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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: Indonesia
Habibie's selective prison releases
By Mike Head
28 May 1998
An unknown number of political prisoners -- thousands at least
-- languish in the Indonesian dictatorship's jails, including
those in East Timor and Iran Jaya (West Papua). Whereas the regime
and the corporate media speak of 200 political prisoners, even
official legal aid spokesmen admit the numbers are far greater.
The Habibie government's decision to release two prominent
political prisoners, and the associated media fanfare therefore
requires some examination. Why has the military-backed regime
chosen these two detainees -- unofficial trade union leader Muchtar
Pakpahan and dissident former MP Sri Bintang Pamungkas?
There may be a trickle of such releases in coming days. Justice
Minister Muladi said the cabinet would discuss the release of
10 to 15 prisoners jailed for criticising Suharto. But he ruled
out the release of "criminals" and those who oppose
the Jakarta regime's state ideology (known as pancasila).
He specifically rejected the release of 10 members of the Indonesian
Communist Party (PKI), jailed 30 years ago following Suharto's
bloody military coup of 1965, and several members of the outlawed
Peoples Democratic Party (PRD) who were imprisoned in 1996 after
the state-organised raid on the headquarters of the Indonesian
Democratic Party (PDI) to enforce the ouster of that party's leader,
Megawati Sukarnoputri. Foreign Minister Ali Alatas declared that
East Timor leader Xanana Gusmao would not be freed, because he
was classified as a "criminal".
The Western response to Muladi's announcement was typified
by Australian Prime Minister John Howard who said there were encouraging
signs that up to 15 Indonesian political prisoners might be released.
He insisted that Habibie's priority had to be to restore "stability"
and "investor confidence".
What then do these selective releases reveal about Habibie's
regime and the "political reforms" demanded by the International
Monetary Fund and the governments in Washington, Tokyo, Berlin
and Canberra?
The political records of both Muchtar Pakpahan and Sri Bintang
Pamungkas indicate that they are regarded by many in high places
as crucial to erecting a token "democratic" facade in
Indonesia and to heading off the development of an industrial
and political movement by the Indonesian working class.
The creation of political safety valves -- in the form of alternative
parties and trade unions -- is seen in these quarters as essential
to enforce capitalist rule, particularly as economic conditions
deteriorate, throwing millions of factory and construction workers
out of work and sending prices for food and other essential items
soaring.
The emergence of the working class
At the heart of the political crisis are vast changes in the
economy, which have undermined the Suharto dictatorship. In 1965
Suharto was installed by a coup, followed by an anti-communist
pogrom, backed by the United States and its allies -- the very
same forces now presenting demands for "democratic reform".
For more than two decades the military dictatorship sustained
itself through oil revenues and the development of a highly protected
and regulated economy. Over the past decade, however, these conditions
broke apart as transnational corporations shifted their operations
globally to seek ever-cheaper sources of labour.
Indonesia has increasingly become an export assembly platform
for the multinationals, particularly from Japan, the US, Germany
and South Korea, often operating in partnership with the Suharto
family and its associates. By 1996 Nike, for example, was producing
one-third of its sports shoes in Indonesian sweatshops.
Conditions in these factories are horrific, with 12-hour shifts
and 50-hour weeks, compulsory unpaid overtime and no annual leave.
The 1997 minimum wage used to be the equivalent of a miserable
$US2.46 a day but following the collapse of the rupiah last year
it is not even worth 50 cents today. Many companies, including
state-owned enterprises and transnational corporations, such as
Nike affiliates, routinely pay less, particularly in the textile
and footwear industries, where most workers are female.
Backed not only by outright military repression but also its
official trade union apparatus, the All-Indonesia Workers Union
(SPSI), Suharto's government enforced these conditions as it vied
with other Asian regimes, China and Vietnam notably, to provide
the most profitable conditions for global investors.
Millions of Indonesian peasants have been driven by poverty
and landlessness into the cities and the factories, to be exploited
as wage labour, producing commodities for export to the US and
other Western markets. The Indonesian working class now numbers
up to 90 million, after expanding by some 2.5 million every year
in the 1990s.
As a result, the 32-year-old military dictatorship of General
Suharto faced growing strike action. Even according to its own
figures, there were 251 strikes in 1992, involving more than 100,000
workers, compared with only 19 stoppages in 1989. In more recent
years, major strike struggles erupted in Medan, north Sumatra,
in 1994 and repeatedly in the industrial areas surrounding Jakarta.
Last year, 16,000 Nike workers struck against their conditions.
In recent months, in the midst of the economy's collapse, few
reports have appeared of strikes and political struggles by workers.
Instead the pent-up class hostility to the regime initially took
the form of rioting and looting in Jakarta and other cities. But
strikes have reportedly re-emerged in recent days.
Muchtar Pakpahan
Just after it released Muchtar Pakpahan, the Habibie government
lifted the ban on the trade union body he has headed for six years,
the Serikat Buruh Sejahtera Indonesia (SBSI, or Indonesian Prosperous
Labour Union).
Since 1992, the former university law lecturer has been at
the centre of US-backed demands that the Indonesian regime allow
the formation of Western-style trade unions to contain the working
class. In June 1992 the Clinton administration threatened trade
sanctions against Indonesia, backed by a petition filed by Asia
Watch and the International Labour Rights Education and Research
Fund, both US government-funded bodies with close links to the
CIA and the American trade union bureaucracy, the AFL-CIO.
The petition pointed to the fact that retired military commanders
and members of the ruling Golkar party dominated the leadership
of the official SPSI union and observed that its reported one
million members made up less than 6 percent of the workforce.
It referred to a growing number of strikes erupting outside SPSI's
control.
"Precisely because existing procedures for resolving labour
disputes do not, for the most part, allow for a real expression
of worker demands, many workers have resorted to strikes and work
stoppages to draw attention to their grievances, particularly
in West Java and the industrial area around Jakarta... These are
wildcat strikes."
In a reply to the US petition, the Suharto regime defended
the use of the military to suppress strikes, precisely in order
to prevent a political movement developing among younger workers.
"One of the military's roles with respect to strikes,"
it said, "is to determine if there are any outside forces
at work... One possible inroad for communist subversion is through
worker unrest. The Government especially fears that the communist
ideology might be attractive to young people who did not live
through the national distress of the 1960s, and many of these
young people can best be reached on the job through labour disputes."
The Suharto government banned the first SBSI national congress
in 1993, prompting a public condemnation by the US embassy in
Jakarta. Evidence of direct US government involvement in SBSI
had earlier emerged on October 28, 1992 when police in Tangerang,
West Java, broke up a meeting in which nine members of SBSI, headed
by Muchtar Pakpahan, were discussing how to open a branch office.
Among those detained was Greg Talcott, the US embassy's Labor
Attache, who said he was present as an observer. It has long been
US policy to place CIA officers in other countries as labour attaches.
Talcott was released after an hour. The others were interrogated
overnight and released the following morning.
Eighteen months later, Pakpahan was held responsible for workers'
strikes and demonstrations in Medan in April 1994 and sentenced
to four years jail. The Medan events began when some 25,000 workers
from 42 outlying factories rallied in the city's main square.
They defied the military and local authorities, demanding wage
rises; trade union rights; an investigation into the death of
a worker. The next day, rioting and looting broke out, including
attacks on Chinese businesses.
In a 1995 interview with Tempo, an Indonesian magazine,
Pakpahan said he tried to stop the initial demonstration in Medan.
He declared that he was an anti-communist who abided by Suharto's
official pancasila ideology. Speaking like a trade union bureaucrat
anywhere in the world, he said unions instilled discipline among
workers and SBSI had the task of increasing production. He appealed
for a dialogue with the government and employers.
In 1995 the Supreme Court released him on appeal but that order
was cancelled by another Supreme Court Judge in October 1996.
He also faced subversion charges in relation to riots in Jakarta
in July 1996.
On his release, Pakpahan urged Habibie to convene the puppet
Peoples Consultative Assembly (MPR) to elect a transitional president.
Like other bourgeois opposition figures, he insists that all demands
for reform must be confined within this narrow political framework.
In addition, he spoke of forming a labour party. Other figures,
including bureaucrats of the official SPSI union federation, have
reportedly established an Indonesian Workers Party. Such formations
will seek to divert workers into reformist and trade union channels
that tie them to the dictates of the profit system.
This process can be seen in South Korea, where the former underground
KCTU unions have sought to curb resistance to the Kim Dae Jung
government's IMF program. Earlier this year, the KCTU blocked
with the official "yellow" unions sponsored by the former
military dictatorship to allow the passage of laws providing for
mass sackings.
Sri Bintang Pamungkas
Sri Bintang Pamungkas, a former engineering lecturer at the
elite University of Indonesia, has for some years been a key figure
in attempts to forge a bourgeois "Islamic" opposition
to the Suharto regime.
Once an MP for the officially constituted Islamic party, the
United Development Party (PPP), he was witchhunted after March
1994 when he exposed a credit scandal, involving a state bank,
the Suharto family and the then Information Minister Harmoko at
PT Sritex, a large textile factory near Solo, central Java.
He was expelled from the PPP after his involvement in anti-Suharto
rallies in Germany in April 1995 and also dismissed from parliament.
He was not, however, expelled from ICMI, the Suharto-supported
Islamic scholars association headed by Habibie.
In 1996 he formed an illegal political party, the United Democratic
Party (PUDI). He was arrested in March 1996 and jailed for 34
months for insulting the President (maximum penalty six years).
Arrested with him were fellow PUDI office bearers Saleh Abdullah
and Julius Usman.
His perspective is to form a non-military nationalist government
similar to those in Malaysia, South Korea and Thailand. In a March
1994 interview with Inside Indonesia, an Australian-based
magazine, he described the Mahathir government in Malaysia as
his political model of professional, technocratic Islamic politics.
He hailed South Korea and Thailand as "very encouraging examples"
of "strong and advanced nations" because they had reversed
decades of military rule.
In August 1995, speaking on the 50th anniversary of Indonesian
independence, he appealed for a return to "the real democratic
principles" of pancasila and the 1945 constitution. The 1945
constitution gave the country's first president, Sukarno, virtually
unchecked power. Pancasila is the doctrine adopted by the Suharto
regime to legitimise the military's domination of economic and
political life.
See Also:
Military dominates Habibie's cabinet
[26 May 1998]
A revealing interview
- PRD of Indonesia calls for alignment with US
[15 April 1998]
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