Mungkin banyak hal buruk tentang Indonesia. Ya, memang tak ada negara yang 
sempurna. Tetapi nyatanya, selalu ada orang luar yang berpandangan positif 
terhadap kita. Orang luar yang mengapresiasi semua yang telah kita lakukan 
untuk perbaikan negeri ini, dengan segala kelebihan dan 
kekurangannya. (Anehnya, biasanya justru kita sendiri yang menjelek-jelekkan 
diri sendiri)
 
Kita sepatutnya bersyukur dengan pencapaian ini, terus bergerak maju dengan 
melakukan perbaikan di sana-sini, dan terus melihat ke depan secara realistis, 
tanpa mematikan mimpi-mimpi kita, harapan kita. 
 
Hal ini karena kemajuan memang dimulai dengan harapan, mimpi, kepercayaan diri, 
dan belajar melihat semua hal dari sisi positif (tidak terpaku pada yang 
negatif). Tidak menjadikan masa lalu sebagai beban, tetapi sebagai pengingat 
untuk selalu waspada agar tidak mengulang kesalahan masa lalu. 

Maju terus Indonesia!
 




http://asiasentinel .com/index. php?option= com_content& task=view& 
id=1788&Itemid= 175

Indonesia's unlikely - and steady - democracy 
Written by Our Correspondent 
Thursday, 26 March 2009 

As it prepares for elections, the country outshines its neighbors 

A decade ago, Indonesia was often written off by analysts as unstable and 
perilously close to being dismembered piece by fractious piece in the wake of 
the tragedy in East Timor and ethnic and religious tensions throughout the vast 
archipelago. But heading into national elections scheduled for April 9, its 
democracy seems to be in pretty good shape 11 years after rioting and economic 
meltdown forced out former President Suharto, the strongman who ran the country 
for 32 years. 

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, the retired general who took power in 
national elections in 2004 on an anticorruption ticket, has considerably 
solidified his position. In 2004, his Democratic Party was a relatively minor 
force that forged an uncomfortable coalition with the Golkar Party and its 
chairman, Jusuf Kalla, who became Yudhoyono's vice president. Recent polls 
(which can be notoriously unreliable), however, have the Democratic Party with 
nearly a quarter of the electorate, if the Indonesian Survey Institute data is 
anywhere near accurate. 

With nearly 40 parties lined up to vie for hundreds of seats in Regional 
Representative Councils or the 560 seats up for grabs in the national House of 
Representatives, or DPR, the big question is what happens after the elections, 
when the real strength of the major players is determined and serious jockeying 
will begin to for the presidential election to be held in July, which will 
likely be followed by a runoff. 

The game is complicated because under the election laws a party cannot nominate 
a presidential candidate unless it wins 20 percent of the seats or 25 percent 
of the vote in legislative elections - the only party likely to reach that 
milestone is the president's Democratic Party. A handful of others - Golkar, 
former President Megawati Sukarnoputri' s Democratic Party of Struggle, or 
PDI-P, the new Gerindra Party of right-wing former Army General Prabowo 
Subianto - will be in the running to form coalitions to reach the 20 percent 
threshold in order to make a run for the top spot. 

And here the Islamists play a potential role, especially the Prosperous Justice 
Party, or PKS, which rose in popularity in 2004. While Islamic parties 
generally have seen their support shrink by most measures, the complex 
electoral arithmetic - and lack of any real issues other than flag waving and 
sloganeering - could yet find the PKS in a potential presidential coalition 
with either Golkar or the Democrats, both of which bill themselves as 
nationalist and secular. That courtship began late last year when the two 
parties both backed an unpopular and hard-edged anti-pornography bill pushed by 
religious extremists as a way to curry favor with potential Islamist coalition 
partners. 

Andi Mallarangeng, a spokesman for Yudhoyono, told CNN recently that the 
president's support for the bill was a "symbolic gesture" to Islamists. "During 
the process of legislation, [the government] made sure we do not support 
pornography, " Mallarangeng told CNN. "But there should be no limitation on 
freedom of arts and expression" 

Unfortunately, critics have said the bill undermines traditional culture by 
proscribing traditional dances, could eventually ban swimsuits from the beaches 
of Bali and may lead to rampant vigilantism. The measure is being put through 
the courts by reformers who hope to nullify it. 

Still, Indonesia's imperfect democracy is in better odor than most of the rest 
of Southeast Asia and there is little fear here that serious mayhem will come 
from the polls, despite some worrying signs of fraud in the voter lists in 
populous East Java and continuing ethnic tensions in Papua. 

Thailand is still suffering the after effects of the 2006 royalist coup that 
ousted Thaksin Shinawatra's democratically elected government. The royalty and 
political establishment there later annulled elections and supported street 
demonstrations in its effort to finally manipulate the system into putting in 
place the government it wanted, led now by the Democrat Party. 

Malaysia, after a surprising election in March 2008 that broke the two-thirds 
majority stranglehold of the national ruling coalition in parliament, has 
fallen into both intraparty and ethnic squabbling and appears set to name Najib 
Tun Razak as prime minister, despite his involvement in a long series of 
scandals, including connections with the spectacular murder of a beautiful 
Mongolian woman. 

The Philippines is still trying to shake off the hangover of 2001's People 
Power II ouster of Joseph Estrada, which was little more than a coup disguised 
as a big street demonstration. That event just added fuel to the idea, as it 
did in Thailand, that indignant elites do not have to wait for an elected 
government to finish out its term. 

Elsewhere, Singapore, of course, is Singapore, which maintains a thin façade of 
democracy designed to keep the ruling Lee family in power. Laos and Vietnam are 
one-party states as, effectively, is Cambodia under Hun Sen. And Burma's 
military dictatorship remains one of the world's most reviled governments. 

Contrast them with Indonesia and things look pretty good. With a certain amount 
of ambiguity, a new class of politician is coalescing around Yudhoyono. The old 
guard that surrounded Suharto, which viewed government as a personal cash 
register, is losing momentum although all the major presidential candidates 
hail from the old guard. The new government, if Yudhoyono wins, will probably 
see a proliferation of the kinds of technocrats like Sri Mulyani Indrawati, the 
finance minister, and Mari E Pangestu, the trade minister, with fewer 
politicians around the ministries.

Golkar, the political vehicle for Suharto, was still the dominant political 
party in 2004, with Kalla largely able to dictate the terms of his support for 
Yudhoyono, including putting in place old-guard cabinet members like Aburizal 
Bakrie, the head of the Bakrie clan whose troubled empire has benefited 
repeatedly from government intervention. Golkar has now fallen to below the 
magic 20 percent of voters, according to the Indonesian Survey Institute poll, 
and some party insiders worry it could suffer a massive embarrassment on April 
9, a fear that has Kalla increasingly isolated inside the party. 

Megawati's PDI-P has fallen to 17.3 percent, according to the poll. The Islamic 
parties may have the lowest aggregate total since Suharto fell, if the polls 
are close to accurate. Religious parties got nearly 45 percent of the vote in 
Indonesia's first elections in 1955, but they have slowly tailed off, falling 
to 38 percent in 2004. Although at one point it was expected that the country's 
four Islamic parties would get as little as 17 to 23 percent of the votes, that 
figure has been rising in recent days. 

The best hope for moderates, say many observers, is for Yudhoyono's party to 
get a clear win on April 9. 

"The legislative elections will lead to a less fragmented government for the 
2009-2014 term because parties must have 20 percent of the seats or a coalition 
of 25 percent of the votes cast to nominate a presidential candidate," said a 
knowledgeable western political observer. "That means there will be far fewer 
candidates, and a big party like the Democratic Party can likely get that 20 
percent on its own, thus it won't have to going into a coalition with Golkar or 
anyone else. He can run with a technocrat vice presidential candidate or senior 
Democratic Party official, and if or when he wins, he doesn't have to hand out 
any cabinet posts as a payback for the coalition." 

Part of Yudhoyono's success has to be laid to attempts, not always successful, 
to clean out corruption. The country's Corruption Eradication Commission, or 
KPK, has jailed or indicted at least nine members of the House of 
Representatives, as well as a number of other senior government officials and 
businessmen. The arrested include members of Golkar, the Democratic Party, 
PDI-P and others. The house remains one of the most corrupt institutions in a 
country tied with eight other countries for 126th place in Transparency 
International' s 2008 corruption index of 180 countries. 

The economy, which was flattened by the Asian Financial Crisis of 1997-1998, 
and hammered by the Bali bombings and the Asian tsunami of 2004, which claimed 
an estimated 170,000 lives in Indonesia alone, is still in positive territory 
despite the current global crisis. Partly because its domestic economy largely 
shields it from export slumps, Indonesia, along with the Philippines, is 
expected to chug along at 4.0 percent gross domestic product growth this year, 
while Singapore's GDP is expected to sink by nearly 5 percent. Thailand, at 
least partly due to political turmoil, could shrink by as much as 1.5 percent, 
and Malaysia's export-dependent economy is expected to contract by at least 1.2 
percent or more. That gives Indonesians a certain sense of security. The malls 
remain packed; tourism is set for a moderate increase. 

Against Yudhoyono, Megawati, a listless campaigner and a lackluster former 
president but one whose father's name - Sukarno, the founder of the country - 
still inspires affection, remains the front runner. Others include Prabowo, the 
former head of the Army Strategic Reserve unit Kostrad and a one-time Suharto 
son-in-law. Prabowo was dismissed from Kostrad for mobilizing troops around 
Jakarta without orders following Suharto's resignation, prompting speculation 
he was orchestrating a coup. He's also been implicated in the kidnappings and 
torture of student activists prior to Suharto's fall, and of instigating 
anti-Chinese riots in 1998, charges he denies. He was never convicted of 
anything, however, and his well-funded Gerindra party is blanketing the country 
with newspaper and television advertising. Jusuf Kalla, the Golkar head, is 
making a nominal run for the top job, but he is given little chance because he 
is an ethnic Buginese from South Sulawesi in
 a political scene dominated by Javanese. 

Is there a wild card? If the Democratic Party falls short, the fear that it 
will sell its soul to the Islamist Prosperous Justice Party, or PKS, is real. 
The PKS has built its support on attempts to bring Islamic purity to 
Indonesia's pluralistic society and vows to clean up corruption. 

In 2004, the party endorsed Yudhoyono for the presidency and has largely run 
rings around the other Islamic parties with a mixture of savvy public relations 
and connections to the Egypt-based Muslim Brotherhood. It was considered to be 
the driving force behind the anti-pornography bill that Yudhoyono signed. 
Secularists worry that despite its relatively small size, it will end up as a 
kingmaker and the price of its support will be hegemony over the social 
agencies that supposedly govern public morals. But relatively few Indonesians, 
even among the 90 percent of the country that is at least nominally Muslim, 
want the hard-line Imams to tell them what to do. It remains to be seen what 
damage they might do. 

It's a long shot and moderates of all stripes say it is unlikely.

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Satrio Arismunandar 
Executive Producer
News Division, Trans TV, Lantai 3
Jl. Kapten P. Tendean Kav. 12 - 14 A, Jakarta 12790 
Phone: 7917-7000, 7918-4544 ext. 4034,  Fax: 79184558, 79184627
 
http://satrioarismunandar6.blogspot.com
http://satrioarismunandar.multiply.com  



      

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