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WSWS : News
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: Indonesia
The political tasks facing the working class
The Indonesian elections and the struggle for democracy
By the Editorial Board
21 May 1999
Also in
Indonesian
A year after the fall of military strongman Suharto, Indonesia's
national elections will be held on June 7. Great efforts are being
made by the government and opposition parties, state officials
and the media to create the illusion that the poll will be a step
towards democracy. The campaign itself is gathering momentum with
street posters, party banners and flags, rallies, debates and
speeches. But for all those who have taken part in the struggle
for democratic rights over the last 12 months, it is necessary
to critically examine the underlying political issues and the
very real dangers facing the working class.
Suharto's forced resignation dealt a severe political blow
to the ruling class, both in Indonesia and internationally, who
for three decades relied on his junta to safeguard its economic
and strategic interests in the world's fourth most populous country
and within the South East Asian region. He was the central pillar
of the New Order dictatorship and its extensive apparatus
of repression established in the CIA-organised coup of 1965-66.
In the aftermath of his ouster, the election is being used as
a means of legitimising the military-backed regime, and of preserving
the badly shaken state structures for the inevitable class struggles
ahead.
The poll is being widely touted in the media as the first democratic
election to be held in Indonesia since 1955. But its anti-democratic
character is clearly revealed in the fact that the guidelines
for the poll and the composition of the next parliament were drawn
up by the Peoples Consultative Assembly (MPR) and the House of
Representatives (DPR)two bodies stacked with Suharto appointees,
army generals, ruling Golkar Party politicians, businessmen and
state officials. Just over a year ago, the same MPR voted unanimously
to rubberstamp Suharto for another five-year term as president.
Nothing fundamental has changed as a result of the amendments
made by the MPR and DPR to Indonesia's political laws. The military
will retain 38 appointees in the new 500-member DPR, and along
with 200 state and regional nominees will form one third of the
MPR, which will select the president and vice-president in November.
Under Indonesia's 1945 Constitution, the MPR and DPR have limited
powers. The unelected president, on the other hand, has sweeping
authority to appoint and dismiss cabinets and ministers, and to
circumvent parliament by issuing decrees.
The new political laws effectively allow only parties with
big business or military backing to stand in the elections. To
be officially registered, a party had to have branches in one
third of the country's 27 provinces and at least half of the local
regencies in those provinces. Even those that met the requirements
were vetted by a committee of government appointeesonly
48 of the 141 parties received state approval to stand in the
elections. The Communist Party of Indonesia (PKI) is still proscribed
and even though the leftist People's Democratic Party (PRD) has
been recognised, some of its leaders are still behind bars.
The Indonesian Armed Forces (ABRI) retain their dual
role under which military appointees are directly involved
in all levels of government, from the national to the provincial
and local. The generals, who are steeped in decades of repression
and bloodshed, continue to wield enormous influence in the present
Habibie cabinet, holding the key posts of defence, interior, political
affairs and information. Moreover, the military has exploited
the eruption of racial and religious unrest in Ambon, West Kalimantan,
Java and elsewhere to extend its command structures, to bolster
its powers and to recruit an armed militia to 40,000 to supplement
its already substantial forces.
A profound revolutionary crisis
The elections are taking place amid the most serious political
and economic upheaval in Indonesia in decades. Fuelled by the
economic breakdown in Asia, Indonesia has entered the first stages
of a profound revolutionary crisis. All the unresolved contradictions
of Indonesian capitalism have erupted to the surface of political
life: the subordination of the economy to international finance
capital; the widening gulf between a tiny wealthy elite and the
impoverished masses; the pressing needs of poor peasants for land
and financial assistance; and the festering of bitter regional,
ethnic and religious antagonisms.
Suharto himself was the first major casualty of the economic
collapse which erupted in July, 1997 in Thailand and rapidly spread
to the other so-called Asian tigers in the region. In just six
months, the Indonesian rupee lost 80 percent of its value and
share prices plummetted, undermining the economy as a wholevirtually
every major bank and corporation was technically insolvent. Interest
rates soared and credit dried up. The regime was compelled to
declare a temporary moratorium on foreign loan repayments that
for the most part were denominated in increasingly expensive US
dollars.
Opposition to Suharto came from two completely different quarters.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF), the US and other major
powers seized upon the crisis as a means for advancing long-held
plans for imposing the radical restructuring of the economies
not only of Indonesia but South Korea, Thailand and other countries
in the region. Their tightly regulated economic and financial
structures had become a barrier to the requirements of globally
mobile capital.
In Indonesia, international finance capital could not tolerate
the vast network of interlocking business empires owned by Suharto,
his family and his business cronies, or their state-sanctioned
monopolies, tariffs, subsidies and economic preferences that impeded
the free flow of investment and profits. The IMF, with the backing
of the US, insisted that in return for its $43 billion bailout,
Suharto sign an unprecedented 80-point memorandum placing virtually
every aspect of the economy under its supervision and control,
and laying out a detailed timetable for the abolition of economic
restrictions.
As Suharto's resistance to these plans continued, the US began
to intrigue for his replacement. According to a New York Times
report, top-level White House briefings on Indonesia started to
take place daily, involving financial experts, senior State Department
officials, CIA analysts, Pentagon brass and national security
aides. The US openly courted opposition figures: the American
ambassador very publicly attended the political meetings of Megawati
Sukarnoputri, and US officials and business leaders met Amien
Rais during his visit to Washington.
The second source of opposition came from below. The pent-up
frustration and anger of broad masses of students, workers and
layers of the middle class, fed up with decades of dictatorial
rule and hard hit by the rapid disintegration of the economy,
boiled over in the form of strikes against job losses, deteriorating
working conditions and rising prices, and increasingly militant
protests by students, intellectuals and others calling for the
ousting of Suharto and democratic reforms. In rural areas, small
farmers and villagers began to protest over a variety of grievances
including land held by Suharto and his business cronies.
By mid-May, Suharto's position had become untenable. Despite
the military's continuing repression and Suharto's belated promises
of reform, the anti-government protests continued to grow. The
critical issue in the debate raging in ruling circles was when
and how to replace him without a sudden and chaotic collapse of
the state apparatus. Finally on May 21, after days of intense
backroom intrigues, Suharto shuffled into a ceremony presided
over by ABRI chief General Wiranto and, with the blessing of Washington,
formally handed over to his long-time protégé B.J.
Habibie.
The transition to Habibie bought some time for the regime but
it resolved none of the basic issues confronting the ruling class.
Despite a temporary stabilisation of the rupiah, the country's
huge debts remain unresolved and the economy continues to be stagnant
and highly unstable. The implementation of the IMF's demands for
economic restructuring, budget cutbacks and the abolition of price
subsidies will only worsen the unmitigated disaster facing the
Indonesian masses. Factory closures and layoffs have driven up
unemployment to 20 million, or about one quarter of the workforce.
According to an official estimate late last year, 130 million
people or more than 60 percent of the population are living in
poverty. Many laid-off workers returned to their towns and villages
compounding the problems already facing rural communities: the
effects of drought, soaring interest rates, huge price increases
for fertiliser, seed, and basic necessities.
The ruling class is acutely aware that it is perched atop a
political powderkeg. It cannot permit any real democracy when
it is implementing a program diametrically opposed to the interests
of the majority of working people. But a semblance of democracy
is needed to legitimise a government that will accelerate the
economic restructuring and impose the IMF demands regardless of
any opposition. Behind the gloss of the democratic
elections, the security forces remain intact and will be used
just as ruthlessly as under Suharto to defend the interests of
the ruling class.
The bourgeois opposition
If the upcoming elections have any legitimacy at all in the
eyes of ordinary Indonesians it is only because Habibie has been
able to rely on the political support of bourgeois opposition
figures such as Megawati, Rais and Abdurrahman Wahid. At every
crucial turning point over the last year, these so-called democrats
have acted as a brake on the developing opposition to the military-backed
regimea product of their instinctive fear that such a movement
will threaten their own privileged positions and the profit system
itself.
Their opposition to Suharto reflected the interests of elements
of the ruling elite, who like the IMF and the US, regarded the
regime's stranglehold of the economy as an impediment to their
own ambitions. Their calls for an end to cronyism, corruption
and nepotism were directed at opening up opportunities for
profit making by a broader layer of businessmen and women. All
of them have pledged to implement the IMF's program. At the conference
of her PDI-Struggle party last October in Bali, Megawati urged
her supporters to embrace the era of globalisation, which
calls for the implementation of the open market system.
These leaders are deeply imbued with the entrenched right-wing,
anti-communist ideology of the military regime. Rais and Wahid
head Indonesia's two largest Islamic organisationsMuhummadiyah
and Nahdlatul Ulama (NU) respectivelywhich supported or
participated directly in the massacres organised by Suharto and
the military in 1965-66, resulting in the murder of at least 500,000
workers, peasants and PKI members. One of the major components
of the Indonesian Democratic Party (PDI), the Indonesian Nationalist
Party (PNI), was involved in the killing on the island of Bali.
Even to call Megawati, Rais and Wahid democrats
or oppositionists is a misnomer. All of them are connected
by countless ties to the junta and maintain the closest of relations
with the top echelons of the military and the state apparatus.
Under Suharto, they only held their leadership posts in parties
and organisations with his personal blessing and by strictly toeing
the official line. In conditions where even minor public criticisms
often resulted in severe repression, none of them were ever arrested
or imprisoned.
Megawati was a DPR representative for the state-run PDI for
over a decade, along with her businessman husband. She became
party leader in 1993 after Suharto removed the then PDI chairman
Suriyadi, and was in turn ousted in 1996not for making a
public attack on Suharto but rather because he could not tolerate
any potential rival. During the tumultuous events of May 1998,
when hundreds of thousands of protesters were demanding Suharto's
resignation, Megawati was nowhere to be foundshe remained
holed up in her suburban home and said nothing.
Rais and Wahid have played a similar role. In the months leading
up to last May, Rais sought to publicly promote himself, particularly
among student protesters, by guardedly threatening to unleash
people's power against the junta. In private, however,
he continued to meet with its leading figures and reassure them
that he posed no threat. At the height of the May protests, Rais
urged students to call off mass demonstrations in Jakarta and,
behind the scenes, intrigued with the generals, bureaucrats and
politicians to effect an orderly transition from Suharto to Habibie.
To remain in power and concoct the present bogus election,
the Habibie regime has been completely dependent on these opposition
leaders. Last November, the frustration of students, workers and
sections of the middle class with the lack of any genuine change
had reached breaking point. Huge protests were organised in Jakarta
and other major cities to coincide with the special session of
the MPR convened to discuss a new framework for the elections.
The calls of the protestors for Habibie's immediate resignation,
an end to the military's political role, the trial of Suharto
and the establishment of a governing transitional committee reflected
a widespread distrust of the regime. Right from the outset, the
bourgeois opposition emphatically rejected these demands. Rais
warned that Indonesia would descend into anarchy unless
Habibie was permitted to remain in office until a poll was organised.
As the MPR session wore on, the protests drew in hundreds of
thousands of people, including workers and sections of the urban
poor, exerting enormous pressure on Habibie. Jakarta was turned
into an armed camp as the military mobilised 30,000 heavily armed
troops and 100,000 so-called volunteers, backed by armoured vehicles,
water cannon and light tanks, to contain and break up the demonstrations.
Yet despite the army's tactics of provocation and intimidation,
the crowds continued to grow. Unlike the protests in May, the
movement was more focussed against the regime as a whole, and
therefore, more dangerous to the bourgeoisie.
In the midst of the mounting political crisis, Megawati, Rais,
Wahid and Yogyakarta Sultan Hamengku Buwono X hurriedly convened
a meeting in the Jakarta suburb of Ciganjur and issued a joint
declaration, which urged the MPR to amend its proposed political
framework and election timetable. The crucial thrust of the document
cut directly across the demands of the protestors: the opposition
leaders endorsed Habibie as president as well as the MPR's deliberations
and the dual role of the military.
The statement by the Ciganjur Four was a crucial
political lifeline for the floundering Habibie. By throwing their
support behind the regime and its electoral charade, the opposition
leaders cut the ground from under the protests, opened up divisions
in the protestors' ranks and gave the regime a free hand to disperse
the movement. On November 13, Habibie and Defence Minister General
Wiranto unleashed the troops who shot into the crowds in Jakarta
at point blank range, killing at least seven demonstrators and
injuring many more.
The lessons of history
The actions of the present opposition leaders demonstrate once
again the historic inability of any section of the weak and thoroughly
venal Indonesian capitalist class to lead a political struggle
for genuine democratic reform or social equality.
The bourgeoisie has always been economically and politically
subservient to one or other of the major imperialist powers. Its
origins lie in the narrow social stratum of landlords, petty aristocrats,
traders and civil servants that acted as key props for Dutch colonial
rule. The political perspective of the bourgeois leaders such
as Megawati's father Sukarno, Indonesia's first president, was
never to mobilise the masses to drive out the Dutch but rather
to exploit the widespread hostility to colonial rule in order
to reach an accommodation with the Dutch.
When the Japanese military invaded in 1942, Sukarno sought
to manoeuvre with the new power, hoping thereby to reach a deal
for independence with imperial Japan. As a result,
he became a mouthpiece for Japanese claims to be waging a war
of liberation against the old European colonialists and the chief
political puppet of the hated occupation forces.
Throughout the period from 1945 to 1949, when the Dutch attempted
to reassert control over their former colony, Sukarno, as head
of the self-proclaimed Indonesian republic, repeatedly undermined
those fighting the Dutch military forces. He conceded territory
and resources in the Linggadjati and Renville agreements, which
allowed the Dutch to tighten their noose around the republic and
to invade its central base in Yogyakarta. After the Dutchunder
pressure from the USfinally relinquished control, Sukarno
agreed to take over the debts of the former colony and guaranteed
to protect the property and investments of the Dutch colonists.
In the 50 years since formal independence in 1949, the Indonesian
bourgeoisie has never been able to rule through democratic means.
The results of the first, and only open national election in 1955
were unilaterally overturned by Sukarno less two years later when
he abolished parliament and an elected constituent assembly. On
the basis of the 1945 Constitution, a document drawn up under
Japanese wartime tutelage, Sukarno instigated so-called Guided
Democracya term for his own personal rule in collaboration
with military chiefs, state officials and unelected political
figures, including representatives of the Stalinist Indonesian
Communist Party (PKI).
In many respects, the period of the late 1950s and early 1960s
bears an uncanny resemblance to the situation in Indonesia today.
The country was mired in economic crisis. Workers, small farmers
and the urban and rural poor were fighting for their demands through
strikes, land seizures and protests. Sukarno was walking a political
tightropeinternally, between the military and the PKI, and
externally, between the US and Soviet blocs. Amid an escalating
war in Indochina, the US was deeply concerned at the strategic
consequences of a social upheaval in Indonesia and began to intrigue
with elements of the military for Sukarno's overthrow.
The 1965-66 military coup and subsequent political genocide,
which was a calamitous setback for the working class both in Indonesia
and internationally, was far from inevitable. The defeat of the
military and its death squads required the independent mobilisation
of workers and peasantsa process which would have inevitably
come into conflict with Sukarno who passively acquiesced in his
own removal from power. The chief responsibility for the disaster
rested with the PKI, then the third largest Communist Party in
the world. It tied the working class to Sukarno and, even as the
slaughter was taking place, insisted that workers, peasants and
party members took no action to defend themselves.
The PKI's betrayal was the end product of its perspective that
subordinated the interests of the working class to those of the
national bourgeoisie. Having repudiated the program of socialist
internationalism, the Stalinists claimed that, under the pressure
of the masses, one or other section of the capitalist class would
wage a political struggle for progressive reforms. Time and again
in the period from 1945 to 1965, Sukarno relied directly on the
PKI leadership to contain social discontent and to bolster his
own image as an anti-imperialist and defender
of the poor. Far from moving to the left, Sukarno and other
bourgeoisie leaders invariably responded to a growing mass movement
with hostility and ultimately outright repressionas was
demonstrated by Sukarno's execution of PKI leaders and supporters
after the so-called Madiun uprising in 1948, and in 1965-66 on
a far broader scale.
The immense scale of the repression and the continued reliance
of the Suharto regime on arbitrary arrest, torture, imprisonment
and murder reflects the impossibility of reconciling the class
antagonisms between the tiny privileged ruling elites and the
oppressed masses in Indonesia. Throughout his entire 32 years
in power, the capitalist class proved utterly incapable of generating
any significant opposition to his rule.
The events of 1965-66 are the sharpest warning of the enormous
dangers facing the working class in Indonesia today. The economic,
political and social convulsions of last year have shaken the
confidence of the bourgeoisie but its state and military apparatus
remains intact, and it is biding its time and preparing to inflict
decisive defeats on the working class.
In the immediate aftermath of Suharto's resignation, the entire
regime was compelled to take on a new more democratic coloration
in order to have any credibility in the eyes of the masses. Ruling
party hacks, state bureaucrats and ruthless generals suddenly
declared themselves in favour of democratic change and reformasi.
Habibie was forced to make a series of minor concessions, releasing
certain political prisoners, sanctioning wider public debate and
establishing nominal investigations into a few of Suharto's excesses.
But the real face of the regime can be seen in East Timor,
West Papua and Aceh where the military, in some cases in cahoots
with local militia thugs, has not hesitated to openly terrorise
and kill supporters of local separatist movements. The measures
now being tested in these outlying areas will be used in the future
against workers, small farmers, students and anyone else who poses
a challenge to the regime.
If anyone considers that a new government headed by a combination
of the so-called democrats Megawati, Rais and Wahid will be any
different, they should carefully consider the implications of
Megawati's opposition to East Timorese independence. She continues
to defend the military invasion of East Timor in 1975 and the
two decades of brutal rule that have cost an estimated 200,000
lives. If Megawati is prepared to hang onto East Timor at any
cost then she will employ the similar methods against the Indonesian
masses.
An independent perspective for the working
class
In countries like Indonesia with a belated capitalist development,
the working class is the only social force capable of carrying
out a consistent political struggle for genuine democracy and
progressive social reforms and thus of mobilising the urban poor,
sections of the middle class, and the masses of small farmers,
landless peasants and agricultural labourers for the conquest
of power and the establishment of a workers' and peasants' government.
In the course of the fight for democratic reforms, improved living
standards, an end to national and racial oppression, and against
landlordism, usury and other remnants of feudalism in rural areas,
the working class will be compelled to make inroads into the domination
of economic life by international finance capital and the capitalist
classthat is, to begin to reorganise society along socialist
lines.
In order to win the active support of the urban and rural poor,
small farmers, shopkeepers and stallholders as well as intellectuals,
students and professional layers, the working class must wage
an uncompromising struggle for its own political independence
from the bourgeoisie and all its representatives, including various
petty bourgeois radical groups and parties such as the People's
Democratic Party (PRD).
It is significant that the PRD, which in the past was branded
by the Suharto regime as communist, was one of the 48 parties
to be officially recognised after a rigorous vetting process,
which undoubtedly included the various state intelligence organisations.
Far from being socialist or Marxist, the PRD bases itself explicitly
on collaboration with elements of the capitalist class in a People's
Coalition Government, that is a coalition of progressive classes,
sectors and groups. No doubt elements of the bourgeoisie
calculate that the PRD, like the PKI, may play a useful role in
the near future in containing any movement of the working class.
In the past, the PRD slavishly backed Megawati as a champion
of democratic rights and held out the possibility that US administration
and sections of the military would support such a coalition
of progressive classes. Following the widespread disillusion
with the Ciganjur Four, particularly among students, after the
army shootings last November, the PRD was compelled to modify
its approachlooking instead for a tactical alliance
with Islamic forces in Aceh, Lampung and elsewhere. What
is common to all of the PRD's shifts and manoeuvres is that it
politically subordinates the working class to various bourgeois
political formations, and thus to the capitalist class itself.
While the PRD does not have the size and influence once held
by the PKI, its political program, by blocking the development
of an independent movement of the working class, it poses exactly
the same dangers in the period of social and political upheaval
that lies ahead. To fight for its class interests and to gain
the support of the oppressed masses, the working class in Indonesia
needs to build its own organisations of political struggleabove
all, a socialist party directed at the abolition of the outmoded
and oppressive profit system.
What are the measures that must be advanced?
* The decisions regarding the political and constitutional
framework cannot be left to the Suharto-era institutions or committees
of ABRI generals and bourgeois politicians. A genuinely representative
bodya constituent assemblymust elected on the basis
of universal suffrage to decide the basis for democratic reforms.
Not only must all political prisoners be immediately freed but
the multitude of laws and regulations preventing the formation
of political parties, free speech and free assembly must be repealed
to allow for the widest political debate and discussion.
* The economic and political oppression of the peasantry must
be ended. Millions of small farmers and their families are living
in abject poverty throughout Indonesia without adequate land,
burdened with large debts, subject to landlords and lacking machinery,
tools, fertilisers and pesticides. Many have been driven off the
land to accommodate the demands of agribusinesses and developers.
The big landed estates and plantations must be nationalised, under
the control of peasants and agricultural workers, so as to provide
the means of support for small farmers.
* The democratic rights of the masses are indissolubly bound
up with the struggle for social equality, the abolition of all
forms of racial and religious discrimination and an end to exploitation
and poverty. Every worker should be guaranteed a decent job and
proper wages. All young people must have access to free, high
quality education. Provision must be made for the vast expansion
of public health care and welfare services so that the elderly,
the sick and the disabled are not left to beg on the streets or
waste away and die in poverty.
* As a first step to realising these aims, the vast holdings
of the Suharto family, estimated at a massive $15 billion, and
all of their close cronies, including Habibie and others in the
present government, must be confiscated and transformed into public
enterprises run by and for working people. The vast mountain of
debt owed to the international banks, finance houses and transnational
corporations must be immediately repudiated, along with the IMF's
plans for intensifying the economic exploitation of the Indonesian
people.
* The struggle to unify the oppressed masses of Indonesia requires
an intransigent fight against all forms of racism and ethnic and
religious discrimination. The continuing riots throughout the
archipelago are the latest example of how the ruling class deliberately
inflames racial and religious bigotry to divide working people
against one another. All laws and regulations discriminating against
ethnic Chinese or any other group must be annulled. All Indonesian
troops must be immediately withdrawn from East Timor, West Papua
and Aceh to provide the basis for establishing fraternal relations
with the people of these regions.
* Genuine democracy means a struggle for secularism, in particular
against the influence of the Moslem clergy and fundamentalist
tendencies seeking to entrench Islamic laws and an Islamic state.
It is necessary to end the oppression of women, the persecution
of religious minorities, and to establish the complete separation
of religion and the state, including the abolition of the state
ideology of Pancasila.
In the weeks and months ahead, political tensions will undoubtedly
intensify, throwing up all the outstanding historic and political
issues once again. Workers are being confronted with the fact
that their most basic needs and aspirations are incompatible with
the requirements of the profit system. Just two years ago there
was no shortage of economic pundits who claimed that the strength
of the so-called Asian tigers demonstrated the viability of the
capitalist market and provided a new road to rapid growth and
prosperity. Now these myths are in tatters.
A new period of social and political upheaval has opened up.
The Asian economic meltdown has revealed a deepening global disequilibrium,
characterised by chronic overproduction and slump in large parts
of the globe, bitter trade frictions and rivalries, and increasingly
reckless military adventures by the major powers, particularly
the US, in the Middle East, Africa and now in the Balkans. Under
the guise of concern for "human rights," a renewed drive
for the colonial carve-up of the globe is underwaymost graphically
revealed in NATO's bombardment of Yugoslavia and its demands that
Kosovo become a virtual military protectorate.
Only the working class is able to offer a progressive solution
to the calamities confronting humanity, whether in Indonesia or
anywhere else. By throwing off the shackles of international finance
capital and ending the domination of the capitalist class, the
establishment of a workers' and peasants' government in Indonesia,
the fourth most populous country in the world, would give an enormous
impetus to the struggles of the masses throughout the Asian region
and reverberate around the globe, opening up the prospects for
a unified international offensive against the profit system.
Workers, students, intellectuals and others in Indonesia should
critically examine their experiences of the last year within the
context of this unfolding crisis of the capitalist order and draw
the necessary conclusions. What is needed in Indonesia is the
construction of a party based on two fundamental and interconnected
principles: the irreconcilable struggle for the political independence
of the working class from all factions of the bourgeoisie, and
the unification of Indonesian workers with their class brothers
and sisters around the world around the common goal of the socialist
reorganisation of society. The International Committee of the
Fourth International is the only party that fights for this program
of socialist internationalism.
See Also:
The fall
of Suharto
[WSWS coverage of the events of May 1998]
A caricature of democracy:
New political laws passed in Indonesia
[4 February 1999]
The struggle
for democracy in Indonesia
What are the social and political tasks facing the masses?
[23 May 1998]
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