The Jerusalem Post

Thousands protest against Indonesia jobs law

- • By AJENG DINAR ULFIANA and YUDDY CAYHA BUDIMAN

JAKARTA ( Reuters) - Several thousand students and workers protested in Indonesia’s capital Jakarta on Tuesday against President Joko Widodo’s new jobs law, the latest in a series of rallies opposing legislatio­n that the government says is needed to attract investment.

Dressed in yellow, blue and green jackets denoting their universiti­es, students demanded the president, widely known as Jokowi, revoke the so- called ‘ omnibus’ bill that critics say harms labor rights and the environmen­t.

“Our main problem here is that the bill does not accommodat­e what the people want,” Remy Hastian, a student from the State University of Jakarta, told Reuters at the rally.

It was the latest in a series of protests that have erupted across the archipelag­o in recent weeks, some of which have ended in sporadic violence and thousands of arrests.

“When I graduate, there won’t be a job for me,” said Sigit Ari Sandi, a student from Bogor, who singled out measures aimed at loosening rules on minimum wages. Tuesday’s protest, which was joined by labor groups, marked one year since Jokowi was inaugurate­d for a second term in office.

He comfortabl­y won the re- election last year but in an opinion poll released by Kompas newspaper on Tuesday, 46.3% of respondent­s said they were dissatisfi­ed with the first year of his second term, while 39.7% said they were satisfied. On Tuesday, Jokowi is meeting Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga, who is visiting Southeast Asia’s largest economy for talks that will cover security and are likely to include investment.

The flagship jobs legislatio­n, a revision of more than 70 existing laws that was passed on Oct 5, is designed to remove longstandi­ng impediment­s to doing business by cutting red tape, easing restrictio­ns on foreign investment and boosting labor market competitiv­eness. The government says it will lead to widespread employment generation.

But trade unions, student groups, academics and civil society groups say the legislatio­n harms protection for workers, including those on minimum wages, severance pay and maternity benefits, and weakens environmen­tal protection.

 ?? ( Ajeng Dinar Ulfiana/ Reuters) ?? DEMONSTRAT­ORS PROTEST against the government’s labor reforms bill in Jakarta, Indonesia, October 20, 2020.
( Ajeng Dinar Ulfiana/ Reuters) DEMONSTRAT­ORS PROTEST against the government’s labor reforms bill in Jakarta, Indonesia, October 20, 2020.

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