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Renewed Muslim-Christian
clashes in Poso, Sulawesi
- (IslamOnline)
The violence-stricken regency of Poso in Sulawesi, Indonesia
saw renewed clashes this week even after the arrival of troop reinforcements
in the region, official sources in Jakarta said on Tuesday.
Police last weekend arrested around a hundred Laskar Jihad members, confiscating
arms and restricting the movement of other members of the group in Poso.
The army also sent four battalions into the region in a bid to curb the
violence and help the police disarm the warring factions, but to no avail.
Tens of thousands of people in the mainly Christian district are said
to be living in fear after renewed clashes between Muslims and Christians,
in which whole villages have been destroyed.
A member of the Laskar Jihad said the situation was becoming tense since
the arrival of the armed Christian group in Poso, but said that Christians
had been planning fresh attacks against Muslims before their arrival.
On a website, the Laskar Jihad said its presence in the Poso regency was
to act as a balance of the forces in place in the gross absence of police
and military assistance for the Muslims.
Muslim villages are surrounded by Christians in several areas of Tentena.
Other villages with a Muslim majority have been under constant attack
during the past two and half years, IslamOnline was told.
"We have seen villages being attacked with impunity, with the security
personnel helpless or even not present," Father Tumbelaka from Tentena
said, adding that some 32,000 people lived in mainly Christian areas in
and around Tentena and that more than 13,000 refugees from other parts
of Poso district have sought safety there since May of last year.
The violence between armed Muslim and Christian groups in Poso has left
more than 2,000 people dead and tens of thousands homeless.
Reports say that Christian militias are armed with standard military issue
weapons, such as M-16s. Aid groups said armed Christian militias have
also set up roadblocks.
The Laskar Jihad said the violence in the region started with the killing
of Muslim students in the Wali Songko Islamic School, where dead bodies
were found sprawled over vast areas from the rivers to the marshes and
inside the complex.
Top Indonesian Security Minister Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono said on Monday
that the government would send some 2,600 extra troops and police to help
end the violence and search for weapons and "any individual or organization
who is not supposed to be in Poso."
The Laskar Jihad, an activist Muslim organization based in Central Java,
has battled Christians in the Malukus. The group claims to have sent thousands
of fighters to the Poso district to help Muslims.
The National Human Rights Commission has sent a fact-finding mission to
the tense provinces to investigate why security forces failed to control
the violence, despite warnings that clashes were imminent, said a spokesman.
The same Commission, however, failed to send fact-finding missions to
the provinces were Muslims were under attack and were summarily raped
and murdered, according to members of armed Muslim groups.
The Laskar Jihad said that at the start of the conflict, the successive
governments in power did not defend Muslims and watched while innocents
were killed.
Latest reports from Jakarta indicate that authorities might declare a
state of emergency in Poso in order to protect Christians and Muslim from
one another.
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