Christians blast police over Easter shooting
Christians blast police over Easter shooting
Irvan NR, The Jakarta Post, Palu, Central Sulawesi
Christians here lashed out at security forces for failing to
protect them from Saturday's Easter shooting by unidentified
gunmen in Poso regency, Central Sulawesi, despite recent police
reinforcements.
The protest was swiftly staged by residents in the
predominately Christian town of Tentena around one hour after the
attack on Tabernacle Church in Kilo village, Poso Pesisir
subdistrict, which injured seven people including a four-year old
girl.
The protesters gathered en masse in Tentena and checked every
vehicle passing through the town.
Poso Police chief Adj. Sr. Comr. Abdi Darma Sitepu confirmed
on Sunday that the Tentena residents had tried to avenge the
victims of the shooting.
But they refrained from resorting to violence as police
immediately arrived to calm them down, he added. "There were only
gathering in groups."
Despite the attack, thousands of Christians in Poso flocked to
churches in the lakeside town for Easter Sunday mass amid tight
security from hundreds of police.
Abdi admitted that he was worried if Tentena residents
retaliated as it would have pleased the gunmen because their
target would have been achieved.
Previous attacks blamed on unidentified gunmen have mostly
targeted Christians in Poso after a 2001 peace accord to end two
years of religious fighting, which killed some 2,000 people.
However, Christians have so far not retaliated.
The fresh attacks were launched despite reinforcements of
security personnel in the religiously divided town.
Two weeks ago, police deployed around 300 more officers to
Poso after a clergyman was shot dead and a woman lecturer was
injured by gunmen on March 31.
The police arrested five men, including one of Arab descent,
after the previous attacks.
Abdi said he sent two platoons of police officers to comb Poso
in search of the perpetrators of the Easter shooting at around
7:15 p.m. on Saturday.
However, none of suspects have been captured.
Abdi believed the attackers were still in Poso, but could not
identify them or their whereabouts. He said that the gunmen
likely belonged to the same group that launched the earlier
attacks.
In Saturday's attack, two gunmen dressed in black Ninja-like
uniforms rode up to the Tabernacle Church on a motorbike and
fired shots indiscriminately at churchgoers who were singing a
hymn. The people immediately fell to the ground and lay face down
covered only by the pews.
Abdi said daily activities continued as usual on Sunday as
local residents were not affected by the latest shooting,
although they remained alert in case of further shootings.
Traffic on the Trans-Sulawesi highway was normal. A traveler,
named Om Ontet who made a trip from neighboring Morowali regency
to the Central Sulawesi capital of Palu via Poso, said his car
was examined by security forces while arriving at the scene.
Poso has seen intermittent violence after the government-
brokered peace deal in 2001. In the worst bloodshed last year,
gunmen in October killed 10 people in attacks on mainly Christian
villages.