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Albanese set to land in a changed and changing Indonesia
Albanese set to land in a changed and changing Indonesia

Sydney Morning Herald

time12-05-2025

  • Business
  • Sydney Morning Herald

Albanese set to land in a changed and changing Indonesia

Another target is funding for schools and universities, and this galvanised the first Dark Indonesia protests in February. The student-led movement claims that Prabowo is using the pretext of austerity to suffocate higher education. Their suspicions only grew when the president tried to allow granting of coal and mineral mining royalty rights to universities. Dark Indonesia – Indonesia Gelap – claimed that this was intended to subvert university independence and undercut climate-related research. The protesters' No.1 demand is that the austerity program be revoked. Prabowo's decision to widen the scope of the military's involvement in civilian affairs has aroused deep fears. One of his first acts was to dress his cabinet ministers in combat fatigues and lead them on a three-day military boot camp. More seriously, Prabowo has allowed serving members of the military to occupy senior government jobs, breaking through one of the guardrails designed to stop backsliding towards the military dictatorship of the Suharto years. The concern in Indonesia today is that Prabowo might be seeking to reverse-engineer a military takeover of the government. 'Don't give a blank check where soldiers could be placed at any posts. It will ruin the system,' a retired general who helped shape the post-Suharto system, Agus Widjojo, told Reuters. ANU professor emeritus Greg Fealy says that the concerns of Dark Indonesia are sincerely held: 'There is genuine substance to the critique that he's increasing the role of the military in public life. The risk is overstated, but it's heading in the wrong direction for democratic Indonesia.' Loading And prospects for Golden Indonesia? 'It's looking far less in prospect for Prabowo, not because of things he's done but because of things that have happened,' says Fealy. 'The Trump tariffs could hit Indonesia quite hard directly, and also indirectly because they will hit China, which is Indonesia's main trading economic relationship.' Trump has announced a 42 per cent total tariff on Indonesian imports to the US, although 32 of those 42 percentage points are suspended while being reviewed. Prabowo's predecessor, Joko Widodo, promised annual economic growth of 6 per cent but rarely got above 5, so Prabowo's growth target is heroic: 'It would take a whole lot of things to align favourably to hit 8 per cent,' says Fealy, 'but he's doing everything he can to achieve it and to claw in foreign investment and increase exports.' This brings us to Albanese's visit. 'More than anything else Prabowo will want to talk to Albanese about, he will want to talk trade and investment,' Fealy says. So it's no coincidence that Albanese has exactly these topics on his list for his summit with Prabowo. Australia and Indonesia already have a free trade agreement. But Albanese sees scope for much more trade liberalisation with Jakarta. Now that the US has erected a tariff wall around itself, the nations that make up the other 85 per cent of the global economy are busily talking to each other about new trade arrangements. Albanese also intends to discuss the prospects for the Sun Cable project to deliver renewable power to Indonesia. The $30 billion project will collect solar energy from northern Australia and run it through an undersea cable to Singapore. But it must transit Indonesian waters, and there could be scope for some of its electricity to be sold to Jakarta in an offtake. The director of the Lowy Institute's South-East Asia program, Susannah Patton, dismisses an Australian commentary that the Albanese visit was 'symbolic diplomacy'. Loading 'It's hugely important,' she says. 'Prabowo has centralised a lot of power' in the Istana presidential palace. Australian ministers previously had good access in Jakarta through Indonesian foreign affairs ministers and defence ministers. But Patton points out that there is only one avenue to power that counts today. With China and Russia both seeking more influence over Indonesia while the US metes out hostile trade treatment, the Australian connection to Jakarta is more vital than ever: 'Albanese needs to find a way of establishing strategic dialogue, talking regularly with Prabowo by phone; it's the only way we are able to have any influence.'

Albanese set to land in a changed and changing Indonesia
Albanese set to land in a changed and changing Indonesia

The Age

time12-05-2025

  • Business
  • The Age

Albanese set to land in a changed and changing Indonesia

Another target is funding for schools and universities, and this galvanised the first Dark Indonesia protests in February. The student-led movement claims that Prabowo is using the pretext of austerity to suffocate higher education. Their suspicions only grew when the president tried to allow granting of coal and mineral mining royalty rights to universities. Dark Indonesia – Indonesia Gelap – claimed that this was intended to subvert university independence and undercut climate-related research. The protesters' No.1 demand is that the austerity program be revoked. Prabowo's decision to widen the scope of the military's involvement in civilian affairs has aroused deep fears. One of his first acts was to dress his cabinet ministers in combat fatigues and lead them on a three-day military boot camp. More seriously, Prabowo has allowed serving members of the military to occupy senior government jobs, breaking through one of the guardrails designed to stop backsliding towards the military dictatorship of the Suharto years. The concern in Indonesia today is that Prabowo might be seeking to reverse-engineer a military takeover of the government. 'Don't give a blank check where soldiers could be placed at any posts. It will ruin the system,' a retired general who helped shape the post-Suharto system, Agus Widjojo, told Reuters. ANU professor emeritus Greg Fealy says that the concerns of Dark Indonesia are sincerely held: 'There is genuine substance to the critique that he's increasing the role of the military in public life. The risk is overstated, but it's heading in the wrong direction for democratic Indonesia.' Loading And prospects for Golden Indonesia? 'It's looking far less in prospect for Prabowo, not because of things he's done but because of things that have happened,' says Fealy. 'The Trump tariffs could hit Indonesia quite hard directly, and also indirectly because they will hit China, which is Indonesia's main trading economic relationship.' Trump has announced a 42 per cent total tariff on Indonesian imports to the US, although 32 of those 42 percentage points are suspended while being reviewed. Prabowo's predecessor, Joko Widodo, promised annual economic growth of 6 per cent but rarely got above 5, so Prabowo's growth target is heroic: 'It would take a whole lot of things to align favourably to hit 8 per cent,' says Fealy, 'but he's doing everything he can to achieve it and to claw in foreign investment and increase exports.' This brings us to Albanese's visit. 'More than anything else Prabowo will want to talk to Albanese about, he will want to talk trade and investment,' Fealy says. So it's no coincidence that Albanese has exactly these topics on his list for his summit with Prabowo. Australia and Indonesia already have a free trade agreement. But Albanese sees scope for much more trade liberalisation with Jakarta. Now that the US has erected a tariff wall around itself, the nations that make up the other 85 per cent of the global economy are busily talking to each other about new trade arrangements. Albanese also intends to discuss the prospects for the Sun Cable project to deliver renewable power to Indonesia. The $30 billion project will collect solar energy from northern Australia and run it through an undersea cable to Singapore. But it must transit Indonesian waters, and there could be scope for some of its electricity to be sold to Jakarta in an offtake. The director of the Lowy Institute's South-East Asia program, Susannah Patton, dismisses an Australian commentary that the Albanese visit was 'symbolic diplomacy'. Loading 'It's hugely important,' she says. 'Prabowo has centralised a lot of power' in the Istana presidential palace. Australian ministers previously had good access in Jakarta through Indonesian foreign affairs ministers and defence ministers. But Patton points out that there is only one avenue to power that counts today. With China and Russia both seeking more influence over Indonesia while the US metes out hostile trade treatment, the Australian connection to Jakarta is more vital than ever: 'Albanese needs to find a way of establishing strategic dialogue, talking regularly with Prabowo by phone; it's the only way we are able to have any influence.'

IN FOCUS: How has Prabowo fared after 6 months as Indonesia's president?
IN FOCUS: How has Prabowo fared after 6 months as Indonesia's president?

CNA

time21-04-2025

  • Politics
  • CNA

IN FOCUS: How has Prabowo fared after 6 months as Indonesia's president?

Asia Prabowo Subianto asked early in his presidency for six months' time before judging his performance. Half a year on, observers give their take on how the Indonesian president has fared domestically and on the global stage. JAKARTA: Juggling multiple roles as an employee, mother, wife, and daughter leaves 41-year-old Widya with barely enough time to prepare proper meals for her two children to eat at school. However, things have changed since January when her 16-year-old daughter started to get free meals at her public school in West Jakarta. Two months later, Widya's 10-year-old son also became a recipient of the nutritious free meal programme , Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto's flagship scheme to fight malnutrition and stunting. Widya, a customer service officer at an energy supply chain company, has noticed positive impacts from the programme. Her daughter is now more fond of eating vegetables since they are provided daily in different menus. Widya's mornings are also less hectic, as she now spends less time in the kitchen. 'The free nutritious meal is good for children because they can eat healthy and nutritious food,' said Widya, who wants to be known only by her first name. 'It also helps the parents save money to spend on food.' Prabowo, who came into power on Oct 20 last year, campaigned heavily for the nutritious free meal programme when he ran for president and insisted it should reach 82.9 million people out of the country's 280 million population. These include students, pregnant women and poor families. The aim is for them to grow healthy and productive so Indonesia can become an advanced country by its centennial in 2045 - a term known mainly as Golden Indonesia. Launched on Jan 6 this year, the populist programme has won the hearts of many, as reflected in Prabowo's high approval rating in his first 100 days. Students eat meals from the free nutritious meal programme at a school in Jakarta on Jan 6, 2025. (Photo: Reuters/Willy Kurniawan) A survey conducted by the research unit of daily newspaper Kompas showed almost 81 per cent of its 1,000 respondents were satisfied with Prabowo's performance in the first three months, attributing it to an early delivery on his campaign pledge. Another survey by polling firm LSI also found a similar approving rating of 81 per cent. However, not everyone is happy with Prabowo's administration, whose ruling coalition holds about 70 per cent of the seats in the parliament. In late January, the government ordered a 256 trillion rupiah (US$15.76 billion) budget cut for ministries and state agencies, primarily to reallocate funds toward Prabowo's flagship initiatives such as the US$28 billion free meal programme. The broad budget cuts triggered nationwide Dark Indonesia protests - led mostly by students - less than four months into Prabowo's term. Another move by Prabowo to allow a bigger role for the military in government with the passing of a controversial military Bill also sparked anger among segments of the population. Prabowo is now also grappling with a likely economic slowdown in light of global uncertainties from United States President Donald Trump's sweeping tariffs. That could affect Prabowo's pledge to increase Indonesia's annual economic growth to 8 per cent during his term from the usual 5 per cent. On the foreign policy front, Prabowo has taken an active role in a departure from his predecessor Joko 'Jokowi' Widodo, visiting more than 10 countries after he was sworn in. Prabowo has said early in his presidency to give him six months to work before judging his performance, given his large Cabinet and ambitious agenda. Since the Kompas and LSI surveys marking his 100 days in office, there have been no further notable opinion polls on his approval ratings. So how has Prabowo fared domestically and on the international stage since he came into office six months ago? CNA takes a closer look. Prabowo came into office with the backing of most big political parties, which together form the Advance Indonesia Coalition, often locally referred to as KIM Plus. A notable absentee from KIM Plus is the Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P), which has the most seats in parliament and is led by former president Megawati Soekarnoputri . Prabowo has on multiple occasions admitted that his presidential victory was due to the influence of Jokowi , whose eldest son Gibran Rakabuming Raka ran as vice- president with Prabowo. At the start of his presidency, Prabowo named a Red and White Cabinet comprising 48 ministers, 56 vice-ministers and five minister-level senior officials, making it Indonesia's biggest Cabinet in decades. New Indonesian ministers salute during their inauguration at the Presidential Palace in Jakarta, Indonesia on October 21, 2024. (Photo: Reuters/Willy Kurniawan) Analysts believe this is to accommodate the different parties supporting Prabowo. But the president himself has said the large size of the Cabinet is needed to help him realise his goals, such as helping the economy grow by 8 per cent yearly and turning Indonesia into a developed country in 20 years. Prabowo's political grip was further strengthened at the end of November when his allies secured the most seats as regional heads in the country's local elections . Jokowi's influence was still notable as he had endorsed several prominent regional figures in the local polls. But by the start of 2025, the shadow of Jokowi over the Prabowo administration started to diminish, analysts told CNA. They pointed to several signs of this. The first was Prabowo's rollout of the free lunch programme in January, which signalled that he had complete power over his government. The second, said political analyst Nicky Fahrizal of the Centre for Strategic and International Studies think tank, was Prabowo's first Cabinet change at the end of February. The move also showed that Prabowo has no room for underperforming ministers, said Nicky. However, Nicky said Prabowo's strong political backing does not mean the government is stable. The recent budget cuts to sustain the free meal programme have resulted in drastic changes in the lives of the average person, Nicky added. Some civil servants have had to work with limited electricity to save costs, and funding for research at some state universities have been cut, among others. This has triggered the nationwide Dark Indonesia protests . University students take part in an anti-government protest called 'Indonesia Gelap' (Dark Indonesia) near the presidential palace in Jakarta on Feb 20, 2025. (Photo: Reuters/Willy Kurniawan) Nicky also said that the large coalition means Prabowo has to accommodate the needs of many parties in his coalition, which do not necessarily share the same ideology. Political analyst Aditya Perdana from the University of Indonesia said the coalition was formed in a transactional manner, where party leaders were given ministerial positions in return for their support. This means that the solidarity of the Cabinet also depends on whether political parties are satisfied with the power they receive. A big question that has lingered since the start of Prabowo's presidency is the stance of PDI-P, which was the biggest winner in last year's legislative election and so holds the most seats in parliament, with about 19 per cent of the 580 seats. Prabowo had not met its leader Megawati since the end of 2023 when campaigning for the presidential election started, triggering speculation on how their relationship would evolve and affect the government. On Apr 7, the two finally met again at Megawati's residence in Jakarta and held private talks for 1.5 hours. 'This is a symbolic move to show that Prabowo still wants to embrace every political elite - apart from former presidents Jokowi and Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono,' said Nicky, pointing out that it was Prabowo who visited Megawati. 'Megawati was the only (living) former president whose backing he still does not have, and it now further triggers the question: Will PDI-P join the government?' Indonesia President Prabowo Subianto held a private meeting with PDI-P chairwoman Megawati Soekarnoputri at her home in Central Jakarta on Apr 7, 2025. (Photo: X/bang_dasco) PDI-P is expected to hold its national congress some time this year, where it will clarify its stance on whether to join the government, in addition to electing a chairperson, which will likely remain Megawati. Aditya from the University of Indonesia said that if PDI-P joins KIM Plus, Prabowo's coalition may not necessarily be more solid, as he would need to accommodate more demands from another powerful partner. Meanwhile, if PDI-P decides to remain outside of the government, this could trigger some other remaining parties, such as the fourth largest party in parliament Nasdem which also has not joined KIM Plus, to join the opposition group. 'I think PDI-P is a game changer,' said Aditya. 'But if PDI-P joins the coalition, the checks and balances on the government will be even less.' Nevertheless, despite recent protests against the government's austerity measures and the passing of a revised military law, Prabowo is still politically powerful and popular, said Aditya. He attributed this to ongoing populist programmes, such as health and education subsidies for the poor. Aditya said the biggest political risk to Prabowo is the country's economic situation. 'If the economy is not growing and remains stagnant until the end of the year, and the government has no money to improve people's livelihood, there may be more protests.' Compared to his predecessor Jokowi, Prabowo has been more active on the foreign affairs front, even in his early days as president. Analysts attributed this to their different backgrounds. Prabowo is a four-star general with an international upbringing, while Jokowi comes from humble beginnings, having lived in the slums of Solo city, said foreign policy expert Teuku Rezasyah from Bandung's Padjadjaran University. Thus, unlike Jokowi, Prabowo feels comfortable on the international stage and has been actively embarking on foreign trips. Days after his presidency, he went to China, followed by the United States . In just six months, Prabowo has visited more than 10 countries, with the United Arab Emirates, Türkiye, Egypt, Qatar and Jordan being the latest he visited this month. This is a stark contrast to Jokowi, who largely stayed in Indonesia during his 10-year tenure and left foreign policy issues to then-Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi. But the biggest surprise was that Indonesia officially joined BRICS - a bloc of developing economies increasingly seen as a counterweight to the West - at the beginning of the year, said Rezasyah. However, the government has not really explained why it joined the bloc, he added. 'So there is an impression that we don't get much from BRICS,' said Rezasyah. The only advantage so far from being a BRICS member is that Indonesia has joined the New Development Bank, which is a lender established by the group to mobilise resources for infrastructure and sustainable development projects, he said. But Indonesia should still be wary as it is unclear whether it could be more helpful than the World Bank or the International Monetary Fund, he added. 'These are things the public needs to know but we don't, including its term of references.' In general, Rezasyah said that the government has also not explained the outcomes of Prabowo's various foreign trips during the past six months. 'Have they resulted in Memorandums of Understanding or agreements which have reached the implementation stage? These are things that should be known to the public.' Rezasyah said Prabowo is projecting Indonesia as a qualified middle power by attending various summits in his first six months, such as the 11th Summit of the Developing Eight (D-8) in Egypt in December, and making statements about the wars in Gaza and Ukraine. So far, Prabowo has yet to visit all ASEAN countries, but he has visited Malaysia three times. Malaysia is this year's rotating ASEAN chair, and Prabowo's visits are a sign that he supports the neighbouring country's chairmanship, said Rezasyah. So far, Indonesia's economy is not doing well, said experts, and this is related to the government's policies and how it functions. Economist Bhima Yudhistira from the Center of Economic and Law Studies (CELIOS) said there have been layoffs in many sectors such as textile, most notably in textile giant Sritex, which filed for bankruptcy and shut down operations at the beginning of March. He also noted that Indonesia's stock market plunged as much as 7 per cent on Mar 18, triggering a 30-minute trading halt not seen since the COVID-19 pandemic. A journalist observes the prices of Indonesian stocks on Apr 15, 2025. (Photo: CNA/Ridhwan Siregar) 'Why was it red? Because of Danantara and concerns about the state-owned enterprises, especially the banks under Danantara, people (in Danantara) who hold dual positions,' said Bhima, referring to Indonesia's new sovereign wealth fund launched on Feb 24 and headed by Minister of Investment Rosan Perkasa Roeslani . Danantara aims to manage the assets of all state-owned enterprises in the country worth more than US$900 billion and reinvest their dividends in commercial projects. It has named former presidents Jokowi and Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono as members of its steering committee. However, some observers are concerned about the transparency of Danantara as it is unclear how it would be audited and by who. The government has said that the Corruption Eradication Commission and the country's audit board can audit Danantara, but so far the mechanism is not clear. Bhima also noted that the country's tax revenue has declined in recent months due to a state spending deficit. As of the end of March, Indonesia's tax revenue in the first three months of this year was 322.6 trillion rupiah. This is 18 per cent lower compared to the first three months last year, when the country's tax revenue was 393.91 trillion rupiah. This has in turn affected government spending, which dropped 11.7 per cent in February. He said he cannot recall both tax revenue and government spending dipping like this under previous presidencies, adding that the current government's debt levels have also gone up compared to the past. 'What does this all mean? It means that the economy is getting worse,' he added. Economist Wijayanto Samirin from Jakarta's Paramadina University believes the government does not have a comprehensive, realistic plan about where the nation should be heading based on solid technocracy. He also said there are too many ambitious and expensive programmes - such as the free meal programme and a plan to provide three million affordable homes - without experts leading them and without a concrete plan. Prabowo's affordable homes scheme aims to provide three million houses annually for low-income earners, defined as people who earn less than eight million rupiah per month. The programme needs 750 trillion rupiah per year, and for this year the government has set aside 40.27 trillion rupiah, with the hopes of getting the remaining funds from foreign investors. Wijayanto noted that the previous Jokowi government had a scheme to provide one million houses for the lower-income group. Still, it did not succeed, so aiming for three million houses would be even more challenging. He also thinks that if the government has a limited budget, the free meal programme should not target 82.9 million people but just poor people. 'The free nutritious meal programme has indeed spurred economic growth, but it also has contributed to a deficit budget because the budget for the programme is taken from the budget which was supposed to be used for other things,' said Wijayanto. Tangerang-based mother of one Mega, 41, also thinks the free nutritious meal programme hurts the state budget. 'The programme is actually good but (only) as long as there is ample budget and (it is) not taking up the budget for other programmes,' said Mega, who only wants to be identified by her first name and works as a banker. 'It puts a huge burden on the state finances and makes investors run away. It would be better to stop it,' said Mega, who has a nine-year-old daughter. Wijayanto added that the government's cost-cutting measures were implemented incorrectly; instead of cutting the budget at the upper level, such as ministers, the budgets related to civil servants at staff levels were cut. He cited for instance how some ministerial posts could be reduced and this would also trim related costs such as staff needed to service these ministers. Flip-flopping of policies such as the government's plan to implement a value-added tax rate hike to 12 per cent, which was cancelled last minute amid growing public concerns, also does not reflect well on the government and caused distrust among investors, said Wijayanto. He said that there is a perception that the Cabinet is 'still not coherent'. 'Many ministers are unsure what to do. Thus, until now, we are still unclear what kind of initiatives some ministers have taken,' he observed. He added that a big Cabinet makes coordination difficult and is not cost-efficient. 'Ideally, Prabowo should soon make some adjustments to the Cabinet. He could cut some posts or, and he could change some people with better performers.' Bhima from CELIOS agreed. It had conducted a survey of 95 journalists from 44 different organisations who covered different beats to rate how Prabowo's Cabinet ministers had fared in their first 100 days using indicators such as programme achievements, suitability of policy plans with public needs, leadership and coordination quality, budget management and policy communication. The survey found that several ministers failed, with Minister of Human Rights Natalius Pigai scoring the lowest with -113 points, followed by Minister of Cooperatives Budi Arie Setiadi with -61 points and Minister of Energy and Mineral Resources Bahlil Lahadalia with -41 points. 'The Cabinet needs to be reshuffled and budget efficiency must start from the top level,' said Bhima. 'There must be transparency in the making of regulations, especially those which are sensitive.' Wijayanto added that Prabowo needs to urgently change the communication style of the government and be more transparent in communicating policies. This is particularly so given that like many countries around the world, Indonesia's economic outlook has darkened in light of the sweeping tariffs that the US has announced. Trump has declared a 32 per cent reciprocal tariff on Indonesia before announcing a 90-day suspension, though a 10 per cent base is still in force. Prabowo's government has tried to negotiate with the US by sending a delegation to Washington on Apr 18 led by Coordinating Minister for Economic Affairs Airlangga Hartarto. While the two countries have yet to come to an agreement, they agreed to hold further talks within the next 60 days. 'Trump's tariffs will impact a lot of things,' said Bhima. 'Firstly, it will affect Indonesia's export performance because with this tariff war, Indonesian textile, apparel, and footwear products will be at a disadvantage as many of the products produced here are for American international brands. 'There will also be a flood of imported goods, especially from China, Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia, to Indonesia.' He said that mass layoffs will be hard to prevent and the rupiah, which already hit a historic low against the US dollar this month, could further weaken. An officer displays US dollars and Indonesian rupiah banknotes at a foreign currency exchange outlet in Jakarta. (Photo: CNA/Ridhwan Siregar) Bhima said the impacts will be seen in the third and fourth quarters this year. Meanwhile, Wijayanto said the current situation is a challenge and opportunity for Indonesia to improve its investment climate through deregulation and improving legal certainty, among other things. 'This is our big homework, and it must be done with or without a request from the US.' On his part, Prabowo has said that he wants to cut back business regulations that hinder investments. 'Please tell us which ones are not well implemented. We will act immediately,' he said on Apr 8. 'Now I give a line to all the Cabinet members. First, everything must be efficient, the work must be efficient. Second, get rid of all unreasonable regulations. Make it easy. Make all (business) processes easy for entrepreneurs.' Speaking at the same economic forum on Apr 8, chairman of the national economic council of Indonesia Luhut Pandjaitan said people should not be overly worried about the current economic situation. 'That we are alert, yes (we should be). We have handled many big cases.' He cited how Indonesia had managed to deal with the COVID-19 pandemic a few years ago. 'This too we can solve together.' Ministers and cabinet members in military fatigues pose for photographers during a cabinet retreat at the Military Academy in Magelang, Central Java on Oct 25, 2024. (Photo: AP/Achmad Ibrahim) As a former army general, the military's influence on Prabowo's personality and leadership is clear, said analysts. Just a few days after the Red and White Cabinet was formed, Prabowo's newly appointed ministers had to undergo a three-day military style retreat at the Indonesian Military Academy in the mountainous region of Magelang, Central Ja va. The military is also actively helping distribute the nutritious free meals, particularly in remote areas. While the military is nowadays not as dominant as it was during the regime of former authoritarian president Suharto, who is Prabowo's former father-in-law, defence expert Yohanes Sulaiman from the University of Jenderal Achmad Yani in West Java said it is becoming more dominant compared to during Jokowi's tenure. It is especially notable when contentious revisions to the country's military Bill was passed into law at the end of March, allowing more civilian posts for military officers. The new military law also contributed to the fall of the stock exchange, said Yohanes, as investors were spooked by the protests it triggered. Thousands of people stage a protest against the newly passed military law in front of the Indonesian parliament in Jakarta on Mar 20, 2025. (Photo: CNA/Wisnu Agung Prasetyo) Viewing the new military law from two perspectives, Yohanes said that the law is important for people in the defence sector because there are many military personnel with high ranks but no positions, which means their salary is also low. With the new law, military officers can take up civilian posts in 14 ministries, up from 10 previously. 'So actually, there is nothing to criticise there. But, if we look at it from the point of view of civil society, it is also understandable why they are concerned because the law was made secretly, and there was no communication with the public about it. ' 'The current government is simply not communicative, and this creates distrust. This is a problem,' he said. If the military is not involved in a political setting, it should be communicated to the public, but this is not being done, said Yohanes. Analysts said that there are also concerns that the press is under attack and that there is growing authoritarianism in the country that could threaten democracy. They pointed to recent cases where investigative news outlet Tempo - which has been critical of Prabowo's policies - was sent a box of six rats with their heads cut off on Mar 22 and an earlier incident where a pig's head without its ears was found to be intended for a Tempo reporter. In a rare group interview with six Indonesian editors-in-chief at the beginning of April, Prabowo said he was shocked by the Tempo incidents. The parliament has plans to soon revise the country's criminal code and police law to provide law enforcers with more power. If also conducted in a non-transparent way, it will cause significant upheaval like the passing of the military Bill, especially given the negative public perception of the police in general, said Yohanes. 'Prabowo needs to be firm. He needs to listen and see: What is the problem? If, for example, the problem is that investors are not confident in Danantara, he should act accordingly and dissolve it instead of making lousy comments. 'He should set aside his ego.' Indonesia Prabowo Subianto economy Politics

Clip shows suspects in Indonesian corruption case, not 'student who insulted Prabowo'
Clip shows suspects in Indonesian corruption case, not 'student who insulted Prabowo'

Yahoo

time18-03-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Clip shows suspects in Indonesian corruption case, not 'student who insulted Prabowo'

"The woman who insulted the president during the protest by calling Prabowo a 'dog' was officially arrested," reads the Indonesian-language caption of a TikTok video shared on February 28, 2025. The video, viewed more than 37,000 times, shows prosecution service officers escorting several women wearing masks and prison uniforms. Audio of someone singing "Prabowo is a dog" can be heard in the background. Overlaid text hails the "power of Indonesian netizens" in leading to the arrest of the protester who insulted the president, saying she is the head of the student group of Airlangga University, a state university in Surabaya. The video circulated after footage emerged of a protester delivering a speech and singing "Prabowo is a dog" during nationwide demonstrations in February against budget cuts by Prabowo's government aimed at funding a free-meal programme and other big-ticket campaign pledges (archived here and here). Austerity measures announced by Prabowo in late January had sparked thousands of student protesters to rally across Indonesian cities, underpinned by a social media movement known as "Dark Indonesia". The footage of the protester insulting the president triggered outrage from government supporters and pro-government influencers, who said she had "gone too far" (archived here, here and here). The footage purportedly showing the arrested protester was shared in similar posts elsewhere on TikTok, X and YouTube. But as of March 18 there have been no official reports about the protester's identity or whether she had been detained. Airlangga University's student body president Aulia Thaariq Akbar told AFP on March 14 the woman filmed insulting Prabowo is not a member of his organisation. Aulia added that no members of his organisation were arrested after the protests. A reverse image search on Google using keyframes from the falsely shared video led to the same footage posted on local broadcaster Semarang TV's TikTok page on January 24 (archived link). The clip's Javanese-language caption says it shows two Kemusu Public Health Center workers named as suspects in a corruption investigation. The same footage was also published on Semarang TV News' YouTube channel and the Liputan6 verified YouTube channel (archived here and here). According to local media outlet the suspects worked as accountants at the facility in the Boyolali regency of Central Java province (archived link). They were alleged to have pocketed 1.9 billion rupiah ($116,000) between 2017 and 2022. AFP previously debunked another false claim about the budget cut protests.

Clip shows suspects in Indonesian corruption case, not 'student who insulted Prabowo'
Clip shows suspects in Indonesian corruption case, not 'student who insulted Prabowo'

AFP

time18-03-2025

  • Politics
  • AFP

Clip shows suspects in Indonesian corruption case, not 'student who insulted Prabowo'

"The woman who insulted the president during the protest by calling Prabowo a 'dog' was officially arrested," reads the Indonesian-language caption of a TikTok video shared on February 28, 2025. The video, viewed more than 37,000 times, shows prosecution service escorting several wearing masks and prison uniforms. A Overlaid text hails the " " in leading to the arrest of the protester who insulted the president, saying she is the head of the student group of Airlangga University, a state university in Surabaya. Image Screenshot of the false TikTok post, captured on March 13, 2025 The video circulated after footage emerged of a protester delivering a speech and singing "Prabowo is a dog" during nationwide demonstrations in February against budget cuts by Prabowo's government aimed at funding a free-meal programme and other big-ticket campaign pledges (archived here and here). Austerity measures announced by Prabowo in late January had sparked thousands of student protesters to rally across Indonesian cities, underpinned by a social media movement known as "Dark Indonesia". The footage of the protester insulting the president triggered outrage from government supporters and pro-government influencers, who said she had "gone too far" (archived here, here and here). The footage purportedly showing the arrested protester was shared in similar posts elsewhere on TikTok, X and YouTube. But as of March 18 there have been no official reports about the protester's identity or whether she had been detained. Airlangga University's student body president Aulia Thaariq Akbar told AFP on March 14 the woman filmed insulting Prabowo is not a member of his organisation. Aulia added that no members of his organisation were arrested after the protests. A reverse image search on Google using keyframes from the falsely shared video led to the same footage posted on local broadcaster on January 24 (archived link). The clip' says it shows two Kemusu Public Health Center workers named as suspects in a corruption investigation. Image Screenshot comparison of the falsely shared video (L) and the Semarang TV clip The same footage was also published on Semarang TV News' YouTube channel and the Liputan6 verified YouTube channel (archived here and here). According to local media outlet the suspects worked as accountants at the facility in the Boyolali regency of Central Java province (archived link). They were alleged to have pocketed 1.9 billion rupiah ($116,000) between 2017 and 2022. AFP previously debunked another false claim about the budget cut protests.

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