BusinessMirror

Indonesia declares Subianto president-elect after highest court rejected rivals’ challenge

- By Niniek Karmini & Fadlan Syam The Associated Press writer Edna Tarigan in Jakarta, Indonesia, contribute­d to this report.

JAKARTA, Indonesia—indonesia’s electoral commission formally declared Prabowo Subianto president-elect in a ceremony on Wednesday, after the country’s highest court rejected challenges to his landslide victory lodged by two losing presidenti­al candidates.

Subianto, who is currently defense minister, won the election with 58.6% of the votes, or more than 96 million ballots, more than twice the votes received by either of the other two candidates. But his rivals alleged that his victory had depended on large-scale fraud and widespread state interferen­ce.

Authoritie­s blocked streets leading to the General Election Commission compound, where more than 4,200 police and soldiers were deployed. Wearing matching long-sleeved white shirts, Subianto and vice president elect Gibran Rakabuming Raka waved to their supporters as they arrived at the building.

“The race has finished ... the tough contest, with sometimes heated debates, is over,”subianto said during the ceremony, attended by the country’s political elite, including rival candidate Anies Baswedan and his running mate Muhaimin Iskandar. “And now our people demand that political leaders must work together and collaborat­e for the people’s welfare and to eliminate poverty and corruption in Indonesia,” Subianto said.

Subianto will take office in October, succeeding the popular Joko Widodo, the country’s first president from outside the Jakarta elite.

The General Election Commission certified the election results on March 20, but the formal declaratio­n ceremony was put on hold following legal challenges from rival candidates, former Jakarta Gov. Anies Baswedan and former Central Java Gov. Ganjar Pranowo, who sought to annul the result and demand a revote.

They also alleged nepotism, challengin­g the candidacy of outgoing President Joko Widodo’s eldest son, Raka, as Subianto’s running mate.

Baswedan and Pranowo argued that Raka, 37, should have been disqualifi­ed because the minimum age for candidates is 40, and they asked the court to bar him from a revote. Before the election, Raka was granted a controvers­ial exception to that requiremen­t by the Constituti­onal Court, which was then led by Anwar Usman, Widodo’s brother-in-law. Usman was later forced to resign as chief justice for failing to recuse himself.

In a 5-to-3 decision, the Constituti­onal Court rejected the arguments on Monday, saying the legal teams of the losing candidates had failed to prove allegation­s that Subianto’s victory was the result of widespread fraud. That verdict cannot be appealed.

The case was decided by eight justices instead of the full nine-member court because Usman, who is still on the court as an associate justice, was required to recuse himself.

Baswedan and Iskandar conceded and congratula­ted Subianto and Raka shortly after the Constituti­onal Court’s decision was read out on Monday, saying they are committed to maintainin­g the principle of peaceful transfer of power and that “we choose to be part of continuing to build the quality of Indonesian democracy.”

Pranowo and his running mate, Mohammad Mahfud, also congratula­ted Subianto.

“We accept and fully respect the decision of the Constituti­onal Court,” Pranowo said, “Like or dislike, we have to accept it because it’s final, legal and binding.”

A longtime commander in Indonesia’s Kopassus special forces, Subianto was discharged from the military in 1998 after Kopassus soldiers tortured activists who opposed dictator Suharto, his father-in-law. He never faced a trial and vehemently denies any involvemen­t, although several of his men were tried and convicted.

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