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Military takes lead on food security

Military takes lead on food security

The Star3 days ago
Indonesia's President Prabowo Subianto (L) inspects troops from a vehicle during the Operational Troops and Military Honours ceremony as President Prabowo Subianto inaugurates commanders of Special Forces Command (Kopassus), Marine Corps, and Air Force Quick Reaction Command (Kopasgat) at Suparlan Airfield, in Bandung, West Java, August 10, 2025. (Photo by Timur Matahari / AFP)
THE nation has set up 100 army battalions to help with agriculture projects under President Prabowo Subianto's food security initiative, an official said, underscoring the growing role of the military in civilian life.
Since being inaugurated as president last year, Prabowo, a former special forces commander, has expanded the role of the military, including using soldiers to deliver his flagship free school meals project and to manufacture medicines for public use.
The battalions, consisting of thousands of soldiers, will be installed across Indonesia to work on agriculture and health projects, especially in remote areas, said army spokesperson Brigadier General Wahyu Yudhayana.
'Our roles are as the enablers, to fill the gap when the projects are not delivered due to certain limitations or problems,' he said.
Indonesia passed a change to legislation in March that allows the military a bigger role in government, a move that has raised fears among rights groups of a return to authoritarianism.
Wahyu said the battalions would work to make idle land productive, improve irrigation systems and increase food production.
Some have voiced concern that the military lacks farming expertise, but Wahyu said the agriculture ministry would train the soldiers, equipping them with the required skills.
Made Supriatma, a visiting fellow at the Iseas-Yusof Ishak Institute in Singapore, said it was the first time in its democratic era that Indonesia had set up military units dedicated to agriculture and farming.
Rather than enlist soldiers, the government should have improved agricultural productivity by empowering farmers, he argued.
'This is a serious threat to democracy because these people will create their own structure. The military will have more roles,' he said. — Reuters
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