{
    "success": true,
    "data": {
        "id": 1085497,
        "msgid": "peace-remains-elusive-as-ever-in-kalimantan-1447893297",
        "date": "2001-12-27 00:00:00",
        "title": "Peace remains elusive as ever in Kalimantan",
        "author": null,
        "source": "JP",
        "tags": null,
        "topic": null,
        "summary": "Peace remains elusive as ever in Kalimantan Kanis Dursin, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta Peace remained elusive as ever in the land of headhunters in 2001 as a fresh bout of ethnic violence pitting native Dayaks against migrant Madurese broke out in Central Kalimantan last February, wearing down a fragile \"truce\" between the two hostile communities.",
        "content": "<p>Peace remains elusive as ever in Kalimantan<\/p>\n<p>Kanis Dursin, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta<\/p>\n<p>Peace remained elusive as ever in the land of headhunters in<br>\n2001 as a fresh bout of ethnic violence pitting native Dayaks<br>\nagainst migrant Madurese broke out in Central Kalimantan last<br>\nFebruary, wearing down a fragile &quot;truce&quot; between the two hostile<br>\ncommunities.<\/p>\n<p>The clashes between Dayaks and Madurese shocked the world and<br>\nwere further exacerbated by the fact that the government was<br>\nincredibly slow in responding, highlighting its insensitivity to<br>\nthe images of bodies with heads severed and others with entrails<br>\nspilling out.<\/p>\n<p>Police and military personnel stationed in Kalimantan<br>\nprovinces were obviously not only outnumbered by members of<br>\nwarring parties, but were also unprepared to handle mass conflict<br>\nof such a large scale. And police and military personnel sent<br>\nfrom Jakarta as reinforcement proved to be either powerless or<br>\ntoo late to contain the savagery. Worse still, police and<br>\nmilitary personnel differed on how to handle the violence and<br>\nfleeing refugees, which resulted in a shootout that killed one<br>\nsoldier and wounded a number of policemen.<\/p>\n<p>Other than a long history of hostility and deep-seated hatred,<br>\nnobody knows exactly what triggered the carnage, which began when<br>\na group of armed Dayaks suddenly attacked Madurese migrants in<br>\nthe Pelalang resettlement area in Sampit in the wee hours of Feb.<br>\n18, 2001, killing at least five Madurese.<\/p>\n<p>The attack unnerved Madurese, who are well known for their<br>\ntoughness and solidarity with fellow Madurese, to launch large-<br>\nscale retaliation operations against native Dayaks.<\/p>\n<p>Being the majority in Sampit, the Madurese, who are also<br>\nassociated with clurit (a traditional sharp weapon), the karapan<br>\nsapi (traditional cow racing) and violence, easily took control<br>\nof Sampit, a bustling town located 214 kilometers northwest of<br>\nprovincial capital Palangkaraya, killing at least 24 Dayaks in<br>\nthe process. The Madurese marched down the town&apos;s streets, flying<br>\nbanners with &quot;Sampit is a Madurese town&quot; and &quot;Sampit is the<br>\nsecond Sampang&quot; (a major town in Madura).<\/p>\n<p>The &quot;fall&quot; of Sampit into Madurese control forced residents of<br>\nother ethnic groups, including Malays and Bugis, to flee Sampit<br>\nand the Dayaks to evacuate, spreading the news to other parts of<br>\nCentral Kalimantan. Soon, the violence spread to other villages,<br>\nsubdistricts and districts in Central Kalimantan, eventually<br>\nreaching the provincial capital of Palangkaraya.<\/p>\n<p>But the Dayaks, who had a well-preserved reputation as head-<br>\nhunters until Dutch colonialists outlawed the practice in the<br>\nlate 19th century, were far from defeated. According to the head<br>\nof the Association of East Kalimantan Dayaks, Julianus Sulaiman,<br>\nthe word &quot;Dayak&quot; comes from the Dutch word dayaker, meaning a<br>\nwild community.<\/p>\n<p>What happened next was a full-blown, unbridled ethnic war,<br>\nwith each warring party on the offensive and defensive<br>\nalternately.<\/p>\n<p>In early March, the Dayaks, firmly believing that all of<br>\nKalimantan rightfully belonged to them because it was their<br>\nancestral land, launched a bloody revenge against the Madurese<br>\nthat culminated in the Dayaks taking over Sampit, killing<br>\nthousands of innocent people. In some cases, the victims&apos; bodies<br>\nwere mutilated beyond recognition.<\/p>\n<p>Dayak mobs hunted down and killed Madurese, including women,<br>\nchildren and the elderly. They also attacked and burned houses<br>\nand businesses belonging to Madurese.<\/p>\n<p>With the Dayaks taking control of Sampit, tens of thousands of<br>\nMadurese migrants fled their houses and left their belongings in<br>\nSampit and returned to the land of their ancestors, Madura, a<br>\nsmall barren island off Surabaya, the capital of East Java<br>\nprovince. The Sampit refugees, as the Madurese returnees are<br>\ncalled, are now housed in squalid refugee camps on Madura.<br>\nGovernment officials have repeatedly promised to send back the<br>\nrefugees to Central Kalimantan, but have given no date for their<br>\nrepatriation.<\/p>\n<p>The February-April ethnic conflict was not the first between<br>\nthe Dayaks and Madurese. In 1999, the Madurese clashed with the<br>\nDayaks and other ethnic groups in Sambas and Singkawang in West<br>\nKalimantan, killing thousands of people from both sides. It also<br>\nforced tens of thousands Madurese to flee to provincial capital<br>\nPontianak and some return to Madura. In 1997, ethnic conflict<br>\nbetween the Dayaks and Madurese also broke out in Sanggau Ledo,<br>\nWest Kalimantan, killing hundreds of innocent people, including<br>\nchildren.<\/p>\n<p>One intriguing question that perhaps only the Dayaks, the<br>\nmajority of whom are Christian, and Madurese, generally Muslim,<br>\ncan answer is why the two communities harbor such a deep-seated<br>\nhatred against the other that full-blown ethnic conflicts can<br>\nerupt at any time, with any insignificant occurrence as the<br>\ntrigger?<\/p>\n<p>The hatred is so intense that it appears to even conquer the<br>\nholy bond of religion. In 2001, for example, angry Madurese<br>\nmercilessly beat to death a Dayak Muslim man who had accompanied<br>\nhis Madurese wife to Madura after the ethnic conflict in Sampit.<br>\nIn 1999, some Madurese men, who had converted to Christianity and<br>\nhad Christian wives, had to take sanctuary in churches in<br>\nPontianak to avoid angry Dayak Christians.<\/p>\n<p>The usual explanation offered by experts and government<br>\nofficials has been economic jealousy. Madurese, who first set<br>\nfoot on the country&apos;s biggest territory in the 1960s through<br>\ngovernment-sponsored transmigration programs, are said to control<br>\neconomic life in Kalimantan, while their Dayak counterparts are<br>\npoor and largely marginalized.<\/p>\n<p>Such an explanation, however, contradicts reality in the<br>\nfield. Just as on the national level, Chinese-Indonesians and, to<br>\na certain extent, traders from Sumatra who are locally referred<br>\nto as Malays, control the economy in Kalimantan. So, if the<br>\ntrigger was economic jealousy, the ethnic Chinese and Malay<br>\ntraders should have been the main targets of the Dayak people&apos;s<br>\nwrath.<\/p>\n<p>But so far, there have been no reports of conflicts between<br>\nDayaks and Malay traders or Chinese-Indonesians in Kalimantan. In<br>\nfact, in the 1999 ethnic conflict in Singkawang and Sambas,<br>\nethnic groups like the Malays, Bugis and Chinese as well as<br>\nJavanese migrants sided with the Dayaks in driving Madurese out<br>\nof the two towns. These ethnic groups have also been unanimous in<br>\ntheir rejection of the return of Madurese who are now living in a<br>\nnumber of temporary resettlements in and around Pontianak. Their<br>\nfuture remains uncertain, as local authorities appear reluctant<br>\nto relocate them to other parts of West Kalimantan province.<\/p>\n<p>The Dayaks, Malays, Javanese and ethnic Chinese as well Bugis<br>\nin West Kalimantan are particularly affronted by the perceived<br>\narrogance of the Madurese, who, in the words of the other ethnic<br>\ngroups &quot;were not planting but were harvesting, were not raising<br>\ncows but were selling them&quot;. Some Madurese leaders in Pontianak<br>\nacknowledge the wayward attitudes of some Madurese migrants in<br>\nWest Kalimantan, but assert that there are more good Madurese<br>\nthan there are bad Madurese. Other ethnic groups agree with the<br>\nassessment, but became irritated that Madurese elders did nothing<br>\nto punish the wayward Madurese.<\/p>\n<p>The conflict revealed that after more than 50 years of<br>\nindependence, Indonesia is still very much compartmentalized by<br>\nreligion or ethnicity or both. Under such a condition, the<br>\ncountry remains prone to disintegration. And the fear becomes<br>\nreal if one looks at the country&apos;s police and military, which<br>\nhave proven to be ill-equipped to deal with full-scale social<br>\nconflict.<\/p>\n<p>Needless to say the continued, earth-shaking Dayak-Madurese<br>\nconflict has raised concerns over the future of Indonesia, which<br>\nhas been plagued by social unrest triggered by the prolonged<br>\neconomic crisis beleaguering the country since 1997. With the<br>\nspecter of ethnic and religious conflicts, plus &quot;rebellions&quot; in<br>\ntwo provinces, there is indeed a clear reason to worry about the<br>\nvery existence of this country.<\/p>",
        "url": "https:\/\/jawawa.id\/newsitem\/peace-remains-elusive-as-ever-in-kalimantan-1447893297",
        "image": ""
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    "sponsor": "Okusi Associates",
    "sponsor_url": "https:\/\/okusiassociates.com"
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