The graphic footage that circulated on social media in recent days, showed several people assaulting a man in the eastern region, with his hands tied in a water-filled steel drum.
hirteen soldiers have been detained for their alleged role in the torture of a Papuan man, the military said Monday, after a viral video showed him being beaten by a group, some in military fatigues.
The graphic footage that circulated on social media in recent days, showed several people assaulting a man in the eastern region, with his hands tied in a water-filled steel drum.
Papua is where separatists have waged a decades-long insurgency against Indonesian Military (TNI) forces.
Another video showed the same man shivering in the drum while a man in fatigues slashes his back with a combat knife.
The military opened a probe into the incident after the footage spread and detained 13 soldiers out of more than 40 questioned, military spokesman Col. Kristomei Sianturi told a press conference.
"Out of those 42 soldiers, indications were found that 13 soldiers committed the violent act," Kristomei said.
The soldiers will soon be named as suspects, he added.
The attack allegedly occurred last month but the video went viral last week.
Maj. Gen. Izak Pangemanan, a senior Indonesian military official in Papua, said the actions of the alleged perpetrators "tarnished efforts to handle conflict in Papua" and apologised for the incident.
"I apologise to all Papuan people. And we will continue to work so that these kinds of events will not be repeated in the future," he said.
Military officials said the man was accused of planning to burn down a health clinic and was a member of an armed criminal group, an Indonesian army term for describing Papuan rebel groups.
Papua's main rebel group has claimed responsibility for attacks against soldiers and civilians in recent years.
Security forces have for years been dogged by allegations of rights abuses against Papua's ethnic Melanesian population including extrajudicial killings of activists and peaceful protestors in their efforts to crush the rebel groups.
Human rights group Amnesty International, which collects evidence of violence in Papua, said the man had died. It called for higher-ranking officers to be held to account as well as foot soldiers.
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