With brooms, Indonesian women protest for sweeping police reforms after deadly crackdown

Women holding up brooms and placards attend a protest outside the parliament complex in Jakarta on Sept. 3, 2025. (Reuters)
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Updated 03 September 2025
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With brooms, Indonesian women protest for sweeping police reforms after deadly crackdown

  • At least 10 people killed, more than 1,000 injured and 20 are missing since protests broke out last week, rights groups say
  • Police, military were deployed for patrols in Jakarta and other Indonesian cities after demonstrations turned violent

JAKARTA: Hundreds of Indonesian women, dressed in symbolic pink and black, and carrying brooms, rallied in Jakarta on Wednesday to demand sweeping reforms in the country’s security forces after a violent crackdown on nationwide protests.

At least 10 people have been killed, over a thousand injured, more than 3,300 arrested, and 20 remain missing, rights groups say, after a wave of demonstrations that started in Jakarta last week.

Initially sparked by controversial perks and housing allowances for lawmakers, the protests turned violent and spread across the country after an armed police vehicle ran over and killed a 21-year-old delivery driver at a protest site.

As military and security forces remained deployed on the streets, women protesters gathered at the parliament complex on Wednesday morning, shouting “Reform the police” and “Stop state violence,” with some hoisting traditional brooms found in every Indonesian household.

“Women are always part of social and democratic movements. We believe that the broom symbolizes a tool that can sweep away greed and evil in this country,” Nabila Tauhida, spokesperson for the Alliance of Indonesian Women, which organized the demonstration, told Arab News.

“We are symbolically using the broom to sweep away the state’s repression ... The government has responded to civil society members who voiced their criticism and demands, how we have now become the victims of state repression and violence. Many civilians were arrested, and some were even killed while protesting.”

The women protesters wore black — the color of mourning — and pink, in honor of Ana, a middle-aged woman in a bright pink hijab who became a protest icon last week after stepping ahead of student demonstrators to confront the police alone.

As protests escalated across the country, with incidents of burning and looting of state property and homes of several politicians, President Prabowo Subianto has deployed more military and police to the streets, who set up checkpoints. Troops have been patrolling the capital and other major cities such as Surabaya, Bandung, Yogyakarta and Makassar.

The militarization of public space and fears of a new violent crackdown have already forced Indonesian students and civil society groups to call off some of the protests planned for earlier this week.

Holding banners reading “Protesting is a right,” the women who gathered in front of parliament called on the president to protect their basic freedoms.

“The Alliance of Indonesian Women is calling on President Prabowo Subianto to stop all forms of state violence, including by withdrawing the military and police,” representatives of the alliance said, as they read their demands aloud together.

“We demand the full guarantee of our constitutional rights as citizens to gather, unite and protest in public without intimidation or violence.”


UK police hunt suspects after 600 items relating to the British Empire are stolen from a museum

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UK police hunt suspects after 600 items relating to the British Empire are stolen from a museum

  • The Avon and Somerset Police force said the items with “significant cultural value”
  • The force said it wanted to speak to four men over the theft and appealed to the public for information

LONDON: More than 600 artifacts relating to the history of the British Empire and Commonwealth have been stolen from the collection of Bristol Museum, police said Thursday as they released images of four suspects.
The Avon and Somerset Police force said the items with “significant cultural value” were taken from a storage building in the early hours of Sept. 25.
The force said it wanted to speak to four men over the theft and appealed to the public for information.
It was unclear why the appeal was being made more than two months after the crime.
“The theft of many items which carry a significant cultural value is a significant loss for the city,” said Det. Constable Dan Burgan.
“These items, many of which were donations, form part of a collection that provides insight into a multilayered part of British history, and we are hoping that members of the public can help us to bring those responsible to justice.”
The port city of Bristol, 120 miles (195 kilometers) southwest of London, played a major role in the trans-Atlantic slave trade. Ships based in the city transported at least half a million Africans into slavery before Britain outlawed the slave trade in 1807. Many 18th-century Bristolians helped fund the trade and shared in the profits, which also built handsome Georgian houses and buildings that still dot the city.
It was the focus of international attention and debate in 2020, when anti-racism demonstrators toppled a statue of 17th-century slave trader Edward Colston from its plinth in the city and dumped it in the River Avon.
The vandalized statue was later fished out and put on display in a museum.