https://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2020/10/13/hundreds-arrested-in-jakarta-as-clashes-break-out-in-protests-against-jobs-law.html?utm_source=Newsletter&utm_medium=Mailchimp&utm_campaign=mailchimp-oct&utm_term=arrests-protest



Hundreds arrested in Jakarta as clashes break out in protests against jobs
law

Alya Nurbaiti The Jakarta Post Jakarta   /   Tue, October 13, 2020   /
09:19 pm

Protestors disperse as police shoot tear gas following clashes that broke
out during a protest against the Job Creation Law in Gambir, Central
Jakarta on Tuesday (Antara

This article was published in thejakartapost.com
<https://www.thejakartapost.com/> with the title "Hundreds arrested in
Jakarta as clashes break out in protests against jobs law". Click to read:
https://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2020/10/13/hundreds-arrested-in-jakarta-as-clashes-break-out-in-protests-against-jobs-law.html
..


Download The Jakarta Post app for easier and faster news access:
Android: http://bit.ly/tjp-android
iOS: http://bit.ly/tjp-ios

What began as a peaceful protest against the Job Creation Law turned into
riots on Tuesday as violent opposition to the controversial law continued
in the capital city.

Unidentified people reportedly threw bottles and stones at police officers
near the Arjuna Wiwaha Monument, also known as the Horse Statue, in Central
Jakarta, just as protesters from the Islam Defenders Front (FPI), the
National Movement to Safeguard Fatwas (GNPF) and the 212 Alumni Brotherhood
started to disperse

At 3:45 p.m., the protesters, mostly dressed in white and wearing caps,
began to leave the location. Central Jakarta Police chief Sr. Comr. Heru
Novianto appealed to the masses to remain calm while leaving.

“This is a peaceful protest. Now the rally is over, let’s return home
peacefully. FPI group, please keep the situation [under control] and do not
riot,” Heru said to the masses.


*Read also*: *Foreign force behind chaotic protests over Job Creation Law:
Prabowo*

However, a group of people without attributes refused to leave the area.
Clashes erupted when the mob reportedly started to hurl mineral bottles and
stones at the police barricades, which the police countered with tear gas
fired near the Horse Statue.

Clashes also erupted in the nearby Tugu Tani area, also in Central Jakarta,
at 5 p.m., where the rioters set alight various goods in the middle of the
road, kompas.com reported.

Near the Hotel Indonesia traffic circle, meanwhile, the mob allegedly tried
to seize control of a pickup.


Jakarta Police chief Insp. Gen. Nana Sudjana said police had apprehended
around 500 people who had allegedly provoked the protesters to start the
clash. He said he suspected they had infiltrated the masses to instigate
riots by throwing objects at police personnel.


“There were around 600 people trying to provoke the mass. We [Police] stood
by at first, but they kept throwing [things] at security personnel. At that
point, we pushed and apprehended them,” he said.


Read also:* FPI, 212 rally alumni protest over omnibus law, demand Jokowi's
resignation *


Earlier in the day, thousands of protesters of the FPI, GNPF and 212
Alumni had gathered on Jl. Medan Merdeka Selatan in Gambir, Central
Jakarta, – around 1 kilometer from the Presidential Palace, kompas.com
reported. They
recited prayers and voiced demands for the government to revoke the omnibus
law. They also called on President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo to step down.


“The omnibus law will cause Indonesian citizens to be colonized in their
own country. We’re here to defend the workers,” Muslim preacher Sugi Nur
Raharja said in his speech during the demonstration, as reported by Kompas
TV.


The 212 Alumni Brotherhood is known as the driving force behind the
so-called 212 rally in December 2016 to demand the imprisonment of
then-Jakarta governor Basuki “Ahok” Tjahaja Purnama for alleged blasphemy.


The protestors followed the members of labor unions and university students
that had vowed to continue to stage protests to voice their opposition to
the highly contentious law.


According to the Jakarta Police, around 12,000 police and military
personnel stand ready to ensure public safety and security in the capital.
Heru said 650 police officers and soldiers had been deployed to the Horse
Statue area.


Some public transportation services were suspended on Tuesday as a
precautionary measure in anticipation of disruption caused by the
large-scale protest. The MRT only served trips from the Lebak Bulus Grab
Station to Blok M BCA Station, while the Transjakarta bus service halted
operations across the city.

Kirim email ke