New Straits Times

RIVALS IN ‘WAR ROOM’ BATTLE

Supporters of Joko, Prabowo set up operations to check ballots following disputed unofficial tallies by private pollsters

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IN a low-rise Jakarta office block, young Indonesian supporters of President Joko Widodo sit hunched over screens to count photograph­ed vote tallies from polling stations, two weeks after an election to lead the world’s third biggest democracy.

Opposing campaigns have set up their own operations, dubbed “war rooms”, to verify counts after Joko’s challenger, Prabowo Subianto, disputed unofficial tallies by private pollsters giving the president a lead of about 10 points.

Retired general Prabowo had said his poll put him on 62 per cent and alleged widespread cheating, raising the prospect of a legal challenge when official results are released next month, and the risk of street protests.

In 2014, Prabowo also claimed victory, before contesting the results at the Constituti­onal Court, which confirmed Joko’s win.

This time, social media has been awash with conspiracy theories, questionin­g the neutrality of the election commission and election supervisor­y agency.

“There are heightened concerns about the electoral process

this time because there have been consistent efforts to erode trust in the electoral commission using hoaxes and disinforma­tion,” said Ben Bland, director of the Southeast Asia project at the Australian think tank, the Lowy Institute.

Nonetheles­s, he said, the transparen­cy of the vote count and public trust in Indonesia’s election agencies should “ensure that, in the end, the final results will be seen as legitimate.”

Counting is done manually in Indonesia and results are filled in on a tabulated form posted at polling stations with “official witnesses”, including from parties, taking photograph­s of the socalled form.

A non-partisan organisati­on called Kawal Pemilu, or Guard the Election, used 45,000 volunteers to post photos of the forms on their website. The group’s cofounder, Elina Ciptadi, said about 30 per cent of this data had been logged by vetted moderators to ensure it matched official tallies.

“The way we work, everybody verifies everybody’s else’s work,” Ciptadi said, adding that any discrepanc­ies were reported to the election commission, which had been very responsive.

Prabowo’s running mate, Sandiaga Uno, said his campaign was conducting its own verificati­on of votes. “This is a part of our effort to ensure that the election is honest and fair, because, for Prabowo and me, the mandate of the people must be fulfilled,” he said on Monday.

In Joko’s “war room”, volunteers, some affiliated with parties backing the president, are paid 4 million rupiah (RM1,160) a month to work 12-hour shifts to count votes.

“It’s important for democracy to have more varieties of data so that we can compare,” campaign communicat­ions director Usman Kansong said.

The count at the election commission yesterday based on about 55 per cent of the 813,350 polling stations put Joko at 56.13 per cent and Prabowo at 43.87 per cent.

 ?? REUTERS PIC ?? Volunteers inputting data of vote tally forms of last month’s general election in a room at Joko Widodo’s national campaign office in Jakarta on Monday.
REUTERS PIC Volunteers inputting data of vote tally forms of last month’s general election in a room at Joko Widodo’s national campaign office in Jakarta on Monday.

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