Residents of Mesuji district, in Ogan Komering Ilir, South Sumatra, have difficulty moving forward without recalling the brutal killing of seven people, three of whom were beheaded, in April in a land dispute between local people and a plantation company.
The  plantation camp of PT Sumber Wangi Alam (SWA), where the crimes  reportedly happened, was found to be deserted on Tuesday after all of  the company’s workers had resigned for security reasons and severe  psychological trauma.
Dozens of houses for the workers and their  families were left in ruins as new workers preferred to return to their  homes in nearby villages located outside the plantation due to security  concerns.
“They are all traumatized by the incidents,  especially after witnessing the dead bodies of their colleagues who were  brutally killed by the locals,” said SWA worker Supriyono, who is in  charge of operations at the company.
He said after the closure in April, the company finally reopened in October having managed to recruit new workers.
Run  24 hours-a-day by 25 workers in two working shifts, SWA’s palm oil  factory can process up to 10 tons of oil palm fruit per hour. The plant  is located only 100 meters from the crime scene.
The SWA  plantation is at the heart of alleged human rights violations reported  by a group of local residents supported by former
Army officer Maj. Gen. (ret.) Saurip Kadi, who showed legislators alleged video footage of the beheadings last week.
Apart  from the SWA incident, Saurip also reported two other incidents of land  disputes that ended in brutal killings in two areas in Mesuji regency  in Lampung — located more than 80 kilometers south of Ogan Komering  Ilir.
In the SWA incident, Saurip claimed gross negligence by local law enforcers had led to a failure to prevent the killings.
The  land dispute between SWA and local residents, which has spanned more  than a decade, came to a head in April’s incident when a grandson of  Sungai Sodong village leader Syafei Hasan was allegedly beheaded by the  company’s security personnel for allegedly trying to take over the  company’s harvest. Another resident was also killed in the clash.
Sungai Sodong is the nearest village to the plantation.
A couple of hours later, around 200 villagers retaliated to the killing by storming the plantation and killing five SWA workers.
Trials of the suspects in the incidents are currently ongoing.
Sungai  Sodong villagers have mostly refused to talk to outsiders about the  trials or to discuss the incidents, saying they had difficulties in  moving forward as the situation remained tense.
“The incidents  took place months ago. There’s no need to talk about it since we’re  trying to live normally,” said Bangsawan, 36, an indigenous resident and  father of four.
Located some 40 kilometers from the province’s  main road, Sungai Sodong is bordered by the SWA plantation and the  Mesuji River. To reach the area, visitors must drive along a rugged road  through the heart of the company’s plantation.
According to  official data, the village is now inhabited by 600 families, with 400  families of indigenous people and the remaining 200, long-term migrants  from Java.
 
 
 
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