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| New
Zealand pilot Philip Mehrtens taken captive by Papuan rebels . . . a
"Papua Merdeka" - Free Papua message. IMAGE: TPNPB screenshot APR |
By DAVID ROBIE
Papuan independence rebels are playing a desperate game of cat and mouse with Indonesian authorities over their hostage taking last week with a New Zealand pilot caught in the middle.
Christchurch-raised Philip Mehrtens, 37, a pilot for the national feeder airline Susi Air owned by a former cabinet minister and with Jakarta government supply contracts, was seized by rebels last Tuesday, February 7, shortly after he had touched down at the remote Paro airstrip near Nduga in the Papuan highlands.
Five Indigenous Papuans on board the aircraft were set free and the plane was set on fire.
- READ MORE: Why a NZ pilot is a pawn in the West Papua conflict that the world ignores
- Blood on the Cross: East Timor and West Papua – Mark Davis in Pacific Journalism Review
- Other West Papuan conflict reports
After initial reports saying the authorities were trying to pinpoint the actual place where the rebels are in hiding and that a rescue operation is under way, the West Papua National Liberation Army (TPNPB) played a trump card today by releasing “proof of life” video footage and photos.
“Papua Merdeka!,” said Mehrtens in one of the obviously coached video
messages. “The Papuan military have taken me captive in the fight for
Papuan independence,” he added hesitantly while surrounded by a group of
armed rebels.


