Countries deny Papua rebels claim of ‘bribe’ paid for pilot release


Jakarta and Wellington have denied a claim by rebels in the nation’s restive region of Papua that a New Zealand pilot was freed from captivity over the weekend after they received payment from a local leader.

Phillip Mehrtens, 38, was released on Saturday by the West Papua National Liberation Army (TPNPB) insurgent group after 19 months in captivity.

Sebby Sambom, a spokesman for the group, said the Indonesian government gave money to the acting chief of the Papuan district where Mehrtens was freed, accusing him of then paying the rebels, without providing evidence.

“The Indonesian military and police gave bribe money to Edison Gwijangge and his team,” he said in a statement yesterday, referring to the acting head of Nduga regency.

The funds then landed with the rebels “through a family system”, said Sebby.

“The TPNPB handed over the pilot to Edison. Then, Edison handed over the pilot to the Indonesian military and police.”

New Zealand Foreign Minister Winston Peters quickly rubbished any suggestion that Wellington was involved in payment for Mehrtens’ release, saying it was diplomacy that secured his freedom.

“I think this is a disgrace, frankly, that it’s even suggested that a bribe was paid – we don’t pay ransoms, we don’t pay bribes,” Peters told Radio New Zealand yesterday.

“All the work that’s done by these people of all sorts, including officials, working as hard as they can and as cautiously as they can – not to make a mistake or be offensive and for things to fail – has now been trammelled by the allegation of a bribe.”

The spokesman for the joint Indonesian task force of police and military that collected Mehrtens said no money was given directly to the rebels.

“There was no request for money or any conditions from Egianus Kogoya for the pilot’s release,” said Bayu Suseno, referring to the rival rebel leader accused of taking the payment.

The rebels had said foreign nationals were targets because their governments had ties with Indonesia, from which they are seeking independence.

During his captivity in the Papuan countryside, the New Zealander made sporadic appearances on video to address his family and his government.

His appearance changed drastically over time, but he appeared in good physical condition after his release and arrival in Jakarta on Saturday night. — AFP

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

rebels , Papua

   

Next In Aseanplus News

Iswaran pleads guilty to five charges on first day of trial, corruption charges dropped
China's Wang Yi urges Japan to deal with boy's fatal stabbing 'calmly'
Vietnam, US firms sign MoUs on energy, AI, data centre: Govt
Myanmar soldiers help clean up after a typhoon that killed more than 380 people
One person dies after fire in Choa Chu Kang flat, about 150 residents evacuated
Letter supposedly by Japanese father of boy fatally stabbed scrubbed by China’s censors
Insurgents fled to Malaysia after attacking Hala Bala wildlife sanctuary: Military
Ringgit opens higher vs US dollar, revisits RM4.19 level
Prosecution and ex-Singapore Transport Minister Iswaran’s team to go head-to-head on first day of trial
Bursa Malaysia opens higher, tracks upbeat Wall Street performance

Others Also Read