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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: The fall
of Suharto
Protests defy Suhartos repression
28 February 1998
By Peter Symonds
Indonesia is in political and social turmoil in the lead-up
to next weeks meeting of the Peoples Consultative
Assembly (MPR).
The countrys ageing military dictator General Suharto
confidently expects the 1,000-member assembly, dominated by government
appointees and ruling Golkar Party representatives, to rubber-stamp
his nomination for a seventh five-year term as president.
But the basis of his regime is being undermined by growing
opposition within many layers of Indonesian society.
Demonstrations have been banned in the capital, Jakarta, until
after the assembly session, yet thousands of students from the
citys prestigious University of Indonesia defied police
this week and held campus rallies against the Suharto regime.
On February 26 3,000 students rallied at the Depok campus calling
for democratic political reforms. Some carried banners proclaiming
"reform or death," others derided the MPR as a joke.
Facing rows of troops, the students appealed for soldiers to join
them rather than fire on them.
The previous day, about 150 graduates and 500 students at the
universitys city campus vociferously denounced the Suharto
regime for its corruption. They cheered when a white mourning
cloth was draped over a giant billboard identified with the Suharto
junta.
In addition, the students distributed the results of a university
survey showing that 72 percent of those polled on the campus had
no faith in the presidential and vice-presidential "elections"
to take place at the national assembly.
They issued a statement appealing to the government to voluntarily
stand aside: "The people had fully trusted the government
to develop our beloved country, but instead the economic and political
conditions cause the people misery. That is why the New Order
Government must voluntarily withdraw from the governance of our
country."
Authorities treated the protest with caution. Troops did not
enter the campus area, although military intelligence officers
mingled in the crowd. The universitys students include the
children of the political and business elite. Their protests indicate
rifts opening up in Indonesian ruling circles. In the period of
the bloody 1965-66 military coup, students from this institution
provided important backing for Suharto.
Other protests took place in Jakarta during the week. On February
23 a small group of women calling itself "The Voice of Concerned
Mothers" protested at a busy city roundabout over price rises
of 300 percent for basic food items and medicines. The women were
surrounded by police and army troops. Three were arrested and
interrogated for 12 hours before being released.
Elsewhere in Jakarta, 24 members and supporters of Siagaa
grouping formed last year to support opposition figures Amien
Rais and Megawati Sukarnoputriheld a silent vigil for about
30 minutes. Both Rais, the head of the Muhammadiyah Islamic organisation,
and Megawati, the daughter of former president Sukarno, have publicly
opposed Suharto, but have not supported anti-government demonstrations.
On the same day, approximately 600 students at the Pajajaran
and Pasundan universities in the West Javan city of Bandung held
campus rallies against skyrocketing prices. They demanded the
release of a fellow student charged with distributing anti-Suharto
material. Squads of riot police prevented them from marching on
the provincial parliament building. Instead they burnt tires at
the universitys main gate. Significantly, the demonstration,
organised by the Indonesian Youth Forum and Student Revolutionary
Organisation, won support from local residents.
In Yogyakarta in Central Java, six Gadjah Mada University students
are on a hunger strike to demand lower prices and an end to racial
violence. The latter demand is particularly important. In recent
weeks riots sparked by rising prices have broken out in at least
24 towns and cities across Indonesia. Many have been directed
against ethnic Chinese shops and storesa development encouraged
by sections of the Indonesian media, the military and Muslim groups,
all keen to find scapegoats in an effort to shield the Suharto
regime.
The student demonstrations are developing despite a severe
military crackdown. Indonesian human rights groups have reported
at least five deaths, 921 detentions and 14 disappearances so
far this year. Amnesty International reported last week that at
least 250 political activists had been arrested during the previous
fortnight.
The repression is particularly heavy in Jakarta where the regime
has established a special Operation Command comprising 50,000
troops and has an extensive system of satellite-linked security
surveillance cameras. Police have demanded access to the operations
of cellular phone companies to monitor and cut off calls deemed
to be "rabble-rousing." Throughout Indonesia police
have announced that "rioters" will be "shot on
sight."
Far from voluntarily leaving the scene, the Suharto regime
is seeking to entrench itself. In the national assembly all three
officially-sanctioned partiesthe ruling Golkar group, the
Indonesian Democratic Party (PDI) and the Muslim-based Indonesian
Peoples Party (PPP)have endorsed Suharto as president
and Research and Technology Minister Yusuf Habibie as vice-president.
Habibie is a staunch Suharto supporter, friend of the family
and the cronies that Suharto rests and relies upon, and an advocate
of national economic regulation. When Suharto first indicated
in January that Habibie might fill the post, the rupiah plummeted
as investors feared that the appointment might threaten the implementation
of US and International Monetary Fund policies aimed at opening
up the Indonesian economy to unfettered international exploitation.
In recent days US-trained economist Emil Salim, a former long-serving
cabinet member and a senior Golkar member, has been nominated
in opposition to Habibie. Salim was closely involved in the 1965-66
coup and served as Environment Minister for 15 years. His intervention
is designed to provide democratic window-dressing and also to
appease the US. Speaking on Australian television this week, he
emphasised that he was not running to win. Instead he expressed
the conviction that the Suharto regime would accept his suggestions
for a slightly modified form of the IMFs austerity and deregulation
measures.
Salims calls for "an end to corruption" and
for economic deregulation are little different from those of Rais
and Megawati. These calls reflect the demands of international
big business for open access to the Indonesian economy. Washington
has publicly identified itself with Megawati, sending its ambassador
to attend a recent meeting at her compound. These figures are
in alliance with sections of the Indonesian capitalist class who
have been thwarted by the tight economic and political control
wielded by Suharto and his associates.
At the same time, all factions of the ruling class are concerned
that the current economic crisis will fuel a social explosion
that they will not be able to control. Megawati and Rais are together
seeking to dampen any opposition to Suharto. Neither has called
for mass demonstrations to bring down the regime. Rais has declared
that he will call "peoples power" protests, but not
before Suharto has been given another year to prove himself.
References to "peoples power" are a warning that
figures such as Rais and Megawati are hoping to follow the path
of Cory Aquino in the Philippines. With the backing of the US,
Aquino won the support of sections of the military for the ousting
of the discredited and corrupt Marcos dictatorship and its replacement
by a regime more amenable to the requirements of the US and other
multinationals.
Aquino diverted the legitimate aspirations of the Filipino
students, workers, peasants and middle class for democratic rights
and improved living conditions into a business-led coalition that
has only intensified the exploitation of the masses.
Today, the US and the IMFwhich has bluntly threatened
to cut off aid to Suhartoare working to create the conditions
for a similar outcome in Indonesia. Megawati, Rais and Salim are
entirely committed to implementing the demands of the global corporations
and banks.
The present crisis, however, is creating a political ferment,
particularly among Indonesias hundreds of thousands of students.
Only the lack of a coherent political program, representing the
interests of the vast mass of Indonesian workers, urban and rural
poor, has created a situation in which most students continue
to look to Megawati, Rais and other bourgeois figures as alternatives
to Suharto.
Students and workers in Indonesia need to study the lessons
of history and begin to build their own political party, independent
of all wings of the ruling class, to fight for a workers government
and socialist policies. An important first step will be to open
up a discussion on the complex historical and political issues
facing the Indonesian masses. The World Socialist Web Site encourages
and welcomes questions and comments from all our readers, particularly
those in Indonesia.
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