San Francisco Chronicle

Violence erupts after election results; 6 dead

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JAKARTA, Indonesia — The defeated candidate in Indonesia’s presidenti­al election is expected to challenge the result in court Thursday as calm returned to the capital following a 24-hour spasm of apparently orchestrat­ed violence.

The campaign team of former Gen. Prabowo Subianto has alleged massive election fraud but not provided any credible evidence. It has said it will file a challenge to the Constituti­onal Court on Thursday.

Six people died in rioting that started Tuesday night during peaceful protests over official results that confirmed President Joko Widodo had won 55.5% of the vote in the April 17 election, securing him a second term.

Subianto, an ultra-nationalis­t politician who was also defeated by Widodo in 2014, has refused to accept the result and instead declared himself the winner.

The election supervisor­y agency earlier this week rejected Subianto’s complaint about the election’s integrity after the only evidence of fraud provided by his team was links to online articles.

The rioting in Jakarta was planned and not spontaneou­s, and many of the several hundred arrested had come from outside Jakarta, according to police.

Officers found an ambulance filled with stones and other weapons. Some of those arrested had envelopes containing 250,000-500,000 rupiah ($17-$34), said Jakarta police chief Argo Yuwono. The minimum wage in Jakarta is about $9 a day.

The government has deployed some 50,000 police and soldiers in Jakarta. Many residents have left the city and parts of the downtown are closed to traffic, with the election supervisor­y agency and Election Commission barricaded with razor wire.

Flanked by the military chief and other top leaders, grim-looking Widodo said, “I will work together with anyone to advance this country, but I will not tolerate anyone who disrupts the security, democratic processes and unity of our beloved nation.”

Subianto, an elite figure from a wealthy family connected to former dictator Suharto, also lost to Widodo in 2014. He has made four unsuccessf­ul bids for the presidency since Suharto was ousted in 1998.

“The bottom line is the people who are protesting and rioting in the past 24 hours represent a small minority of Indonesian voters and a small minority of Indonesian Muslims,” said Alexander Arifanto, an Indonesian politics expert at the S. Rajaratnam School of Internatio­nal Studies in Singapore.

 ?? Dita Alangkara / Associated Press ?? Firecracke­rs explode near supporters of losing presidenti­al candidate Prabowo Subianto during clashes with police in Jakarta. More than two dozen vehicles were burned.
Dita Alangkara / Associated Press Firecracke­rs explode near supporters of losing presidenti­al candidate Prabowo Subianto during clashes with police in Jakarta. More than two dozen vehicles were burned.

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