https://jakartaglobe.id/context/meet-us-on-the-street-mr-president-students?fbclid=IwAR2XriBV2XjcU9FrL6SNj8-yyqy9z5cmwTQEN4OwZcjjSxDreKGcxt-Y0qY




Indonesian students refuse President Joko "Jokowi" Widodo's invitation to
meet at the Presidential Palace on Friday, following four days of
nationwide protests that have turned into a deadly conflict with the
security forces. (Antara Photo/Zabur Karuru)
*Meet Us on the Street Mr. President: Students*

SEPTEMBER 27, 2019

*Jakarta*. The Alliance of Indonesian Student Executive Boards have refused
an invitation to meet with President Joko "Jokowi" Widodo at
the Presidential Palace in Jakarta on Friday, following four days of
nationwide protests that have turned into violent clashes with security
forces.

The students instead requested that the meeting with Jokowi be held out in
public so people could see the President's real stance on their demands.

"[The meeting] should be out in the open and witnessed live through
national television channels," Muhammad Nurdiyansyah, the alliance's
coordinator, said as quoted by CNN Indonesia.

Nurdiyansyah said the students had clearly stated their demands during the
street protests and also in the media. He said what the students want this
time is to see Jokowi reveal his real stance toward their demands in front
of everyone.

"Our demands have never been about securing a meeting [with the president].
Our goal is for the president to fulfill those demands," Nurdiyansyah said.

*Seven Demands*

The students have put forward seven demands to the government. First
is the rejection of several bills they deem problematic: the criminal code
bill, the mineral mining bill, the agrarian bill, the correctional
institution bill and the employment bill.

The House of Representatives (DPR) has only passed the correctional
institution bill so far while putting on hold the criminal code bill.

Second, the students demand the ratification of the elimination of sexual
violence bill and domestic workers protection bill. The House said it would
leave deliberations of the elimination of sexual violence bill to the next
term of the national legislature.

Third, the students demand that the president annul the revisions to the
Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) law and the water resources law
passed by the House last week.

Jokowi said on Thursday he considered issuing a presidential decree
<https://jakartaglobe.id/context/pressures-up-on-jokowi-to-discard-new-kpk-law>
in
lieu of law to annul the amended KPK law.

Fourth, the students demand the dismissal of new KPK leaders whose
election by the House last week they deem as problematic.

The students' fifth demand is a rejection of the Indonesian Military and
National Police personnel occupying civilian positions.

Sixth, the students demand the government must stop prosecuting human
rights activists. Instead, the government should sue individuals and
companies who set off the forest fires that engulfed Sumatra and parts of
Kalimantan this year.

Their seventh and final request was for the government to resolve all past
human rights violations, to punish violators currently still in office and
to restore the rights of the victims.

*One Student Killed in Fatal Shooting*

Nurdiyansyah said the students' refusal to meet with Jokowi at the State
Palace stemmed from their experience four years ago. The student movement
at that time experienced a serious split after a closed-door meeting with
the president.

"We've learned from that experience; we do not want to be a tool for rulers
who are facing a crisis of public legitimacy, just so they can brush aside
the substance of our demands," he said.

Jokowi said on Thursday he appreciated the demonstrations by thousands of
students across the country as an expression of democracy in Indonesia.

"The most important thing is protesters should not damage public
facilities, create anarchy or threaten harm to anyone," Jokowi said.

Increasingly intense protests have been springing up in several regions of
Indonesia since Monday. Some escalated to skirmishes between the students
and security forces as police tried in vain to disperse large crowds.

The police confirmed on Thursday that a student of Halu Oleo University in
Kendari, North Sulawesi, had died from a wound in his chest after a protest
in front of the regional House of Representatives building turned violent
earlier in the day.

"We're still waiting for the autopsy results to determine the cause of
death," Adjutant Chief Comr. Harry Goldenhart, a North Sulawesi Police
spokesman, said on Thursday as quoted by Antara news agency.

"The death of a student today shows that police can't guarantee the safety
of demonstrators. The authorities must immediately determine the facts of
this fatal shooting through a quick, thorough, independent and impartial
investigation. The perpetrators of the shooting must be tried in the
criminal court," Usman Hamid, Amnesty International Indonesia's executive
director, said in a statement.

"There is already plenty of evidence that the police have beaten
demonstrators and used excessive force since the protests erupted on 23
September. Although full information about the killing of the student today
is not yet fully published, excessive use of violence by the police in
demonstrations will only worsen the situation. The priority of the
authorities should be to prevent deaths and ensure that they protect the
protesters' human rights," Usman said.

The police said hundreds more students have been injured in four days of
protests across Indonesia. The authorities suspected a different group
<http://jakartaglobe.id/context/govt-says-violent-rallies-aim-to-prevent-jokowi-from-being-sworn-in-for-second-term>
had
been trying to hijack the student protests. The group reportedly seeks to
turn the protests into violent riots to disrupt Jokowi's inauguration for
his second term as president next month.

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