On 3 March 1947, the uprising occurred, centered in the government base at
Bukittinggi in addition to several other towns. Forces involved in Bukittinggi were primarily Hizbullah militias withdrawn from
Solok,
Padangpanjang and
Payakumbuh, mobilized early that day. The primary objective of the uprising was to seize power from the Republican government, and to kidnap the heads of government there - civilian resident Rasyid and army commander . Both leaders had been alerted to the uprising a week in advance and were well-protected, and had preemptively contacted local
ulama to convince them against taking part in the rebellion. Due to the prior knowledge, Republican military leaders had formed operational plans which dictated a policy of minimal violence to prevent losses. The Hizbullah men were intercepted and surrounded, and after just several hours of light combat the militias surrendered before reaching the center of Bukittinggi. They were disarmed, and some men who attempted to escape by blending into civilians were not pursued. Outside of Bukittinggi, the rebels managed to capture some civilian officials (such as future minister
Eny Karim), but by morning the following day principal coup leaders had been arrested. In Bukittinggi, one regular army soldier was killed and one of the rebels was wounded. ==Aftermath==