http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=40962


INDONESIA: The 'Kemusuk Thug' Is Finally Dead
Analysis by Andreas Harsono*

JAKARTA, Jan 28 (IPS) - Minutes after hearing of Suharto's passing away on 
Sunday, Marco, a militia leader in the capital, donned battle fatigues and 
raced to the former president's mansion on Cendana street to help with guard 
duties. 

Suharto died at 1:10 pm. By 4 pm, his body was already laid down in his living 
room. Government officials, politicians, generals, businessmen and reporters 
with their cameras, boom mikes and satellite vans crowded the neighbourhood. 

"It's a huge loss. His death left me bereft. I immediately flew a half-mast 
flag in front of my house,'' Marco told IPS. Fitullah, another militiaman, 
said: ''We came here because of our conscience. If we had waited for 
instructions, it would not have been fast enough.'' 

More than 300 militiamen, in addition to soldiers of the Kopassus special 
command, lined Cendana street on Sunday to pay their last respects to their 
patriarch. ''He was the patron of our organisation,'' said Marco. 

The militiamen are members of the 'Pemuda Pancasila' ( Pancasila Youth), a 
grassroots organisation whose members are mostly thugs. ''We have around 11 
million members,'' said Marco, proudly. (Like most Javanese, Suharto, Marco and 
Fitullah use only one name). 

It is no coincidence that the militiamen were present in Suharto¹s house. 
Benedict Anderson, a Cornell University professor and an old hand on Indonesia, 
once wrote an essay, 'Petrus Dadi Ratu,' on Suharto's thuggery and opportunism. 
Anderson called Suharto by his underground title, 'Gali Pelarian Kemusuk' or 
'The Thug from Kemusuk.' 

Suharto was born on Jun. 8, 1921 in the village of Kemusuk in Jogjakarta, the 
heartland of Java Island. As a teenager, Suharto enlisted for a three-year 
contract with the Dutch colonial army, the Koninklijk Nederlandsch Indisch 
Leger. But a week after his training began, the Dutch surrendered to the 
invading Japanese army. 

Suharto quickly switched sides and joined Japanese-trained collaborators. But 
Japan soon lost World War II and Indonesia's freedom fighters, led by Sukarno 
and Mohammad Hatta, declared Indonesia¹s independence on Aug. 17, 1945. Suharto 
switched sides once again and joined the new Indonesian army. 

In the 1950s, he was a low-profile but daring officer. In 1956-1957, he was 
found involved in smuggling activities. But it was a revolutionary period and 
hard to differentiate between thugs and soldiers, bandits and militias. Suharto 
argued that it was okay to conduct some 'businesses' to feed his troops. 

Abdul Harris Nasution, Suharto's superior, decided it was safer to take Suharto 
off his command and sent him for an officer-training programme in Bandung. 

His political career took a turn on Sep. 30, 1965 when hundreds of army 
officers kidnapped and killed several generals. Nasution escaped being 
kidnapped. 

Suharto knew of the plan because the kidnappers were mostly his colleagues. 
They reportedly planned to bring the generals, including Nasution, who were 
allegedly planning a coup, to face president Sukarno. Kidnapping was not 
unusual in the early days of modern Indonesia. Militiamen had also kidnapped 
Sukarno and Hatta, just one day prior to the declaration of independence. 

The following morning, on Oct. 1, 1965 Suharto decided to move against his 
former colleagues. The Suharto-led military even began a slow purge against 
Sukarno. Suharto put the blame on the communists. It was a bloody period in 
Indonesia's history. At least, 500,000 people were murdered between October 
1965 and March 1966. 

Hundreds of thousands of people were to spend years in prison, without clear 
charges against them. They suffered, on a routine basis, excruciating torture. 
They endured uncountable losses of property to theft and looting, everyday 
rapes and social ostracism that also targeted wives and widows, children and 
kinsfolk. There were stories about wives who slept with the soldiers who 
guarded their husbands. Militia mushroomed with Suharto's rise to power and 
Pemuda Pancasila became his darling. 

Dozens of intellectuals and activists were exiled to Buru Island. Journalists 
were not spared. Adam Schwarz, in his book 'A Nation in Waiting,' wrote: "In 
1965-1966, about a quarter of Indonesia's 160 or so newspapers were shut down 
because of alleged communist links and hundreds of journalists were arrested." 
Suharto looked down on journalists, treating them like servants throughout his 
career. 

But Suharto also wanted to build Indonesia's tattered economy. He recruited 
U.S.-trained economists to build the economy. They worked closely with the 
World Bank, the International Monetary Fund and Western governments. They 
opened up Indonesia¹s vast natural resources to international investors, using 
the money to build highly needed infrastructure. They introduced family 
planning to slow down population growth. They introduced hybrid rice, but 
indirectly also created the rural dependency on fertilisers and pesticides. 

In 1975, Suharto ordered his troops to invade East Timor, with support from 
Washington, London, Tokyo and Canberra. His troops killed 100,000 to 200,000 in 
East Timor, around 100,000 in West Papua, tens of thousands more in Aceh, 
Lampung, Tanjung Priok and elsewhere. East Timor Action Network, a New 
York-based human rights group, called Suharto ''one of the worst mass murderers 
of the 20th century''. 

Suharto also acquired an appalling legacy of corruption, estimated at 15 
billion US dollars stolen by him, cronies, and his family. He discriminated 
against the Chinese minority. He banned Chinese names but had no qualms using 
the financial acumen of some Chinese tycoons to build his business empires. 

In the 1980s, as his regime stabilised and won the support of the Western 
establishment, his doctrine got buried in Orwellian doublespeak. This was 
needed because of the contradiction between his concept of stability, 
orderliness, freedom, economic development and democracy and their actual 
principles. 

When Suharto said that ''our Pancasila democracy'' would prevail, he actually 
meant that his regime would prevail. When he talked about ''our 
responsibility,'' he did not include his own responsibility. 

The Asian economic crisis exposed the weaknesses of his corrupt and brutal 
regime. Poverty in rural areas was rampant. The outer islands were left far 
behind compared to Java, Indonesia's main island. 

In May 1998, Suharto stepped down from his 32-year rule after the Indonesian 
rupiah all but collapsed. He claimed that it was time for him to be a sage. But 
even in retirement, he blamed his ministers for the killings and corruptions of 
his time. 

He avoided prosecution on grounds of failing health. He was hospitalised 14 
times between 1999 and 2007, thus avoiding personal accountability for the 
genocide, destruction and corruption he inflicted upon those he ruled over. 

He also managed to protect his generals, cronies and family members who carried 
out his orders via massacre, torture and theft. Today they live well in 
Jakarta, visiting his house in their black limousines and haute couture 
costumes. Many of today's government leaders were his former assistants or 
cronies, including President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and Vice-President Jusuf 
Kalla. 

The last hospitalisation took place two weeks ago. As he neared his death, many 
people believed he was protected by his many amulets. Suharto was 
superstitious, consulting clairvoyants throughout his career. 

Some days prior to his death, B.J. Habibie, the vice-president who replaced 
Suharto in May 1998, flew in from Germany to visit. Suharto, who never spoke 
with Habibie after the transfer of power, refused to see the man he wanted to 
see resign along with him. From his death bed, he ordered his children to ask 
Habibie go away. 

Suharto might be dead but his thuggery will outlive him. Marco, Fitullah and 
many other thugs at his residence show that the gruesome legacy is alive and 
well. 

(*Andreas Harsono is a Jakarta-based scholar, currently writing a book, 'From 
Sabang to Merauke: Debunking the Myth of Indonesian Nationalism'.) 

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