The Star Malaysia

‘Hologram campaign’ ahead of polls

Pressed for time, Indonesia’s president reaches voters with 3D image

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Jakarta: Indonesia’s president has started beaming a hologram of himself to reach voters in key battlegrou­nd provinces as he shuttles around the South-East Asian archipelag­o ahead of national polls.

Joko Widodo, running for re-election in the world’s third-biggest democracy, has a tight schedule so he and his vice-presidenti­al running mate are projecting three-dimensiona­l images of themselves at some campaign rallies, his team said.

The high-tech campaign launched this week and is targeting the heavily populated provinces of West, Central and East Java – seen as key sources of support.

More than 190 million people are registered to vote on April 17, with thousands running for seats in parliament and local councils across Indonesia, the world’s biggest Muslim majority nation.

Like the candidate himself, Joko’s life-sized hologram (pic) will keep moving across the South-East Asian nation in the coming weeks.

The 57-year-old leader is believed to be the first Indonesian politician to rely on a hologram, but others including Turkey’s Recep Tayyip Erdogan, India’s Narendra Modi and a far-left French politician have used them in recent years.

Dressed casually in a white longsleeve­d shirt, jeans and sneakers, the hologram pitches Joko’s economic record. It also hits out against false claims, including that Joko is an ethnic Chinese communist and not a devout Muslim.

Indonesia has been battling a wave of fake news and misinforma­tion campaigns online in the leadup to the polls.

Last month, three Indonesian housewives were arrested over an online video that claimed Joko would ban prayer and make gay marriage legal if re-elected – deeply unpopular moves that the politician has never publicly pushed.

“I assure you it’s all slander, lies. Don’t believe it,” his hologram said.

“We must fight against it, explain this to those who do believe it.”

The image of Joko’s vice-presidenti­al running mate Ma’ruf Amin – a prominent Islamic cleric widely seen as a buffer against questions about Joko’s Muslim credential­s – warned against letting religion influence voters.

“Islam has become a political commodity,” the hologram said.

“Verses from the Quran are being used for political purposes.”

Recent polls show Joko and Amin hold a wide lead over rivals Prabowo Subianto, a retired general, and business magnate Sandiaga Uno.

Joko beat Prabowo in a 2014 presidenti­al contest. — AFP

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