:
FREDHOM 1970s Starting from 1976, officials at mining company
Freeport Indonesia received letters from the OPM threatening the company and demanding assistance in a planned uprising in the spring. The company refused to cooperate with OPM. From July until 7 September 1977, OPM insurgents carried out their threats against Freeport and cut
slurry and fuel
pipelines, slashed telephone and power cables, burned down a warehouse, and detonated explosives at various facilities. Freeport estimated the damage at $US123,871.23.
1980s In 1982 a OPM Revolutionary Council (OPMRC) was established, and under the chairmanship of Moses Werror the OPMRC has sought independence through a campaign of international diplomacy. OPMRC aims to obtain international recognition for West Papuan independence through international forums such as the United Nations, The
Non-Aligned Movement of Nations, The
South Pacific Forum and The
Association of South East Asian Nations. In 1984 OPM staged an attack on
Jayapura, the provincial capital and a city dominated by non-Melanesian Indonesians. The attack was quickly repelled by the Indonesian military, who followed it with broader counter-insurgency activity. This triggered an exodus of Papuan
refugees, apparently supported by the OPM, into camps across the border in
Papua New Guinea. On 14 February 1986, Freeport Indonesia received information that the OPM was again becoming active in their area, and that some of Freeport's employees were OPM members or sympathisers. On 18 February, a letter signed by a "Rebel General" warned that "On Wed. 19th, there will be some rain on
Tembagapura". At around 22:00 that night several unidentified people cut Freeport's slurry and fuel pipelines by hacksaw, causing "a substantial loss of slurry, containing copper, silver and gold ores and diesel fuel." Additionally, the saboteurs set fire along the breaks in the fuel line, and shot at police that tried to approach the fires. On 14 April of that same year, OPM insurgents cut more pipelines, slashed electric wires, vandalised plumbing, and burned equipment tyres. Repair crews were attacked by OPM gunfire as they approached the sites of the damage, so Freeport requested police and military assistance.
2000–2019 In 2009, an OPM command group led by
Goliath Tabuni in
Puncak Jaya Regency was featured on an undercover report about the West Papuan independence movement. On 24 October 2011, Adj. Comr. Dominggus Oktavianus Awes, the Mulia Police chief, was shot by unknown assailants at Mulia Airport in Puncak Jaya regency. The National Police of Indonesia alleged that the perpetrators were members of the Free Papua Movement (OPM) separatist group. The series of attacks prompted deployments of more personnel to Papua. On 21 January 2012, armed men, believed to be members of OPM, shot and killed a civilian who was running a roadside kiosk. He was a
transmigrant from West Sumatra. On 8 January 2012, OPM conducted an attack on a public bus which caused the death of three civilians and one member of an Indonesian security force. Four others were also injured. On 31 January 2012, an OPM member was caught carrying of drugs on the Indonesian – Papua New Guinea Border. It was alleged that the drugs were intended to be sold in the city of Jayapura. On 8 April 2012, Indonesian media sources alleged armed members of OPM carried out an attack on a civilian aircraft after it landed at Mulia Airport in Puncak Jaya, Papua. Viva, an Indonesian online
news web portal, claimed five armed OPM militants opened fire on the moving plane, causing it to go out of control and crash into a building. Leiron Kogoya, 35, was a victim and former journalist for Papua Post. Kogoya was writing about local elections in Papua when he suffered a gunshot wound to the neck, dying at the scene. Amongst other victims were the pilot, co-pilot, both wounded by shrapnel; the passengers, a mother and housewife who was hurt by shrapnel on her right shoulder, and her four-year-old infant, also afflicted by shrapnel on his left hand. In response to these allegations, West Papuan Media Alerts, a news organisation created in reaction to the Indonesian media blackout of Papuan media, defended the OPM against these claims. West Papua asserted it was the Indonesian military who had attacked the plane, as a part of a
false flag operation. West Papuan rights activist and former political prisoner Sebby Sambon was quoted as saying, "If it occurred near the TPN/OPM headquarters in Tingginambut, then accusations may make sense. TPN/OPM (is there) to fight for the people. Period. It is not possible to shoot people.” Sambon had frequent contact with Goliat Tabuni, the leader of the OPM troops at the time and said "TPN/OPM has made no orders to shoot civilian aircraft." In December 2012, an Australian would-be mercenary, who was trained by a military/police security firm in
Ukraine, was arrested in Australia for planning to train the OPM. He later pleaded guilty to training in the use of arms or explosives with the intention of committing an offence against the
Crimes (Foreign Incursions and Recruitment) Act 1978. On 26 April 2018,
Polish OPM supporter Jakub Skrzypski was arrested in
Wamena along with four Papuans who police claimed as being linked to "armed criminal groups" and was charged with treason. He was later sentenced to five years in prison, however wrote in a letter to news agency
The Associated Press that his being charged and arrested was, "a purely political case, a trial staged for propaganda reasons." On 1 December 2018, an armed group with ties to OPM kidnapped 25 civilian construction workers in
Nduga regency, Papua. The following day, the group killed
19 of the workers and a soldier. One of construction workers had allegedly photographed the group raising the Morning Star flag at an independence celebration - considered illegal acts by Indonesian authorities. The construction workers were building a part of the Trans Papua highway that aims to connect remote communities in Papua. A few days after the incident, the OPM allegedly sent an open letter to Indonesian president
Joko Widodo, demanding Papuan independence, rejecting central government infrastructure building projects, and demanding the right for foreign journalists and aid workers to enter Papua. In reprisals to obtain the massacred workers' bodies, the Indonesian military allegedly carried out airstrikes on at least four villages and used
white phosphorus, This was however denied by the Indonesian government.
2019 Papuan protests Fresh protests began on 19 August 2019 and mainly took place across
Indonesian Papua in response to the arrests of 43 Papuan students in
Surabaya,
East Java for alleged disrespect of the
Indonesian flag. Many of the protests involved thousands of participants, and some grew from local protests in Surabaya to demanding an independence referendum. In several locations, the protests turned into general riots, resulting in the destruction of government buildings in
Wamena,
Sorong and
Jayapura. Clashes between protesters and counter-protesters and police resulted in injuries, with over 31 people killed from both the clashes and the rioting, mostly non-Papuan trapped when rioters burned houses. In response to the rioting, the
government of Indonesia implemented an
internet blackout in the region. A
Reuters reporter from the
Jakarta bureau described the unrest as "Papua's most serious in years".
2020–present On 25 April 2021, Special Forces major-general
I Gusti Putu Danny Karya Nugraha, head of the Papua intelligence agency, was killed when he was shot in the head while in an ambush in a heavily armed military convoy. On 5 March 2022, Sebby Sambom, a TPNPB-OPM spokesperson, alongside
Terianus Satto supported the
2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, claiming alleged similarity of Ukrainian police and military treatment of the Russian minority as
genocide with Indonesian police and military treatment of Papuans. TPNPB-OPM claimed Russian government support of
pro-Russian separatists as justified, and claimed that both Indonesia and Ukraine are "capitalist puppets" of the United States. On 7 February 2023,
Papuan separatists attacked and set fire to a plane, after taking the pilot and five passengers hostage. The passengers were soon released. The New Zealander pilot, Philip Mehrtens, remained in captivity until 21 September 2024. The flight was operated by Indonesian airline
Susi Air that operates flights in and out of Papua. The TPNPB has claimed responsibility for the kidnapping and attack, stating that they would be targeting all foreigners as a part of their campaign. On 15 February, photos of the pilot showed him to be in relatively good health and guarded by armed insurgents from the Papua movement. The group said that he would not be freed from captivity until authorities recognise the independence of the region. In June 2024, it was reported that the rebels wanted to free Mehrtens, but there had been "complications" including a failed rescue in April which left casualties on both sides. On 3 April 2023, four Indonesian soldiers died and another five suffered gunshot injuries in an attack led by
Egianus Kogoya in
Nduga,
Papua. ==Armed wing==