December 6, 2000
His Excellency Abdurrahman Wahid
President, Republic of Indonesia
Office of the President
Bina Graha, Jalan Veteran No. 17
Jakarta Pusat, Indonesia
VIA FAX: 62-21-778-182
The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) is deeply concerned by the
prolonged detention of Swiss journalist Oswald Iten in Jayapura, Irian
Jaya, on suspicion that he violated Indonesia's immigration laws by
reporting without a press visa.
Police have threatened Iten with a five-year jail term for improper
use of his tourist visa, according to the Agence France-Presse news
service.
Iten, 50, is a veteran foreign affairs correspondent for the Zurich-based
newspaper Neue Zürcher Zeitung. On the afternoon of December
2, police arrested the journalist at his hotel in the capital city of
Jayapura. His arrest followed a raid on the headquarters of the West
Papua independence movement, and comes amid a general crackdown on separatist
activity in Irian Jaya province.
On December 4, Iten told reporters that he was being held in unsanitary
conditions along with 28 other inmates. Lt. Col. Daud Sihombing, police
chief in Jayapura, said today that once the police conclude their investigation,
they intend to prosecute Iten, despite the journalist's offer to leave
the country immediately.
As a nonpartisan organization of journalists dedicated to the defense
of our colleagues around the world, CPJ is dismayed that even in democratic
Indonesia, it is still possible to prosecute journalists for violating
visa restrictions that the former Suharto regime designed to control
the flow of information. The requirement that foreign journalists obtain
special permission to work in Indonesia is a restrictive, repressive
relic of an authoritarian system, and is inconsistent with your administration's
avowed commitment to reform.
CPJ respectfully urges Your Excellency to do everything within your
power to assure that Oswald Iten is not prosecuted for his activities
in Irian Jaya, and that he is released without delay.
Sincerely,

Ann K. Cooper
Executive Director