[INDONESIA-NEWS] JKTP - Commemoration of 1998 Shooting Marred by Clash

From: indonesia-p@indopubs.com
Date: Sat May 13 2000 - 12:49:36 MDT


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   Commemoration of 1998 shooting marred by clash
   
   City News - May 13, 2000
   
   JAKARTA (JP): Hundreds of university students taking part in a
   commemoration of the May 12, 1998 fatal shooting of four Trisakti
   University students clashed with security personnel while rallying
   near the residence of former president Soeharto on Friday evening.
   
   Witnesses and police said at least 15 people, consisting of three
   journalists, two students and 10 policemen, were wounded in the head
   by flying stones during the clash.
   
   The protesting students, who were blockaded by troops while attempting
   to get closer to Soeharto's residence, became enraged and burned the
   Megaria Police post and vandalized many public facilities, such as
   flower pots, along Jl. Diponegoro.
   
   The clash, which started at 7:40 p.m. ended some two hours later when
   the students decided to disperse.
   
   Most of the protesters, who were demanding that Soeharto be held
   accountable for his alleged wrongdoings and a series of human rights
   violations, including the May 12 incident, were members of City Forum
   (Forkot) student organization and students from several universities,
   such as Bung Karno University and Muhammadiyah University,
   
   According to the chief of the Jakarta Police Operational Control, Col.
   Soenarko, who was at the scene, his men detained "a number of people".
   
   He, however, refused to elaborate.
   
   Separately, police spokesman Lt. Col. Zainuri Lubis announced that six
   people had been arrested. He also said two police posts had been set
   on fire by the students.
   
   Zainuri said the clash caused a loss of some Rp 30 million (US$3,750).
   
   An Antara reporter and a TPI television crew member were injured in
   the melee. A TPI camera was also damaged.
   
   Unlike protesters on the streets, thousands of students of Trisakti
   University peacefully commemorated the four students killed in the
   bloody shooting on May 12, 1998 by staging a series of events
   throughout the day.
   
   Hundreds of students from other universities and student
   organizations, including the Network of Indonesian College Students
   (JMI) -- a joint association of several leading universities across
   the country -- also joined the events at the campus in Grogol, West
   Jakarta, some five kilometers from the House of Representatives
   complex.
   
   The first event started in the morning when Trisakti University rector
   Toby Muthis dedicated a four-pillar silver monument in the front
   garden, a memorial to the four students -- Hendrawan, Hafidin Royadi,
   Heri Hartanto and Elang Mulya Lesmana -- lost in the May 12 tragedy.
   
   Designed by two students from the university's school of architecture,
   the May 12 monument depicts traces of bullets in each of the pillars,
   with heights ranging from 10 meters to 12 meters to indicate the dates
   of the events leading up to and including the tragedy.
   
   The five sides of each pillar represent the month and the 98 slabs of
   stone scattered about the pillars signify the year.
   
   During the day, the students participated in an open dialog with
   former student activists, Andi Mallarangeng and Hariman Siregar. They
   discussed Indonesian student movements, their objectives and impact on
   society.
   
   At about 1 p.m., after the Muslim Friday prayer, the rector marked the
   beginning of construction work on the campus mosque, also dedicated to
   the four reform heroes.
   
   The 1,140-square-meter mosque will be named Asy-Syuhada, the Arabic
   term for heroes who die in a holy war.
   
   Later in the afternoon, some of the students left the campus and
   staged protests at the Ministry of Defense and at Soeharto's residence
   in Cendana, both in Central Jakarta.
   
   Dozens of local police were seen on guard around the Trisakti campus,
   but no clashes were reported as all the students dispersed peacefully.
   They later returned to their campus for a "night of contemplation".
   
   The commemoration ended with a performance of famous singers and
   musicians Chrisye and Erwin Gutawa.
   
   The May 12, 1998 tragedy began when thousands of students, mostly from
   Trisakti University, dubbed by many as the school for the wealthy,
   staged a peaceful antigovernment protest around their campus.
   
   When attempting to march through the House building, they were blocked
   by lines of armed riot police and military personnel.
   
   There was a brief standoff as students and security officers
   negotiated a peaceful solution. They had just reached an agreement in
   which both students and soldiers agreed to pull back simultaneously,
   when the shooting began.
   
   The case has twice been brought to the courts, which failed to
   determine responsibility for the shooting: the police or the Army.
   
   The parents of Heri, Elang and Hafidin, who attended a media
   conference held at the campus, showed their disappointment at the
   government's failure to reopen the case.
   
   "The President has yet to show his willingness to open the case. We
   just hope that a trial can be conducted soon and will successfully
   uncover the real masterminds," said Enus Yunus, Hafidin's father.
   (09/nvn)

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