San Francisco Chronicle

Violent protests against labor law

- By Niniek Karmini Niniek Karmini is an Associated Press writer.

JAKARTA, Indonesia — Protests in many Indonesian cities turned violent Thursday as thousands of enraged students and workers criticized a new law they say will cripple labor rights and harm the environmen­t.

Clashes between rockthrowi­ng demonstrat­ors and riot police broke out near Jakarta’s presidenti­al palace as police tried to disperse the protesters, including workers and high school and university students.

President Joko Widodo is visiting Central Kalimantan province and was not in the palace.

Police fired tear gas at the protesters from several high schools and universiti­es as they tried to approach the palace compound, turning roads into a smokefille­d battlegrou­nd. The protesters fought back, hurling rocks and bottles.

An angry mob burned a traffic police post at an intersecti­on near the palace, while other protesters set fires to tires and fiberglass road barriers. As night fell, some protesters set fire to a subway shelter in downtown Jakarta, causing the area to turn an eerie orange color.

Similar clashes occurred in large cities all over the country, including Yogyakarta, Medan, Makassar, Manado and Bandung, the capital of West Java province, where police arrested 209 people during two days of violent protests.

Organizers have called for a threeday national strike starting Tuesday demanding that the government revoke the legislatio­n.

The Job Creation Law approved by Parliament on Monday is expected to substantia­lly change Indonesia’s labor system and natural resources management. It amended 79 previous laws and was intended to improve bureaucrat­ic efficiency as part of efforts by Widodo’s administra­tion to attract more investment to the country.

The demonstrat­ors say the law will hurt workers by reducing severance pay, removing restrictio­ns on manual labor by foreign workers, increasing the use of outsourcin­g, and converting monthly salaries to hourly wages.

“We vow to continue returning to the streets until the new law is revoked,” said Andi Khiyarulla­h, a protest organizer from the Indonesia Alliance’s student executive body.

Police in Jakarta also blocked streets leading to Parliament, preventing labor groups from holding a mass rally there, and detained at least 200 high school students who attempted to reach the compound, Jakarta police spokesman Yusri Yunus said.

Fears grew of a surge in coronaviru­s cases from the protests, as infection rates are rising in many areas. Indonesia’s confirmed deaths rose Thursday to 11,580, the highest number in Southeast Asia.

National COVID19 task force spokespers­on Wiku Adisasmito expressed concern about “potential spreaders” in the crowds of protesters across the country, especially in Jakarta, the center of Indonesia’s outbreak.

The government reported Thursday that the total number of confirmed cases nationwide has risen to 320,564, including the 11,580 deaths.

Indonesia, Southeast Asia’s largest economy, is eagerly courting foreign investors as key drivers of economic growth in a nation where nearly half the population of 270 million is younger than 30.

 ?? Ed Wray / Getty Images ?? Protesters try to ram a ladder through the entrance of a subway station in the downtown area of Jakarta, Indonesia.
Ed Wray / Getty Images Protesters try to ram a ladder through the entrance of a subway station in the downtown area of Jakarta, Indonesia.

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