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Subject: Reform agenda unfinished, activists sayThe Fall Of Suharto - A
Perspective From The Street
[Also The Fall Of Suharto - A Perspective From The Street ]
The Jakarta Post
Wednesday, May 21, 2008
Reform agenda unfinished, activists say
The Jakarta Post, Jakarta
Former student activists who took part in the historic rallies of May
1998 have called their struggle for sweeping reforms a disappointment.
The former students, some of them having joined major political
parties, concluded in a discussion Tuesday that apart from forcing
President Soeharto to resign, most of their demands had failed to
materialize.
Summing up the discussion, former Trisakti University student Dedy
Arianto, who chairs the Golkar Party-affiliated Wira Karya Indonesia, said
the failure to bring Soeharto and his cronies to justice was the heaviest
defeat of the reform movement.
"Worse, efforts to eradicate corruption, collusion and nepotism
and to uphold the supremacy of law have not been accomplished," said
Dedy.
Soeharto died last January, with the government having dropped criminal
charges against him due to his failing health. Golkar has proposed the
government name the late first president a national hero, but President
Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has not responded to the controversial request.
The former students also said they regretted the lack of resolution to
alleged human rights violations before and after the May 21, 1998,
collapse of the New Order regime.
Hundreds were killed in riots in Jakarta, which broke out after
security personnel opened fire at Trisakti student protesters who were
demanding Soeharto's resignation on May 12. The shooting claimed four
lives.
The reform movement resulted in the revocation of the military's dual
roles and split the police from the armed forces, but the discussion
concluded these reforms were not enough.
"Indeed, the military's dual functions have been scrapped.
However, there is a new threat rising as a number of military officers
have joined political parties," said Dedy.
The former activist added that constitutional amendments had exceeded
the students' expectations and created new problems.
"We wanted constitutional amendments to terminate the president's
absolute power. However, the amendments have unfortunately also opened the
way for foreign investors to control the country's assets," said Dedy.
Regional autonomy is another reform goal which remains incomplete, the
discussion heard.
Dedy said the distribution of powers to regions had not worked, as
evident in the fact that many candidates for regional elections came from
Jakarta.
Another former activist, Usman Hamid, who now leads the human rights
group Kontras, said the political elite groups had hampered the campaign
against impunity and efforts to resolve past human rights abuses.
"President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has urged all parties to help
resolve the problems. However, the Attorney General's Office has done
nothing to follow the President's order," he said. (nkn)
sidebar: Reforms demanded by student activists in 1998:
1. Bring Soeharto and his cronies to justice for alleged graft
2. Abolish the military's dual function
3. Amend the Constitution
4. Eradicate corruption, collusion and nepotism
5. Uphold the supremacy of law
6. Implement regional autonomy nationwide
OnLine Opinion
[Australia's e-journal of social and political debate]
May 21, 2008
The fall of Suharto - a perspective from the street
By Roger Smith
May 21, 2008 marks exactly a decade since the fall of arguably Asia's
most enduring 20th century dictator.
One of the most striking aspects of what occurred in Indonesia at that
time is just how wrong Australia's diplomatic and academic elite were
about Suharto and his ability to cling to power. Typical of the commentary
in the two years before Suharto's fall were these comments by former
Secretary of the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade Richard Woolcott
in an article published in the Jakarta Post on August 31, 1996: "It
would be misguided for Australians, despite the recent political rumblings
in Jakarta, to expect rapid or radical change or even serious instability
in the near future in our large, restless, very different, yet very
important northern neighbour."
Woolcott was not alone in his assessment. Even once the economic crisis
began to bite a year later, the smart money, we were told at a briefing by
the US Embassy, was still on Indonesia not being too badly affected due to
its strong economic "fundamentals".
So why was it that he fell from power so ignominiously leaving
political and economic ruin in his wake? And why did Indonesia chose an
imperfect but relatively functional representative democracy after Suharto
rather than another military dictatorship, which some cultural relativist
experts would have us believe is more suited to Indonesia's development?
Was the end of the New Order regime really so difficult to predict for
observers of events in the archipelago in those final years?
Australia National University Indonesia expert Ross McLeod recently
released a paper The Soeharto Era: From Beginning to End arguing that
Suharto's New Order regime was inherently unsustainable due to its
dependence on a franchise system that necessitated ever increasing
corruption and private taxation to pay off elite interests so they would
maintain their loyalty to the regime.
As an ordinary Australian living in Jakarta at the time, McLeod's
analysis is instinctively correct. From a more prosaic perspective,
though, Suharto's fall was essentially two-pronged:
1. a political crisis commencing in 1996; and 2. an economic one that
followed a year later in 1997.
My perspective is not that of an academic, but rather as an interested
observer who was living and working in Jakarta at the time and mixing with
ordinary Indonesians. This is what I saw.
If there is a single day that marked the beginning of the end of
Suharto, it was June 20, 1996. I recall this as a typical dry season
Jakarta day with smog-filled horizons during Indonesia's boom years. A
façade of high rise glitter and fancy shopping malls barely concealed the
struggle of every day existence in the kampungs where the majority of the
population lived. Ironically, it was a day that I had looked forward to
for some time since it marked the opening of a new toll road that would
finally complete the missing link between the two main ethnic Chinese
suburbs of Kelapa Gading and Pluit where I taught English classes thus
enabling me to by-pass the shocking muddy slums of the northern reaches of
the city.
The magnificent new toll road did open that day, but it was a seemingly
inauspicious event 2,000km away in provincial Medan that was to have far
more serious ramifications for the future of Indonesia.
The country's rulers had decided that the daughter of Indonesia's first
President had to be removed as leader of the small Indonesian Democratic
Party (PDI), one of two minor political parties permitted to compete in
stage-managed general elections held every five years. They did so by
coercing PDI officials to convene an extraordinary party congress in Medan
to unseat Megawati and replace her with a government stooge named Soerjadi.
However, rather than accept the results of PDI's Medan Congress, the
party faithful fought back. Thousands of supporters, mostly drawn from the
urban poor and lower middle classes, flocked to PDI's national party
headquarters in Jakarta vowing to block the newly appointed delegates of
the Congress from taking up their positions. Even more worrying for the
Government, PDI HQ quickly became a rallying point for pro-democracy
activists. Day after day, speakers lined up to deliver speeches
criticising Suharto's regime.
Suddenly, the inconsequential matter of the leadership of a minor
Indonesian political party was starting to generate unprecedented
international interest.
An Indonesian journalist resident at the local boarding house where I
lived was filing stories about PDI's leadership with an Italian news
outlet. A street demonstration by thousands of Megawati supporters ended
in a violent clash with the military outside Gambir Train Station on the
same day as the Medan Congress. Rumours were that a protester had been
killed. I was surprised to hear this incident reported that same evening
by an Australian satellite TV station that we were able to receive at the
English language school where I worked. But the incident was strongly
censored in the local press and most Indonesians knew nothing of what had
occurred.
The PDI crisis caught Suharto off guard. He had not expected such a
strong reaction to Megawati's removal. So, in the early hours of July 27,
1996, he arranged for the party headquarters, by now packed with the PDI
supporters, sympathisers and activists, to be violently attacked in a raid
led by armed thugs. A number of people were killed in this attack. Riots
broke out in the surrounding neighbourhoods and many large buildings were
burnt and destroyed.
What is interesting, however, as the crackdown grew over the following
months in the lead-up to the May 1997 general elections, is that the bulk
of the urban-dwelling populace of Java viewed the government's crude
manoeuverings with increasing distaste and even disgust.
Each measure taken against Megawati to block her from competing in the
1997 election, together with the anti-subversion show trials of
pro-democracy activists and the later imprisonment of another prominent
dissident Sri Bintang Pamungkas in March 1997, just seemed to make the
urban working poor angrier and more resentful, while the middle classes
also became restless.
By disallowing Megawati's PDI from competing, Suharto actually de-legitimised
his own elections - an election sufficiently stage-managed with garden
variety electoral fraud that his ruling party Golkar would have easily won
anyway even with Megawati's participation.
The May 1997 election campaign was, in fact, marked by unprecedented
rioting between supporters of Golkar and PPP, the only remaining
legitimate party still permitted to compete. More than 100 people were
killed in one incident of fighting between Golkar and PPP supporters in
Banjarmasin alone.
Large numbers of campaigners spontaneously formed a movement known as
MegaBintang - a combination of Megawati supporters and Bintang which was
the party symbol for the conservative Muslim-based PPP. The government
then promptly banned use of the movement's banners, T-shirts and slogans.
The comment of a motorcycle taxi driver during the 1997 election campaign
summed it up when he remarked to me: "30 years of this - the people
can't win!"
In the 12 months after the July 27 riots, there were also a number of
other incidents of significant communal violence and these were reported
and commented on in the Indonesian media. This included Situbondo, East
Java in October 1996, Tasikmalaya, West Java in December 1996,
Rengasdengklok in January 1997 and West Kalimantan in early 1997.
But it wasn't just domestic events that marked trouble for Suharto. The
regime's foreign policy agenda, usually ably led by Ali Alatas, was
turning increasingly sour. In a major diplomatic blow, East Timor's Jose
Ramos-Horta and Archbishop Belo were awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in
October 1996. At the same time, the Clinton Administration was under
intense pressure to display a hard line over human rights abuses in
Indonesia. US House of Representatives Speaker Newt Gingrich even called
for an investigation into whether Indonesia received US foreign policy
favours in exchange for political donations to the Democratic Party from a
couple connected to Indonesia's Lippo Group.
The political atmosphere was by now tinder dry and it was in this
scenario that the Government of Thailand on July 2, 1997 made its now
infamous decision to devalue the baht. The Asian Economic Crisis hit
Indonesia slowly at first, but then like a steam train. The value of the
rupiah plummeted from about Rp 2,400 to the US dollar in July 1997 to
about Rp 10,000 just six months later.
The twin crises - one political and the other economic - fed into one
another like a giant destructive vortex closing banks, sending companies
broke and putting millions of workers out of a job.
The government tried everything to stop the downward spiral - calling
in the IMF, closing insolvent banks, proposals for a currency board system
and even an "I love Rupiah" campaign. But nothing worked because
in reality it was a political crisis. While elections could be rigged and
formal political structures manipulated to the government's content, the
New Order regime could not do the same for the economy that was by now
completely intertwined with global market forces.
Suharto could not force foreign investors to have confidence in his
ability to rule in the same way he could force Indonesian voters. The
strong economic "fundamentals" didn't really matter to the
extent that they were incapable of covering up a political system that
by1997 had become totally dictatorial, corrupted and dysfunctional.
As 1997 turned to 1998, there was panic buying and a rush on the
grocery stores. Rice was hoarded and some food riots broke out. The US
Embassy at this time conducted confidential polling and the results
indicated that there was only one group left in Indonesia that still
wanted Suharto to remain as president - the ethnic Chinese.
By February, with the economy in a tailspin, Suharto was poised for
another five year term as Indonesia's ruler. His People's Constituent
Assembly or MPR, virtually hand-picked, was 100 per cent certain to
constitutionally seal Cendana's iron grip on the nation until 2003.
Meanwhile, with opposition leaders either sidelined or in prison,
something extraordinary happened. On February 25, 1998, I was informed by
human rights activist Poncke Princen that a significant event was to take
place that afternoon at the University of Indonesia's Salemba Campus where
Suharto's New Order regime had began 32 years earlier. Sure enough, when I
arrived at the scene, about 1,000 protesters had gathered and erased the
words "New Order" from a sign reading "Welcome to the
campus of the struggle of the New Order". The final act of the
unfolding drama was set.
If the students wanted struggle, they certainly got it. The next day,
the demonstration had spread to the University of Indonesia's Depok
campus. From there, it spread to campuses across Jakarta and to
Yogyakarta's prestigious Gajah Mada University where effigies of Suharto
were being burned.
Soon the entire Indonesian student body was alive. Makeshift command
posts were set up to distribute food to the increasingly desperate
communities surrounding the campuses. Even mothers' groups were
established to provide back-up and one group of very prominent middle-aged
women was arrested in the middle of the Hotel Indonesia roundabout for
protesting about the price of milk for infants. It had turned into a
middle class revolt led by students and fully backed by the masses of
urban poor.
By April, virtually every campus in the archipelago had erupted in
peaceful protest. In many cases, academic staff joined in. The slogan was
"reform or revolution". On May 4, 1998, the government announced
large fuel price hikes. Demonstrations in Medan turned violent. Molotov
cocktails were increasingly being used. The killing of four Trisakti
University students in Jakarta on May 12 was the final spark.
Although controversy remains over the extent to which they were co-ordinated
by General Probowo - possibly in an attempt to emulate Suharto's original
counter coup style rise to power - there was no doubting the genuine anger
of those mobs pouring onto the streets of Jakarta on the afternoon of May
13 and all day on May 14.
I witnessed destruction on an extraordinary scale. In one incident on
the corner of Jalan Matraman Raya and Jalan Pramuka, I saw crowds of young
men from the kampung do battle for hours with heavily armed riot police
and soldiers who were trying to defend their station.
Whenever the crowds surged too far forward with cries of reformasi, the
police opened fire and the crowds would scatter. But they refused to
completely disperse since they vastly out-numbered the security forces.
Eventually, one of the protesters hurled a burning object in the direction
of the police line setting the police station ablaze and burning it to the
ground. The mobs then rushed forwards smashing a nearby Fuji camera store
and making a giant bonfire in the middle of the street out of the seized
merchandise.
Smoke from the burning electronics goods was so thick that it created a
twilight-like darkness over the street. By nightfall on May 14, fires were
still burning from the wrecks of vehicles and buildings. This scene was
repeated at dozens of locations across the shattered city.
Suharto returned home from an overseas trip to his devastated capital
with more than 1,000 dead and an estimated 5,000 buildings damaged or
destroyed. He came back to find the Assembly that two months earlier had
unanimously appointed him to another five-year term now occupied by
students with banners denouncing the corruption and abuse of his rule.
Abandoned by his own Golkar power base, Suharto was finally forced to bow
down at 9:00 am on Thursday, May 21, 1998.
Perhaps the best metaphor for those heady days on the streets of
Jakarta is that of a memorable 1970s disaster movie. It was like a
towering inferno in which the tiny brushfires of the leadership of an
obscure political party and the devaluation of a neighbouring country's
currency turned into a monstrous unstoppable firestorm that brought a
colossal economy crashing and a tyrant to his knees.
It was a time when the forces of dictatorship, democracy, capitalism
and Islam all converged, and in doing so, Indonesia's end-of-millennium
story tells us - a decade on - much about the world we live in today.
Originally trained as a lawyer, Roger Smith lived in Indonesia and East
Timor from 1995 to 2004 where he worked in the justice, human rights and
trade union arenas.
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Terjemahan (atas jasa "Kataku"): The_Fall_Of_Suharto_-_A_Perspective_From_The_Street
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