http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/home/anarchy-at-tanjung-priok-leaves-a-trail-of-destruction/369567

April 15, 2010 
Nivell Rayda, Arientha Primanita & Dimas Siregar

 
Public order officers and police used water cannons, shields and clubs on 
rioters who were furious over the perceived destruction of a tomb considered 
sacred. Enraged local residents attacked officers and burned vehicles. The 
riots escalated throughout the day, leaving vehicles burning into the night. 
(JG Photo/ Yudhi Sukma Wijaya)

Anarchy at Tanjung Priok Leaves a Trail of Destruction

What began as a misunderstanding evolved into a conflict that turned Tanjung 
Priok port into a war zone on Wednesday.

At about 6 a.m., some 2,000 public order officers, known as Satpol PP, began 
arriving in convoys at the tomb of Habib Hasan bin Muhammad Al Hadad, also 
known as Mbah Priok, in the Koja area of Tanjung Priok, according to city 
spokesman Cucu Ahmad Kurnia, who spoke during a news conference at City Hall. 

Two excavator machines accompanied the officers. Cucu said they were there to 
remove illegal buildings, including the gate to the tomb complex, which did not 
have permits.

But about 400 residents, apparently thinking that Satpol was there to destroy 
what they believe to be a sacred tomb, were waiting for them at the gates, 
armed with sickles and machetes.

For several tense minutes, the two groups held their ground, taunting each 
other, waiting for the other to attack.

Shortly before 7 a.m., chaos erupted. It remains unclear who initiated the 
violence - demonstrators claimed Satpol officers targeted two teenagers who 
broke ranks, while officials say protesters cast the first stone.

The standoff quickly became a riot. Protestors threw Molotov cocktails and 
rocks at the officers, injuring many. One officer nearly lost an arm while 
another was reportedly slashed across the stomach. The authorities retaliated, 
injuring a number of rioters, many of them critically.

Shortly after the fighting started, about 700 Jakarta Police officers arrived 
on the scene.

Television footage showed a mob running amok. Several Satpol officers in full 
protective gear and armed with shields and batons were shown repeatedly beating 
a resident. 

Other images showed residents, many of whom wore motorcycle helmets for 
protection, kicking and throwing rocks at an injured Satpol officer lying on 
the ground.

By early afternoon, after police used tear gas and pepper bullets in attempts 
to disperse protesters, the situation had calmed slightly.
But the lull didn't last long.

At around 2 p.m., at nearby Koja hospital where several of the injured had been 
taken, clashes broke out again. This time the number of rioters had increased 
to at least 1,000.

Wanda Hamidah, a member of the Jakarta Provincial Legislative Council (DPRD), 
told the Jakarta Globe that Satpol officers were uncontrollable, attacking 
several legislators at the scene. "If a DPRD member can get punched by Satpol, 
how about the people? Satpol was just so brutal," Wanda said.

One such civilian was 25-year-old Amin, who told the Globe that he and his 
father and brother were delivering water to some of his friends who were 
guarding the tomb site at around 2 p.m. When the riots broke out again, they 
tried to hide behind a structure near the harbor.

But a public order officer saw them and shouted that they were rioters. He said 
his father was grabbed and immediately punched. "I hugged my father to protect 
him. But I was pulled off and punched by Satpol, too," he said. "They pulled 
off my clothes until I was almost naked. Fortunately, one police officer 
ordered me to put on my clothes. Then they tied a rope around my hands so I 
could not do anything while they kicked and punched me."

They were only saved, he said, when other angry local residents came to their 
rescue. Amin was taken to the hospital with an open wound on his head, while 
his father's face was severely bruised.

Others were simply in the wrong place at the wrong time.

"I was just trying to get home when the riot broke out. I was stopped by a 
police officer and he told me to go to the police station," Ruli said as he was 
leaving Koja hospital. 

"I tried to tell him that I was only passing by. Out of nowhere his colleagues 
hit me in the right temple and again at the back of my head."

Muhammad Nuril, 15, said he wasn't even from Jakarta.

"I heard on the news that the cemetery I often visit would be moved. I felt 
motivated to come from Tangerang," he said.

Nuril said he was hit in the face with a baton by a police officer, who smashed 
his glasses. Fragments of the glasses cut his left eye and his vision was 
partially impaired, he said.

At about 4 p.m., the enraged mob upped the ante. At Koja hospital, several 
local residents were seen patrolling the halls with wooden sticks, looking for 
wounded Satpol officers. 

The hospital staff would not reveal the identities of the public order officers 
they treated, evacuating them by sea to an undisclosed location.

Other rioters conducted a sweep of the vehicles stuck in the massive traffic 
jam along Jalan Raya Koja, searching for police or public order officers and 
forcing motorists to show their identity cards.

Rioters also began looting the offices of the Tanjung Priok port and destroying 
vehicles owned by Satpol and the Jakarta Police.

Relative calm returned to the area in the evening, but the fires continued. The 
burned vehicles were stripped for spare parts and scrap metal.

By the end of the day, two Satpol PP officers had been confirmed dead and 144 
others injured - 10 police officials, 69 public order officials and 65 locals. 
In addition, 59 official vehicles had either gone up in flames or been severely 
damaged, including a police water cannon vehicle that was set on fire.




Related articles
Indonesia Begins Search for Blame After Bloody Port Battle
1:54 AM 15/04/2010

Death Toll From 1984 Massacre at Tanjung Priok Still Uncertain
12:29 AM 15/04/2010

A History of Land Disputes Sullies the Sacred Plot of Mbah Priok's Empty Tomb
12:45 AM 15/04/2010

City Blames Public Order Agency for Raging Violence
5:03 PM 14/04/2010

Fresh Clashes in North Jakarta as Situation Deteriorates
3:28 PM 14/04/2010


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Kirim email ke