http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/20/world/asia/suhartos-indonesian-legacy-15-years-later.html?ref=asia&_r=0

Jakarta Journal
Indonesian Strongman’s Legacy Remains a Matter of Debate
 
Andri Tambunan for The International Herald Tribune
A street vendor at the entrance to the street where former President Suharto 
lived in an elaborate complex. 

By JOE COCHRANE
Published: May 19, 2013 
JAKARTA, Indonesia — Tree-lined Cendana street in an upscale neighborhood in 
central Jakarta has not changed much in recent decades, save for the demolition 
of a few Dutch colonial homes in favor of modernist villas. Yet the former 
resident whose home once took up the entire middle of the block initiated 
dramatic changes in his country, and 15 years after he disappeared from 
Indonesia’s political scene, debate still rages about whether they were for 
better or worse. 



Enlarge This Image
 
The New York Times
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Muchtar Zakaria/Associated Press
Former President Suharto resigned 15 years ago Tuesday as Indonesia was wracked 
by rioting. 

Cendana is synonymous with Suharto, the army general-turned-president who ruled 
Indonesia for 32 years while residing in the houses at Nos. 6, 8 and 10, which 
were renovated and connected. After his death in 2008, an Indonesian Web portal 
dedicated to paranormal activity published an account by an elderly servant who 
said that Mr. Suharto’s ghost was still there and occasionally pinched and 
poked him. 

Perhaps. But more certain is that Mr. Suharto’s spirit continues to loom over 
modern-day Indonesia. 

He brought the country back from the brink of political, social and economic 
calamity in the mid-1960s, dramatically reduced poverty and by the early 1990s 
had turned Indonesia into one of the Asian tiger economies. But he also 
governed with an iron fist, sending his jackbooted military into 
separatist-minded regions, jailing and exiling political enemies, quashing 
democratic institutions and the news media, and presiding over what some claim 
is one of the most corrupt governments in modern history. 

Tuesday is the 15th anniversary of Mr. Suharto’s resignation as president. He 
stepped down amid huge pro-democracy street protests in Jakarta, rioting and 
deadly attacks on ethnic Chinese in several cities, and economic calamity 
brought on by the 1997 Asian financial crisis. 

Since then, Indonesia has undergone a dramatic transformation toward democracy 
and now has open elections and the world’s 16th-largest economy. Yet corruption 
remains endemic, crime is higher than during Mr. Suharto’s “New Order” regime, 
and Jakarta and other large cities have chronic traffic problems. 

Whether the country’s 240 million people, more than a quarter of whom were born 
after Mr. Suharto resigned, will pause to reflect on the anniversary remains to 
be seen. 

“Even right now, a lot of people look at his time as the good old days, ” said 
Saprudin, a 33-year-old security guard who has worked at Mr. Suharto’s compound 
since 2001 and who, like many here, goes by one name. “I think as time goes by, 
more people will feel that way.” 

That rosy view extended to the man whom many called a dictator. “Mr. Suharto 
was good — it was his cronies who acted badly, with all the corruption that 
created a lot of the problems,” Mr. Saprudin said. “He didn’t want to continue 
being president but was pushed to by his supporters.” 

Other Indonesians, members of human rights groups in particular, do not see it 
that way. They say that Mr. Suharto clung to power, even as the country’s 
economy was collapsing because of a banking crisis in 1998, to protect the 
business interests of his family and associates. They remain angry that Mr. 
Suharto never stood trial for corruption and human rights abuses committed by 
his military and security forces. 

As Mr. Saprudin reminisced about how prices were lower and jobs plentiful in 
Mr. Suharto’s state-controlled economy, workmen were busy repainting the 
Cendana compound’s wooden driveway awning and landscaping the front gardens. 
The work is part of a three-month renovation of the weather-beaten, unoccupied 
estate ordered by the leader’s adult children, who own the property and want it 
to be ready to entertain guests during the post-Ramadan Id al-Fitr holiday in 
August. 

A mile or so away, some 400 vendors were holding a spirited demonstration 
outside a shopping mall where they rent space, complaining that its management 
is in violation of a national law regulating negotiations on rental prices and 
protesting the way complaints about property maintenance are handled. 

Mr. Suharto’s security forces did not tolerate street protests; these days, 
much to the chagrin of motorists, there are several per day in Jakarta alone. 

Ivan Wijaya, a 26-year-old shop manager at the mall, said the management had 
refused to meet with tenants for seven years, prompting them to form a workers’ 
organization, consult with lawyers and organize the protest. 

“In 1998, we didn’t have freedom of speech, freedom to demonstrate,” Mr. Wijaya 
said. “This kind of thing is illegal in Singapore; this is illegal in China.” 

Another protest leader, Frankie Wong, 49, said the Indonesian public has and 
would probably continue to have mixed opinions about Mr. Suharto and his 
legacy. “Sometimes we appreciate what he has done for the country, and 
sometimes we do not,” he said. “It’s like a yin and yang thing.” 

At a train station nearby, next to the National Monument, a 70-year-old man 
buying a ticket said he was firmly a Suharto man. A native of Central Java 
Province, the man, Sukirno, spent 25 years in the Indonesian Navy, retiring as 
a sergeant major. He said he saw Mr. Suharto once, when the leader spoke to 
naval personnel. 

“The Suharto days were better — he had a strategy, a vision and he was a strong 
man,” Mr. Sukirno said, indirectly criticizing the president of the last 
eight-plus years, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, another former army general whose 
critics say is indecisive when it comes to tough policy decisions. 

“Democracy here is still an uphill thing,” Mr. Sukirno said. 

This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: May 19, 2013

An earlier version of this article and an accompanying photo caption misstated 
which date marks the 15th anniversary of Suharto’s resignation. The anniversary 
falls on Tuesday, May 21, not Monday, May 20.


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