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rasibiduk
January 12, 2008
A Resilient Indonesia Moves Beyond Suharto
By SETH MYDANS

JAKARTA — As Indonesia’s former strongman, Suharto, lay on his sickbed this week, the country that rejected him 10 years ago was in the early stages of a democratic election campaign.

Though the nation’s leaders spoke with respect of the man who had been their master and mentor for three decades, they were by their actions repudiating him, moving forward with a new Indonesia that contrasts in almost every way with one he bequeathed to them.

From one of the most centralized and controlled countries in the region, it has transformed itself into one of the most decentralized, free, open and self-regulating.

From a brutal and corrupt regime under the heel of the military, it has become the standard bearer of democracy in Southeast Asia. It stands out for its political liberalism at a time when coups and coup attempts have discredited the region’s two exemplars of democracy, Thailand and the Philippines.

“Indonesia represents a good-news story in the region and in the world,” said Ralph Boyce, a former United States ambassador to Indonesia during the post-Suharto period.

It did not disintegrate as a nation or fragment into a tumult of mini-wars, as many people feared when the dictator suddenly released his grip. It was not engulfed in Islamic radicalism, although that struggle is still playing itself out. It did not fall back into the grip of the military or collapse in economic ruin.

“They’re well on their way to establishing a more democratic and modern Indonesia,” Mr. Boyce said, “which is quite a challenge when you are dealing with one of the world’s largest and most disparate societies.”

A vast archipelago with a population of 240 million, Indonesia is the world’s fourth most-populous nation, whose people are 90 percent Muslim. As the country with the largest Muslim population in the world, it is demonstrating that Islam can be compatible with democracy.

Since Mr. Suharto was ousted as president in May 1998, Indonesia has had four presidents, all of whom have worked, unlike him, within the democratic system. The next election is a year away but already three of them the four have declared that they want the job again.

In the past decade, Indonesia has held three national elections and more than 300 elections for provincial and district officials in votes that have been judged to be relatively clean and in which the results have mostly been accepted by the losers.

In the marketplace of elections, political Islam has failed to win support, and Indonesians have mostly rejected the radicalism and violence of Islamist groups. In general, the country has become more devoutly religious but has not embraced extremism.

“I think the more hard-line Islamists discredited themselves in the early post-Suharto period” when they attempted to bully the nation into Islamic conservatism, said Greg Fealy, a specialist on Indonesia at the Australian National University. “They added to the wariness that the general public had toward strong Islamism.”

After three decades in power during which he bent Indonesia to his will, Mr. Suharto disappeared almost completely from public life, puttering quietly in his modest home in central Jakarta as his health grew steadily worse.

“What we learned,” said Mr. Boyce, “is that at least in Indonesia, when you lose absolute power, you lose it absolutely.”

In today’s Indonesia, Mr. Suharto is not even a reference point against which policies and reforms are measured.

His legacy is a mixture of economic growth, a culture of corruption and a stunted political system.

A nation that was written off as an economic failure when he took power in 1965 became one of Asia’s tigers. Roads, schools, clinics and electricity raised living standards, and economic liberalism tied the economy to the outside world.

When the economy collapsed during the Asian financial crisis of 1997, Mr. Suharto lost the basis of his legitimacy, and growing discontent burst into the open.

In the decade since then, Indonesia has climbed back toward prosperity. A growth rate that fell to a negative 13 percent has risen to more than 6 percent.

But although the nation embraced democracy with starved enthusiasm, it found that Mr. Suharto had eviscerated its institutions, weakened its political parties and blocked the rise of potential leaders, setting back its political development.

There are no fresh faces in the presidential field for 2009. Political analysts say they are waiting until the next vote, in 2014, to see a new generation emerge.

One of the most profound changes has been the decentralization that dispersed power and political accountability from the all-powerful executive in Jakarta to local governments around the country.

The country’s bank deposits fell from 70 percent in the capital, Jakarta, to 35 percent, said Craig Charney, a political scientist and pollster based in New York — “a redistribution of wealth rare in countries outside of revolution or war.”

This has increased the political accountability of local leaders, potentially improving the delivery of government services, and it has increased stability by defusing separatist demands.

But it has also run the risk of creating what people here call hundreds of corrupt and autocratic mini-Suhartos. And it has weakened the hand of the central government in putting its policies into effect.

This accomplishment is Indonesia’s main task today, said Defense Minister Juwono Sudarsono, a cabinet minister under every president since the time of Suharto.

“Before we claim to be the third largest democracy we have to overcome what I call the delivery deficit,” he said. “For democracy to take root here it must prove that it can improve the lives of the people.”

Forty-nine million people live on less than $2 a day, he said. Ten million are unemployed. Large numbers have no access to health care, primary education or clean water. The infant mortality rate is one of the highest in the region.

“We call it procedural democracy,” said Bonar Tigor, who heads a pro-democracy group called Solidarity Without Borders. “We have freedom of political expression. We have good freedom of the press and freedom of assembly. We no longer have political prisoners.” But he said, “Democracy has been kidnapped by the elites who have gotten all the benefits. The hard daily life of the people on the bottom is still the same.”

For many of these people, the controls of the Suharto regime offered a marginally better life. Commodities like gasoline, rice, sugar and cooking oil were subsidized by the government. Now the poor are at the mercy of the market.

Problems like these are challenges for the country’s democratic government, the hard work of everyday governance. Indonesia’s success now depends on small and incremental changes rather than on the heart-stopping historical turning points of a decade ago.

“The biggest news here is that there is no crisis,” said Douglas Ramage, the country representative for the Asia Foundation.

“What strikes me is the sheer normality of the country. Indonesia is now a normal nation.”

kelapa
Thanks.

Can you give the link? Or is the article password-protected?
jokotarub
^^No they're not. I just did a copy-paste of the article title to Google and read the original article.

@rasibiduk: thanks.
rasibiduk
QUOTE(kelapa @ Jan 12 2008, 10:51 AM) [snapback]3421068[/snapback]
Thanks.

Can you give the link? Or is the article password-protected?


In case your google doesn't work (j/k) : A Resilient Indonesia Moves Beyond Suharto

@jokotarub: you're welcome.
kelapa
I would like to comment on this:

QUOTE
“We call it procedural democracy,” said Bonar Tigor, who heads a pro-democracy group called Solidarity Without Borders. “We have freedom of political expression. We have good freedom of the press and freedom of assembly. We no longer have political prisoners.” But he said, “Democracy has been kidnapped by the elites who have gotten all the benefits. The hard daily life of the people on the bottom is still the same.”


Doesn't that also happen in the US and some european countries (especially eastern)? What is the difference actually? Cultural may be, since Indonesian doesn't like to argue openly (with mouth, but OK with body, he he)? Democracy must adapt itself, however. As long as the spirit of "power in the hand of the people" still alive (which is still quite rare to find in Indonesia but increasing), yes we are democratic.

Majapahitans
QUOTE(rasibiduk @ Jan 11 2008, 12:10 PM) [snapback]3419182[/snapback]
“Before we claim to be the third largest democracy we have to overcome what I call the delivery deficit,” he said. “For democracy to take root here it must prove that it can improve the lives of the people.”

Forty-nine million people live on less than $2 a day, he said. Ten million are unemployed. Large numbers have no access to health care, primary education or clean water. The infant mortality rate is one of the highest in the region.

For many of these people, the controls of the Suharto regime offered a marginally better life. Commodities like gasoline, rice, sugar and cooking oil were subsidized by the government. Now the poor are at the mercy of the market.


Sure we did good job to be noted as "Standard Bearer of Democracy" in Southeast Asia, but I totally agree on this "delivery deficit" thesys, poverty rate still high, prices of daily goods are soaring high.

A senior reporter here in my office said:
"How could this happened again? we tought that dark days in 60's is over, dark days when people queueing for kerosene, cooking oil, etc. But look now, poor people struggle for their share of raskin (beras miskin/rice for poors, subsidized rice), also queueing to buy some diminishing supply of minyak tanah (kerosene) for cooking.

Democracy is good...., but show me the money...! icon_twisted.gif
firdausj
From now, we have to focus to reform our "mess" legal system ...

QUOTE
Indonesia has to fix its dysfunctional legal system
Wednesday, January 23. 2008

Indonesia's transition in the last ten years since the country was hit by the Asia's financial crisis has been such a remarkable success that some people see the emergence of a "democratic Indonesian tiger".

The combination of political democracy and rapid economic growth appears to be within Indonesia's grasp.

Indonesia is enjoying its sixth straight year of economic expansion with growth in 2007 expected to reach 6.3 per cent, slightly above the average of its peers in Southeast Asia. A 7 per cent growth rate is no longer unimaginable. This new level of growth would significantly strengthen President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono's re-election chances in 2009.

Since the fall of Soeharto, the country has prioritized democratization, macro-economic stability and growth rather than improved governance, better services, and micro-economic reform.

The successful shift to democracy has confounded skeptics who in 1997 feared this sprawling, diverse country of 235 million would disintegrate without strongmen like Sukarno and Soeharto holding it together. The latest annual Freedom House global survey even identifies Indonesia as the only fully free and democratic nation in Southeast Asia. Indonesia has achieved something unique in the region and the developing Muslim world: stability and growth on democratic foundations.

However, strong macro-economic fundamentals mask other stubborn problems that still have to be dealt with. The most important ones are poverty, a crumbling infrastructure and a dysfunctional legal system. Yudhoyono promised that his election to office, and democracy itself, would reduce poverty and create jobs. The numbers are daunting. Over 100 million Indonesians survive on less than US$2 a day. According to some estimates 40 per cent of the workforce is either unemployed or underemployed.

Many investors, who didn't dare to visit the country three years ago, are giving Indonesia a second look. However, only a few of them set up labor intensive factories that would create the necessary jobs Indonesia so badly needs. Many also give investments in badly needed infrastructure a miss. The single most important reason for this: Indonesia's unreformed legal system is a mess. The legal system doesn't do what it is supposed to do: create predictability.

Why would an Indonesian or a foreign investor put money in a country if some bizarre court-ruling can go against you? The lack of legal certainty is the single biggest obstacle in beating poverty, (re-)building Indonesia's infrastructure and reducing unemployment.

To many observers it is mystifying why there is not more oversight of those who work in legal professions, like judges, solicitors and members of quasi legal institutions like the anti trust agency. The quality of many verdicts in civil cases in Indonesia is horrendous. The KPPU has established a well-established track record for nonsensical rulings of which the one against Temasek is only the latest example.

Another travesty of justice recently took place at the High Court of Jakarta. The High Court broke the Indonesian speed record by agreeing to hear, examine and rule on a case, all in three weeks. Curiously, the chairman of the Panel of Judges hearing the case retired the day after upholding a verdict by the South Jakarta District Court in favor of a former distributor of the Indonesian subsidiary of Mars.Inc.

The court awarded the former distributor 130 years of potential profits, even though the business was in steep decline. In fact, Mars' business in Indonesia was forced to close its factory in Medan due to insufficient sales of the products being manufactured there.

This case is only the latest in a long line of former distributers trying to get even through a defective legal system. Mars is appealing to the Supreme Court, which has a better record in addressing these matters.

Budiono Kusumohamidjojo, who is a senior lecturer in Philosophy of Law, thinks to know why the legal system is in such dire straits: "Legal certainty has been such an alien concept during the course of Indonesia's six decades of political independence that it has become an empty slogan for most Indonesians." According to him there is a need to uproot the corrupt culture from which plenty privileged people are accustomed to taking the forbidden fruit.

President Yudhoyono does not want to interfere with the judiciary's independence. But case after case has shown corruption in the system. Paradoxically, by not intervening the President is allowing the dysfunctional system to prevail.

It is a tragic state of affairs when so called black lawyers can openly boast that they can guarantee a judicial outcome, and taunt their opponents with the inevitability that they will lose, not because of legal arguments, but because of a defective legal system.

According to the well-respected lawyer Todung Mulya Lubis: "It is a tragic state of affairs when two courts in two different parts of the country reach virtually word-for-word judgments, each totally absurd as a matter of jurisprudence, and where the only link between the two courts is the plaintiffs' lawyer. The odds of those identical judgments being genuinely arrived at are similar to the odds of a room full of young children with typewriters accidentally creating the works of Shakespeare."

To become a truly "democratic Indonesian tiger" Jakarta has to tackle its dysfunctional legal system. Fully fledged democracies have independent courts that issue verdicts one can rely on. Not absurd verdicts that only serve some vested interest and seem drafted by Monty Python Flying Circus.

Hans W. Vriens, Singapore, Jakarta Post
The writer is Vice Chairman, Asia of APCO Worldwide, a global firm specializing in political risk analysis. He was based in Indonesia in 2000-2006.
kelapa
QUOTE(firdausj @ Jan 23 2008, 01:12 PM) [snapback]3444893[/snapback]
From now, we have to focus to reform our "mess" legal system ...


Isn't that one of the major agenda in "Reformasi" ? Do we need to go to the street again, but instead of protesting to the government we protest the MA, the highest court?
Misrevolution
Nice to know that there are this kind of news about indonesia
jrockerz
there is no perfect raw ideology,
democracy liberalism, communism or any other ism2 in the world

it has to be combined and picked the best element of it then combined what suitable to national condition.
kelapa
QUOTE(jrockerz @ Feb 3 2008, 10:33 AM) [snapback]3469179[/snapback]
there is no perfect raw ideology,
democracy liberalism, communism or any other ism2 in the world

it has to be combined and picked the best element of it then combined what suitable to national condition.


Apparently, Indonesia lacks people who can do this effectively in function. How unfortunate.
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