https://pursuit.unimelb.edu.au/articles/20-years-after-soeharto-is-indonesia-s-era-reformasi-over

20 YEARS AFTER SOEHARTO: IS INDONESIA’S ‘ERA REFORMASI’ OVER?

Since the end of President Soeharto’s 32-year rule, Indonesia has gone
through a period of reform. But recent political and social changes raise
questions about where the country is heading

*By Professor Tim Lindsey, University of Melbourne*

May 1998 was a watershed moment in Indonesian history.


President Soeharto’s 32 years of authoritarian rule ended, as his bloated *New
Order*
<https://www.britannica.com/place/Indonesia/Indonesia-from-the-coup-to-the-end-of-the-New-Order>regime
collapsed amid the economic and political chaos triggered by the *Asian
Economic Crisis*
<http://www.afr.com/news/world/asia/the-asian-financial-crisis-20-years-on-lessons-learnt-and-remaining-challenges-20170702-gx2v3k>
..

President Soeharto held office for 31 years before resigning in May 1998.
Picture: Getty Images

Soeharto’s New Order had reinvigorated the Indonesian economy and
encouraged Western investment. But his government was essentially an
authoritarian regime with military power embedded throughout both the
government and economy. Wealth and power were concentrated in the hands of
a crony elite - including the military.

This policy led to alienation and discontent and, after the Asian Economic
Crisis triggered the collapse of the Indonesian economy, riots swept
through Indonesian cities. Finally, on 21 May 1998 the once unthinkable
happened, and President Soeharto *resigned*
<https://www.nytimes.com/1998/05/21/world/fall-suharto-overview-suharto-besieged-steps-down-after-32-year-rule-indonesia.html>
..

Over the next five years, elite survivors, oligarchs and newly-confident
civil society leaders slowly negotiated a new democratic system with
liberal ambitions. It drew on long-repressed but persistent
aspirations for *negara
hokum* (the rule of law) and human rights, and opened politics, business
and public discourse to a diverse new range of voices.
*ERA REFORMASI*

<https://pursuit.unimelb.edu.au/articles/blasphemy-treason-and-democracy-jakarta-goes-to-the-polls>
Blasphemy, treason and democracy: Jakarta goes to the polls
<https://pursuit.unimelb.edu.au/articles/blasphemy-treason-and-democracy-jakarta-goes-to-the-polls>

*Read more*
<https://pursuit.unimelb.edu.au/articles/blasphemy-treason-and-democracy-jakarta-goes-to-the-polls>

The years after Soeharto’s fall are usually referred to by Indonesians as
the *Era Reformasi* (reform era). The term is still used today, although
the spirit of radical reform that drove democratisation is now distant.

In fact, most Indonesian civil society champions agree that *reformasi* ended
a decade or so ago. Despite this, a new label to define *reformasi’s*
replacement
hasn’t yet emerged. This reflects deep uncertainty among Indonesians about
recent social and political change and where their country is heading.

Some prominent government critics claim that while electoral democracy
seems entrenched, liberal democracy is under threat from *populism and
renewed conservatism*
<https://theconversation.com/indonesia-takes-an-ultra-nationalist-turn-against-islamic-populism-86341>.
For them, Indonesia seems to be sliding towards what they call the ‘Neo-New
Order’.

Others argue that the critical change that marked the end of Soeharto’s
system, the retreat of the military from government to the barracks, hasn’t
been reversed. They point to new governance institutions established
post-Soeharto to combat the repression and corruption that characterised
his regime, like the *Constitutional Court*
<http://www.newmandala.org/indonesias-constitutional-court-public-opinion/> and
the courageous *Corruption Eradication Commission*
<https://thediplomat.com/2017/09/indonesias-corruption-eradication-commission-law-weathers-the-storm-for-now/>
(KPK),
as well as to a diverse civil society and a largely free, even boisterous,
media.

But they do so with increasingly difficulty.

Protests over a poem by Sukmawati Sukarnoputri, who called the singing of a
mother more beautiful than the sound of the call to prayer in Islam.
Picture: Getty Images

Rampant corruption is perhaps Indonesia’s single biggest political issue
and the KPK is *under constant attack*
<http://indonesiaatmelbourne.unimelb.edu.au/talking-indonesia-attacks-on-the-corruption-eradication-commission-kpk/>
from
both politicians and the police. Meanwhile, the Constitutional Court is
entangled in its own scandals and the press is facing increased use of
defamation laws that assist politicians and oligarchs.

Civil society faces new pressures from Indonesia’s emboldened religious and
political conservatives that have had a ‘chilling’ effect on many
reformers, making them far more cautious about what they say and do.
*WHERE TO NEXT?*

*Reformasi* is history.

<https://pursuit.unimelb.edu.au/articles/on-indonesia-language-law-and-looking-past-the-boats>
On Indonesia: Language, law and looking past the boats
<https://pursuit.unimelb.edu.au/articles/on-indonesia-language-law-and-looking-past-the-boats>

*Read more*
<https://pursuit.unimelb.edu.au/articles/on-indonesia-language-law-and-looking-past-the-boats>

So where will Indonesia land? Will liberal democracy bounce back? Will
Indonesia’s resilient oligarchs complete their creeping takeover of
government? Will Indonesia follow Malaysia, conceding political privilege
to Islam and institutionalising intolerance? Or will the country keep
muddling through?

This uncertainty is the source of confusion and anxiety among ordinary
Indonesians. The tensions will only increase with *local elections this
year* <https://thediplomat.com/tag/indonesia-2018-local-elections/> and
next April’s *national elections*
<https://www.cfr.org/blog/contenders-shaping-2019-indonesian-presidential-election>.
Negative campaigning – fake news and all – is underway and will be
particularly intense because, for the first time, presidential and
legislative elections will be held together next year.

The likely outcome is still unclear due to the disruptive influence of
social media manipulation and the unpredictability of the *millions of
millennials who will be voting*
<https://www.lowyinstitute.org/the-interpreter/indonesia-millennial-s-party>
(half
the population is under 40).

The uncertainty that dominates domestic Indonesian politics will have
profound implications for Indonesia’s foreign relations, too.

Indonesia is on the cusp of middle-class status and is rising economically
– despite unimpressive economic management. For all the rhetoric from
Jakarta about being open for business and reforms to facilitate foreign
investment, Indonesia remains fiercely protectionist. A small group of
politically powerful oligarchs dominate a highly uncompetitive economy that
is a minefield for foreign investors.

Basuki ‘Ahok’ Tjahaja Purnama, the Christian ethnic Chinese governor of
Jakarta was jailed for blasphemy. Picture: Getty Images

But Indonesia may prosper nonetheless. Rating agencies claim that even if
it simply maintains its current *5 per cent GDP growth*
<http://www.worldbank.org/en/news/press-release/2018/03/27/indonesia-continues-to-build-on-solid-economic-growth>,
Indonesia will achieve global economic clout.

In fact, its leaders believe that by 2030, Indonesia will be among the
seven largest economies in the world and that this will transform it in the
way that rapid growth transformed China. This, combined with Indonesia’s
strategic geographic expanse and huge population will make it a global
player, they think.

WHAT DOES THIS MEAN FOR AUSTRALIA?

<https://pursuit.unimelb.edu.au/articles/malaysia-s-remarkable-election-outcome>
Malaysia's remarkable election outcome
<https://pursuit.unimelb.edu.au/articles/malaysia-s-remarkable-election-outcome>

*Read more*
<https://pursuit.unimelb.edu.au/articles/malaysia-s-remarkable-election-outcome>

In 2008, at the height of the administration of President Susilo Bambang
Yudhoyono, when relations with Australia were as good as they get, Andrew
MacIntyre, a professor of political science and Dr Douglas Ramage, then
head of the Asia Foundation in Jakarta, *argued*
<https://www.aspi.org.au/report/seeing-indonesia-normal-country-implications-australia>
that
Indonesia had committed to a liberal democratic path and participation in
the international community. Pluralism, they said, is ‘the bedrock fact of
Indonesian society’ and Australia needs to rethink its dated Soeharto-era
attitudes to Indonesia.

But another rethink is necessary now.

Indonesia’s commitment to electoral democracy remains strong but support
for liberal democracy is less certain and concern for international opinion
much diminished. Expectations of Indonesia’s rise are already fuelling
experiments with populism, xenophobia and regional assertiveness.

Likewise, pluralism – and the status of religious, ethnic and social
minorities – face major challenges from rising religious intolerance.
The *growing
influence of Islamist hardliners*
<http://time.com/4181557/jakarta-terrorist-attacks-Indonesia-isis/>,
repressed by the Soeharto regime – is fracturing the national consensus on
pluralism and these groups seem to be emerging as Indonesia’s alt-right.

Massive rallies by Islamist groups that led to the *electoral defeat and
jailing for blasphemy*
<http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2018/04/06/courts-swift-decision-to-reject-ahoks-case-review-petition-questioned.html>
of
Basuki ‘Ahok’ Tjahaja Purnama, the Christian ethnic Chinese governor of
Jakarta, shocked Indonesians and foreign observers.

Half the Indonesian voting population is under 40 - making the next
election results unpredictable. Picture: Getty Images

Advocates of pluralism and minority rights feel intimidated and, by their
own admission, are beginning to self-censor. The apology forced by Islamist
critics from a *weeping Sukmawati Soekarnoputri*
<https://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/world/islamists-set-for-culture-clash-with-sukarno-daughter/news-story/5dcb5b09e5c504b037d3470a1dc13f01>,
a daughter of the first president, for a poem she wrote praising
traditional Indonesian culture over Islamic culture will only increase the
chilling effect of the so-called ‘conservative turn’ on public discourse.

Australia will need a rapid recalibration of its expectations about
Indonesia as the country contemplates an uncertain post-*reformasi *future
that may be much less liberal and less welcoming of foreign engagement.

Even if it becomes a wealthier middle class society, Indonesia’s turbulent
relations with its neighbours may prove to be more difficult in the decade
ahead than at any time since last century.


*A version of this article first appeared on the **Indonesia at Melbourne
<http://indonesiaatmelbourne.unimelb.edu.au/>** blog – you can read the
original article **here
<http://indonesiaatmelbourne.unimelb.edu.au/post-reformasi-indonesia-the-age-of-uncertainty/>*
*.*

Banner: Getty Images

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