The Phnom Penh Post

Indonesia says top officials marked for death amid riots

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FOUR Indonesian officials, including its chief security minister and the president’s top intelligen­ce adviser, were targeted in a failed assassinat­ion plot that may be linked to deadly riots in Jakarta, police said on Tuesday.

Details of the a lleged plan come less than a week after eight demonstrat­ors were k illed and hundreds injured during t he capita l’s worst v iolence in years.

The heart of the city descended into chaos over two nights of street battles between riot police and protesters opposed to Joko Widodo’s re-election as leader of the world’s biggest Muslimmajo­rity country.

A group of six people – arrested before they could carry out the killings – planned to murder the officials and an election pollster in a bid to plunge the country into chaos, authoritie­s said on Tuesday.

The ringleader was arrested near t he riots wit h a gun last week, t hey added.

‘Meant to create fear’

Chief Security Minister Wiranto, State Intelligen­ce Agency chief Budi Gunawan, Widodo’s intelligen­ce and security adviser Gories Mere and cabinet minister Luhut Pandjaitan were the assassinat­ion targets, according to police.

“The plot to assassinat­e national figures was meant to create fear,” Wiranto, who goes by one name, told a press briefing on Tuesday.

Authoritie­s – who said Widodo was not a target – did not revea l when the a lleged plot was to have been carried out.

Last week’s protests were sparked by official election results that showed Widodo easily beat rival Prabowo Subianto, a retired general who has launched a court challenge over claims that the April 17 poll was rigged against him.

Various groups converged on cent ra l Ja karta, including Subianto supporters and hardline Islamic militants who wanted to spark chaos by setting off bombs during the protests, aut horities have claimed.

Also on Tuesday, police said they had arrested 10 people for spreading fake news and hoaxes about the riots, which is a crime under Indonesia’s electronic informatio­n law.

Among the claims was a debunked report that police raided a mosque and another that falsely suggested Indonesian security forces had enlisted the help of Chinese troops to quell the civil unrest.

Ja karta took t he unusual step of temporaril­y block ing Indonesia’s 130-million strong Internet users from sharing photos and v ideos on platforms like WhatsApp and Twitter during t he unrest.

Indonesian police themselves are under the spotlight after online videos surfaced that appeared to show officers beating some protesters.

There are also questions about how the demonstrat­ors – including a 15year-old high school student – died.

Police have insisted they did not shoot live rounds, but instead used rubber bullets, water cannons and tear gas to push back the crowds. Some of the dead were reported to have had gunshot wounds.

 ?? GOH CHAI HIN/AFP ?? Indonesian anti-riot police fire tear gas at protesters demonstrat­ing against the re-election of Indonesian president in Jakarta on May 22.
GOH CHAI HIN/AFP Indonesian anti-riot police fire tear gas at protesters demonstrat­ing against the re-election of Indonesian president in Jakarta on May 22.
 ?? TWITTER ?? Indonesia’s chief security minister Wiranto was among four officials targeted in a failed assassinat­ion plot that may be linked to deadly riots in Jakarta, police said.
TWITTER Indonesia’s chief security minister Wiranto was among four officials targeted in a failed assassinat­ion plot that may be linked to deadly riots in Jakarta, police said.

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