PUBLICISED incidents of suspected torture of separatists in eastern Indonesia have alarmed rights groups, who say further reform is needed to eradicate the kind of brutality tolerated under former President Suharto.
Indonesia has embraced democracy since the fall of the autocratic Suharto in 1998 and is attracting strong interest from foreign investors, thanks largely to President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono's market-friendly reforms.
The United States recently lifted a ban on ties with Kopassus, Indonesia's once-notorious special forces unit, citing the military's improved human rights record.
But military and police efforts to crush long-running separatist movements in resource-rich Papua and the Moluccas in easternmost Indonesia have alarmed human rights activists.
"Indonesia now is not Indonesia 10 years ago and there have been significant institutional reforms that protect human rights. But we do have some elements of the old Indonesia," said Sophie Richardson, Asia advocacy director for Human Rights Watch.
"I think it shows how far the Yudhoyono administration has to go."
Earlier this month, a gruesome video clip on Youtube showed a Papuan separatist lying in the jungle after his abdomen had been sliced open by a bayonet as he was questioned by uniformed officers.
National police spokesman Edward Aritonang was quoted in the English-language newspaper, Jakarta Post, saying that police had made the video to document their arrest of the man, Yawan Wayeni, a member of the secessionist Free Papua Organisation (OPM).
Local media also reported last month that a Papuan journalist had been found dead with signs of torture on his body and that other Papuan journalists had received phone threats.Reuters
Treatment of suspected Indonesian separatists alarms rights group

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A file photo dated December 1, 2009 shows Indonesian police arresting a protester during a demonstration against Indonesian rule in the restive Papua province in Jayapura. Picture: EPA
Monday, August 9, 2010