http://asiapacific.anu.edu.au/newmandala/2014/05/16/a-lesson-for-researchers/

A lesson for researchers
By 
Edward Aspinall
– 16 May 2014Posted in: Indonesia Votes, Uncategorized
 
Oxford historian Peter Carey appears in a Gerindra party film.

Many readers will by now be familiar with the controversy surrounding retired 
Oxford University historian Peter Carey and his appearance in the propaganda 
film, ‘Sang Patriot: Prabowo Subianto’. The film is about the Gerindra party’s 
presidential candidate, disgraced former military officer and former Suharto 
son-in-law, Prabowo Subianto. It’s a slickly produced hagiography that traces, 
among other things, Prabowo’s ancestors and their role in the struggle against 
the Dutch, Prabowo’s career in the military, and his other achievements. 
Carey’s appearance in the film was criticised in a review on the Asian 
Correspondent website and Carey subsequently responded to it and other queries 
in a series of posts, explaining that the interview had in fact been shot for a 
different project altogether, many months earlier. He has thus tried to 
distance himself from the film. However, for reasons I explain below, aspects 
of his response remain problematic, and contain important warnings for other 
scholars researching Indonesia.

I first saw the film myself in mid-March this year, when I attended an event 
organised by the Gerindra party in Palembang, South Sumatra. About 200 party 
supporters were present, and one item on the agenda was the showing of the 
film. At the end of the film, a party activist told the audience that the film 
was the ‘answer’ to anyone who wanted to make accusations about human rights 
abuses by Prabowo. Though I did not attend any other Gerindra events like this, 
the people showing the film were introduced as Kader Penggerak Desa (Village 
Mobilisation Cadres) who had been especially sent to South Sumatra from Jakarta 
to energise the Gerindra campaign. Presumably, similar cadres have been showing 
the film in other party meetings across the country and its audience could have 
reached many hundreds of thousands of people by now. Carey, in other words, has 
appeared in a major piece of political propaganda promoting Prabowo’s 
presidential campaign.

The extracts from the interviews with Carey appear in the early parts of the 
film. Carey is well known as the leading expert on Prince Diponegoro and the 
‘Java War’ in the early 19th century. His commentary is mostly about this 
period. He also states (in my own translation) with regard to the family and 
forebears of Prabowo (two of whose ancestors played a prominent role in that 
war): “It can be said that this is a family line who are not persons who want 
to be lickspittle [he says this word in English], who don’t want to be a yes 
man [also in English], or don’t want to be a person who just goes along with 
the crowd.” It’s not clear from the context of the interview whether he means 
to include Prabowo in this praise. But it’s possible that he does; earlier in 
the film he talks about the six generations of the family line that run “to Mas 
Prabowo and Pak Hashim [Prabowo’s brother]”. Anyway, the producers of the film 
try to make the association explicit by featuring a picture of the young 
Prabowo immediately before Carey makes his statement.

Let’s be clear. Prabowo is no ordinary political candidate. As is well known, 
he faces accusations of involvement in serious human rights abuses, including 
responsibility for the abduction and disappearance of political activists in 
1998, and for even worse events in East Timor in the 1980s. Prabowo responds 
angrily when questioned by the media about these matters.  

Moreover, it’s not just Prabowo’s past that is the problem. It’s also the 
possible future that he heralds. In my view, the prospect of a Prabowo 
presidency is the greatest threat that Indonesian democracy has faced in more 
than a decade. We do not know for sure whether a President Prabowo would 
destroy Indonesia’s democratic institutions and curtail civil liberties. But 
his record, his public rhetoric and what we know about his private personality 
suggest such outcomes are real possibilities. Anyone studying his public 
speeches, for example, can see easy parallels with authoritarian-populist 
leaders elsewhere, with their fiery (and hypocritical) denunciations of the 
Indonesian elite, his promises of firm leadership, and so on. Moreover, he has 
publically stated that he wants to take Indonesia back to the authoritarian 
1945 Constitution. The Gerindra manifesto ominously aims for the return of a 
‘pure’ presidential system. Prabowo has repeatedly stated he regrets not 
organising a coup in 1998 to overthrow President Habibie. One need be neither a 
political genius nor a fantasist to see an Indonesian Putin, or worse, in the 
making.

When I saw the film, and knowing a little about Peter Carey, especially his 
research in East Timor and his reputation as a person who is committed to human 
rights principles, my immediate thought was that he must have been tricked 
somehow to appear in the film. After the negative review of the film appeared 
on the Asian Correspondent website, including a line about Carey ‘selling his 
soul’, it was pleasing to see that he did respond in a series of Internet 
postings. In the first, a Facebook posting, he made it clear that the interview 
“was in fact made over a year beforehand in the context of a much longer 90 
minute interview which was made in the aftermath of the publication of the 
Indonesian version of my Power of Prophecy.” Accordingly, “….. The interview in 
Sang Patriot is therefore out of context.” In the second post, he also 
explained: “my particular contribution on the historical side the interview I 
made was not aimed at propaganda. It was an historical reflection and as it 
appeared in the film was taken out of context.”

But this wasn’t all he explained. It turns out that Professor Carey has known 
the Djojohadikusumo family since the 1970s, not surprising given the nature of 
his historical research and the family’s connection to the events that are his 
interest. Much more problematically, as he explains at greatest length in a 
third post, he also has received, and apparently continues to receive, funding 
from them.

Hashim Djohadikusumo’s family foundation, Yayasan Arsari Djojohadikusumo (YAD) 
subsidised the translation into Indonesian and distribution of Carey’s 
biography of Prince Diponegoro. Hashim is Prabowo’s younger brother, a wealthy 
entrepreneur whose fortune was first made, like the children of many other 
officials, during the Suharto period when his father was an important economics 
minister and adviser. Hashim is also co-founder, with Prabowo, of Gerindra and 
the main bankroller of his presidential bid. Politically, they are inseparable.

Most problematically of all, Carey is also, it seems, drawing a salary from the 
same foundation, though he uses indirect language to acknowledge this point:

  … I was approached in August 2012 by one of historians at the Faculty of 
Humanities of the University of Indonesia, who had been a speaker at the 
Jakarta launch of the Indonesian edition of the Power of Prophecy, to ask 
whether I would consider teaching at the Faculty of Humanities of the 
University of Indonesia. I agreed provided the post was supported. More than a 
year elapsed before that invitation was officially acknowledged by the 
university authorities (12 November 2013). By that time, YAD had agreed to 
support the post.

On the face of it, this comment suggests that Carey’s employment by the 
University is underwritten by the Djohadikusumo family, though we don’t know 
the precise extent of the ‘support’ provided.

This background places Carey’s appearance in the film in a different light, and 
helps to explain otherwise strange aspects of his public response. One would 
expect that someone with a history of concern about human rights matters would 
respond with expressions of alarm, anger, dismay, embarrassment, or perhaps 
even shame to find himself being used in a major piece of propaganda for a 
presidential candidate with Prabowo’s human rights record and possibly 
destructive future. Instead, Carey seems mostly to treat the controversy as if 
has offered him a pleasing opportunity to discourse on the Djojohadikusumo 
family line, the connection between history and politics, and similar matters.

Moreover, his responses are striking for what they leave out:

  a.. He does not condemn, or even criticise, anyone for misusing the footage 
or state that he regretted it had been used in this way. 
  b.. He does not state that the footage was used without his permission. 
Indeed, in his New Mandala piece, he writes as if the real problem was that “it 
appeared that I had made a separate contribution to the film which was not the 
case”. 
  c.. He does not call for the film to be removed from circulation or deleted 
from YouTube. 
  d.. He does not make clear that he holds an unfavourable view of Prabowo or 
the prospects of a Prabowo presidency.
Instead, he presents a series of comments that seem artfully contrived to 
disassociate himself from the film in the minds of sophisticated readers, while 
ensuring that he does not say anything to offend the Djojohadikusumo family. 
Indeed, in one of his pieces he goes out of his way to praise them as a 
“‘brainy’ family of over-achievers” comparable to the leading families in the 
Irish freedom struggle against British occupation.

Carey presents all this in the mode of a professor engaged in a controversy in 
which he has no part, rather than as if he is responding to a piece of 
political propaganda in which he plays a major role. Indeed, he writes in his 
New Mandala piece, “as a UK citizen and a person with no voting rights in 
Indonesia, it is completely inappropriate that I express political views on any 
of the current presidential candidates. The election is for Indonesians and 
Indonesians alone to decide.” Seemingly intended to explain that he did not 
intend to endorse Prabowo, this limp statement seems equally aimed at removing 
the necessity of saying anything unpleasant about him.

In fact, as a moment’s reflection will tell us, there is no absolute 
proscription on individuals making comments about political candidates in 
countries where they do not hold citizenship. Anyway, it turns out that Carey 
himself had expressed his views about Indonesian presidential candidates not so 
long ago. In a public lecture in early March at the City University of Hong 
Kong, he had no compunction about making critical assessments of other 
Indonesian political leaders, including the current President Susilo Bambang 
Yudhoyono and Golkar presidential hopeful Aburizal Bakrie. Tellingly, however, 
in the same lecture he made no critical comments about Prabowo. Indeed, when it 
came time to discuss Prabowo and his prospects as a presidential candidate, all 
Carey did in the lecture was to make a seemingly bizarre statement that Prabowo 
“has major problems most significantly his relationship with the Indonesian 
Army and former generals like Wiranto, Tri [sic.] Sutrisno, Luhut Panjaitan – 
some of whom have political ambitions”.

No serious and disinterested observer of Indonesian politics would rank this as 
a major problem for Prabowo. He has many more significant problems, for 
instance his human rights record and the fact that his penchant for flying into 
violent rages is increasingly well known. But Carey’s statement is exactly how 
Prabowo himself would view things: Prabowo is known to be obsessed with his 
former army rivals from the critical period of 1997-98, whom he blames for his 
dismissal from the military and subsequent fall from grace. That Carey would 
reproduce such a line as serious political analysis raises the question of how 
influenced he has become by the Djojohadikusumos’ view of politics.

I don’t know Peter Carey personally. Back in the 1990s, however, I did know 
several of the activists who were abducted, allegedly by Kopassus troops under 
the command of Prabowo, including two who never returned. My personal reaction 
about Carey’s appearance in the film is informed by this background and I have 
tried to temper my views and to understand Carey’s position. Perhaps it is best 
to read this story not as a betrayal but as a tragedy: duped into being used in 
a piece of political propaganda, Carey has found himself unable to repudiate or 
offend his patrons. It’s a sad episode, especially for someone who has a record 
that is otherwise exemplary (for example, he has dedicated a good part of his 
life to helping victims of land mines in Cambodia).

Even so, there is no avoiding that Carey has made questionable judgements along 
the way, chief among them being to accept funding from such a source. This 
episode should be a warning to all academics researching contemporary 
Indonesian politics and society at a time when many successful Indonesian 
businesspeople – oligarchs, some would call them – are increasingly engaging in 
philanthropy, including by offering grants to overseas educational and research 
institutions. We need to scrutinise carefully the sources of our funds; 
safeguard our independence; and examine carefully how our behaviour may be 
perceived.

……………

Professor Edward Aspinall researches Indonesian politics at the Australian 
National University.

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