http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/53bc3750-6b0e-11de-861d-00144feabdc0.html?nclick_check=1

Chaos threat as Indonesia axes voter list
By John Aglionby in Jakarta 

Published: July 8 2009 01:06 | Last updated: July 8 2009 01:06

Indonesia's 176m eligible voters face potential confusion in Wednesday's 
presidential election after a last-minute court decision to throw out the 
official voter roll because of complaints of missed or dead voters and double 
registrations.

Officials said they would allow anyone with valid identity papers to cast 
ballots and cautioned that could cause some logistical problems as voters tried 
to figure out where to vote and what documents to present. Election authorities 
in the world's third largest democracy dismissed concerns about having 
insufficient ballot papers, as they were expecting turnout of about 75 per 
cent, down significantly from the last presidential poll in 2004.

Some voters were ecstatic at Monday's ruling by the Constitutional Court, which 
threw out the official voter rolls after complaints that up to 45m people might 
have been disenfranchised by the General Election Commission's incomplete 
registration programme.
"I wasn't able to vote in the [April] legislative election because my name was 
not on the list, even though I thought I registered," Bondan, a cold-drinks 
seller, said on Tuesday. "But now I will be able to vote. This is the real 
meaning of democracy, giving power to the people. I just hope they have enough 
ballot papers." 

The sudden change is not expected to affect what most analysts anticipate will 
be President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono's likely re-election. 

In April's legislative election, Mr Yudhoyono's Democrat Party won a leading 
20.6 per cent of the vote. Most polls put his own popularity at several times 
that, thanks in part to the relatively robust state of south-east Asia's 
largest economy.

Growth is slowing but remains above 4 per cent, while the government has 
mitigated the impact of the crisis through cash handouts, cheap rice and free 
education for the poor. Mr Yudhoyono is also seen to have been more successful 
than his predecessors in tackling the country's endemic corruption.

To secure victory, a candidate must win 50 per cent of the nationwide vote and 
at least 20 per cent of the vote in at least 17 of the country's 33 provinces. 
If no one fulfils the criteria, the top two will participate in a run-off in 
September.

Most opinion polls predict Mr Yudhoyono will win a second and final five-year 
term without any need for the run-off. His two challengers are his predecessor, 
Megawati Sukarnoputri, and the current vice-president, Jusuf Kalla.

Neither challenger has used the campaign to attack the incumbent, with Mrs 
Megawati, the daughter of Indonesia's founding father, Sukarno, declaring last 
week it was "not the eastern way" to launch direct attacks on a political 
rival. 

The benign atmosphere has enabled Mr Yudhoyono to run a safe campaign around 
the unspectacular slogan "Continue on!"

Official results will not be announced for more than a fortnight, but 
unofficial projections based on returns from representative samples of polling 
stations are expected by late afternoon Jakarta time.


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