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JAKARTA: Tear gas was fired near the presidential palace in Jakarta on Thursday (October 8) afternoon, where protesters gathered to protest against the new Job Creation Law.
A large crowd of people took to the streets on the third day of heated protests over the general job creation law passed on Monday that they said would favor companies and investors at the expense of workers.
Chaos erupted at 2 p.m. when protesters attempted to break through a police barricade guarding West Merdeka Street, where key government offices are located.
They threw stones and the police responded with tear gas, sending them to safety. A police post was burned down.
Some protesters burned tires, smashed bus stops and dismantled partitions of a construction site, while others were seen breaking bricks and concrete into smaller pieces to be thrown at the police.
At 4pm, more tear gas was fired as the police tried to push the protesters back from their original positions.
This caused some protesters to flee as police sirens sounded in the distance.
Earlier, more than 1,000 protesters protested near the parliament complex in Jakarta at noon.
The protesters arrived on motorcycles and immediately obstructed Jakarta’s Gatot Subroto Street, but were blocked by hundreds of police armed with tear gas canisters and full combat gear.
There was a clash with some protesters yelling at the police officers, demanding that they open their barricade. Others chanted “Long live the workers!”, Among other slogans, while honking their horns and accelerating their motorcycles.
After a 10-minute standoff, the protesters agreed to move to the nearby Jakarta Convention Center.
They disbanded about 40 minutes later, after police ordered them to leave on the grounds that the protest had violated the physical distancing rule to stop the spread of COVID-19.
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Elsewhere, there were numerous reports in the media of similar protests organized across the country that ended in violence.
There were also reports of hundreds of arrests, including those who attempted to break through police barricades and defied orders to disperse.
On Thursday morning, a heavy security presence was seen near the parliament complex and around the presidential palace, with thousands of heavily armed officers in riot gear and armored vehicles waiting. The streets and highways surrounding the two locations have also been closed with barbed wire and concrete barriers.
Police have also dispatched hundreds of officials to Jakarta’s border areas to prevent people from outside Jakarta from joining the protests.
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Iyut Bastcho, from the Confederation of Independent Labor Unions, told CNA on Thursday afternoon that many protesters were stranded as police completely closed access from Cikarang, an industrial zone 20 kilometers east of Jakarta, to the capital.
He expressed disappointment at the bill’s passage Monday despite widespread rejection.
“(Indonesian President) Jokowi still has a chance to do the right thing and veto the law and prevent it from being enacted.
“You should listen to people’s wishes. But we are pessimistic that you would do that,” he said.
Going forward, Bastcho said the unions would consider challenging the law in the Constitutional Court.
“We have challenged the old labor law 13 times and some (attempts) were successful. And the old law is better than the new one. Therefore, we are optimistic that the Constitutional Court will repeal the law or some of the articles that violate our rights. . as workers, “he said.
450 NABBED INDIVIDUALS: POLICE
Jakarta police arrested 450 people in Thursday’s protests.
Jakarta police spokesman Yusri Yunus told CNA that around 20 of them received a positive result on their rapid tests for COVID-19 and must be quarantined.
“Jakarta is still under the PSBB (large-scale social restrictions). We have to dissolve them. We cannot afford another group. Jakarta is already registering 1,000 cases a day,” he said of the police decision to fire tear gas at protesters.
Yunus said the police believe that the people arrested were not students or workers, but schoolchildren and the unemployed who infiltrated the protests to create chaos and riots.
“We don’t know if they were mobilized or paid. We don’t know what their motivation was for joining the protests,” he said.