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UN chief Guterres calls Gaza situation ‘morally, politically, legally intolerable’

Special UN chief Guterres calls Gaza situation ‘morally, politically, legally intolerable’
Palestinians walk through dust moments after an Israeli military strike that destroyed a building in Gaza City. (AP)
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Updated 17 September 2025

UN chief Guterres calls Gaza situation ‘morally, politically, legally intolerable’

UN chief Guterres calls Gaza situation ‘morally, politically, legally intolerable’
  • A UN commission report has found that Israel committed four genocidal acts in Gaza under the 1948 Genocide Convention
  • Israel rejected the report as “distorted and false,” while Palestinians hailed it as proof of systematic destruction and genocidal intent

NEW YORK CITY/LONDON: The UN secretary-general condemned on Tuesday the “systematic destruction” of Gaza City, but insisted it was for the international courts to determine whether Israel is committing genocide.

Taking questions at UN headquarters, Antonio Guterres said it was not his role to make a legal determination of genocide after a team of experts commissioned by the UN’s Human Rights Council concluded that Israel is doing just that in Gaza.

UN agencies, global bodies and governments face mounting pressure to say that Israel’s conduct in the Palestinian territory since is began military operations in October 2023 amounts to genocide.




“We are seeing massive destruction of neighborhoods, now the systematic destruction of Gaza City, we are seeing massive killing of civilians in a way that I do not remember in any conflict since I (became) secretary-general,” Antonio Guterres said. (AFP/File)

Asked whether he believes Israel is committing genocide in Gaza, Guterres said: “As I’ve said, time and time again, in these and different, similar circumstances, it is not in the attributions that the secretary-general to do the legal determination of genocide.

“That belongs to the adequate judicial entities, namely the International Court of Justice.”

Guterres nevertheless said that what is happening in Gaza is “horrendous.”

“We are seeing massive destruction of neighborhoods, now the systematic destruction of Gaza City, we are seeing massive killing of civilians in a way that I do not remember in any conflict since I (became) secretary-general,” he said.

“With the consequences that the Palestinian people are suffering a horrendous situation, famine, with no access to any kind of support, and with continued displacement and imminent risk of losing their lives at any moment.”

He added: “The truth is that this is something that is morally, politically and legally intolerable.”

Guterres’s comments came in response to a damning 72-page report by the Commission of Inquiry on the Occupied Palestinian Territory and Israel published on Tuesday.

Not only did the findings say that Israel has, since October 2023, committed and continues to commit acts of genocide against Palestinians in Gaza, it found the incitement to do so came from the highest political and military figures of the Israeli state.




The ICC has issued arrest warrants for both BenjaminNetanyahu and YoavGallant for the war crime of starvation and the crimes against humanity of murder, persecution, and “other inhumane acts.”(AFP)

These included Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, President Isaac Herzog, and former Defense Minister Yoav Gallant.

“The ongoing genocide in Gaza is a moral outrage and a legal emergency,” Navi Pillay, head of the three-member commission of inquiry and a former International Criminal Court judge, told a press briefing in Geneva.

“The responsibility for these atrocity crimes lies with Israeli authorities at the highest echelons who have orchestrated a genocidal campaign for almost two years now with the specific intent to destroy the Palestinian group in Gaza.”

The report is based on a meticulous study of factual and legal findings in relation to attacks in Gaza by Israeli forces and the conduct of Israeli authorities.

The panel found Israel had committed four of the five genocidal acts defined by a 1948 international treaty known as the “Genocide Convention.”

The four acts are: Killing, causing serious bodily or mental harm, deliberately inflicting conditions of life calculated to bring about the destruction of the Palestinians in whole or in part, and imposing measures intended to prevent births.

The timing of the report’s release could not have been more pertinent, coming shortly after Israel announced a full-scale ground assault on Gaza City — the territory’s largest urban center.

While the conclusions may not come as a surprise to many, the significance of its findings could have global repercussions.

The commission itself is not a legal body, but the report could be incorporated into cases by prosecutors at the ICJ and the ICC.




UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk (R) looks on next to Deputy High Commissioner for Human Rights Nada Al-Nashif. (AFP)

The ICJ is examining a case brought by South Africa accusing Israeli forces of committing genocide against the Palestinians in Gaza.

The ICC has issued arrest warrants for both Netanyahu and Gallant for the war crime of starvation and the crimes against humanity of murder, persecution, and “other inhumane acts.”

The report was immediately attacked by Israel, but was widely welcomed by Palestinians and their supporters.

The foreign ministry of the Palestinian Authority, which governs in the occupied West Bank, said the report had “unequivocally proven” that Israel had committed the crime of genocide in Gaza “through a deliberate and widespread policy aimed at the systematic destruction of the Palestinian people.”

The ministry called on the international community to take steps to protect the Palestinian people and “halt all forms of military and political support for Israel.”

The report does not represent the UN’s official position on whether acts of genocide have been carried out in Gaza, but it will increase pressure on UN agencies and governments to use the word.




A woman collects salvage items from the rubble of the Unknown Soldier Tower, after it was destroyed by overnight Israeli bombardment, in the Rimal neighbourhood of Gaza City. (AFP)

Volker Turk, the UN high commissioner for human rights, also said it was up to the courts to decide “whether it’s genocide or not” but that the evidence was mounting.

“We see the piling up of war crime after war crime or crime against humanity, and potentially even more,” he said.

In the UK, where the government has come under increasing pressure to take a tougher stance against Israel, a Foreign Office spokesperson told Arab News that any formal determination as to whether genocide has occurred “should be made following a judgment by a competent national or international court.”

“What is happening in Gaza is appalling and we continue to call on Israel to change course immediately by halting its ground offensive and letting in a surge of humanitarian aid without delay,” the spokesperson said.

In a letter earlier this month, the former Foreign Secretary David Lammy wrote that the government “had not concluded that Israel is acting with genocidal intent.”

A joint statement from civil society organizations, including the British Palestinian Committee and Palestine Solidarity Campaign said that the commission of inquiry’s findings confirmed that Lammy was not only “wrong” but showed the extent of UK complicity in Israel’s crimes.




A Palestinian child eats rice out of a pot, in front of a charity kitchen in the Nuseirat refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip. (AFP)

“This government has been playing a linguistic and legal game with MPs, the British public, and the lives of Palestinians,” the statement said. “Rather than doing everything in its power to protect an occupied people, the UK government has opted to back a state committing war crimes.”

The left-wing parliamentarian Zarah Sultana said the report confirmed what was already clear: that Israel is committing genocide in Gaza.

“This is the most documented genocide in history,” she wrote on X. “The government’s position was already morally indefensible. It is now politically untenable.”

Nimer Sultany, an expert in international law at the School of Oriental and African Studies, said the report was a nail in the coffin of a “genocide denial” that has delayed governments from acting against Israel.

He told Channel 4 News that the report was a “damning indictment of the policy of the UK government, of the European Commission, of European states, that have failed to act, that have continued to shield Israel from accountability.”

Israel’s foreign ministry said it “categorically” rejected the report, describing it as “distorted and false.”




Palestinians search the rubble of Al-Ghafari tower after its destruction by Israeli airstrikes in Gaza City. (AFP)

The report follows a resolution passed earlier this month by the International Association of Genocide Scholars saying Israel’s conduct meets the legal definition of genocide laid out in the 1948 UN convention.

Israel faced further international pressure last week when the UN General Assembly voted overwhelmingly in favor of reviving the two-state solution between Israel and Palestine without involving Hamas.

The “New York Declaration” was presented jointly by Ƶ and France, with the two countries set to host an international conference on the two-state solution at the UN headquarters on Sept. 22.

The French presidency said on Tuesday that the event was the “only viable solution and option on the table in order to come out of this terrible crisis.”

The “vast mobilization” of international support by Ƶ and France for the two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict aims to convince the US that there is an “absolute urgency” to end the war in Gaza, the French presidency said on Tuesday.

The idea for the conference “came as a result of the state visit that President (Emmanuel) Macron paid to Ƶ” last year, the Elysee said in a high-level briefing attended by Arab News.

“We were working with Ƶ in reflecting on what kind of initiative we could jointly take in order to get a ceasefire in Gaza, an end to the war and a political solution to the crisis that would lead finally to the creation of two states and bring peace and security to all people in the region.”




A convoy of Israeli tanks is deployed at Israel's border with the Gaza Strip. (AFP)

A decision was made by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and Macron last December to organize and elevate the proposed conference as a mechanism for implementing the two-state solution.

The UN General Assembly later voted to give a mandate to Ƶ and France to host the conference, which held its first stage at the UN in July.

That event resulted in the New York Declaration, which was hailed by French Ambassador to the UN Jerome Bonnafont as a “single road map to deliver the two-state solution.”

Though the New York Declaration condemns Hamas and seeks to secure its international isolation, Israeli Ambassador to the UN Danny Danon last week accused the majority of the UNGA of “advancing terror.”

US diplomat Morgan Ortagus told the chamber that the resolution was a “gift to Hamas,” adding: “Far from promoting peace, the conference has already prolonged the war, emboldened Hamas and harmed the prospects of peace in both short and long term.”

The French presidency rebuffed those accusations on Tuesday, warning that the “atrocious humanitarian catastrophe” and “unbearable human toll” in Gaza could only be resolved “on the basis of a political horizon for the two-state solution.”

The New York Declaration lays out “both a timeframe and irreversible step towards the two-state solution that would start with a ceasefire, the release of the hostages and humanitarian aid being offered without constraint to the Palestinian population in Gaza,” the Elysee said.




Displaced Palestinians move with their belongings southwards on a road in the Nuseirat refugee camp area. (AFP)

As part of post-war efforts to stabilize Gaza, a reformed Palestinian Authority must be allowed to operate in the enclave through a UN Security Council mandate, it added.

The French presidency highlighted that “all the Arab countries, the Organization of Islamic Cooperation leaders and the Arab League leaders” accepted the plan, which would see Hamas “have no part” in the administration of post-war Gaza.

The PA’s leader Mahmoud Abbas wrote a letter to Macron and the crown prince on June 9 which, in part, committed to reforming the authority.

As part of the joint international project, a slew of major countries — including Canada, Australia, Belgium and Portugal — have committed to recognizing Palestine at the Sept. 22 conference.

“This is the most significant movement since a long while because, for the very first time, UN Security Council member states but also G7 member states will recognize the state of Palestine,” the Elysee said.

“This will create a way for us to say that the two-state solution cannot be wiped out by the Israeli operation that we see happening on the ground.”

The French presidency expressed its concern over Israel’s recent strikes on Qatar that targeted Hamas leaders.

In the wake of the attack, leaders from the UK, France, Canada, Qatar, Jordan and Egypt held an emergency remote meeting, pledging solidarity with all Gulf states.

“No country should be stricken and the sovereignty of the neighboring countries of Israel should be respected. We managed to get a clear condemnation in the UN Security Council,” the Elysee said.

“But we need this collective mobilization to be crystal clear, and we hope for Sept. 22 to bring light on this international mobilization that needs to move the needle, and needs to convince the US that there is an absolute urgency to end this war.”


France’s new prime minister faces a bumpy ride with budget challenges and nationwide strikes ahead

Updated 5 sec ago

France’s new prime minister faces a bumpy ride with budget challenges and nationwide strikes ahead

France’s new prime minister faces a bumpy ride with budget challenges and nationwide strikes ahead
Lecornu’s first big move has been to dismiss the idea of cutting two public holidays
Unions reject cuts in social spending, arguing French workers have been deeply affected by rising prices in recent years

PARIS: A ballooning deficit. A fractious Parliament. Unrest on the streets. The challenges facing Sébastien Lecornu, France’s fourth prime minister in a year, are daunting and defeated his immediate predecessors.
So he’s trying a different tack. To ease tensions, Lecornu has scrapped proposals to axe two public holidays and trimmed lifetime benefits for former government ministers. A loyal ally to unpopular centrist President Emmanuel Macron, he began meeting with opposition leaders and trade unions this week.
But pitfalls lie ahead. Opponents aim to turn up the heat yet further on Thursday with nationwide strikes and protests against budget cuts and other complaints targeting Lecornu’s fragile minority government.
French politics have been in turmoil since Macron called early parliamentary elections in June last year which resulted in a deeply fragmented legislature.
One major challenge looms: addressing France’s budget crisis, a deeply divisive issue in Parliament.
Symbolic, popular first moves
Lecornu’s first big move has been to dismiss the idea of cutting two public holidays, championed by his immediate predecessor, whose government fell earlier this month. François Bayrou had stirred public anger with his plan to scrap the Easter Monday and Victory Day (May 8) holidays, a move he said was needed to boost the economy.
Lecornu vowed to find “to find other sources of financing” instead.
He also announced this week that lifetime benefits for former government members will be eliminated, starting from Jan. 1st.
For former prime ministers, the benefits include police protection, along with a car and driver paid for by the state. Protection will be capped at three years and only extended for security reasons, while the car will be reduced to a period of 10 years. This is estimated to save about 4.4 million euros ($5.21 million) per year.
Strikes and protests Thursday
Trade unions have called for nationwide strikes and protests on Thursday, scheduled before the change of prime minister, to push back on what they see as austerity policies.
Unions reject cuts in social spending, arguing French workers have been deeply affected by rising prices in recent years. They also continue to protest against Macron’s pension reform that raised the minimum retirement age from 62 to 64.
Thursday’s strikes are expected to prompt disruption in sectors like transport, public services, hospitals and schools. They may sound a stark warning for Lecornu.
Last week, thousands of protesters rallied across France last week for a day of nationwide action against Macron’s policies under the slogan “Block Everything.”
Mathieu Gallard, account director at Ipsos France polling institute, says a series of opinion polls show French voters’ main concerns focus on their declining purchasing power and the deterioration of once-generous social benefits, including health care, pensions and public services.
“The political situation gives the French the feeling leaders are not able to remedy the situation due to that instability,” Gallard told The Associated Press.
Lecornu’s method
On the day he took office, Lecornu, 39, vowed to be both “more creative” and “more serious” in the way his government will work with opposition parties.
Lecornu, who started his political career in his 20s as a local official in the Normandy region, is described by his longtime friends as a somewhat old-school politician. They say he is is by nature discreet and methodical but also very persuasive — qualities that could help him in his quest to ease political tensions.
“There’s a Lecornu method,” said François Ouzilleau, mayor of Vernon in Normandy, where they made their first forays into politics together. “I think he’ll manage to find comprises … He has a manner of doing things in the right order, with methodology.”
“People criticize his closeness with and loyalty to the president. But I think that’s a strength. It’s better when the executive twosome functions well together. And that doesn’t mean that Sébastien has no character, no personality, no freedom,” Ouzilleau said in an Associated Press telephone interview.
“He’s a guy with incredible flair. He is good at sniffing things out, sniffing out people, sniffing out situations, sniffing out subjects. He’s like a truffle-hunting dog.”
Tough budget debate ahead
France’s previous government fell over plans to cut 44 billion euros ($51 billion) in public spending, meant to rein in debt of the European Union’s second-largest economy. Last week, the Fitch rating agency downgraded France’s credit rating, anticipating that the country’s debt ratio “will continue to rise.”
Lecornu has not yet set out his own strategy.
He met Wednesday with Socialist leader Olivier Faure in an effort to negotiate a parliamentary non-aggression pact that would help prevent the fall of his government in a no-confidence vote.
The Socialists are pushing for a tax on the super-rich as proposed by French economist Gabriel Zucman. French media reported Lecornu may be open to increase the taxes on the wealthiest, but in a downsized version.
Meanwhile, Lecornu must also take care of his conservative allies, The Republicans, who reject any general tax rise.
Marine Le Pen, leader of the far-right National Rally party, predicted Lecornu’s failure and urged Macron to call new legislative elections to break the deadlock.
“The level of pessimism is massive in France,” Gallard said, arguing opinion polls show a vast majority of French voters don’t believe in the new prime minister’s ability to negotiate with opposition parties and pass a budget.
“When you ask the French about the economic situation of the country, 9 percent consider it’s good ... way lower compared to France’s neighbors in southern Europe, Italians and Spanish who are around 30 percent,” he said.

Gold worth 600,000 euros stolen in Paris museum heist

Gold worth 600,000 euros stolen in Paris museum heist
Updated 3 min 47 sec ago

Gold worth 600,000 euros stolen in Paris museum heist

Gold worth 600,000 euros stolen in Paris museum heist
  • The National Natural History Museum in the chic 5th district of the French capital also houses a geology and mineralogy gallery.
  • Native gold is a metal alloy containing gold and silver in their natural, unrefined form

PARIS: Thieves have broken into Paris’s Natural History Museum, making off with gold samples worth 600,000 euros ($700,000) in the latest of a series of robberies from cultural institutions, according to the museum.
Famed for its dinosaur skeletons and taxidermy, the National Natural History Museum in the chic 5th district of the French capital also houses a geology and mineralogy gallery.
A break-in was detected on Tuesday morning, with the intruders reportedly using an angle grinder and a blow torch to force their way into the riverside complex that is popular with Parisians and tourists.
“The theft concerns several specimens of native gold from the national collections held by the museum,” the museum’s press office told AFP late on Tuesday.
“While the stolen specimens are valued at around 600,000 euros based on the price of raw gold, they nevertheless carry an immeasurable heritage value,” it added.
Native gold is a metal alloy containing gold and silver in their natural, unrefined form.
An unnamed police source told the Parisien newspaper that the museum’s alarm and surveillance systems had been disabled by a cyberattack in July, but it was unclear if they were working when the theft took place.
“We are dealing with an extremely professional team, perfectly aware of where they needed to go, and with professional equipment,” museum director Emmanuel Skoulios told the BFM TV channel.
“It is absolutely not by chance that they went for these specific items,” he added.

- ‘Critical time’ -

The museum closed its mineralogy gallery on Tuesday and was checking its collection for other losses.
One of its treasures is a native gold and quartz sample measuring nine by 8.5 centimeters (3.3-3.5 inches) which originated in the Donatia mine in California and was gifted to the museum by a wealthy French collector, according to its website.
The robbery “comes at a critical time for cultural institutions and museums in particular. Several public collections have indeed been targeted by thefts in recent months,” the museum added.
It did not elaborate on the other robberies, but the Adrien Dubouche National Museum in Limoges in central France is known to have suffered a break-in earlier this month.
Thieves stole two dishes and a vase in Chinese porcelain classed as national treasures, with the losses estimated at 6.5 million euros.
Last November, four men with axes and baseball bats smashed the display cases in broad daylight at the Cognacq-Jay museum in Paris, making off with several 18th-century works.
The next day, jewelry valued at several million euros was stolen during an armed robbery at a museum in Saone-et-Loire in central France.
The most notorious museum heist of recent times occurred at the Musee d’Art Moderne in Paris in May 2010.
Vjeran Tomic, a Croatian burglar nicknamed “Spiderman,” made off with masterpieces by Henri Matisse, Pablo Picasso, Georges Braque, Fernand Leger and Amedeo Modigliani valued at more than 100 million euros.
The case revealed extraordinary security lapses at the museum, including that motion-detection alarms had been out of order for two months and three guards failed to spot him.
Tomic was sentenced to eight years in prison in 2017.


Greece to buy fourth Belharra frigate from France

Greece to buy fourth Belharra frigate from France
Updated 23 min 58 sec ago

Greece to buy fourth Belharra frigate from France

Greece to buy fourth Belharra frigate from France
  • Greece has a long-standing dispute with its NATO ally Turkiye over maritime waters
  • Athens agreed in 2021 to procure new Belharra frigates for about $3.3 billion

ATHENS: Greece’s security council, KYSEA, approved on Wednesday the purchase of a fourth Belharra frigate from France to modernize its armed forces and as it tries to keep pace with historic rival Turkiye, two government sources told Reuters.
Greece has a long-standing dispute with its NATO ally Turkiye over maritime waters, and the security council meeting comes after Ankara said it would conduct scientific research in the Aegean Sea in the coming days.
Athens agreed in 2021 to procure new Belharra frigates for about 3.0 billion euros ($3.3 billion), with an option for one more, as it aims to replace old vessels that have operated for more than 30 years in its navy.
“KYSEA approved the procurement of a fourth Belharra frigate from France,” said a senior government official, without giving details on the cost.
A second official confirmed the purchase.
Greek Defense Minister Nikos Dendias said earlier on Wednesday, after a presentation to KYSEA, that the new frigate would carry ballistic missiles.
The purchase is expected to be approved by a parliamentary committee in the coming days.
Greece plans to spend more than 25 billion euros in the next 10 years as part of a multi-year defense plan, which includes new F-35 fighter jets from the US, new submarines, new air, sea and underwater drones and an anti-aircraft dome, called the “Achilles Shield.”


EU eyes deeper India alliance despite concern over Moscow ties

EU eyes deeper India alliance despite concern over Moscow ties
Updated 40 min 43 sec ago

EU eyes deeper India alliance despite concern over Moscow ties

EU eyes deeper India alliance despite concern over Moscow ties
  • The European Union and India are in the final stages of negotiating a free trade agreement
  • India sees promise in the European Union, but also in China and Russia

BRUSSELS: The European Commission set out plans on Wednesday to deepen cooperation with India in fields such as defense, technology and trade, despite tensions over New Delhi’s close ties to Moscow.
The European Union and India are in the final stages of negotiating a free trade agreement, which they aim to conclude by the end of the year.
Negotiations, relaunched in 2022, have gained pace since the re-election of US President Donald Trump. Faced with Trump’s tariffs, both sides have accelerated efforts to foster new alliances.

EU SEES INDIA AS ECONOMIC, DIPLOMATIC PARTNER
For Brussels, that means planned trade agreements with Mexico, South American bloc Mercosur, India and Indonesia. India sees promise in the European Union, but also in China and Russia.
India has increased purchases of Russian oil since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022. In the past month Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has held hands with Russian President Vladimir Putin at a summit in China, and its troops joined a Russian-led military exercise. On Friday, US officials called on G7 and EU states to impose tariffs on China and India over Russian oil purchases.
EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas acknowledged the EU and India had “clear areas of disagreement” that were obstacles to deeper cooperation, but said the bloc did not want to push India into “Russia’s corner.”
“The question is whether we leave this void to be filled by somebody else or we try to fill it ourselves,” she told a press conference. In its document released on Wednesday setting out its vision, the Commission said the EU would further engage with India on curtailing Russia’s military and preventing circumvention of EU sanctions. Despite tensions, the European Commission views India as a fellow upholder of the rules-based multilateral order, and hopes to benefit from its expected rise to become the world’s third largest economy in 2030, the document says.
The EU envisages the two sides negotiating agreements on investment protection and boosting air transport, collaborating on securing supply chains, on green hydrogen, on decarbonization of heavy industry and on research and innovation.
They could also agree a defense and security partnership, as the EU already has with Japan and South Korea, and cooperate in projects in third countries, particularly in Africa and South Asia.


Indonesian president reshuffles Cabinet again in wake of deadly protests

Indonesian president reshuffles Cabinet again in wake of deadly protests
Updated 17 September 2025

Indonesian president reshuffles Cabinet again in wake of deadly protests

Indonesian president reshuffles Cabinet again in wake of deadly protests
  • Prabowo named retired Lt. Gen. Djamari Chaniago as Indonesia’s new chief security minister
  • Protests called for sweeping reforms across various institutions, including police and military

JAKARTA: Indonesia’s president carried out a second surprise Cabinet reshuffle on Wednesday, just a week after firing five ministers following deadly anti-government protests.

At least 11 people were killed in mass protests that broke out in Jakarta in late August. Sparked by controversial allowances for lawmakers, rising living costs and inequality, the demonstrations turned violent and spread across the country after an armed police vehicle ran over and killed a 21-year-old delivery driver. 

With protesters demanding sweeping reforms across various institutions, including the police, military and House of Representatives, the demonstrations have posed the biggest challenge yet for the presidency of Prabowo Subianto, who took office last October. 

After replacing his Cabinet members last week — including well-regarded Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati — Prabowo appointed 11 new officials on Wednesday. 

“President Prabowo Subianto officially inaugurated two ministers and three deputy ministers of the Red and White Cabinet for the remainder of the 2024–2029 term,” the presidential secretariat said in a statement after the inauguration ceremony. 

Among the new appointees are Lt. Gen. (retd.) Djamari Chaniago as the new chief security minister, Erick Thohir — former state-owned enterprises minister — as the new youth and sports minister, and Ahmad Dofiri, retired police commissioner general, as a special presidential adviser for public security and order and police reform.

While the Cabinet changes since last week have been significant, some activists, including Amnesty International Indonesia’s Executive Director Usman Hamid, say the reshuffle was disconnected from the protesters’ demands.

“For example, the public has called for civil supremacy and to return the military to the barracks, but the choice of chief security minister reflects the government’s old paradigm of choosing people with a military background,” he told Arab News. 

Even the appointment of a special security adviser did not address the public’s concerns. 

“It doesn’t answer the demands of the people who are hoping that the government and House of Representatives will immediately form an independent commission to investigate the death of 11 people and other human rights violations during the protests,” Hamid said. 

“This reshuffle is nothing more than the circulation of officials among the political elites; it does not address the root issues of policies that the people were protesting against.”