http://www.asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=5053&Itemid=178


      Indonesia, Malaysia Diplomatic Spat        
      Written by Our Correspondent     
      Tuesday, 18 December 2012  
        
             
            The best of chums 
      Former Malaysian information minister insults former Indonesian President

      The governments of Indonesia and Malaysia are embroiled in a growing 
diplomatic spat over a seemingly gratuitous but certainly offensive insult by 
Malaysia’s former information minister, Zainuddin Maidin, who called former 
Indonesian President BJ Habibie a traitor and dog of imperialism. 

      Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono joined the fray Tuesday 
prior to his departure for Malaysia for annual high-level talks with Prime 
Minister Najib Tun Razak, saying Zainuddin’s comments are unethical and 
overstep the boundaries of decorum. The comments, he added, have jeopardized 
relations between the two countries and said he would raise the matter with 
Najib during his visit. Indonesian Minister for Foreign Affairs Marty 
Natalegawa said the government would send a formal protest over the article. 
Lawmakers have also protested, calling on Yudhoyono to cancel today's scheduled 
visit. 

      Zainuddin wrote the comments first in his blog, then published them in 
the Malay-language broadsheet daily Utusan Malaysia, describing Habibie’s 
decision to free what was then the Indonesian province of East Timor in October 
of 1999 when Habibie was serving as Indonesia’s president in the chaotic days 
following the downfall of the strongman Suharto. 

      In the article, headlined "Similarities Between B.J. Habibie and Anwar 
Ibrahim," Zainuddin took aim at the close friendship between the two and said 
Habibie would not have fallen from the Indonesian presidency if he had done the 
right thing. He also accused Habibie of being an accomplice of the United 
States and said he had helped Anwar Ibrahim in seeking vainly to topple former 
Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad. 

      Zainuddin refused to apologize last week despite calls to do so. 

      Habibie, who left the presidency in 1999 to be succeeded by Abdurrahman 
Wahid, has descended into a kind of genteel obscurity since, concentrating on 
the technological concerns that occupied him prior to being selected as 
Indonesia’s vice president near the end of Suharto’s reign. 

      That raises the question why Zainuddin took after the 76-year-old 
technocrat. It appears more than anything else to do with the fact that Habibie 
is an Anwar friend who regularly visits Habibie in Indonesia, most recently to 
speak at an event marking the anniversary of the Habibie Center in Jakarta. 

      Utusan Malaysia is wholly owned by the United Malays National 
Organization, Malaysia’s biggest ethnic political party. More than any of the 
other party-owned publications it serves as the party’s Rottweiler, especially 
going after opposition Chinese politicians, but also going after Anwar and 
other Malay opposition figures as well. It regularly raises the unlikely 
specter of Christian missionaries attempting to convert ethnic Malays, who by 
the country’s constitution can only be Muslims. 

      In July 2011,in the middle of one of those controversies over supposed 
conversions, Free Malaysia Today, a Kuala Lumpur-based blog, argued that "The 
mainstream media, for as long as they pander to the government, enjoy immunity 
from public prosecution. But Utusan Malaysia has earned a special place within 
this untouchable clique simply by the virtue of being owned by UMNO. This 
privilege has spawned relentless attacks on the opposition and increasingly 
frequent inflammatory reports on race and religion. But while most urbanites 
can see right through Utusan Malaysia's thinly-veiled propaganda, its rural 
readership remains staunch believers.” It isn’t just Habibie, although he is a 
more convenient target than the Indonesian president himself, who in July gave 
a major speech at a high profile public forum in Jakarta on the subject of 
political reconciliation. Anwar was one of the featured panelists and the 
president greeted him from the podium, calling him "my good friend." 

      This was apparently the first time Yudhoyono had acknowledged Anwar in 
public, although the two know each other reasonably well. Numerous sources have 
said the Malaysian government was furious about the incident. "The Utusan 
editorial would appear to be in retaliation for the face Anwar is getting in 
Jakarta, and it is interesting that SBY would publicly comment on it," said a 
senior political observer in Jakarta. 

      "Even on a good day there is little love lost between Malaysia and 
Indonesia, but of late Anwar's appearances here are certainly a reminder that 
Indonesia is a democracy while Malaysia falls short." 

      Is Jakarta also hedging its bets on UMNO losing in the next election? 
"Almost certainly,” the observer said. “But even without that, there is nothing 
quite so much fun in Jakarta as getting the Malaysians all hot and bothered 
over the little things."
     


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Kirim email ke