http://www.smh.com.au/world/indonesia-tweets-fuel-acts-of-violence-20111002-1l3te.html
Indonesia tweets fuel acts of violence 
Tom Allard, Indonesia Correspondent, Jakarta
October 3, 2011 
 
Messages flew around the social networking site. 

IN THE aftermath of last week's suicide bombing by a rogue Islamist of a church 
in the Central Java city of Solo, messages flew around the social networking 
site Twitter urging followers to go to an extremist website.

There, on arrahmah.com, was an article condemning Indonesian President Susilo 
Bambang Yudhoyono for his strong and quickly delivered words against the 
violent act in Solo, contrasting it with a supposedly weak response to the 
alleged attacks on Muslims by Christians in Ambon.

It continued with a litany of falsehoods, including claims that a village had 
been burnt down and that thousands of Muslims remained in mosques in Ambon, 
seeking refuge from the crusader hordes.

In two days some 20,000 people had retweeted the message. Disturbingly, it was 
just the latest in a series of highly inflammatory tweets, SMS and Facebook 
postings sowing the seeds of disharmony and promoting terrorism in Indonesia.
Last month, there were two striking examples of the power of social media to 
spread misinformation and promote conflict.

On September 11, a deadly riot broke out in Ambon, an island in Maluku in 
eastern Indonesia. Seven people died and scores of homes and vehicles were 
damaged after rumours spread by SMS, Twitter and Facebook that a Muslim had 
been captured and tortured to death by Christians. In fact, he died in a 
traffic accident.

Three days later, in Makassar, a city in South Sulawesi, a mentally ill man 
went on a stabbing rampage killing three people. The man happened to be a 
Christian and within hours, SMS and Twitter messages were warning of 
co-ordinated Christian attacks on Muslims.

Two Christian men were stabbed in retaliation and more than 1000 people fled to 
a police school to seek refuge from Christian attacks that never occurred.

â– Indonesian police yesterday said they had arrested a wanted terror suspect, 
Ben Asri, in connection with the Solo bombing.


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http://www.smh.com.au/world/indonesia-tweets-fuel-acts-of-violence-20111002-1l3te.html#ixzz1ZkPDdqzq


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