Indonesia President Prabowo cancels China trip as protests continue

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FILE PHOTO: Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto looks on before he delivers his annual State of the Nation Address, ahead of the country's Independence Day, in Jakarta, Indonesia, August 15, 2025. REUTERS/Ajeng Dinar Ulfiana/Pool/File Photo

The protests are the first major test for the nearly year-old government of Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto.

PHOTO: REUTERS

Follow topic:
  • Prabowo Subianto cancelled his China trip to monitor Indonesian protests over lawmakers' pay and disinformation.
  • Protests resulted in fires at parliament buildings, looting, injuries, and at least three deaths in Makassar.
  • TikTok was summoned to increase content moderation due to disinformation allegedly fuelling the unrest.

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JAKARTA - Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto on Aug 30 cancelled a planned trip to China as

days of protests spread further

outside the capital Jakarta, with several regional parliament buildings set ablaze.

Mr Prabowo had been due to attend

a “Victory Day” parade in China

on Sept 3 to mark the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II following Japan’s formal surrender.

The protests, the first major test for Mr Prabowo’s nearly year-old government, began in Jakarta this week over lawmakers’ pay and worsened after

a police vehicle hit and killed a motorcycle rider.

“The president wants to continue monitoring (the situation in Indonesia) directly...and seek the best solutions,” presidential spokesperson Prasetyo Hadi said in a video statement on Aug 30.

“Therefore, the president apologises to the Chinese government that he could not attend the invitation.”

Another consideration in cancelling the trip was a United Nations General Assembly session in September, Mr Prasetyo said.

In light of the protest, short-video app TikTok, which is owned by China’s ByteDance, said on Aug 30 it had

suspended its live feature

in Indonesia for a few days.

Jakarta had this week summoned representatives of social media platforms, including as Meta Platforms and TikTok, and told them to boost content moderation because disinformation had spread online.

The government says that such disinformation has spurred protests against it.

A car is set on fire during a protest in Yogyakarta on Aug 29.

PHOTO: AFP

Fires

Earlier on Aug 30, protesters caused fires at regional parliament buildings in three provinces - West Nusa Tenggara, Pekalongan city in Central Java and Cirebon city in West Java, local media reported.

Local media Detik.com said protesters had looted parliamentary office equipment in Cirebon and police fired teargas to disperse protesters in Pekalongan and West Nusa Tenggara.

Three people were killed on Aug 29 in an arson attack on a parliament building in Makassar, the capital of South Sulawesi province, Indonesia’s disaster management agency said.

Cars and the Makassar City Council building, which were set on fire on Aug 29.

PHOTO: AFP

State news agency Antara said the victims had been trapped in the burning building, and the disaster management agency said two people were injured after jumping out of the building to escape the fire.

Local media outlet metrotvnews.com reported one further death from a fire at the Makassar parliamentary building. This could not be independently confirmed.

Protests also occurred on the holiday island of Bali, where teargas was used against protesters.

Local media also reported that a crowd had looted the Jakarta home of Mr Ahmad Sahroni, a lawmaker from the political party NasDem, and taken items including household furniture.

Mr Sahroni has faced accusations of responding insensitively to people calling for Parliament to be dissolved amid anger over lawmakers’ allowances.

Mr Sahroni has labelled such critics “the stupidest people in the world”. REUTERS

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