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[Lounge Formil Raya - Part 24] The Largest Indonesian Military Community - Part 1
![[Lounge Formil Raya - Part 24] The Largest Indonesian Military Community - Part 1](https://s.kaskus.id/images/2016/10/31/2367992_20161031084830.jpg)
Selamat Datang di FORMIL
Lounge ini adalah tempat ngumpul formilers.
Daripada OOT di thread diskusi, mending ngobrol, sharing, kangen - kangenan, chit - chat disini sampai klimaks.
![[Lounge Formil Raya - Part 24] The Largest Indonesian Military Community - Part 1](https://s.kaskus.id/images/2016/06/14/6692979_20160614032737.png)
SEJARAH FORMIL
![[Lounge Formil Raya - Part 24] The Largest Indonesian Military Community - Part 1](https://s.kaskus.id/images/2016/06/14/6692979_20160614032743.png)
Quote:
Alkisah dulu di BP ada banyak obrolan tentang Militer. Jadinya dibuatlah sub forum baru bernama Formil. Untuk komunitas Formil sendiri baru ada pada waktu 2008, ketika ada Indo Defence 2008, pertama kali kawan kawan berkumpul bersama. Setelah itu, dibentuklah komunitas Formil diluar dunia maya
Pengen tau lebih lanjut tentang FORMIL? Cekidot disini gan!
Pengen tau lebih lanjut tentang FORMIL? Cekidot disini gan!
![[Lounge Formil Raya - Part 24] The Largest Indonesian Military Community - Part 1](https://s.kaskus.id/images/2016/06/14/6692979_20160614032737.png)
BACA RULES DULU SEBELUM POSTING
![[Lounge Formil Raya - Part 24] The Largest Indonesian Military Community - Part 1](https://s.kaskus.id/images/2016/06/14/6692979_20160614032743.png)
Quote:
- Be nice to other kaskuser, gunakan bahasa manusia yang beradab.
- Dilarang posting komentar yang bersifat INSULT user lain.
- Dilarang BERJUALAN dalam bentuk apapun.
- Dilarang posting mengandung SARA, Junk & Flaming.
- Dilarang posting yang bersifat PORNOGRAFI, LONGCET, maupun DISTURBING PIC
- Posting foto maupun video BW KILLER gunakan spoiler.
- Biasakan MULTIQUOTE, jika kesulitan cukup gunakan @username untuk membalas.
- Dilarang cuma posting berupa emoticon saja.
- Dilarang menggunakan emoticon kasar


- Dilarang melakuan REAL LIFE ABUSED, yaitu mengumbar pribadi seseorang, pajang2 foto, nama asli, alamat rumah/kantor, membuka rahasia penyakit, contact person, link FB, transkrip chatting dll untuk diposting/disebarkan dengan tujuan apapun kecuali atas seijin user yang bersangkutan.
- GTAbhol & ALAMOR harus larbug dulu sebelum masuk
- Selebihnya mengacu pada Rules of Engagement FORMIL
Sanksi: teguran, delete post, banned 

Selamat bergabung, semoga trit ini dpt memperkukuh tali persaudaraan antar penghuni kaskus pada umumnya dan penghuni FORMIL khususnya.

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Two Indonesians confess to petrol bomb plot to ‘burn Chinese shops’ and incite looting spree
Two Indonesian men have told police they were each paid 300,000 rupiah (US$21) to buy petrol for bombs that would “burn Chinese shops” in Jakarta and “provoke the masses” into a looting spree, as seen in 1998 when ethnic Chinese residents were attacked by mobs.
Videos of the men – who were arrested on Saturday for storing, transporting and assembling explosives – were on Monday circulated on social media as pitched battles between thousands of students and police officers continued in the capital and several other cities.
Unrest has been rocking Indonesia
for more than a week, sparked by proposed laws that critics say would weaken the country’s anti-corruption agency. The demonstrators are also against planned revisions to the criminal code that would compromise the rights of women and minorities and toughen the Muslim majority nation’s blasphemy law, among other changes.
On Monday, police fired tear gas near the parliament building in Jakarta to break up a crowd of about 2,000, saying protesters had been throwing rocks, bottles, fireworks and petrol bombs, according to state news agency Antara. About 26,000 officers and soldiers were mobilised in the capital.
The videos of the two men, first published on the Twitter account of a police officer, were authentic, Jakarta police confirmed.
In the first recording, a man who identified himself as Ali Udin from Bogor in West Java said: “I was given 300,000 rupiah to buy petrol to make Molotov cocktails which would be used to burn Chinese shops from Roxy to Grogol to provoke the masses to come out to loot those shops just like the riots of 1998.
“Furthermore, there would be someone to direct and coordinate [what would happen next],” said the man, adding that he was not under duress to make the statement.
The man was referring to ITC Roxy Mas, a mall in west Jakarta selling mobile phones where many shops are owned by ethnic Chinese, while Grogol is a neighbouring district that was the scene of violence during the anti-Chinese riots 21 years ago, which eventually led to the downfall of then-president Suharto.
Another suspect, named Yudhi Febrian, also admitted on video to receiving 300,000 rupiah to assemble petrol bombs for the same purpose.
An ethnic Chinese resident in Jakarta said some members of his community were scared.
“We are all very concerned but we place our trust in the security authorities that they will be able to resolve this well,” said the man, who did not want to be named.
But he added that it was “business as usual” for most Chinese-owned shops.
In 1998 more than 1,000 people were killed when riots erupted in Jakarta amid the crippling Asian financial crisis that threw millions of Indonesians out of work.
Ethnic Chinese were targeted by mobs in an orgy of looting, arson and killings. Many fled the country and the economy was paralysed.
The two suspects were among six men arrested over the weekend for possession, storing, transporting and assembling explosive materials, according to a senior police source.
The suspects included a retired two-star navy general – rear admiral Sony Santoso – and a lecturer from the Bogor Institute of Agriculture.
Jakarta police spokesman Argo Yuwono told reporters petrol bombs were stored in the home of the lecturer. At least 29 petrol bombs were discovered and seized from the lecturer’s home.
Santoso was a candidate in the legislative election earlier this year in April, where he represented the Berkarya Party, which is led by Tommy Suharto, the former dictator’s son.
Local press quoted a senior party official, Badaruddin Andi Picunang, confirming that the retired admiral had stood in the election.
But Badaruddin added the party was not involved in any of Santoso’s activities and that if there were indications the admiral was involved in any illegal acts, he had done so in “his personal capacity, not as a cadre of the party”.
The latest bout of unrest follows protests in May by opponents of President Joko Widodo against his election in the April presidential polls, and comes weeks before Widodo’s inauguration for his second term. In the past week, two students have died
and hundreds have been injured in bursts of chaos, though many of the rallies have been peaceful.
Yose Rizal Damuri, chief economist at Indonesia’s Centre for Strategic and International Studies, said the four-month hiatus between the announcement of the election results in May and the inauguration of Widodo on October 20 allowed room for all kinds of “elements” to create trouble.
“Many people are trying to take advantage of this – the opposition, Islamic fundamentalists … many parties. It is a very mixed and complicated picture,” Yose said.
Two Indonesian men have told police they were each paid 300,000 rupiah (US$21) to buy petrol for bombs that would “burn Chinese shops” in Jakarta and “provoke the masses” into a looting spree, as seen in 1998 when ethnic Chinese residents were attacked by mobs.
Videos of the men – who were arrested on Saturday for storing, transporting and assembling explosives – were on Monday circulated on social media as pitched battles between thousands of students and police officers continued in the capital and several other cities.
Unrest has been rocking Indonesia
for more than a week, sparked by proposed laws that critics say would weaken the country’s anti-corruption agency. The demonstrators are also against planned revisions to the criminal code that would compromise the rights of women and minorities and toughen the Muslim majority nation’s blasphemy law, among other changes.
On Monday, police fired tear gas near the parliament building in Jakarta to break up a crowd of about 2,000, saying protesters had been throwing rocks, bottles, fireworks and petrol bombs, according to state news agency Antara. About 26,000 officers and soldiers were mobilised in the capital.
The videos of the two men, first published on the Twitter account of a police officer, were authentic, Jakarta police confirmed.
In the first recording, a man who identified himself as Ali Udin from Bogor in West Java said: “I was given 300,000 rupiah to buy petrol to make Molotov cocktails which would be used to burn Chinese shops from Roxy to Grogol to provoke the masses to come out to loot those shops just like the riots of 1998.
“Furthermore, there would be someone to direct and coordinate [what would happen next],” said the man, adding that he was not under duress to make the statement.
The man was referring to ITC Roxy Mas, a mall in west Jakarta selling mobile phones where many shops are owned by ethnic Chinese, while Grogol is a neighbouring district that was the scene of violence during the anti-Chinese riots 21 years ago, which eventually led to the downfall of then-president Suharto.
Another suspect, named Yudhi Febrian, also admitted on video to receiving 300,000 rupiah to assemble petrol bombs for the same purpose.
An ethnic Chinese resident in Jakarta said some members of his community were scared.
“We are all very concerned but we place our trust in the security authorities that they will be able to resolve this well,” said the man, who did not want to be named.
But he added that it was “business as usual” for most Chinese-owned shops.
In 1998 more than 1,000 people were killed when riots erupted in Jakarta amid the crippling Asian financial crisis that threw millions of Indonesians out of work.
Ethnic Chinese were targeted by mobs in an orgy of looting, arson and killings. Many fled the country and the economy was paralysed.
The two suspects were among six men arrested over the weekend for possession, storing, transporting and assembling explosive materials, according to a senior police source.
The suspects included a retired two-star navy general – rear admiral Sony Santoso – and a lecturer from the Bogor Institute of Agriculture.
Jakarta police spokesman Argo Yuwono told reporters petrol bombs were stored in the home of the lecturer. At least 29 petrol bombs were discovered and seized from the lecturer’s home.
Santoso was a candidate in the legislative election earlier this year in April, where he represented the Berkarya Party, which is led by Tommy Suharto, the former dictator’s son.
Local press quoted a senior party official, Badaruddin Andi Picunang, confirming that the retired admiral had stood in the election.
But Badaruddin added the party was not involved in any of Santoso’s activities and that if there were indications the admiral was involved in any illegal acts, he had done so in “his personal capacity, not as a cadre of the party”.
The latest bout of unrest follows protests in May by opponents of President Joko Widodo against his election in the April presidential polls, and comes weeks before Widodo’s inauguration for his second term. In the past week, two students have died
and hundreds have been injured in bursts of chaos, though many of the rallies have been peaceful.
Yose Rizal Damuri, chief economist at Indonesia’s Centre for Strategic and International Studies, said the four-month hiatus between the announcement of the election results in May and the inauguration of Widodo on October 20 allowed room for all kinds of “elements” to create trouble.
“Many people are trying to take advantage of this – the opposition, Islamic fundamentalists … many parties. It is a very mixed and complicated picture,” Yose said.
https://www.scmp.com/week-asia/polit...-chinese-shops
ada yang bisa tampilin videonya barangkali?
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