Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Sohe supporters clash with police

By Khairul Saleh
Source : The Jakarta Post


At least a dozen police officers and four supporters of losing gubernatorial candidates Syahrial Oesman and Helmy Yahya (Sohe) were injured during a clash outside the South Sumatra General Elections Commission (KPUD) office Tuesday.

The crowd was made up of members of political parties and mass organizations supporting the losing pair. They demanded the KPUD postpone vote counting and the plenary session and immediately follow up on reports of violations across the province.

The protesters attempted to push their way into the office but were held back by police. They later threw rocks and sticks at police, injuring several of them.

Protest coordinator Suparman Romans was unable to meet with KPUD members because they were all at Palembang City Police headquarters to discuss the upcoming vote count.

The KPUD is expected to move the vote counting forward to Tuesday, from Sept. 14, as originally scheduled.

However, the count was canceled because of the rally at the KPUD.

Suparman told the protesters to disperse after the Palembang City Police and South Sumatra Provincial Police recommended the KPUD postpone the vote counting and plenary session.

"The postponement aims to prevent clashes on a larger scale," Palembang City Police chief Sr. Comr. Lucky Hermawan said.

Tuesday's protest was the second by Sohe supporters. A day earlier, they also demonstrated outside the KPUD office demanding votes be counted immediately.

The protesters are claiming there were election violations and vote rigging in Musi Banyuasin regency and are demanding the KPUD recount votes in the regency, especially in Sungai Lilin, Bayung Lencir and Lalan districts, where they strongly believe vote rigging occurred. According to KPUD data, only eight regencies and municipalities in the province have handed over their tally results. They are Lubuk Linggau, Ogan Komering Ulu (OKU), South OKU, Lahat, Musi Banyuasin, Musi Rawas, Banyuasin and Palembang.

Ogan Komering Ilir, Ogan Ilir, East OKU, Muara Enim, Pagaralam and Prabumulih submitted their results later in the day but the provincial KPUD has yet to count the votes from these regions.

The KPUD data show the Alex Noerdin and Eddy Yusuf (Aldy) pair, nominated by the Golkar Party, National Mandate Party, Reform Star Party, Bung Karno Nationalist Party and Democratic Party, have taken the lead with 1,866,390 votes (51.4 percent), followed by the Sohe pair, nominated by the Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle, Justice Prosperity Party, United Development Party and dozens of other minor parties with 1,764,373 votes, or 48.6 percent.

Quick counts conducted by the Indonesian Survey Network showed the Aldy pair garnering 51.2 percent of votes and the Sohe pair with 48.8 percent.

Quick counts confuse S. Sumatra voters

By Khairul Saleh
Source : The Jakarta Post


South Sumatrans have been left confused by different quick count results, with each institution claiming victory for its own candidate and the public having limited access to reliable information.

A full-page advertisement in the local print media congratulated the team of Syahrial Oesman and Helmi Yahya (SOHE) for winning 51.11 percent of votes over Alex Noerdin and Eddy Yusuf (ALDY), with only 49.13 percent of votes.

The advertisement was quoting the quick count result from the Policy and Strategic Development Research Center (Puskaptis), SOHE's campaign adviser.

Another one-page, full-color advertisement printed the quick count results from the Indonesian Survey Institute (LSI) and the Indonesian Survey Circle, which both claimed the victory of ALDY over SOHE.

ALDY, according to the advertisement, won 51.22 percent of votes, while SOHE won only 48.78 percent of votes.

The conflicting claims had members of the public turning to whatever information sources were available in an attempt to work out what was really going on with the tallies.

Newspaper vendor Hamdani in Palembang said his 30 copies of newspapers had sold out quickly everyday since the election on Thursday.

"Most of my customers buy the papers for the count results," said the 24-year-old, adding that whatever paper he had for sale always sold out.

"I really wonder about who has exactly won the election. Is it Alex Noerdin or Syahrial Oesman? All have claimed victory," a confused Ujang, 36, of KM 5, Palembang, said Sunday.

Meanwhile, congratulatory bouquets to celebrate victory have been arriving at the residences of both Syahrial and Alex since Thursday evening.

In response to the conflicting counts, Alex asked his constituents to stay calm while waiting for the South Sumatra Regional Election Committee's (KPUD) official tally. He also reminded his supporters not to parade on the streets.

"It's really unnecessary," Alex said.

The KPUD plans to accelerate the central vote recount, moving it forward from its previously scheduled date of September 12-16 to September 8-12. It thus hopes to be able to announce the final election result this Friday.

"We have faxed the letter to the 15 regency/municipal KPUD offices across South Sumatra regarding the accelerated vote counting," Helmi Ibrahim of the South Sumatra KPUD legal division said.