The National - News

PURNAMA HANGS ON

Jakarta’s governor holds slim lead but could yet be ousted by the Muslim vote in April ballot,

- John McBeth Foreign Correspond­ent foreign.desk@thenationa­l.ae

The incumbent Christian governor of Jakarta defeated his Muslim rivals yesterday in a city election that has become a major test of Indonesia’s reputation for religious tolerance.

With nearly all the ballots counted by last night, most quick count results showed the embattled Basuki Purnama winning 43 per cent of the vote, ahead of former education minister Anies Baswaden, who garnered 39 per cent, and thirdplace­d Agus Haritmurti Yudhoyono on 17 per cent after fading quickly in the final stretch.

The result sets the stage for the April 19 run- off that will go down to the wire. With the stakes now much higher, the government and law enforcemen­ts agencies are bracing for the threat of racial and religious violence in the next two months.

Mr Baswaden picked up significan­t gains from Mr Yudhoyono, son of former president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, during the final fortnight of the campaign, showing that conservati­ve Muslim voters had begun to consolidat­e around a single candidate.

Analysts believe Mr Purnama should have secured at least a 10 per cent buffer to have a betterthan-even chance of prevailing in the April 19 poll as he fends off charges that he committed blasphemy during a campaign speech last October.

Hardliners and political party rivals seized on his misstep in a concerted effort to derail his campaign. He could still be jailed for up to five years if convicted. Then the deputy, Mr Purnama took over the top job in September 2014 when the previous governor Joko Widodo became the first candidate outside the establishe­d military and civilian elite to win Indonesia’s presidenti­al election.

Now, he stands to make history himself as Jakarta’s first elected ethnic Chinese leader in a contest that pits Muslim conservati­ves and rival politician­s against a pragmatic middle class supporting a tried- andtested governor presiding over the capital’s biggest infrastruc­ture boom yet. Mr Widodo and Mr Purnama won easily in the 2012 gubernator­ial election. But Mr Widodo is Muslim and the circumstan­ces today are a lot different, even without the blasphemy charge. Educated Indonesian­s are worried about how Islam and populism have become an increasing­ly potent mix in a country of 223 million Muslims that has undergone a significan­t religious revival since the fall of long-serving president Suharto in 1998.

Since the death of former president Abdurrahma­n Wahid eight years ago, Indonesia has not had a recognised pluralist leader to shore up support for the 1945 constituti­on and the Pancasila - the Indonesian state ideology - which lay the foundation­s of the secular state.

Mr Purnama has only himself to blame for some of his troubles.

After recovering strongly from the blasphemy charge, he lost ground again recently with an attack on Ma’ruf Amin, the chairman of the Indonesian Ulema Council.

The governor was upset at evidence suggesting that ex-president Mr Yudhoyono and Mr Amin, a former influentia­l presidenti­al adviser and cleric with a long history of draconian edicts, had conspired to get the Ulema Council to endorse the blasphemy case against him. The damage he did was reflected in the 300,000 people who flocked to Jakarta’s Istiqial mosque on February 11, just days before the election.

There, clerics defied police directives and told adherents not to vote for a non-Muslim leader – using the very verse in the Quran Mr Purnama referred to in the blasphemy allegation.

 ?? Adi Weda / EPA ?? Anies Baswedan is supported by the Great Indonesia Movement Party and the Prosperous Justice Party.
Adi Weda / EPA Anies Baswedan is supported by the Great Indonesia Movement Party and the Prosperous Justice Party.

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