Focusing on Washington, glancing at Jakarta
The 17 April Indonesian elections and fallout could have
been big news in Australia. According to some experts they should have
been.
Instead media consumers Down Under got more of US President
Donald Trump’s distant domestic political shenanigans than they did of the
blood and fire crises facing their neighbor nation and its President Joko
Widodo.
The result from the world’s third largest democracy staging
the world’s biggest one-day election will impact many countries, but most
particularly the adjacent southern continent.
Although the times have been tumultuous, consumers of the
Australian Broadcasting Corporation’s sound and vision news bulletins would
have concluded most salient events were happening 13,000 kilometers distant in
the Northern Hemisphere – not next door.
Using the ABC's website search box,
‘Widodo’ appears only a dozen times compared with 150 for 'Trump' in the same seven-week
period. 'Indonesia'
featured on 60 occasions.
The Australian national newspaper did better with 36 mentions of Widodo.
This survey doesn't measure story length,
prominence, or note overlap. It’s a crude measure of quantity, not
quality. That doesn’t undermine the
point: the gap is too wide.
The political happenings in Indonesia’s recent past appear to have been
judged by news editors in Australia
as minor against those in America,
even though the US
didn’t feature an election or resulting tumult.
Perth-based
Indonesia Institute President Ross Taylor told
The Jakarta Post:
“The
statistics simply reinforce our Institute’s view that the only time we here in Australia engage with Indonesia
through the media – or as a community – is when … something shocking happens in
the rest of Indonesia.
“Our media reported how the Jakarta riots’ terrible scenes
were a result of people protesting against alleged vote rigging and anti-Widodo
sentiment … The main contributors to those riots were young thugs, Islamic
radicals combined with disaffected youth happy to get three dollars (Rp 30,000)
each to create a ‘protest'. That should have been a story in its own right.”
Australian journalism is facing crook times; an estimated 3,000 jobs have
been deleted this decade, most from newspaper newsrooms as consumers click
screens rather than flick pages. Rip-and-read reports, mainly from the
Anglosphere, often fill space.
That leaves much heavy lifting to the public broadcaster. The ABC is the most trusted news organization
in the nation, according to Roy Morgan Research’s MEDIA Net Trust Survey.
Told that Trump was eclipsing
Widodo by a factor of twelve, Corporation spokeswoman Sally Jackson
responded: “A keyword in the
search box does not surface all ABC coverage. It is not a reliable basis to
draw conclusions from.”
When asked what the search box misses and how searching
could be refined she added: “We did a lot of coverage - both planned and
breaking news … we had two reporters on the
ground reporting for all platforms … and many live crosses at night. The Indonesia
story was an important one that was covered thoroughly for all our readers,
listeners and viewers.”
That’s not contested.
The issue is the disproportionate attention and higher ranking given
long term to US affairs above those in Indonesia.
Dr Andrew Dodd, Director of the Center for Advancing
Journalism at Melbourne University told this paper low rates of news coverage
“reflect the sad fact that in Australia we are still not switched on to the
great changes occurring in Indonesia.
“We are still largely ignorant of the people and parties and
policies in play and why the protests are occurring. This does not reflect well
on Australia’s
media or population, given so much is at stake.
“Unless the story involves an Aussie backpacker doing
something stupid in Bali it seems we just don’t really connect with stories in Indonesia.
We’re too busy focusing on the latest idiocy occurring at the centers of
Western culture - in Washington and London.”
Presidential candidate Prabowo Subianto had some disquieting
ideas.
The former general publicly promoted Ghost Fleet a US
sci-fi novel which forecasts that by 2030 Indonesia will be brought to its
knees by cunning Westerners plundering the archipelago’s resources.
It gets worse.
According to Dr
Dr Indonesian democracy could die with a Subianto win.
The possibility of a giant dictatorship on the doorstep led
by ‘a Trumpian figure who lives in a self-created bubble of imagined greatness’
according to Mietzner, should have turned Australian media attention to the
islands above.
Another factor: Had the May mayhem continued Australia might
have been hit with a flood of refugees fleeing the violence. That happened in
1998.
President Widodo has visited Australia officially three times,
but the Prime Minister he most liked, Malcolm Turnbull, was deposed last year
in a Liberal Party coup and replaced by Scott Morrison. He’s infamous for riling the Republic by proposing
to shift Australia’s embassy
in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. Relationship repairs will be required.
Next comes a new Widodo Cabinet; few Australians could name
the personalities and parties involved, though they’d be familiar with key
players in US politics.
Commented Taylor: “As a
community, Indonesia is
simply the stranger next door; yet when Australians spend time in Indonesia
they realize that Indonesians are gracious people with a great sense of humor,
value family and value good friends. They also aspire to the things we
seek.”
Which are deeper and wider understandings of each
other. That comes through expanded media
coverage of issues and individuals on both sides of the shallow and narrow Arafura
and Timor Seas.
##
First published in The Jakarta Post 25 June 2019. https://www.thejakartapost.com/academia/2019/06/25/staring-at-washington-glancing-at-jakarta.html
Also published in Pearls and Irritations on 12 July 2019: http://johnmenadue.com/duncan-graham-focusing-on-washington-glancing-at-jakarta/
Also published in Pearls and Irritations on 12 July 2019: http://johnmenadue.com/duncan-graham-focusing-on-washington-glancing-at-jakarta/
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