Yotimin Weya

Date of Birth22 years old in 2005
ChargesTreason
Date of Arrest20/01/2005
Case DetailsAccused of burning a school and public buildings in Wunin District, Tolikara Regency.
SentenceUnknown
Concerns
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Yotimin Weya (also known as Yoimin Weya) was arrested in January 2005 in Wunin sub-district in Papua’s Central Highlands. Along with at least six others, he was accused of burning down a local school and district government building, and being a member of the Free Papua Movement (Organisasi Papua Merdeka, OPM).

We believe that seven people were convicted as a result of this incident: Limanus/Lewanus Wenda, Yotimin/Yoimin Weya, Similes Gire Tabuni, Yohan/Yowan Hiluka, Manase Telenggen, Yusanur/Yus Wenda, Nipenua Wenda. A number of other people were reported arrested at the time, including Natan Wenda, Benius Kogoya, John Hiluka, Solimin Weya, but it is not known if they were detained for a longer period or if they faced trial.

The information surrounding the arrests, detention and trial in this case is far from complete. Understanding how events unfolded in Wunin in early 2005 is further complicated by the fact that different sources have used different spellings of the names of the men involved. However, human rights lawyers based in Papua consider Yotimin Weya to be a political prisoner.

The Wunin arrests briefly made headlines in the Indonesian national press because it was reported that Kelly Kwalik, a well-known OPM leader, was amongst those arrested. Despite the initial publicity however, there is still much ambiguity about how many people were arrested and on which date. An article originally published in national newspaper Kompas states that seven people were arrested by police Mobile Brigades (Brigade Mobil, known locally as ‘Brimob’) on 22 January 2005. A article in local newspaper Cenderawasih Pos claimed that six suspected OPM members were arrested on 21 January and were being held along with another three men who had been arrested previously due to suspected of involvement in the burnings, including Yotimin Weya (here spelt Yatimin).

Reverend Socratez Sofyan Yoman, president of the West Papuan Baptist Church, wrote a report about the incident on 30 January 2005, and other than mainstream media reports, this is one of the few independent sources on what might have happened. Reverend Yoman lists eight names of those arrested, including Yatimin Wenda, and claims they were ordinary civilians, not OPM fighters. He also made clear that neither Papuan Highlanders nor the OPM would burn schools because it was not what they were fighting for. According to Reverend Yoman, neither church representatives nor the prisoners’ families had been allowed to meet the prisoners.

Some days after the arrests, Indonesian military Commander Nurdin Zainal finally clarified that it was not Kelly Kwalik who had been arrested, but actually a man called Manase Telenggen. Whether or not Mr Telenggen gave the name Kelly Kwalik when he was arrested, or whether this was an act of deliberate deception by the military remains unclear. Revd Yoman suspects the latter in his report, as does the Office for Justice and Peace (Sekratariat untuk Keadilan dan Perdamaian, SKP), who analysed the situation in their ‘Papua Aktual’ report. They point out that this disinformation created a false public opinion, while there are then no further reports regarding the real identity of the group, whether or not they were involved in acts of violence and the legal processes initiated against them. They believe such a tactic creates an impression of the Central Highlands as a conflict zone, hence justifying the military presence.

Regarding the original incident of the burnings, an article was published by West Papua News on 15 January 2005 (ie several days before any arrests took place) and was posted on various websites. The report states that military troops from the Special Forces unit (Komandan pasukan khusus, Kopassus) arrived at 08:00 and burnt down all the houses in the village as well as the public buildings. Brimob were also reportedly present, arriving in an Air Force helicopter.

No reports have been found about the subsequent conditions of imprisonment, trial, or sentence of those arrested. However, in Mr Weya’s case it is known that he was charged with treason, and his case was reviewed by the Supreme Court in 2007 following a request for clemency (grasi).

The request was evidently turned down, as on 4 June 2012 following a jailbreak at Wamena prison, Yotimin Weya reportedly escaped along with three of the other prisoners which we believed to be in detention following this incident. The four were listed as being ‘treason’ convicts, and also included Yohan Hiluka, Manase Telenggen, and Limanus Wenda. This event provided confirmation that those arrested in 2005 were still in detention at the time of their escape, suggesting that the remaining three prisoners very likely are still in detention.

Sources
Kompas, “Pemimpin OPM Keli Kwalik ditahan di Jayapura”, 27 January 2005, posted on http://www.prakarsa-rakyat.org/artikel/news/artikel.php?aid=911

Kompas, “Keli Mengakui Kegiatan Makar di Papua”, 28 January 2005, posted on http://groups.yahoo.com/group/indonesia_damai/message/36306

Cenderawasih Pos, “Serang petugas, 42 napi lapas Wamena kabur,” 5 June 2012, http://www.cenderawasihpos.com/index.php?mib=berita.detail&id=5686

Cenderawasih Pos, “6 Orang diduga anggota TPN/OPM di tangkap” [undated], posted on http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Komunitas_Papua/message/2971

Socratez Sofyan Yoman, “Laporan Peristiwa Tolikara”, 30 January 2005, http://groups.yahoo.com/group/tribal-melanesia/message/2223

TNI website, “Pangdam: Itu bukan Kelly yang dikenal umum”, [undated] http://tni.mil.id/index2.php?page=detailnas.html&nw_code=753

Sekretariat Keadilan dan Perdamaian Keuskupan Jayapura, Papua Aktual, Jan-Mar 2005, available from SKP or TAPOL.

West Papua News, “Houses, Churches and Public Buildings burnt,” 15 January 2005, http://santacruz.indymedia.org/newswire/display/14608/index.php

Last updated: 4 January 2013

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