UK Opposition Leader Jeremy Corbyn has spoken out about the plight of the West Papuan people and supported a push for democratic reform in the Indonesian province.

Key points: Corbyn calls for political strategy that brings "recognition to the plight" of West Papuans

Corbyn calls for political strategy that brings "recognition to the plight" of West Papuans Meeting included speakers from the UK, Tonga, Vanuatu and PNG

Meeting included speakers from the UK, Tonga, Vanuatu and PNG West Papua has been under Indonesian rule since 1969

Speaking at a meeting of the International Parliamentarians for West Papua at the House of Commons, Mr Corbyn said it was time the West Papuan people were able to make their own choice about their political future.

"It's about a political strategy that brings to worldwide recognition the plight of the people of West Papua, that forces it onto a political agenda, that forces it to the UN, and ultimately allows the people of West Papua to make a choice about the kind of government they want and the kind of society in which they want to live," he told the meeting.

The Labour leader described the meeting as historic.

Speakers included MPs, ministers and political leaders from the UK, Tonga, Vanuatu, Papua New Guinea and the Solomon Islands.

Mr Corbyn endorsed a report published by the University of Warwick that called for the reinstatement of NGOs in Papua, the release of political prisoners, and a parliamentary delegation being sent to the region.

West Papua has been under Indonesian rule since 1969, when the so-called Act of Free Choice took place, a vote that Indonesia claims rightfully handed over sovereignty of what was then known as West Irian.

West Papuan independence advocates claim the vote was a sham and the UN should now facilitate a free and fair vote for independence.

Sorry, this audio has expired Michael Walsh speaks with Frederika Korain in Jayapura

This week Indonesian police detained hundreds of pro-independence demonstrators in the provincial capital of Jayapura.

Lord Harries of Pentregarth, a former Bishop of Oxford who was at the House of Commons meeting, has described the ongoing situation in West Papua as "one of the great neglected scandals of our time".