Chilling photographs have emerged of a New Zealand pilot who has been taken hostage by a heavily armed rebel group in the remote Papua region of Indonesia. 

Phillip Mehrtens, a pilot for Indonesian aviation company Susu Air, was kidnapped last week by the rebels, who stormed his single-engine plane shortly after it landed on a small runway in Paro in the remote Nduga district on February 7.

The separatist rebels from the West Papua Liberation Army, the armed wing of the United Liberation Movement for West Papua (ULMWP), seized Mehrtens before setting fire to his plane on the runway. 

Rebel leader Egianus Kogoya insisted that the pilot, from Christchurch, will not be released until the Papua region is made independent from Indonesia.

But the Indonesian government has stood firm and said Papua will ‘forever remain a legitimate part’ of Indonesia – raising doubts about when Mehrtens would be released.

The West Papua rebel group behind the February 9 abduction of New Zealand pilot, Phillip Mehrtens (middle), released photos of the captured airman while requesting complete independence from Indonesia to secure his release

Phillip Mehrtens was kidnapped shortly after touching down in Paro in the remote West Papuan province of Nguda

Phillip Mehrtens was kidnapped shortly after touching down in Paro in the remote West Papuan province of Nguda

Mr Mehrtens flew a single engine plane (allegedly pictured) to the Nguda region in order to remove 15 construction workers from the area after their lives were threatened by the rebels

Mr Mehrtens flew a single engine plane (allegedly pictured) to the Nguda region in order to remove 15 construction workers from the area after their lives were threatened by the rebels

Mr Mehrtens had flown into the area to remove 15 construction workers from the area after their lives had been threatened by the rebels.

The president of ULMWP, Benny Wenda, issued a statement on February 9 that laid out his demands while expressing his sympathy for Mr Mehrtens’ family.

He also gave reassurances about the pilot’s safety while in the hands of his troops.

‘Consular support is being provided to the family,’ New Zealand Prime Minister Chris Hipkins said last week. 

Footage released by the ULMWP shows Mr Mehrtens surrounded by rebel fighters armed with guns, spears and bows and arrows.

In the clip the man is forced by the rebels to say: ‘Indonesia must recognise Papua is independent.’ 

‘The ULMWP Executive reiterates and reassures the New Zealand government and the world that we are [using] a peaceful, diplomatic approach,’ President Wenda wrote.

‘Our roadmap is very clear: we are pursuing the unified West Papuan goal of national liberation peacefully, through diplomatic political mechanisms.’

To release Mr Mehrtens, the rebels are demanding the removal of Indonesian troops from West Papua, a UN investigation into alleged human rights violations, a referendum of independence and a cancellation of ‘Special Autonomy’.

Footage released by the West Papua Liberation Army shows Mr Mehrtens surrounded by men armed with guns, spears, bows and arrows while he was forced to make statements to camera in support of the rebels’ cause

‘The kidnap of a foreign pilot naturally brings West Papua to the attention of international media,’ Mr Wenda continued.

‘The international community must help to end the violence in West Papua by forcing Indonesia to come to the table and discuss a referendum, the only path to a peaceful resolution. 

‘We will peacefully continue our long fight for freedom, until the world finally hears our cry.’

The leader of the Nguda faction of resistance, Egianus Kogoya, can also be seen in the video justifying his reasons for the capture of the pilot.

‘I took him hostage for Papua independence, not for food or drinks,’ Kogoya said.

‘He will be safe with me as long as Indonesia does not use its arms, either from the air or on the ground.’

However, a spokesperson for the Liberation Army has also issued a warning to other countries and areas, including Australia.

‘[The West Papuan Liberation Army] considers New Zealand, Australia, Indonesia, America, Europe, all are responsible,’ a statement from the Liberation Army’s secretary, Sebby Sambom, reads.

‘The US, Europe, Australia and New Zealand has supported the Indonesian government, trained The Indonesian National Police, supplied weapons to kill us West Papuans from 1963 to today. They must be held accountable.’ 

The former Dutch colony in the western part of New Guinea, both ethnically and culturally distinct from Indonesia, has been in an insurgency against Indonesian security forces for decades.

The president of the United Liberation Movement for West Papua, Benny Wenda, sent his condolences to Mr Mehrtens' family for the troubles the abduction has caused them

The president of the United Liberation Movement for West Papua, Benny Wenda, sent his condolences to Mr Mehrtens’ family for the troubles the abduction has caused them

Rebellion against Indonesia has smouldered since 1969 when a UN-sponsored ballot placed West Papua under Indonesian control.

The Nguda region was the scene of bloodshed in July last year when 10 traders were killed by the Liberation Army, who they claim were spies for the Indonesian government.

In March of that same year rebel gunmen killed eight technicians repairing a remote telecommunications tower, while in 2018 at least 31 construction workers and a soldier were killed in one of the worst attacks in the province.

Mr Mehrtens worked for Susi Air after leaving flight school, according to a report in the Sydney Morning Herald, before stints with Jetstar and Cathay Pacific subsidiary Cathay Dragon. He then returned to the Indonesian aviation company.

DailyMail

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