The Borneo Post

Prabowo Subianto: Ex-general leading Indonesia presidency

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JAKARTA: Prabowo Subianto is accused of rights abuses while serving as a military chief during Indonesia’s dying days of the Suharto dictatorsh­ip a generation ago, but is now the favourite to win next week’s presidenti­al election.

The Indonesian defence minister has opened a wide lead in polls owing to his vast wealth, nationalis­t verve in populist speeches and strongman credential­s as chief of the influentia­l military.

“At 18, I signed a vow, I was ready to die for the people and the nation. I have not revoked the vow. I am ready if God summons me,” the front-runner told a campaign rally last month, touting his military service.

NGOs and former army bosses have accused him of ordering the abduction of democracy activists at the end of Suharto’s rule in the late 1990s. He also remains accused of ties to the Suharto family as an ex-husband of one of the dictator’s daughters.

But the 72-year-old candidate has rehabilita­ted his image — as a “cute grandpa” who dances on social media — in a bid to lead the world’s third-biggest democracy and replace his former rival Joko Widodo.

While Subianto is promising

more of Widodo’s economic developmen­t, the prospect of his presidency is causing alarm among rights groups that democratic gains made since the end of authoritar­ian rule could be rolled back.

“I am still concerned that Prabowo — fully backed up by Jokowi — could roll back reforms achieved with tears and blood of my fellow student activists,” said Usman Hamid, executive director of Amnesty Internatio­nal Indonesia, using the current president’s nickname.

“This could be the end of our hard-won freedom,” he added.

Subianto has amassed a 20-point lead over his two opponents at around 46 per cent, according to several polls, after picking Widodo’s eldest son Gibran Rakabuming Raka as his running mate.

Analysts say Subianto’s chances are being helped by Widodo’s popularity and support, as well as younger Indonesian­s — more than half of nearly 205 million eligible voters — who did not come of age under Suharto.

People over 40 are “more careful” when considerin­g voting for Subianto, Alexander Arifianto, senior fellow of the S. Rajaratnam School of Internatio­nal Studies, told AFP.

“There is a gap between voters.”

Three attempts

For Subianto, victory would cap a decades-long battle to win high office in Southeast Asia’s largest economy.

In 2004 he failed to become the presidenti­al candidate of the Golkar party, Suharto’s former political vehicle.

He ran for vice president in 2009 with ex-president Megawati Sukarnoput­ri, who failed to win. He would lose the next two presidenti­al elections to Widodo.

Subianto was born in 1951 to a wealthy family and a father who served as finance and trade minister, while his grandfathe­r establishe­d the country’s first state-owned bank.

After living in Switzerlan­d and England as a child, he returned to Indonesia in 1970 and joined the military.

He married one of Suharto’s daughters, Siti Hediati Hariyadi, in 1983. They have since divorced.

Between 1997 and 1998, when some of the kidnapping­s of activists took place, Subianto led the elite army force known as Kopassus, used by Jakarta for special operations aimed at tamping down internal unrest.

More than a dozen activists remain missing and feared dead, and witnesses accuse his military

unit of committing atrocities in East Timor.

He was dismissed from the military in 1998 over the abductions but was never charged, and went into voluntary exile in Jordan.

On his return several years later, he launched a business career with interests in palm oil and energy before jumping into politics.

Indonesian ally the United States once refused a visa over his rights record and he was also reportedly included on a visa blacklist in Australia before the 2014 election.

But he has since been allowed to visit Canberra and Washington, and has in turn hosted his American and Australian counterpar­ts.

 ?? ?? Subianto reacts on the stage during the last presidenti­al election debate at the Jakarta Convention Center (JCC) in Jakarta.
Subianto reacts on the stage during the last presidenti­al election debate at the Jakarta Convention Center (JCC) in Jakarta.
 ?? — AFP photos ?? Subianto speaks on the stage during the last presidenti­al election debate at the Jakarta Convention Center (JCC) in Jakarta.
— AFP photos Subianto speaks on the stage during the last presidenti­al election debate at the Jakarta Convention Center (JCC) in Jakarta.

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