
by Stefan J. Bos, Worthy News Chief International Correspondent
WASHINGTON/JAKARTA (Worthy News) – Indonesia’s military confirmed Friday it had recovered the body of an American mission pilot who was shot dead by separatist rebels in the country’s restive eastern Papua region, as the U.S. government said it was closely monitoring the investigation.
Nicholas F. Goselin, who flew for the Christian mission aviation organization Associated Mission Aviation (AMA), was killed Thursday when armed members of the West Papua National Liberation Army (TPNPB) attacked his aircraft shortly after it landed at a remote airstrip in Yahukimo Regency in the Papua Highlands.
The separatist group later claimed responsibility for the attack, describing it as a “message” to both the Indonesian and U.S. governments. The rebels also said they burned the aircraft after the shooting.
Indonesia’s military said special forces secured the airstrip before recovering Goselin’s body and launching a search for those responsible. The seven passengers aboard the aircraft survived the attack.
US RESPONSE
Authorities said communication with the aircraft was lost shortly after Goselin reported a safe landing, before emergency messages were later received from the operator.
The U.S. State Department said it was aware Indonesian authorities were investigating the death of an American citizen in Papua and that it was closely monitoring developments.
“There is no higher priority than the safety and security of American citizens,” the department said, adding that officials remained in contact with Goselin’s family.
The killing also dealt a severe blow to Associated Mission Aviation, which has served remote communities across Papua for more than six decades.
CHRISTIAN MISSION
Known in Indonesia as PT AMA, the Christian mission aviation organization has operated in Papua since 1959, providing essential air transportation to isolated communities, including support for Christian mission work, medical outreach, and humanitarian assistance.
“We fly because Papua needs aviation. This beautiful island, blessed with so many wonderful people, needs air transport to further grow and develop,” the organization says on its website.
It adds: “We serve because we strive to operate in the imitation of Jesus Christ. The AMA team is service-driven. We care about our passengers, our clients, our suppliers, and about the authorities over us. We are team players, and want to contribute to our community and our region.”
Papua has been the scene of a decades-long, low-level separatist insurgency since Indonesia assumed control of the former Dutch territory in the 1960s. Fighting has intensified in recent years as the rebels have acquired increasingly sophisticated weapons.
RISING RISKS
Indonesian authorities have accused the TPNPB of repeatedly targeting civilians, security personnel, and aircraft serving isolated communities, while the separatists maintain they are fighting for independence.
The killing of Goselin also highlights a growing pattern of attacks against foreign pilots operating in Papua’s remote interior.
In February 2023, New Zealand pilot Philip Mehrtens was kidnapped by the TPNPB after landing in Nduga Regency. He was held for more than a year before being released in September 2024.
In August 2024, another New Zealand pilot, Glen Malcolm Conning, was shot dead shortly after landing in Papua, underscoring the growing dangers faced by civilian, humanitarian, and Christian mission aviation crews serving some of the world’s most isolated communities.
Copyright 1999-2026 Worthy News. This article was originally published on Worthy News and was reproduced with permission.
Latest News from Worthy News
U.S. President Donald J. Trump was to address a crowd on the National Mall, the tree-lined national park in downtown Washington seen as “America’s front yard,” to celebrate the nation’s 250th birthday amid political controversy and a searing heat wave.
Russian President Vladimir Putin claimed Friday that Russian forces had completed the capture of Ukraine’s eastern Luhansk region, marking what Moscow described as a major milestone in the war, although Ukraine had not confirmed the claim and independent verification was not immediately possible.
Government delegations from China, Russia, India, Pakistan and Iraq arrived in Tehran on Friday, where the body of Iran’s slain Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei lay in state.
Moldovan Prime Minister Alexandru Munteanu announced Friday that he was stepping down, triggering the resignation of his government in the strategically located nation sandwiched between Ukraine and Romania that has been a European Union candidate country since November 2025.
At least 40 people were killed and eight others injured early Friday after a speeding, overcrowded passenger bus plunged about 20 meters (70 feet) into a rocky ravine in southwestern Pakistan, officials said.
Authorities say the main suspect in a Monaco bomb attack this week that seriously injured a Ukraine-born business tycoon, his partner, and their 13-year-old son is a Ukrainian woman living in Germany who disguised herself as a man.
Indonesia’s military confirmed Friday it had recovered the body of an American mission pilot who was shot dead by separatist rebels in the country’s restive eastern Papua region, as the U.S. government said it was closely monitoring the investigation.