Amnesty International report alleges nearly 100 people have been unlawfully killed by the Indonesian army in Indonesia’s most eastern provinces, Papua and West Papua, in the past eight years, Al-Jazeera reports. Since coming to power in 2014, President JokoWidodo has pledged to hasten development and open up access, but in spite of a rise in investment and efforts to tackle some human rights concerns, activists say abuses by security forces persist, according to Reuters. The tactics used by the country’s security forces may have changed since the fall of military rule in 1998, but in Papua — Indonesia’s easternmost, restive region — deadly violence from the use of excessive force by police and military personnel remains a constant threat, writes Amnesty International director Usman Hamid.