ALL CHANGE – THOUGH NOT FOR THE BETTER
Nothing civilian about this show |
We know more about our neighbours’
new leader from the US media – not our own.
Australian correspondents stationed in the region constantly sought
interviews with Prabowo Subianto before he became Indonesia's eighth president of
the world’s fourth most populous nation.
We were snubbed.
Being ignored is an occupational
hazard for journos; grow a carapace or switch to PR. But getting to hear and
read the views of the new guy next door heading 280 million people is important
for all Australians - and vital for our future
Among the razzamatazz of the switch
from Joko ‘Jokowi’ Widodo to Prabowo on Sunday were fears this marked the
Republic heading backwards – to the New Order autocracy of his late
father-in-law and second prez Soeharto.
Some have moaned that Anthony
Albanese insulted Jakarta by his absence from the hoopla prioritising a
previous engagement with his King. That could
be expeditious.
Should the disgraced former
general and alleged human rights abuser become a despot, the PM can remind
electors he didn’t personally bless the newcomer. Deputy Richard Marles was
sent as Team B.
Prabowo gave Al Jazeera TV
a brittle half-hour sit-down
in May. Later he spoke
to Time magazine for “over six hours” kissing bubs, and savouring the
reporter’s defence line to the jury:
“Prabowo is too complex a
character to be distilled as simply the ‘massacre general,’ as he sums up his
Western reputation with a resigned eye-roll.” Simply?
Favouring the US and Qatar media over
Oz reveals
Marle’s “no relationship more important”
line is not reciprocated.
The Indonesian media is being
duplicitous by rewriting their new leader as a ‘retired’ general. That’s a lie. The man was cashiered in 1998
for disobeying orders with his troops ‘disappearing’ student dissidents. Thirteen are still missing. Prabowo was never
charged, a point he likes to throw at critics.
Once sacked he fled to Jordan,
only officially returning to Jakarta in 2008 when Soeharto died, his ambitions well
bolstered with funds from his younger US dollar billionaire brother Hashim
Djojohadikusumo.
What to know about Prabowo? He’s 73, mercurial and a misogynist. Indonesia
has a gossip-fuelled tabloid press but has never pictured the former Defence
Minister with anyone since he and wife Siti split in 1998 after 15 years. No
First Lady.
This is unusual. First President Soekarno set the bar for
Javanese manhood as a confirmed philogynist with nine known wives.
Prabowo and Siti’s only child Didit
is a middle-aged fashion designer living in Europe and whispered to be gay, not
a proper public lifestyle in tut-tut Indonesia.
PS is no great shakes on religion
but goes through the rituals in a nation that has more Muslims than any other state
so leaders must seem pious.
Mum Dora Marie Sigar was a
Protestant, Dad Soemitro Djojohadikoesoemo a Dutch-educated Javanese Muslim economist
who quit the country after falling out with Soekarno.
With his parents in exile young
Prabowo was educated in Britain – and later as a soldier in the US, so handles
English well.
When allegations surfaced of unlawful
killings by his troops during spells as a Special Forces Commander in East
Timor and West Papua, the West was shocked. He was banned from entering
Australia and the US till 2019, something Washington and Canberra don’t want to
remember. For a full account see
here.
Prabowo also doesn’t favour academic
critics. Like Trump, he’s said some awful things about democracy being past
its use-by date, but these may not be his present views as the man is a
political chameleon. However, he remains on the hard right.
Prabowo currently faces no threats
internally as opposition has been bought off with coalitions and ministerial
goodies as thank-you notes. Human rights
activists fear he'll target them and help will have to come from outside
causing international friction.
His record on problem-solving is
to reload and fire, demanding upset foreigners respect his country’s sovereignty.
Indonesia calls itself the world’s third
largest democracy (after India and the US) though now labelled
‘flawed’ by the Economist Intelligence Unit. Endy Bayuni, a former
editor of the Jakarta Post has written:
“All Indonesia’s democratic
institutions have become virtually dysfunctional with almost all power residing
in the hands of the president. There is no incentive for Prabowo or any
other future president to change this."
Public concerns have been soothed
by promises of lunches for schoolkids, a fine idea as stunting caused by
malnutrition is a serious issue, particularly in faraway regions.
The Rp 71 trillion (AUD 6.9 billion)
scheme is due to start next year and for sure will be crippled by corruption as
many agencies and private companies will be involved in procurement and supply.
Indonesia ranks 89 out of 180
countries in Transparency International's Corruption Perception Index.
One estimate reckons
it’ll take a century of reform before the Republic sheds the curse, and that’s
going to need brave leaders committed to ethics in public life.
Prabowo doesn’t fit that ideal.
The free-tucker policy and
coupling with Jokowi’s eldest son Gibran Rakabuming as vice president gave the
couple 58 per cent of the popular vote in the February election.
The Straits Times claims
it’s seen a
presentation for foreign investors of Prabowo’s plans to lift growth to
eight per cent and make the country self-sufficient in food by clearing vast
tracts of jungle in West Papua – a horror plan for Western environmentalists.
That won’t faze Prabowo who has
close ties to Moscow and Beijing, visiting both recently, borrowing money and buying goods. That’s worried the White House hoping he might
favour a US alliance.
Wrong. Indonesia’s no foreign pact policy goes back
to Soekarno’s years and there’s little likelihood of change.
We’re close enough to be good
mates but can’t be trusted because we polish our star as the region’s US deputy
sheriff, the promotion courtesy of past PM
John Howard.
We backed the 1999 East Timor referendum and
sent in peacemakers. We reckon all good,
our triumphs. Prabowo recalls all bad, his nation’s shame. He won’t talk to Oz journos because he fears
what we'd ask - and should.
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First published in Michael West Media, 21 October 2024: https://michaelwest.com.au/indonesia-has-a-new-president-prabowo-should-we-be-worried/
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