Jakarta, July 15: Deadly ambushes at the world’s largest gold mine likely stem from rival Indonesian police and military forces who are competing for millions in illegal profits for protecting the industry, analysts said.
Three people died and another seven were injured in weekend ambushes on a private road leading to the mountain mining town of Timika on Indonesia’s easternmost island of Papua. The shootings highlight the security challenges for the American company that operates the mine, Pheonix-based Freeport.
“Whenever they (security forces) feel they do not receive enough ‘protection fee’ then they orchestrate an attack to show Freeport how vulnerable they are and increase protection fees,” said George Junus Aditjondro, an author on rebellions in Indonesia and Papua specialist.
Police forces have been formally responsible for security at Freeport since 2001, when the region gained semi-autonomy, but continue to compete for work and under-the-table profits with military units, analysts and a government official in Papua province say.
Christopher Ballard, a Papuan affairs specialist at the Australian National University, said his research on the area indicates that the “vast majority of security force casualties were at the hands of other security forces.”
Freeport pays more than $5 million annually in protection money, according to the London-based group Global Witness, citing U.S. regulatory filings. Freeport did not respond to a request for details about its security spending.
“There are still continuous attempts (by the military) to show how incompetent the police are in defending or guarding foreign businesses,” Aditjondro said. The weekend attacks “could be an outburst of that rivalry.”
Papuan military spokesman Lt. Col. Susilo, who uses a single name like most Indonesians, denied allegations of rivalry.
“That’s not true at all,” he said. “There is no competition between army and police for the sake of money … we have good relations with the police.”
He accused Papuan separatists, who have waged a low-level insurgency for 40 years, of stealing weapons that could have been used in the recent shootings. But the group, Free Papua Movement, hasn’t launched major attacks with guns for years and experts said they don’t believe the so-called OPM is able to carry out sophisticated military operations.
Another theory suggests that the Indonesian military armed local Papuans — many of whom are angered by the billions of dollars in profit to a foreign corporation while they remain poor — and instructed them to carry out the ambushes.
The mine is majority owned by Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc. which posted revenue of nearly $18 billion in 2008 and is one of the biggest tax payers in the country. The Indonesian government holds a minority stake in the Grasberg mine.
A spokesman for PT Freeport, the Indonesian subsidiary, said in an e-mail Tuesday: “We have no comment on speculation.”
The latest three assaults were in a 30-hour period just outside Freeport’s sprawling Grasberg complex, where 20,000 people are employed at the world’s largest open-pit gold mine.
Forensic material collected at the scene where 29-year-old Australian project manager Drew Grant was shot in the neck and chest on Saturday indicates a coordinated attack by several gunmen, police chief Bagus Ekodanto said.
Casings were recovered of military-grade 5.6 mm bullets that fit AK-47s, M-16s and Indonesian-made SS1 assault rifles, police said.
“Such bullets and guns are standard weapons for both the military and police, but also known to be used by the Papua rebels,” Ekodanto said.
A day after that shooting, a convoy of security vehicles came under sniper fire, killing a private security guard. A police officer seeking cover fell to his death in a ravine.
Police have interviewed 14 witnesses — none of them police or military personnel — but have not detained any suspects or announced a motive, Ekodanto said.
It was the worst violence in the militarized zone since two American schoolteachers and an Indonesian colleague were murdered on the same road in 2002. A Freeport vehicle carrying three passengers was fired upon Tuesday afternoon, but no one was hurt, spokesman Mindo Pangaribuan said.
Papua, which was transferred to Indonesian rule in the 1960s after a stage-managed vote by community leaders, is off limits to foreign journalists. The private Timika road, under the watch of police and Freeport guards, is closed to reporters.
During the Suharto dictatorship, Indonesia’s armed forces openly ran more than 1,000 business ventures, which funded their operations and enriched their commanders. President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has ordered the military to end all commercial activities this year.
But Papua remains a military stronghold, said a leading official in the Papuan government, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he feared for his job.
Ballard, from ANU, said the area around the Freeport mine “is probably the most heavily militarized sector in all of Indonesia.
“The presence of the military in substantial numbers has historically been the key source of conflict in the Freeport area,” he said.
In the last decade, Indonesia has pulled out of now independent East Timor, ended sectarian fighting in Sulawesi and Maluku, and halted a decades-long civil war on Aceh.
“Since Indonesia quit East Timor and also since Aceh peace, West Papua has become the main area of military business in Indonesia,” Aditjondro said. I think they need to show to the world, especially to parliament in Jakarta, there is a need to increase the military budget in West Papua.”
Papua gained semiautonomy from the Jakarta in 2001, but its security has morphed into an unruly mix of paramilitaries, soldiers, contract security guards, anti-terror brigades and special forces, who strangled to death Papua’s political leader, Theys Eluay.
“It’s unclear at the moment who is responsible for what,” the Papuan government official said.
–Agencies