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To: Alex who wrote (7561)2/13/1998 1:13:00 PM
From: Bucky Katt  Respond to of 116972
 
Getting worse>>Riots over rising prices erupt in eight Indonesian towns
12.24 p.m. ET (1826 GMT) February 13, 1998



SUKAMANDI, Indonesia- In the most violent day of protests yet
in Indonesia's economic crisis, thousands went on the rampage in at
least eight towns today, venting their anger against Chinese traders
they blame for soaring prices and mass unemployment.

One death was reported - a man killed in the biggest riot, in
Losari, where more than 3,000 people ran wild, the official Anatra
news agency reported. No details of the death were immediately
available.

Mobs burned or damaged hundreds of shops, houses and cars.
Three Chinese churches in two towns were raided and furniture
was burned outside. Looting was widespread.

Police detained hundreds of people, while scores of terrified
Chinese families took shelter in police stations or fled to other
towns.

Fearful residents painted the word "Muslim'' on their doors to keep
rioters from attacking their homes.


"The crowd became angry in the morning because of rising food
prices in the market. They rioted until sunset,'' said witness Neng
Kursiasih in Sukamandi, about 45 miles east of Jakarta.

Rioters hurled stones at buildings and vehicles. Others grabbed
goods from shop shelves, piled them in the streets, and set them on
fire.

Streets were littered with rocks, shattered glass and burned debris
as troops patrolled late into the night to stop sporadic outbreaks of
new rioting.

Violent protests flared on the eastern side of Java about a month
ago and have progressively moved west toward the capital, Jakarta,
as the pain from the worst economic crisis in three decades hits the
poor.

Today's strife broke out a day after President Suharto ordered the
military to crack down on activists he accused of exploiting
widespread economic discontent to destabilize the state ahead of a
presidential election in March.

Suharto, who has governed for 32 years, is expected to win a
seventh five-year term when a 1,000-member electoral college-like
assembly votes.

Ethnic Chinese, who are mainly Christian or Buddhist, make up
about 4 percent of Indonesia's population of 202 million, which is
about 90 percent Muslim.

Chinese dominate commerce and storekeepers are often targeted as
scapegoats when prices increase and civil unrest breaks out.

Hundreds of police and troops armed with shields and sticks were
trucked in from other towns to restore calm in Losari, about 125
miles east of Jakarta.

Violence was also reported in the towns of Ciasem, Gebang,
Pamanukan and Jatiwangi as well as Sukamandi. All six towns are
on the western side of the main island of Java.

Roads leading to the towns were closed when rioters threw rocks at
passing automobiles. Some were reopened later but only after police
warned drivers that their safety could not be guaranteed.

"I'm worried about what will happen next,'' said Arifin, a resident of
riot-torn Pamanukan, about 55 east of Jakarta. "I saw angry mobs
set fire to shops. Many Chinese families left town.''

About 160 people were arrested in Pamanukan where 23 shops
were burned, police said.