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Video Perang Sampit Full No Sensor Access

The conflict began on February 17, 2001, and lasted for several days, resulting in the deaths of thousands of people, mostly Madurese, and the displacement of many more. The violence was sparked by a dispute over a soccer match between a Dayak and a Madurese team, which ended in a fight between the two groups.

The video, which was shot on a handheld camera, shows the brutal and graphic violence that occurred during the conflict. The footage is shocking and disturbing, and includes scenes of beheadings, stabbings, and burnings. The video also shows the victims, mostly Madurese people, screaming and pleading for mercy as they are attacked. Video Perang Sampit Full No Sensor

The Sampit War was not an isolated incident, but rather the culmination of years of tension and conflict between the Dayak and Madurese people in the region. The Dayak people, who are predominantly Christian, have long been the indigenous inhabitants of the region, while the Madurese people, who are predominantly Muslim, began to migrate to the region in the 1960s. The conflict began on February 17, 2001, and

The Sampit War, also known as the Sampit conflict or the East Kalimantan conflict, was a brutal and devastating inter-ethnic conflict that occurred in Sampit, a regency in Central Kalimantan, Indonesia, in 2001. The conflict pitted the Dayak people, the indigenous inhabitants of the region, against the Madurese people, a Muslim ethnic group from the island of Madura. The footage is shocking and disturbing, and includes