JAKARTA: Activists have called for press freedom to be protected in Indonesia and demanded an investigation after a magazine critical of the government was sent a pig’s head and decapitated rats.
Weekly magazine Tempo, a top Indonesian publication since the 1970s, has been critical of the policies of President Prabowo Subianto, an ex-general whom rights groups accuse of abuses under late dictator Suharto.
Cleaners at Tempo’s office found a box of six rats with their heads cut off on Saturday (Mar 22), the magazine said in a statement.
A pig’s head without its ears was also found there on Thursday, intended for delivery to a reporter.
“This is a dangerous and deliberate act of intimidation,” Beh Lih Yi, head of the Asia program at the Committee to Protect Journalists, told AFP late on Saturday.
“Journalists in Indonesia must be able to do their work freely and safely without fear of retaliation.”
Amnesty International Indonesia executive director Usman Hamid told AFP on Saturday an investigation must be opened, saying there was a risk that being a journalist in Indonesia would become “like a death sentence”.
Tempo editor-in-chief Setri Yasra said the deliveries sought to undermine the publication’s work but added it would remain committed to its mission.
“If the intention is to scare, we are not deterred, but stop this cowardly act,” Setri said in a statement.
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