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"I was really scared when I first heard about these balls," said Mulyanto, a 27-year-old shopkeeper, who rides between his hometown of Bogor and Jakarta almost every day for work. "It sounds like it could be really dangerous." "But I don't think it'll last long," he said. "They've tried everything to keep us from riding ... in the end we always win." "We like it up there. It's windy, really nice." Many of the roof riders -- and regular passengers -- say the main problem lies with Indonesia's dilapidated railway system. There are not enough trains to meet demand, they say. And there are constant delays in service. "People have jobs! They can't be late," said Parto, a trader at the Jakarta stock exchange, who can usually be found sitting inside. "If the train is late, they'll do whatever they have to." Several years ago, paint guns were set up to spray those riding on the top of carriages so authorities could identify and round up the guilty travelers. But roof riders destroyed the equipment soon after. The exhortations of clerics didn't work. Neither did the dogs. At one point, police decided to do the expected: arrest the culprits. But their officers were pelted with rocks and they gave up.
[Associated
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