.
The World Socialist Web Site interviewed Casey and Meixner.
We asked them first to explain the background to the raising of
the West Papuan flag in Biak and other parts of West Papua in
the first days of July.
Paul: Most people there want independence.
Then there was a letter from the United States, which people believed
came from President Bill Clinton, to the effect that the people
of East Timor and West Papua must be set free. In fact, it turned
out to be a letter from US Congressmen urging Habibie to hold
discussions with representatives from East Timor and West Papua.
Rebecca: By the time that news of this letter
filtered through to the people of Biak they believed that Bill
Clinton had written a letter to the Indonesian government saying,
you must allow West Papua and East Timor to become independent
now. People thought they had the backing of the US government,
full stop.
Paul: There was also a belief among some people
that if they flew the flag for 72 hours then West Papua would
become their own country. There was another rumour that if Indonesians
came to attack, the Germans, the Dutch or the French, or perhaps
the Americans, or the Australians, would come to the aid of the
West Papuan people.
Rebecca: The flag-raising was also timed to
coincide with the anniversary of what would have been the day
of independence, July 1, although we did not know it at the time.
We did know that more and more people were openly talking about
freedom and independence, whereas normally they just don't. If
they talk about it, they certainly don't talk about it openly
and they don't talk about it with foreigners. All of a sudden,
there was talk of independence.
Quite a few hundred people were involved in the flag-raising.
When we went down the markets everyone was talking about freedom
and independence. Then we drove for an hour out to the resort
on the island and the staff there were walking past and saying
"Merdeka" (freedom) to each other. It seemed widespread.
WSWS: Did the events in Jakarta and across Indonesia in
May have an impact?
Rebecca: The excitement and the open talking
started after Suharto resigned. But interestingly when Suharto
resigned we did not even know about it until 24 hours later, because
no-one was talking about it. There were no big parties on the
street, as we thought there might be, probably because they would
be in big trouble. But then they started getting excited, so they
did recognise the link.
The flag went up on the Thursday afternoon. We knew that because
two of the people we were working with disappeared for the afternoon
and went down there. Later on we heard that everyone had been
dispersed with tear gas. We were advised not to go there.
On the Friday morning, we thought that everyone would have
been dispersed so we went into town on public transport. Man-made
barricades were on the streets--big tree trunks and rocks--stopping
traffic. We started walking in the direction of the Post Office
and it was strange because there were only West Papuans on the
streets and no soldiers or police anywhere.
People said to us, you can come through because you are Europeans.
We looked up and saw the flag flying. People asked us if we were
happy to see the flag flying, telling us that they were going
to become independent. We came across a burnt-out army truck with
its tyres flattened. People told us there had been trouble in
the morning.

Paul: They had beaten off a military attack
that morning--two attacks by assault police, in which two police
were killed. Police had been withdrawn. They had baton-charged
that morning and the people had fought them back and killed two
police in doing so.
Rebecca: People had cordoned the area off
with barricades to stop the trucks coming back in. We went around
the corner and there were about 200 people around the water tower
under the flag and there was a feeling of real excitement, but
also tension. We videoed a little and then left, because we did
not know what was going to happen next.
From what we knew, people just camped under the flag and danced
and sang and read from the Bible. Whole families were camped there,
including women and children.
On the Sunday night we were told that the people under the
flag had been given a deadline of 5pm to leave. Then we were told
the deadline might be extended because it was a Sunday. When we
asked our boss what would happen if the people did not leave,
he said the army would come in. I asked if he meant that the army
would shoot them, and he said yes.
That Sunday night there were soldiers everywhere and it was
not safe to go anywhere. We heard that four Hercules planes had
landed at the airport, carrying on soldiers from Ambon. The military
had plenty of forces on the island but they did not want the local
soldiers to do the shooting; they wanted people from outside.
Paul: We also saw army trucks full of West
Papuans, whom our friend explained were "contras"--local
men who had been sponsored, bribed or paid to set themselves up
as a pro-Indonesian force. There is a long history of that in
Indonesia.
WSWS: What happened on July 6?
Paul: On the Monday morning we heard the shots,
from about 6am onwards for about four hours.
Rebecca: The first thing we noticed was that
the streets were absolutely empty. Normally on a week morning
there were taxis or little mini buses going up and down the streets,
tooting their horns with music blaring. There would be students--high
school students and nursing students--everywhere. Normally there
was noise, noise, noise from dawn to dusk. That was non-existent
that morning, and then we heard the gunshots from town. Sometimes
the shots were close and sometimes they were further away.
We learned of what happened because people came and told us
and also because the hospital was only 50 metres down our street.
We saw soldiers all around the hospital in full riot gear. Later
in the day we saw people carrying containers of food and then
cautiously retreating. People down the street told us they were
families trying to see their wounded relatives in the hospital
and being turned back by the soldiers; not being allowed to see
the patients or to take them food.
The male nurses' dormitories were across the road from us and
they would come out and describe how many people were in the hospital.
They said there were 22 people there with bullet wounds but that
a lot of people had been turned away by the administrator, who
said they were the military's responsibility to treat, because
the military had shot them. There was also a navy hospital and
apparently a lot of people were sent there.
Paul: In the hospital, people were handcuffed
to the bed or had their hands tied behind them so that they could
not escape before they were questioned.
Rebecca: When we found out the extent of what
had happened, we left our house and spoke to a friend who had
just been released from the police station. He told us what happened
on the day.
Paul: He had been asleep near the tower. He
was awakened by shooting from the army all around them, moving
in. People tried to run but they were shot. If they remained behind
they were shot too.
Eventually the survivors were rounded up and they were forced
to crawl on their stomachs to the dock area, about 300 metres
away. There they were forced to lie on their backs and look at
the midday sun for about two hours. They had to keep their eyes
open while soldiers marched all over them--their stomachs and
their faces--and kicked them and hit them with rifle butts.
Rebecca: He had bruising all down one side
of his face. He was sunburnt as well. He said that in the shooting
the soldiers must have used some rubber bullets but mostly live
ammunition. He was hit by a rubber bullet, yet he was OK. It bounced
off him. But people either side of him were shot and were bleeding
and lying on the ground. One guy had his intestines hanging out.
Another person was shot in the head. The leader was shot in his
elbows and his knees repeatedly at point blank range. Once he
fell to the ground, the soldiers rifled-butted him.
Our friend described bodies, blood and dead people all around
him. He saw people being killed. And he said that a lot more people
were missing. People could not find their brothers, husbands and
sons.
Children who were there, or who had heard the shooting and
come down and then tried to run home, were caught by soldiers
and rifle-butted in the head.
Soldiers went to all the houses in the dock area and said,
right, everyone get out. They took those people down to docks
and beat them up as well. Then the 200 who were tortured at the
docks were put into jail cells, about 28 to the cell.
Paul: Down at the docks there were people
from neighbouring islands who came in to buy petrol and rice.
They were included and rounded up. For no reason, four people
were tied up with ropes, thrown into the water and then dragged
up and beaten. There was no real reason--it was just to try to
get information out of them.
Rebecca: Another survivor came and told us
an almost identical account. He had been in hiding and came to
tell us what had happened. We taped what he said and gave the
footage to a church investigation team.
By this time we thought that the military would come and search
our house. Two army intelligence guys followed us when we went
around with our video camera. We were called down to the police
station and asked all sorts of questions about what we were doing
and why we were taking video footage. They did not want foreigners
snooping around. They were afraid that we would take the information
out.
Paul: Later one of our friends told us that
people had been taken away to be dumped at sea or to be taken
to Jakarta.
The people who came to tell us what happened were brave. They
came at night, they were very nervous. They wanted us to tell
the outside world what had happened.
See Also:
Political storm over Australian Labor's
coverup of Dili massacre
[26 November 1998]
Massacre in West Papua - A first-hand
account
[20 November 1998]
Mass graves begin to reveal
scale of atrocities in Indonesia
Thousands killed in Aceh
[28 August 1998]
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