Saturday, 25 April 2026

20 missing after deadly protests

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JAKARTA: At least 20 people are missing after violent Indonesia protests sparked by lavish perks for lawmakers that have widened to include anger against police, a rights group said yesterday.

At least six people have been killed since protests rocked Southeast Asia’s biggest economy last week, intensified by footage spreading of the killing of a young delivery driver by a paramilitary police unit.

“As of September 1, there were 23 reports of missing persons. After the search and verification process, 20 missing persons remain unfound,” the Commission for the Disappeared and Victims of Violence (KontraS) said in a statement.

The group said the 20 were reported missing in the cities of Bandung and Depok on Java island, and the administrative cities of Central Jakarta, East Jakarta and North Jakarta that make up the wider capital city.

One incident took place in an “unknown location”, it said.

The National Police did not immediately respond to an AFP request for comment.

Police have arrested 1,240 people in Jakarta since August 25, the city’s Metropolitan Police Inspector General Asep Edi Suheri told reporters Monday, state news agency Antara reported.

Yesterday Jakarta police spokesman Ade Ary Syam Indradi said officers arrested activist Delpedro Marhaen, the director of NGO Lokataru Foundation, which also confirmed the arrest.

He was held “on suspicion of making provocative incitement to commit anarchic actions”, Ade said in comments aired by broadcaster Kompas TV.

The unrest emerged in cities across the country last week, forcing President Prabowo Subianto into a U-turn on lawmaker perks.

They were the worst protests since the ex-general took power last year.

More protests were expected yesterday outside parliament in Jakarta by a coalition of women’s groups. The United Nations called on Monday for an investigation into alleged use of disproportionate force in responding to the rallies.

The military was deployed across the capital Jakarta on Monday as hundreds gathered again outside parliament and clashes were reported in several other cities.

Prabowo criticised protesters as he visited injured police at a hospital, and said rallies should end by sundown.

In Bandung, protesters hurled Molotov cocktails at a provincial council building, before police fired tear gas overnight at “suspected… anarchists” who blocked a road.

On social media some users accused police of firing tear gas and rubber bullets into the campus and storming it.

“Officers maintained a distance of approximately 200 metres from the campus and no shots were directed at the campus,” said Hendra.

The university in a press conference denied its students instigated unrest.

Thousands more rallied in Palembang on Sumatra island and hundreds gathered separately in Banjarmasin on Borneo island, Yogyakarta on Java, and Makassar on Sulawesi.

In Gorontalo city on Sulawesi island protesters clashed with police, who responded with tear gas and water cannons. – AFP

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