https://www.asiatimes.com/2019/06/article/no-easy-peace-for-widodos-second-term/

*JUNE 17, 2019*

Indonesian President Joko Widodo at a funeral ceremony for Indonesian
former first lady Kristiani Herrawati at Kalibata Heroes Cemetary, Jakarta,
June 2, 2019. Photo: AFP Forum via NurPhoto/Aditya Irawan
*No easy peace for Widodo’s second term*

Indonesia’s post-election conflict is on hold while a court hears the
opposition’s election fraud appeal but could easily reignite if disgruntled
soldiers are not mollified

*ByJOHN MCBETH, JAKARTA*
In between flying around the world in his private jet and attending to his
many business interests, defeated opposition candidate Prabowo Subianto
appears to have no Plan B if the Constitutional Court rejects his appeal
over alleged massive fraud in the April 17 presidential election.

The court now has a fortnight to decide whether Prabowo and his legal team
have sufficient evidence to justify a fuller inquiry into the election
outcome in which President Joko Widodo beat his challenger by a convincing
55.5% to 44.5% of the national vote.

If the country’s highest legal body decides against his appeal, Prabowo’s
pride, among other things, makes it unlikely he will accept Jokowi’s offer
for his Great Indonesia Movement Party (Gerindra) to join his ruling
coalition to smooth over the social schisms the election exposed.



That would leave the third-ranked Gerindra and the Justice and Prosperity
Party (PKS), its perennial Islamic ally, on the opposition benches, with
their third partner, the National Mandate Party (PAN), showing signs of
jumping ship after doing better than expected at the polls.

Two decades after the birth of democracy in Indonesia, the concept of an
opposition with alternative ideas is mostly lost on political parties,
which have done little to strengthen the country’s now slowly fraying
democratic fabric.

Indonesian presidential candidate Prabowo Subianto prays on his campaign
trail at Gelora Bung Karno Stadium in Jakarta, April 7, 2019. Photo: AFP
Forum via Andalou Agency/Anton Raharjo

Four days after his legal team filed the court appeal, alleging
“systematic, structured and massive” election fraud, Prabowo boarded his
Embraer 190 jet with seven other passengers, including a member of the
Russian Parliament’s secretariat, and flew to Austria on a reported
business trip.

It was not the first time he has shown his mind is on other things. He also
made an eight-hour, round-trip to Brunei on May 16, six days before
election-related disturbances in downtown Jakarta left eight people dead
and more than 400 in detention.

When he is home, Prabowo commutes between his two sprawling residences, one
in the leafy, up-scale Jakarta neighborhood of Kebayoran Baru, and the
other in the cool hills near Bogor, 70 kilometers south of the Indonesian
capital.

The president also favors Bogor, spending much of his time in a guest house
at the colonial-style presidential palace, which lies in expansive grounds
stocked with small deer and adjoining the dormitory city’s renowned
botanical gardens.

Both candidates probably need some tranquility after a turbulent few weeks
and probably more to come, with Constitutional Court justices due to
deliver their verdict on Prabowo’s appeal by June 28 and Widodo wrestling
already with the composition of his new Cabinet.

Political sources claim the president wants to have his new cabinet in
place before his October 20 inauguration, saying it could be announced in
the next few weeks and will not simply involve ditching several ministers
currently under a corruption cloud.

[image: President Joko Widodo on a call. Photo: Pinterest]President Joko
Widodo on a call in a file photo. Photo: Pinterest

The sources also claim Widodo has set aside 17 posts for the five parties
that currently form his ruling coalition and 18 for professionals, more
than in any previous Cabinet, something investment board chief Thomas
Lembong forecast in a speech last May.

Along with Widodo’s poll-topping Indonesian Democratic Party for Struggle
(128 seats), Golkar (85), National Democratic (59), National Awakening (58)
and United Development (19) parties already give the new government a
commanding 349-seat majority in the 575-seat lower house going into the
president’s second term.

But that can be somewhat misleading at the level of the eleven
parliamentary commissions, which do all the legislative work and do not
always vote along party lines when money and self-interest intervene.

Laws are usually passed by consensus when they reach the plenary session of
the House, without any of the debate that former president Suharto found
highly entertaining while watching the raucous Australian Parliament in
action on television.

Parliamentary procedures and its political culture have remained outdated
and a significant obstacle to democratic consolidation. In fact, some
academics consider it not only a continuation of the authoritarian Suharto
era, but of Dutch colonial practices as well.

Distraught over the recent death from cancer of first lady Kristiani, 66,
former president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has yet to decide whether to keep
his Democrat Party in its centrist position, which he adopted after
finishing his second term in 2014.

Ex-president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and his politician son Agus Harimurti
in a file photo. Photo: Twitter

Elder son Agus Harimurti has met twice with Widodo since the elections, but
bringing the Democrats into the coalition would mean placating PDI-P leader
Megawati Sukarnoputri, who has always accused Yudhoyono of an act of
betrayal in ousting her from the leadership in 2004.

Harimurti, 40, is a likely presidential contender in 2024, as is Prabowo’s
vice presidential candidate, Sandiaga Uno, 49; insiders claim the latter
wealthy financier is being considered for a post in the new Cabinet, even
though he is not a member of Gerindra.

The Cabinet is not Widodo’s only concern, with prosecutors pressing ahead
with treason and weapons charges against retired army generals Kivlan Zen
and Sunarko for allegedly fomenting the post-election violence and plotting
the assassination of four leading government figures.

The president may have to pay more attention to the discontent that has
spread among senior officers in the Indonesian Armed Forces (TNI), many of
whom voted for Prabowo, including significant elements of the special
forces and even the Presidential Security Force


While military academy class affiliations are important, they have never
formed strong cliques in the same way as the Thai military in the early
1980s, when ambitious regimental commanders from Chulachomklao Royal
Military Academy class seven staged two unsuccessful revolts.

But a lot of pro-Prabowo sentiment stems from the political leadership’s
perceived favoritism towards the police, compared to the glory days during
Suharto’s long rule, and also the side-lining of officers whose careers
flourished under nepotistic General Gatot Nurmantyo, the previous TNI chief..

Indonesian anti-riot police secure an area from protesters during a
demonstration against Indonesia’s President Joko Widodo’s victory in the
recent election in Jakarta on May 22, 2019. Photo: AFP/Bay Ismoyo

Gatot, 59, whose term was cut short in early 2018 because of disloyalty and
his cohabitation with elements of the anti-Widodo 212 Islamic movement, has
been active behind the scenes in rallying military retirees around the
Prabowo campaign.

Winning back loyalty in the ranks may depend on how the disaffected are
treated in future, and whether new army commander General Andika Perkasa,
54, the son-in-law of palace confident Hendropriyono and heir apparent to
current TNI chief Air Chief Marshal Hadi Tjahjanto, manages future
promotions.

Andika’s classmates include TNI Inspector Lieutenant General Muhammad
Herindra, Education and Training Command chief Lieutenant General Mukti
Putranto, and Major Generals Irwan, Benny Susianto and Marga Taufiq, who
all hold regional command positions.

The former head of the southern Sumatra’s Sriwijaya Regional Command,
Putranto is one of the few officers to survive Widodo loyalist Tjajanto’s
methodical campaign to rid the army of his predecessor’s lingering
influence after he took over in December 2017.

The so-called *de-Gatotisasi* purge ended in March 2018 with the removal of
Kopassus chief Major General Madsuni, 55, who was posted to the North
Sulawesi regional command where he remained for only three months before
being shifted into a dead-end post.

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