Sunday, June 28, 2015

Jokowi’s gamble: trading democracy for stability

By Warren Doull

In his first nine months, Indonesia’s president Joko Widowo (Jokowi) has overseen a remarkable resurgence of military power over Indonesian society. The military now has agreements in place to distribute fertiliser to farmers, guard prisons, and assist the national anti-narcotics agency.Talks are underway to also give it a role assisting the Corruption Eradication Commission and the ministries of transportation and fisheries, Earlier this month, the military launched a new counter-terrorism squad which some fear may compete with existing police-controlled counter-terrorism squads. The military even seems to be weakening civil society, by conducting a nationwide campaign to tell Indonesia’s youth that Indonesian NGOs and civil society organisations could be vehicles of foreign interests. Why is Jokowi making these concessions?

Jokowi is allowing this resurgence because he knows he is not in a position to confront powerful institutions. He is a civilian president with no money and almost no experience or networks in national politics. He is a president who doesn’t even control his own political party, the Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle, known by its Indonesian initials, PDI-P. His main source of support, the Indonesian public, is only heard in elections, scheduled for every five years.

As he took up his precarious position as Indonesia’s new chief executive last October, Jokowi seems to have assessed that the biggest threats to his presidency were the very institutions that are supposed to safeguard security and democracy: the military, the police and political parties like the PDI-P. He immediately started making concessions to them, hoping these concessions would win him sufficient stability to push through reforms in other areas: tackling the oil mafia, the illegal logging industry, and foreign threats while improving the social security net. These concessions are Jokowi’s gamble.
In November 2014, President Jokowi approved military plans to build two new army commands: one in Papua and the other in Sulawesi. Weeks later, he announced an 18% increase in the annual police budget. In January, he nominated Budi Gunawan as Indonesia’s new national police chief. 
Nominating Gunawan seemed aimed at pleasing the PDIP and senior police rather than pleasing the public, as Gunawan was under investigation for corruption. When Indonesia’s Corruption Eradication Commission questioned the nomination of Gunawan, Jokowi stood by while the police force brought trumped up charges against the Corruption Eradication Commission’s leaders and had them replaced with cronies.

While courting his new ‘friends’, Jokowi also began to choose his enemies. By November 2014, he was taking steps against Indonesia’s powerful oil mafia. He cut government subsidies for gasoline and diesel, which mafia had often sold abroad, and he established an “anti-energy mafia committee” chaired by respected academic Faisal Basri. He was also taking on the illegal logging industry, imposing a six-month moratorium on the issuance of all forest-exploitation permits. At the same time, Jokowi was identifying new foreign adversaries and taking them on. He was burning encroaching fishing vessels and re-activating the death penalty for international drug smugglers. Jokowi also took on opposition parties, who said his health cards and smart cards to expand social welfare were insufficiently explained and unclearly financed.

Jokowi in recent months has remained consistent with his choice of enemies. In May 2015, his anti-energy mafia committee succeeded in disbanding three corrupt government institutions: Pertamina Energy Trading Limited (PETRAL) and two of its subsidiaries. In the same month, Jokowi renewed the moratorium on granting logging concessions. After executing six drug smugglers, including five foreigners, in January 2015, Jokowi’s government went ahead with executing eight more, including seven foreigners, in April 2015.

Jokowi in recent months has also remained consistent with his choice of friends. He allowed the widely distrusted Budi Gunawan to be appointed as deputy police chief, while the position of police chief went to Badrodin Haiti, a man whose corruption history was almost as shady as Budi Gunawan’s. He even stood by while the corrupt national police asserted their right to ‘help’ select new commissioners for the Corruption Eradication Commission and while the chief of detectives refused to give a wealth report to the Corruption Eradication Commission. These concessions have allowed his relationship with PDIP and senior police to remain on manageable terms.
Jokowi’s recent concessions to the military are an attempt to befriend an institution that has played a role in the early departures of two previous civilian presidents, Habibie in 1999 and Wahid in 2001. These concessions are also an attempt to empower the military as a counterbalance to the increasingly arrogant police force.

Through this acquiescent approach, Jokowi is not unlike his party matron, former president Megawati, who also made huge concessions to the military to help stabilize her presidency. And when Megawati established the Corruption Eradication Commission in 2003, she kept the police happy by appointing a crony former police officer, Taufiequrahman Ruki, as one of its leaders. To placate the police, Jokowi has brought Ruki back as a leader of the Corruption Eradication Commission in 2015.

So here’s the gamble. By allowing the resurgence of the police force and military as major players in Indonesian politics, and making concessions to powerful parliamentary groups like PDIP, can Jokowi buy enough peace to pass through reforms in other areas? Environmental groups have expressed doubts about Jokowi’s ability to protect forests. Earlier this year, they noted that while rates of illegal logging have declined steadily in recent years, the legalised conversion of forests to plantations for palm oil has gone through the roof.They aren’t feeling very safe either, since one environmental activist was murdered in Jambi province in March 2015 and another in Jakarta in May 2015. The oil mafia does not seem too concerned at this stage about Jokowi’s anti-energy mafia committee. Jokowi’s anti-energy mafia committee can only be considered effective once the oil mafia, through its proxies in the national parliament and in other institutions, begins to fight back.

Other reforms are having mixed success. The rear-guard action against foreign threats has taken unexpected twists. A recent attempt to force all expatriates to pass a Bahasa Indonesia proficiency test was only abandoned after protest. A decision to ban transactions and invoicing in US dollars is scheduled to come into effect on 1 July 2015 but its impact on Indonesia’s economy may not be positive.The most positive reform has been the introduction of health cards and smart cards to improve access to health and social welfare services for the poor. Distribution has accelerated in recent months after the Indonesian parliament passed Jokowi’s budget in January 2015.

No civilian president has ever served out a full five-year term in Indonesia. Jokowi, by acquiescing to powerful institutions, may be the first. He is currently on track for a legacy of improved social services for the very poor, and that’s a huge step. But will Jokowi’s era of Megawati-inspired ‘stability’ only be achieved through steps backwards in law enforcement, environmental protection, international relations and Indonesian democracy?


Warren Doull is a pseudonym. Warren worked for UNTAET in Timor-Leste in 2001-2002 and has also lived and worked extensively in Indonesia. 

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