"This only illustrates the low esteem and the lack of authority which the government suffers at the moment."
"Refugees complained bitterly that security forces had failed to protect them," the online newspaper Mandiri agreed.
"Mobs of indigenous Dayaks roamed the streets with knives and other crude weapons, burning, looting and killing with apparent impunity."
The report quoted Suriya Fauzi, a refugee waiting to be evacuated to Surabaya:
"My two children are dead. They cut their heads off. They slaughtered my husband and dragged his body through the streets. The police and army did nothing. They let this happen."
This was not for lack of security forces, Mandiri argued.
"Despite the presence of two joint police and military battalions there is little sign of them on the streets of Sampit. Officials said troops and police had not been given orders to disarm the gangs in Sampit," it added.
"Security forces called in to quell ethnic violence instead turned their guns on each other while desperate refugees scrambled to board ships," the internet news service said.
"At least two policemen were injured in a brief exchange of fire with army soldiers in the crowded port area of Sampit town."
The Jakarta Post thought that whatever action President Abdurrahman Wahid may finally have taken, it might not be enough.
"Pressured from all sides to start acting decisively in order to save the country from disintegrating - and his own government from collapsing - President Abdurrahman Wahid may finally have been persuaded to act with some measure of resolution."
"The problem is whether the state apparatus is ready to follow," the Post wrote. It saw little cause for optimism.
"There is still no sign that the ethnic turmoil that is threatening to tear apart this nation's unity is about to end."
BBC Monitoring, based in Caversham in southern England, selects and translates information from radio, television, press, news agencies and the Internet from 150 countries in more than 70 languages.