The
Jakarta Post
Saturday, May 22, 2004
Students Renew Call for
Trial of Soeharto
The Jakarta Post , Jakarta
Students
and other people marked the sixth anniversary of the fall of Soeharto
by staging rallies in several cities on Friday, demanding that the
reform movement be put back on track while insisting on the trial
of the former president.
Several
big cities, including Jakarta, Bandung in West Java, Semarang in
Central Java, Denpasar in Bali, Medan in North Sumatra and Palu
in Central Sulawesi saw their students and people marching on the
streets to commemorate
Soeharto's resignation six years ago. His resignation followed riots
in a number of cities after the shooting of students in Jakarta
on May 12, 1998, which sparked protests and the end of the New Order
regime.
The
demands raised in 1998 marking Soeharto's fall included that all
alleged violators of human rights and corruptors be brought to trial
and the end of militarism.
The
protests saw further expression of the rejection of militarism on
Friday, following similar protests in the past few months ahead
of the July 5 presidential election in which two candidates are
retired generals -- former military
chief Gen. (ret) Wiranto and former minister of social and political
affairs, Gen. (ret) Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono.
It
remained a question, however, how the demonstrations could again
lead to a force as united as the 1998 student' protests that led
to Soeharto's fall from power. Students have said their role has
not been followed up in a meaningful manner by other civilian groups
and those in the government. Analysts have pointed to even worse
corruption but optimists have referred to the progress made such
as the free elections.
In
Jakarta, because of a strong police presence, at least 200 students
from the May Alliance Movement were prevented from entering Soeharto's
residence on Jl. Cendana, Central Jakarta. The march stopped at
Jl. Teuku Umar, around 150 meters from his house.
During
the rally, the students delivered speeches demanding that Soeharto
be brought to court. At 6 p.m. the students left after burning a
coffin symbolizing the death of democracy.
Hundreds
of students also marched along the capital's main thoroughfares
of Jl. M.H. Thamrin, Jl. Jend. Sudirman, and Jl. Jend. Gatot Soebroto.
Demonstrations
involving the Indonesian Muslim Students Movement (PMII) demanded
law enforcement, the protection of human rights, Soeharto's trial,
and the elimination of corruption.
In
Bandung, more than 1,000 people including farmers, students, and
housewives staged rallies in front of Gedung Sate, the governor's
office, to urge the government to try Soeharto and provide free
education and health care for the
poor.
The
protesters of the Alliance of United People (ARB), also argued that
the reform movement had not improved the lives of the common people.
Even though hundreds of police personnel were guarding the rallies,
no clash was reported.
In
Denpasar, at least 50 protesters of the Antimilitarism and New Order
Network were involved in clashes with dozens of uniformed members
of The Forum of Sons and Daughters of Retired Military Personnel
(FKPPI), injuring many of the protesters.
The
protesters, many of whom were students, had brought with them several
posters of Wiranto and Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono. They demanded that
both be held responsible for the East Timor mayhem in 1999 and military
operations in Aceh. Around 35 members of FKPPI attacked the protesters,
who fled the site.
However
in Semarang, the Front for the Defense of the Poor (FPRM) rejected
the other four president candidates -- Megawati Soekarnoputri, Amien
Rais, Abdurrahman Wahid and Hamzah Haz, saying that they failed
to support the
reform agenda let alone bring about any tangible improvements in
people's lives.
In
Palembang, hundreds of protesters also criticized military abuses
and the failure of succeeding governments in improving conditions
in the last six years.
The
protesters also demanded that the government implement the demands
of the reform agenda by bringing former President Soeharto and his
cronies to trial, to end corruption, collusion and nepotism, and
to curb foreign control of the
economy.
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