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| The death appeared to mark the first fatality in days of street battles across Indonesia (AFP Photo/STR) |
An Indonesian student died Thursday as thousands hit the streets nationwide in a wave of opposition to a major overhaul of the country's criminal code and a bid to weaken its anti-corruption agency, police said.
The death
appeared to mark the first fatality in days of street battles across the
Southeast Asian country, which have left hundreds injured and sparked a call
from Amnesty International to probe what it described as "massive police
violence" against protesters.
The
21-year-old victim was rushed to hospital suffering from a chest wound and
later died as riots erupted in Kendari city on Sulawesi island, where the local
parliament was torched, authorities said.
But police
denied playing a role in the death, amid social media claims that the
engineering student was shot.
"There
was an injured student among the crowd. He was taken to the hospital and
declared dead as doctors tried to save him. He had a wound on his right chest,
but I cannot confirm what kind of injury it was," Southeast Sulawesi
police spokesman Harry Golden Hart told Metro TV.
"None of our officers carried live bullets... or even rubber bullets," he added.
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Hundreds
have been injured in the protests against a major overhaul of
the country's
criminal code (AFP Photo/Juni Kriswanto)
|
"None of our officers carried live bullets... or even rubber bullets," he added.
The unrest
was sparked by a proposed bill that includes dozens of law changes -- from
criminalising pre-marital sex and restricting sales of contraceptives, to
making it illegal to insult the president.
There has
also been a backlash against a separate bill that critics fear would dilute the
powers of Indonesia's corruption-fighting agency -- known as the KPK --
including its ability to wire-tap graft suspects.
The
demonstrations across the archipelago are among the biggest since mass street
protests in 1998 brought down the three-decade Suharto dictatorship.
'Feedback'
Passage of
the controversial changes has now been delayed.
And, on Thursday, President Joko Widodo appeared to backtrack on plans to press ahead with the anti-corruption agency law, saying he would consider revising it.
![]() |
The
demonstrations across the archipelago are among the biggest since mass
street
protests in 1998 brought down the three-decade Suharto dictatorship
(AFP
Photo/CHAIDEER MAHYUDDIN)
|
And, on Thursday, President Joko Widodo appeared to backtrack on plans to press ahead with the anti-corruption agency law, saying he would consider revising it.
"There
was a lot of feedback given to me" about the law, Widodo said during a
televised press conference.
"Of
course I'll consider (a revision) and after making a decision, I will announce
it."
Earlier
Thursday, officials said more than 500 students had been arrested after a night
of street battles in downtown Jakarta between molotov-cocktail throwing
protesters and riot police who shot tear gas into the crowds.
Meanwhile,
a mass of students stormed and occupied the local parliament building in
Sumatra's Padang city Wednesday.
Most of the
Jakarta students were set free, but some were still being held after police
found knives and other sharp weapons in their possession, police said.
Students have issued a list of demands including scrapping some of the criminal-code changes, withdrawing troops from Indonesia's restive Papua region, and halting forest fires in Sumatra and Borneo that have unleashed toxic haze across Southeast Asia.
![]() |
Students
have issued a list of demands including scrapping some of the
criminal-code
changes (AFP Photo/Bahauddin Raja BASO)
|
Students have issued a list of demands including scrapping some of the criminal-code changes, withdrawing troops from Indonesia's restive Papua region, and halting forest fires in Sumatra and Borneo that have unleashed toxic haze across Southeast Asia.
A vote on
the criminal-code bill was originally scheduled for Tuesday, but Widodo has
called for a delay in passing the controversial changes that could affect
millions of Indonesians, including gay and heterosexual couples who might face
jail for having sex outside wedlock, or having an affair.
Updating
Indonesia's Dutch colonial-era criminal code has been debated for decades and
appeared set to pass in 2018 before momentum fizzled out.
A renewed
push this year, backed by Islamic groups, was met with a wave of criticism over
what many saw as a draconian law that invaded the bedrooms of a nation with
some 260 million people -- the fourth most populous on Earth.




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