http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/HJ19Ae02.html


Oct 19, 2006 


 ASIA HAND 

Behold Indonesia's democratic beacon 
By Shawn W Crispin 


With Thailand under military-appointed rule, the Philippines fresh off a stint 
of martial law and an unresolved vote-rigging scandal and the rest of Southeast 
Asia under hard and soft authoritarian yokes, Indonesia has clearly emerged as 
the region's healthiest, most vibrant functioning democracy. 

Eight years after launching a highly ambitious political reform program, 
Indonesia has surprised many analysts and academics by how quickly and smoothly 
the world's fourth-largest country has consolidated meaningful democratic 
gains. Indonesia has since 1998 overhauled every fundamental aspect of its 
former authoritarian state, including an amended constitution, a more powerful 
parliament and a reformed election system. 

The country's first-ever direct presidential elections in 2004, in which former 
general Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono was elected on a strong reform ticket, 
represented a democratic high-water mark. What's gone less noticed over that 
same period have been 250 or so different local-level elections, which are now 
contested down to the grassroots regent level. 

Breaking with former strongman Suharto's top-down New Order regime, Indonesia's 
peripheral populations are now less captive to the interests and abuses of 
local political heavies, who under Suharto often inserted themselves as 
gatekeepers to financial and natural resources through central government 
authority. While many attempted to co-opt new democratic institutions to 
perpetuate their power, nearly 40% of local level incumbents have in recent 
years been booted from office at the ballot box. 

In certain conflict-plagued regions, local democracy is even having a healing 
effect. According to a recent report in the Jakarta-based Van Zorge Report, 
head and vice head candidates, often representing respectively localities' 
Muslim majority and Christian minority populations, have frequently teamed up 
to beat competing candidates who ran on a one-religion ticket. That is, 
local-level democracy is rewarding politicians who form religiously inclusive, 
not exclusive, coalitions. 

Since 2001, Indonesia has implemented one of Asia's - if not the world's - most 
ambitious decentralization programs, rapidly devolving decision-making 
authority and control of resources from the center to the periphery. Many 
pundits predicted that rushed decentralization would lead to violent 
Balkanization across the sprawling archipelago, where historically aggrieved, 
suddenly empowered populations straddling resource-rich areas would opt to 
secede rather than cooperate with Jakarta. 

Yet only East Timor has so far moved to break away - and some would argue in 
the wake of recent civil unrest there to disastrous effect. The long-running 
rebellion in Papua province has recently lost steam as local-level democratic 
institutions take deeper root. And Jakarta's promise of more local autonomy for 
Aceh province has brought that grinding 30-year conflict to a democratic 
conclusion. 

Michael Malley, an Indonesia expert at the Naval Postgraduate School in 
Monterey, California, notes in a recent Van Zorge Report interview that no new 
breakaway armed insurgent groups have emerged since the promulgation of the 
1998 decentralization reforms. Previously among the skeptics, he said: "Many 
have been surprised that such enormous change could take place without national 
disintegration." 

More significantly, Indonesia's extraordinary democratic progress has put the 
lie to academic debates about whether Islam and democracy can peacefully 
co-exist. Predictions that dismantling Suharto's highly secular state 
institutions would lead to a coincident rise in Islamic fundamentalism have 
notably not panned out. Political parties that have campaigned on strict 
Islamic platforms fared poorly against more secular candidates at the 2004 
parliamentary polls. 

Fundamentalists elected on anti-corruption tickets that have since attempted to 
push Islamic-tinged legislation in parliament, including a controversial 
anti-pornography bill, have seen their popularity fall dramatically in public 
opinion polls. (See The decline of political Islam in Indonesia, March 28, 
2006) 

Rapid transition 
To be sure, the rapid transition from a highly centralized to a highly 
decentralized political system has been attended by growing pains, including 
widespread confusion about where real decision-making authority lies over 
certain jurisdictions. 

Investors reportedly carp that they now must pay bribes not only to central 
government authorities, but also provincial and local-level officials to seal 
business deals. Provincial and local-level officials have quibbled over 
jurisdiction of tax revenues, which in turn has raised hard questions about 
responsibility for the provision of public utilities. Central government 
corruption has in many areas merely been replaced by local-level graft. 

At the same time, democratization and decentralization are unmistakably leading 
to unprecedented rural empowerment - more so than Thailand's highly touted, 
fiscally unsustainable, top-down populist rural handouts, and streets ahead of 
the Philippines' unreformed feudal countryside, where a clutch of elite 
families still owns the majority of land. Indonesian democracy is paying broad 
dividends through greater political stability, a more equitable distribution of 
natural and financial resources to the local level and slowly but surely more 
reactive, inclusive local governance. 

Those burnished democratic credentials are fast improving Western perceptions 
about Indonesia, which was widely viewed as a basket case in the chaotic 
aftermath of the 1997-98 economic crisis, and as a haven for international 
terrorism in the wake of the 2002 Bali bombing. 

US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice strongly praised Indonesia's democratic 
progress during her recent visit to Jakarta - though realpolitik motivations of 
counterbalancing China may have colored her upbeat assessment. Yet it was no 
surprise that Indonesia this month won in a landslide the right to Asia's 
revolving allocated seat on the United Nations Security Council. 

Some viewed that as a reward for Indonesia's new strong democratic leadership 
role inside the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), particularly in 
addressing member state Myanmar's worsening political and humanitarian crisis. 
And although criticized domestically for the US$43 million price tag, Jakarta's 
recent decision to send professional peacekeeping forces under the auspices of 
the UN to Lebanon speaks to Indonesia's desire to serve as an honest democratic 
broker between Islam and the West in the Middle East. 

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono deserves much credit for presiding over and 
not obstructing the latest phases of Indonesia's remarkable democratic 
transition. Yet he has been widely criticized in the local media for his slow, 
deliberate, consensus-building leadership style - particularly in relation to 
his management of the economy, which some Jakarta-based analysts contend needs 
a quick fiscal kick through accelerated infrastructure spending. (See Need for 
speed in Indonesia, September 19) 

But good governance in a checked and balanced democratic system is often by 
necessity slow-moving. Much of the grumbling about Yudhoyono's deliberate 
decision-making arises from an increasingly marginalized political elite, who 
received more generous, less scrutinized government contracts and concessions 
under strongman Suharto. Meanwhile, Yudhoyono's anti-corruption campaign - 
though by no means as deep-reaching as it could be - has ruffled certain 
politically powerful feathers, down to the grassroots level. 

Yudhoyono's party's small numbers in parliament has meant some of his more 
ambitious reform initiatives have been quashed by opposition forces, fairly or 
unfairly fueling perceptions about his ineffectual democratic leadership. But 
that check on presidential power also speaks to the significant 
decentralization of national power, recently devolved by law from the executive 
to the legislative branch. 

It's no longer a question of whether Indonesia's elected politicians are truly 
democratic, but rather whether they are effective leaders and custodians of 
their respective national, provincial or local interests. As seen at the local 
and provincial levels, if national perceptions grow that Yudhoyono isn't 
performing up to expectation, Indonesia's newly demanding voters will replace 
him with a candidate perceived to be more able at the 2009 direct presidential 
polls. Pity the rest of Southeast Asia, which by comparison doesn't have that 
same democratic choice. 

Shawn W Crispin is Asia Times Online's Southeast Asia editor. 

(Copyright 2006 Asia Times Online Ltd. All rights reserved. Please contact us 
about sales, syndication and republishing .)



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



Post message: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subscribe   :  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Unsubscribe :  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
List owner  :  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Homepage    :  http://proletar.8m.com/ 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/proletar/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/proletar/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
    mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 

Kirim email ke