Kuwait Times

Indonesia’s Prabowo set for sweeping presidenti­al win

Election rivals have yet to concede but ‘it’s all over for Anies and Ganjar’

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Indonesian Defence Minister Prabowo Subianto on Thursday looked set to become the new president of the world’s third-largest democracy, likely avoiding a runoff vote against election rivals who have yet to concede.

The ex-general declared victory Wednesday evening after preliminar­y counts from government-approved pollsters—previously shown to be reliable—indicated he would win high office with a majority in his third attempt. The slower, official count by the archipelag­o’s election commission also showed the 72-year-old on course for the presidency at 57 percent with 43.82 percent of votes counted, more than double his nearest rival.

“This victory should be a victory for all Indonesian­s,” Prabowo told a rapturous crowd in the capital Jakarta on Wednesday evening. President Joko Widodo told reporters Thursday he had met with Prabowo the previous evening to offer his “congratula­tions”.

In reaction to Prabowo’s victory, markets in Southeast Asia’s biggest economy jumped by nearly two percent, energised by Prabowo’s vows of continuity. Prabowo lost the previous two presidenti­al polls to popular outgoing leader Jokowi, as he is popularly known.

But he now appears on the cusp of succeeding his former rival, who observers say has unfairly backed his defence chief’s campaign. Analysts have said a Prabowo win is almost assured. “It’s all over for Anies and Ganjar,” said Adrian Vickers, a professor at the University of Sydney.

Fellow candidate Anies Baswedan, who had been the favourite to battle Prabowo in the event of a runoff, said he would respect the result when it was finalised. A spokespers­on for Ganjar Pranowo, polling third, told reporters his team had discovered “structured, systematic and massive” electoral fraud, without providing evidence.

The country’s election commission head Hasyim Asy’ari did not mention the claims at a press conference Thursday. In legislativ­e polls, Prabowo’s Gerindra party was only projected to win 13 percent of parliament­ary seats, meaning he would have to join forces with other parties to pass laws.

‘Cuddly grandpa’

Much was made internatio­nally about Prabowo’s human rights record in the run-up to the vote. NGOs and former bosses accuse Prabowo of ordering the abduction of democracy activists towards the end of the three-decade Suharto dictatorsh­ip in the late 1990s.

Some of those activists have never been found, and witnesses accuse his military unit of committing atrocities in East Timor. He was discharged from the military over the abductions but denied the allegation­s and was never charged.

But voters appear to have overlooked that history as he rehabilita­ted his image from a feared military figure to a “cuddly grandpa” who dances on social media. “The ‘gemoy’ (cute) narrative has made him popular,” said 24-year-old voter Adellia Natasha.

Another key factor in his popularity was picking Jokowi’s eldest son, 36-year-old Gibran Rakabuming Raka, as his running mate, a move that raised eyebrows. Indonesia’s then-chief justice, who is Jokowi’s brother-in-law, in October changed the rules that had barred candidates below the age of 40 from running for high office. Some observers have also accused Jokowi of improperly using government funds to support Prabowo, who has rejected accusation­s of impropriet­y.

Looking forward

Some of Indonesia’s allies have so far avoided congratula­ting the fiery populist on his apparent victory, with the official announceme­nt still weeks away. Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong told a Senate hearing on Thursday that Canberra looked “forward to working closely with the next president” when they are inaugurate­d in October.

The United States congratula­ted Indonesian­s for their “robust turnout” in a statement that did not mention Prabowo. But Singaporea­n Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong called Prabowo to congratula­te him “on his strong performanc­e in the election”, with the pair discussing bilateral ties and areas of cooperatio­n, Lee’s press secretary said in a statement Thursday.

Rights groups, meanwhile, have pointed to concerns about Prabowo, saying he needs to be transparen­t about his history. “That goes for both current rights issues as well as accountabi­lity and justice for what happened in the past,” said Phil Robertson, Asia deputy director of Human Rights Watch.

Prabowo’s sweeping win was also criticised on local and social media. The hashtag #RIPDemokra­si trended on X, formerly Twitter, overnight with tens of thousands of posts after Prabowo declared victory.

Local newspaper Jakarta Post led with the headline “Prabowo wins” and an editorial that said “the result should not surprise anyone” because of the reports of government resources used to help Prabowo. “In the end, it wasn’t even close,” the paper wrote.

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