About 2,000 Papuans marching in Jayapura on Thursday to urge the 
provincial legislature to demand a referendum on self-determination, and
 reject the region

About 2,000 Papuans marching in Jayapura on Thursday to urge the provincial legislature to demand a referendum on self-determination, and reject the region's special autonomy within Indonesia. (AFP Photo/Banjir Ambarita)



Thousands of Papuans rallied Thursday to urge the provincial parliament to demand a referendum on self-determination, and reject the region's special autonomy within Indonesia.

An upper house of tribal leaders, the Papuan People's Assembly (MRP), voted in June to reject Papua's autonomy status, introduced in 2001 after the fall of the Suharto military dictatorship in Jakarta.

Witnesses said more than more than 2,000 Papuans in Jayapura, some of them wearing traditional outfits, were marching about 17 kilometres (11 miles) from the MRP's office to the provincial parliament building.

"Special autonomy has failed to protect the rights of indigenous Papuans," protest leader Markus Haluk told AFP.

"We want to urge Papua's provincial parliament to hold a plenary meeting to declare that special autonomy is a failure and returned it back to the central government," he said.

Haluk said the Indonesian government and Papuans, who are indigenous Melanesians, needed to establish a dialogue in which the UN or a neutral country would act as mediator.

"It's as if Papua is a dark cave, which is always closed and guarded by the government," he said. "Papuan people want a referendum as a solution to our problem."

The provincial parliamant canceled a meeting that was supposed to be held Thursday over the referendum request.

"This is a political issue and we're still waiting for other political groups in the parliament to make their decision," a lawmaker from the Golkar party Yan Ayomi told AFP.

Papua has been the scene of a low-level insurgency for decades and despite Indonesia's vast security presence in the region, Jakarta remains extremely sensitive about any sign of separatism.

Indonesia has sent mixed messages about its willingness to loosen its grip on Papua, offering talks with separatist rebels on one hand while jailing and killing their leaders on the other.

Access to foreign journalists in the area has been restricted by the government.

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