Taranaki Daily News

Widodo hits rival with corruption, equality digs

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Indonesian President Joko Widodo accused his election rival of allowing corrupt candidates on his legislativ­e ticket and failing to include women in senior positions.

Widodo and former general Prabowo Subianto, along with their running mates, faced off Thursday in the first of five debates before the April 17 election. The debate focused on terrorism, human rights, corruption, and law and order.

Opinion polls show Widodo commanding 52 per cent to 54 per cent popular support and Subianto trailing with 30-35 per cent. About 10 per cent of voters are undecided and another 15 per cent are considered swing voters, meaning the race has the potential to tighten.

Subianto, making his second bid for president after being narrowly defeated by Widodo in 2014, waffled when asked why his party has the highest number of candidates with corruption records.

‘‘Maybe the corruption they did was not huge, maybe he or she just, what I mean is, the theft was indeed wrong, but the most important thing to be eradicated was a corrupter who stole trillions of rupiah (hundreds of millions of dollars) of state money, of people’s money,’’ he said.

Questionin­g Subianto’s opening statement of a commitment to empowering women, Widodo said he has nine women in important Cabinet positions but there are few in the leadership of Subianto’s Gerindra party.

Subianto said his party has many female candidates and criticised the quality of decision-making by Widodo’s female ministers.

Widodo, the first Indonesian president from outside the country’s Jakarta elite, has made upgrading Indonesia’s infrastruc­ture the signature policy of his five year-term.

In debating human rights, none of the candidates addressed Subianto’s involvemen­t in human rights abuses during the dictator Suharto’s regime that ended two decades ago. –AP

 ??  ?? Joko Widodo
Joko Widodo

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