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Hundreds wounded as protests continue for second day across Jakarta after incumbent Jokowi was confirmed president.

Deadly protests continue in Indonesia after Jokowi's election win

Jakarta, Indonesia – At least six people have been killed as protests continue for the second day in Indonesia’s capital, Jakarta, after the results of last month’s election confirmed incumbent Joko “Jokowi” Widodo being officially declared president after getting 55 percent of the votes.

The protesters were largely supporters of presidential candidate and former military general Prabowo Subianto and they claimed widespread fraud took place before, during and after the election.

Major roads and public transport routes were shut in the city centre on Wednesday, with over 20,000 police deployed to protect vital installations and stop protests spreading on the second day.

Thousands of protesters thronged near the Elections Oversight Body on Jakarta’s main thoroughfare, Jalan Thamrin, in the morning and early afternoon, with crowds growing by the hour.

Police shut off access to the office with rolls of barbed wire and heavy cement barricades.

“We are here because we want a president who is honest and fair,” said Lely Simanjuntak, a Prabowo supporter from East Jakarta. Lely had arrived at the protest with friends from Surabaya which is around 800km from Jakarta.

“We don’t care who the president is,” she told Al Jazeera. “But as Indonesians, we must care about our elections and make sure they are just and valid.”

Indonesian police said six men were feared killed during the riots overnight, with hundreds more injured.

Jakarta [Kate Mayberry/Al Jazeera]
At 1:30pm local time (05:30 GMT), the Coordinating Minister for Political, Legal and Security Affairs, Wiranto, announced that social media apps would be blocked in certain areas of Jakarta to stop the spread of fake news.
Jakarta [Kate Mayberry/Al Jazeera]
Indonesian police said the situation turned ugly when some protesters refused to leave and began throwing Molotov cocktails [Al Jazeera]

Opposition supporters claimed the men were shot by riot police who denied these claims, showing Al Jazeera their guns were filled with blanks and not live ammunition.

“I was shot by riot police. Please help,” 19-year-old Sumardi shouted to a nurse on the scene while clutching his neck.

Sumardi, who is not from Jakarta, joined the protests after seeing invitations on social media and decided to attend because he believed he saw fraudulent behaviour at his polling station.

“They said we voted for Jokowi, but we didn’t,” he said indignantly. “I can’t accept the official results.”

A group of women from Manado who had flown in to attend the rally said they were angry at the announcement that incumbent Jokowi was named the winner of April’s presidential election. They claimed fraud was rampant during the election.

“The ballot boxes were already marked for certain candidates before they arrived at the polling stations,” one of the women explained as they waited outside the Sarinah shopping centre for the crowd to grow.

She refused to be named for fear of repercussion from her workplace.

“Valid ballot papers were burned and not counted, many fake voter names were added to electoral lists, and the total number of votes was more than 110 percent,” she added. “The fraud was massive.”

The Elections Oversight Body and the General Elections Commission have denied that major fraud took place.

In nearby Petamburan, where the three protesters died overnight, police were working to secure the area early this afternoon.

The protesters threw rocks and set car tyres on fire and the police responded with water cannons.

Despite the government’s attempts to restrict the spread of hoaxes on social media, Al Jazeera saw multiple pieces of fake news being shared.

Some allege that members of the riot police are from China, an attempt to delegitimise Jokowi’s regime, while other graphics showed photos of men bleeding on the ground, claiming they had been shot.