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Rebels in Papua say they killed 17 people this week

A low-level but increasingly deadly battle for independence has simmered between security forces and rebels in Papua ever since it was controversially brought under Indonesian control in a vote overseen by the United Nations in 1969.

Agencies
Jakarta
Thu, April 10, 2025 Published on Apr. 10, 2025 Published on 2025-04-10T12:44:03+07:00

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Rebels in Papua say they killed 17 people this week An Indonesian military ambulance evacuates the body of a soldier in Wamena, Papua province on December 5, 2018, who was killed after coming under rebel gunfire while investigating reports that construction workers had been shot dead by separatist rebels in Nduga. - Indonesian soldiers hunted on December 5 for rebels suspected of killing as many as 24 construction workers in restive Papua province, as an eyewitness account supplied by the military described a grisly mass execution. (AFP/Joseph Situmorang)

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ebels in Papua region said on Thursday they have killed more than 17 people since the weekend, claiming that they were soldiers disguised as gold miners, and police said the insurgents were holding two hostages.

A low-level but increasingly deadly battle for independence has simmered between security forces and rebels in Papua ever since it was controversially brought under Indonesian control in a vote overseen by the United Nations in 1969.

Sebby Sambom, a Papuan rebel spokesperson, said in a statement the rebels had killed more than 17 people since April 6, including five on Wednesday, and claimed they were military members disguised as gold miners.

"If the Indonesian government military wants to chase us, please come to Dekai town, we are in the town," Sebby said, referring to a town in Yahukimo district, where the incident took place.

Frega Wenas, a spokesperson for the Defence Ministry, told reporters that 11 illegal miners were ruthlessly killed in the area and denied they were military officers, adding this was the rebels' propaganda.

Separately, police said in a statement on Thursday that 35 people in the area were evacuated to another district, while two residents were still being held hostage by the rebels. 

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Frega said the attack was one of the deadliest in recent years. In 2018, a separatist group killed 21 road construction workers in the highland area of Nduga.

Rebels in Papua have in recent years managed to acquire better weapons, taken in raids on army posts or sourced from the black market. They have also abducted foreigners, including a New Zealand pilot who was released last year after being held for 19 months.

Last month, more than 90 West Papuan tribes, political organisations and religious groups called for a boycott of products allegedly implicated in the "ecocide" of the region, according to a separatist group.

The tribes and groups called on people to boycott firms with products linked to palm oil sourced from Papua, a driver of deforestation in Indonesia, dubbing it ecological suicide or "ecocide".

"The boycott campaign has identified a number of target brands that are probably complicit in ecocide in West Papua," the Papuan group United Liberation Movement for West Papua (ULWMP) said in a statement. 

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