Rally for West Papuan independence in Port Vila,  Vanuatu, March 5. Vanuatu will officially sponsor the case of West Papua  in the International Court of Justice. Photo: Asia-pacific-action.org         
  Indonesian military forces have stepped up their campaign of  repression in West Papua in recent months. But leaders of the Free Papua  Movement (OPM) continue to defy Indonesian demands to surrender. 

The campaign for West Papuan independence has been amplified by the  continuing repression and lack of improvement of living standards under  the current “special autonomy” system.
An eyewitness report from West Papua Media Announcements (WPMA)  posted on Pacific.scoop.co.nz on June 16 described a large military  mobilisation in the mountainous Puncak Jaya region in central West  Papua. 
The report said the Indonesian military and the paramilitary Mobile  Brigade (Brimob) have engaged in a campaign of harassment and  intimidation since March, as part of their efforts to capture OPM  leaders.
The report cites numerous incidents of lawless behaviour by the  security forces, including arbitrary arrest, torture, extortion, forced  labour and rape. Numerous homes and churches have been burned down.
A June 1 report from WPMA said seven people were killed when the  “Indonesian military stormed several villages in the Jambi, Sinak Ilu  and Tingginambut districts of Mulia” that day, using “rockets, bazookas  and grenades”. 
SOURCE
On June 14, Radio New Zealand International (RNZI) quoted Andreas  Harsono of Human Rights Watch saying people have been fleeing to the  jungle to avoid being terrorised by the military.
Rex Rumakiek, secretary general of the West Papua National Coalition  for Liberation said in the May 
Morning Star that this could  cause a major humanitarian crisis, as has occurred in the past. “In  previous operations those who survived and manage to escape into the  mountains remain in hiding for weeks and even months. 
“Many of the elderly and children died from simple sicknesses because  of malnutrition. Those who came back later had nothing to return to.”
RNZI said Indonesia's police commander in West Papua, Bekto Suprapto,  criticised journalists for being too negative about the security  situation. Independent journalists are discouraged from going to West  Papua, and those who do must be registered with the authorities, which  places strict controls over their movements.
A mass rally took place in the West Papuan capital of Jayapura on  June 18 to reject the region’s special autonomy within Indonesia and  demand a referendum on self-determination. 
WPMA said that participants estimated the crowd to be 6000-10,000  people. The protesters marched 17 km from Abepura to the provincial  parliament in Jayapura to symbolically “hand back” special autonomy  status, the 
Jakarta Globe said.
Papua People’s Assembly member Robby Aituarauw told the 
Jakarta  Post on June 19: “Look at the villages and the conditions of homes.  See whether people have been provided with healthcare and education. 
“They have never benefited from these facilities, so they believe  special autonomy has not been effective and should be revoked.”
The independence campaign received a boost on June 19, when the  parliament of Vanuatu unanimously passed a motion in support of  independence for West Papua. 
Vanuatu will officially sponsor the case of West Papua in the  International Court of Justice, which seeks to have Indonesia’s 1969  annexation of West Papua deemed illegal. 
Vanuatu will also apply for West Papua to be re-listed with the UN  Decolonisation Committee.
West Papuans have been campaigning for independence since the country  was taken over by Indonesia in 1963 as part of Indonesia’s  de-colonisation deal with formal colonial ruler the Netherlands. This is  supposedly a temporary measure until a referendum on West Papuan  independence could be organised. 
West Papua was officially annexed in 1969 in the fraudulent “Act of  Free Choice”, where 1026 West Papuan “representatives” were forced by  the Indonesian military to vote in favour of being part of Indonesia.
In 2001, in an attempt to quell the growing independence movement,  Indonesia imposed “special autonomy” status on West Papua, granting  limited institutions like the Papuan People’s Assembly. But real control  remains in the hands of Jakarta.
Economic development in West Papua is the lowest in Indonesia,  despite the area’s abundance of natural resources. Brutal Indonesian  military repression has created conditions for multinational  corporations to exploit the region. 
Papuans are also discriminated against in favour of Javanese  migrants, who are being moved in at the highest migration rate in the  world, 
Bintang Papua said on May 20.
Rumakiek said that West Papua’s current status of “special autonomy”  within Indonesia was simply colonialism under another name. “Violent  repression, injustice and social inequalities experienced here are not  different from other colonial situations in history. 
“In our view, denying the people basic services while suppressing  them and keeping them under traumatic conditions continuously is nothing  less than terrorism.