
Picture: AFP
The police say they have few leads in the attack on a civilian aircraft
by gunmen in Papua on Sunday, casting doubts on government efforts to
bring peace to the country’s easternmost region.
National Police
spokesman Insp. Gen. Saud Usman Nasution said in Jakarta on Monday that
investigators had no significant leads in the incident at Mulia Airport
in Puncak Jaya.
Saud said that neither could the police connect
the runway shooting with other deadly incidents in the regency. “We are
still working on that.”
Meanwhile, President Susilo Bambang
Yudhoyono’s spokesman, Julian Aldrin Pasha, said the incident indicated
the continued volatility in Papua.
“The President has received
reports about the incident and he was shocked. The President has ordered
the security authorities to launch a special probe to address the
incident,” Julian told reporters at the Presidential Office on Monday.
A
Twin Otter plane operated by privately run Trigana Air was attacked by
gunmen on Sunday morning, shortly after it landed at Mulia Airport in
Puncak Jaya.
The plane crashed into a nearby warehouse after the
pilot lost control. Leiron Kogoya, a journalist from the Papua Pos, died
from a gunshot wound to the neck, while four other people onboard,
including the pilot and first officer, were injured.
“Attacks on
commercial aircraft are a serious threat. We are dealing with armed
groups. The perpetrators must be brought to court. In the meantime, the
authorities will guarantee that the situation is sufficiently conducive
for residents to conduct their daily activities,” Julian added.
At
the same airport in October 2011, Mulia Police chief Adj. Comr.
Dominggus Octavianus Awes was shot dead by an unidentified assailant who
fled with his pistol.
The police have not identified or arrested
suspects in a host of violent incidents in Papua and West Papua,
including attacks on police officers and journalists.
Leiron, the
Papua Pos reporter, was the third person killed in Puncak Jaya in 2012.
A civilian and an officer assigned to a National Police Mobile Brigade
special operations unit were also shot dead by unknown assailants in
January in separate incidents.
Neither has anyone been arrested for the killings of seven people in Mulia in 2011, or for the six slain in 2010.
Lt.
Gen. (ret) Bambang Darmono, the chairman of the Special Unit for the
Acceleration of Development in Papua and West Papua (UP4B), said the
Trigana incident would unlikely have any repercussions. “I just returned
from Mulia. I saw people living normal lives as if there had never been
a shooting. The local market was packed and everything looked normal,”
he said.
The UP4B is tasked with accelerating infrastructure
development and coordinating central and regional government programs in
mountainous areas of Papua where 1.5 million indigenous people live.
Poengky
Indarti, director of the human rights watchdog Imparsial, questioned
government efforts to improve security in Puncak Jaya.
“The area is proven to be vulnerable to attacks,” she said.
The Trigana attack might have been orchestrated by those who wanting to benefit from sowing chaos in the region, she added.
Source: http://www.thejakartapost.com
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