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Six protesters killed following election 'cheating' allegations in Jakarta

Six people are reportedly dead and more than 200 are injured following riots in Jakarta on Wednesday morning.

Indonesia Election Protests

Supporters of Indonesian presidential candidate Prabowo Subianto clash with the police in Jakarta, Indonesia Source: AP

Six are reportedly dead and hundreds are injured, after a Jakarta rally opposed to President Joko Widodo's re-election.

According to the Jakarta Post, Jakarta Governor Anies Baswedan said that six people had died.

“Six people have died so far. Two at Tarakan Hospital and then at Pelni, Budi Kemulyaan, Cipto Mangunkusumo and RSAL Mintoharjo hospitals,” he said. “In total, six people had died and 200 sustained injuries as of 9am."

In a public address, the Governor said he had gone to Tarakan Hospital in Jakarta to check on the injured protesters.

“Tarakan Hospital received the largest number of patients as of this morning. Around 80 injured protesters were brought in this morning. Meanwhile, around 70 injured protesters were admitted to Pelni Hospital in West Jakarta,” he said, according to The Jakarta Post.

The country's election commission on Tuesday released official results that confirmed Widodo, 57, had beaten retired military general Prabowo Subianto for the presidency in a poll held on April 17.

Subianto has said he would challenge the results in court and warned that his claims of widespread cheating could spark street protests.

Several thousand people rallied in support of Subianto near the election supervisory agency office in the heart of the capital Jakarta on Tuesday.

The protest ended peacefully, but police in riot gear later fired tear gas at some demonstrators who refused to leave the area and hurled fireworks and other objects at police.

Earlier, some protesters had set market stalls on fire.

It was not immediately clear if any demonstrators or police were injured in the clash.

More than 30,000 troops were deployed across the capital in anticipation of protests after the official election results were published.

Tensions have also spiked since police said last week that they had arrested dozens of Islamic State-linked terror suspects who had planned to cause chaos by bombing post-election protests.

Last month, a record 245,000 candidates ran for public office in Indonesia's elections, from the presidency and parliamentary seats to local positions -- the first time all were held on the same day.

High-profile arrest made

A former Indonesian military special forces commander has also been arrested for trying to smuggle weapons into protests against President Widodo's re-election.

A military spokesperson confirmed to local media that a retired major general known only as 'S', believed to be Major General Soenarko, and two others had been arrested for weapons smuggling.

Speaking to Indonesian media this week, presidential chief of staff Moeldoko said General Soenarko was now being "processed".

“Our intelligence has captured attempts to smuggle weapons. Their aim was definitely to disrupt the situation (around the election protests),” he said.

“They could have shot into the crowd, making it seem as if it was coming from the police and military security forces. That would be a trigger that would make the situation become chaotic."

Indonesian news outlet Coconut Jakarta reported General Soenarko had also been reported to the authorities for making 'treasonous' statements.

Protests and riots were planned immediately after the election results were announced, with fears tension would only escalate after Soenarko's arrest. 

With Reuters.


3 min read

Published

Updated

By SBS News

Presented by Justin Sungil Park

Source: SBS



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