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Papua rebels call for UN mediation in New Zealand hostage video

THE STAR – A New Zealand pilot who was taken hostage last month by rebels in Indonesia’s Papua region has appeared in videos put out by separatists calling for the United Nations (UN) to mediate in the conflict in the resource-rich region.

Pilot Phillip Mehrtens, who works for the small, domestic Susi Air service, was abducted by the armed wing of Free Papua Movement (OPM) on February 7 after landing at an airstrip in the Nduga district.

“OPM requests the UN to mediate between Papua and Indonesia to work towards Papuan independence,” Mehrtens said in one video, echoing comments in a earlier video statement, in which he said he would only be released if Papua became independent.

Papua, the western half of New Guinea island, has seen a low-level separatist insurgency since the region that was once governed by the Netherlands was brought under Indonesian control following a UN-supervised vote in 1969 that separatists say was flawed.

Since the rebels seized the pilot, officials sought to use dialogue to secure his release, saying a “law enforcement operation” would be a last resort.

In one of the videos, Mehrtens read out a statement while sitting in a jungle clearing and surrounded by a group of men, some with guns and one with a bow.

“No foreign pilots are permitted to work and fly in Papua until Papua is independent,” said Mehrtens.

In another of the videos, Mehrtens sent his love to his family and asked that any salary he was owed be given to them for food and bills.

In a third video, a separatist called on countries such as New Zealand, Australia, the United States, Britain, France, China, and Russia to stop military cooperation with Indonesia.

New Zealand pilot Philip Mehrtens reads a statement prepared by a group of separatists in Papua. PHOTO: TWITTER/ THE JAKARTA POST
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