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Ki tak copy seko indopup, mudah2an lebih membilungkan/membingungkan :-)

Monday, July 30, 2001 

    
   AUGUST 6, 2001, VOL.158 NO.5 
   I Just Don't Believe in Her 
   A celebrated writer and former prisoner asks why Megawati never spoke 
   out 
   BY PRAMOEDYA ANANTA TOER 


   I don't blame President Sukarno for my arrest in the early 1960s. I 
   blame the army. But being a political prisoner in the early 1960s was 
   very different from being a captive of later regimes. Sukarno's 
   political opponents were free to visit their families, to go out 
   walking within a limited area if they wanted to. We were at least 
   treated with respect. 
    
   Under Suharto there were no rules, nothing. You could be thrown into 
   prison without first going to court. If you were found with anything 
   to read, even a piece of torn newspaper, you could be killed. If you 
   were a prisoner in Jakarta you could receive visitors?but for that you 
   had to pay. 
    
   In 1979, when I left prison on Buru Island, all my papers were taken 
   from me. I was in a group of 40 who were separated from the others. 
   When our ship was north of Madura, my group was taken off the boat. It 
   looked like the authorities were planning to hide us away somewhere. 
   But by chance, someone from the Catholic church in Buru heard we were 
   going to be exiled and he spread the news. So when we were put ashore 
   in the Madura Straits and found a vehicle there ready to take us to 
   Nusakambangan, the notorious prison, the world was already watching. 
   And as a result, with numerous foreign ambassadors as witnesses, the 
   government was forced to give us our release papers. 
    
   During Suharto's New Order regime, Megawati, Sukarno's daughter, 
   served in parliament. After her father was overthrown, the New Order 
   government gave her a house and salary as a member of parliament. But 
   did she ever say anything about the way her father was treated? Did 
   she ever protest when her fellow countrymen were imprisoned? Never. 
   Did she ever call Suharto to task? Never! But then she's not alone. 
   Even after Suharto resigned, no one would take him to task, no one 
   dared to bring him to trial. Silently, through his New Order protEgE, 
   he still holds power in this country. 
    
   Megawati came to power on the crest of a wave of youth rebellion. 
   Those kids didn't really think about it; they didn't have any other 
   figurehead, so they adopted her because she was Sukarno's daughter. 
   That's all she is. 
    
   Maybe Megawati hasn't read her father's books. I don't see that she 
   has inherited any of his better characteristics. She has no 
   experience. There is no evidence that she can resolve the country's 
   problems. Yes, she might visit places where conflict has occurred, but 
   for no other reason than to show her tears. Her heart goes out to the 
   people, she says, but that's the most they get. The villagers praise 
   her, but that's because of ignorance. They don't know her. 
    
   No one seems to realize that Indonesia is entering a period of social 
   revolution. The signs are there. It can be seen in the farmers who, 
   having had their land stolen from them during the New Order, are now 
   taking it back by force. It can be seen in the protests by farmers 
   outside regional parliament buildings. It can be seen in the attacks 
   on hundreds of police and military posts. In the past, these very same 
   people would have let themselves be robbed of their voices, but now 
   they are fighting back. Whether they realize it or not, they are the 
   vanguard of a social revolution. Now the nation needs a leader. We've 
   fallen behind; Indonesia is exhausted. 
    
   People like to say that Indonesians are so friendly and polite, but 
   that kind of view seems to be nothing more than a leftover tourism 
   slogan. There is a struggle going on, and it is being controlled by 
   people in Jakarta?by the very same people who have done such things in 
   the past. As I see it, there is no real leadership at present; there 
   are just people with power. That students are now part of the 
   democratic process is a sign of progress; indeed, the change we have 
   seen can be credited to the younger generation. This is not what 
   Megawati fought for. She didn't do anything. The kids, the students, 
   did the fighting and she is here now to enjoy the results of their 
   sacrifice. 
    
   Pramoedya Ananta Toer, author of The Buru Quartet and The Mute's 
   Soliloquy, is a former political prisoner 
    



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