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Monday, February 22, 1999 Published at 16:50 GMT
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World: Asia-Pacific
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Thousands flee Indonesian violence
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Hundreds of refugees have fled violence in Ambon
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Thousands of Muslim immigrants are continuing to flee from the Indonesian island Ambon in fear of further attacks by Christians.

On Monday there were scenes of near anarchy as a ship carrying at least 5,000 people and all their belongings left Ambon bound for western Indonesia.

The depature is part of a mass exodus sparked by rising inter-communal violence in the province of Maluku, 2,250km (1,400 miles) northeast of Jakarta.

More than 100 people have been killed in recent violence between Muslims and Christians, which has also caused extensive damage and left thousands homeless.

New clashes


[ image: Indonesia has been swept by a wave of social unrest]
Indonesia has been swept by a wave of social unrest
Earlier police on the nearby island of Saparua fired warning shots to break up new fighting between rival Muslim and Christian gangs.

Local officials said the clashes left at least one person dead and five others injured.

It was not clear what provoked the latest outbreak of violence.

Burnt out villages

The BBC's Jakarta Correspondent, Jonathan Head, who has visited the scenes of earlier violence on the island of Ambon, says he has seen village after village, most of them Christian, which had been burnt to the ground.

He said many thousands of Muslims were preparing to leave Ambon fearing Christian reprisals for the attacks.

Most of the refugees say they would like to return, but only if their safety is guaranteed - something Indonesia's over-stretched armed forces cannot do at the moment.

Indonesia has been engulfed in a wave of social unrest following the downfall of President Suharto last May and the fallout from the region's economic crisis.

Our correspondent says that rumours of further attacks and reprisals are everywhere on the island and one Muslim leader told him he believes there was a plan to expel enough Muslims to be able to create an independent Christian state.

The region once had a reputation for its centuries' old tradition of peaceful co-existence between Muslims and Christians and there are fears that that may be lost forever.

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