Kamis, 11 April 2013

Oh man, shall we call the New Order back?


Oh man, shall we call the New Order back?
Pandaya  ;  A Staff Writer at The Jakarta Post
JAKARTA POST, 07 April 2013


“Hey guys, how’s life today? It was better in my era, wasn’t it?”

The Javanese phrases that accompany a color portrait of the smiling strongman Soeharto is emblazoned on posters of all sizes and put up on public vans, becak (pedicabs) and public places in his ancestral province of Yogyakarta. 

The poster has a simple artistic design, but the late five-star general’s legendary smile and the message conveyed are both captivating, probably even to Soeharto critics. It is propaganda, but the choice of words can hardly fail to make viewers smile.

Soeharto’s propagandists and fans mean to revoke the memory of the glory of his 32 years of iron-fisted rule when development and harmony had to be defended at all costs.

Forget about widespread rights abuses, authoritarian rule and state corruption; instead ask what made the Soeharto regime “better” than those of his predecessors, from B.J. Habibie, Abdurrahman “Gus Dur” Wahid, Megawati Soekarnoputri and Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono? 

Chances are that most people would answer something along the lines that under Soeharto, basic commodities were affordable, sectarian conflict was properly managed and communal violence was rare. 

Apparently, the self-righteous smile was just one of Soeharto’s tactics to polish his image as the “Father of Development” who deserved a place in history. 

A new monument park in Kemusuk, a remote village in Godean district, just west of Yogyakarta where Soeharto was born, perfectly illustrates all his admirers’ and relatives’ efforts to present the heroic side of the dictator, who died in 2008, 10 years after his downfall.

The benefactor is business tycoon Probosutedjo, Soeharto’s half brother who fiercely believes that people unfairly portray the general as a corrupt dictator while they forget his great service to the country and that he did “more than any hero has done”. 

Probosutedjo, who was convicted of corruption in a reforestation project in 2005, (in)famously said that only “foolish Indonesians would believe that Soeharto was a dictator”.

Built on 1,000 square meters of family land, the Soeharto memorial stands out for its shiny new tiles, high-quality teak framing and a 3.5-meter bronze statue of Soeharto in his supreme military commander uniform. 

He stands right in front of a typical Javanese house that opened to the public on March 1 to coincide with the 64th anniversary of the historic March 1, 1949 General Offensive against the Dutch troops. He was the field commander.

The next thing that Probosutedjo wants visitors to see is Soeharto as a pious Muslim, as depicted in a life-size electronic image near the entrance of the display room. This particular profiling seems to disprove the perception that Soeharto was anti-Muslim, which resulted from his relentless crackdown on political Islam. 

Inside is a range of video footage, documentaries and photos – all presented to show Soeharto as a commanding soldier, the Father of Development, a statesman, a populist leader, an affectionate father and in his early years as a humble peasant’s son. 

And don’t even think of seeing anything remotely concerning the ramifications of his authoritarian rule. 

Particularly nostalgic is a documentary about Soeharto meeting with farmers and him harvesting paddy and lifting a bunch of ripe stalks high for photographers to snap. President Yudhoyono has been seen trying to copy this great general’s style, but with dismal results.

Probosutedjo was not entirely wrong when he said that what Soeharto did for this country was so great that he deserved a positive note in history. 

What is important is fairness in writing it. 

The great general may have had a hand in the various past human rights abuses against his political foes, and corruption may have been rampant among his family and cronies, but who can deny the great things he did to revive Indonesia from virtual bankruptcy when he took power from his flamboyant, ultra-nationalist predecessor Sukarno? One can make an endless list of great services he did as a statesman.

Aided by Western-educated technocrats, Soeharto began to pick up the pieces, smartly devising five-year development plans (Repelita). Then he broke the plans down to annual programs in every sector of development. And the policy was made a mandatory subject in schools. 

These days, we do not see any of the subsequent democratically elected presidents care to make such systematic, detailed plans of which everybody can monitor and assess the outcome! 

 His commitment to upholding Pancasila, the 1945 Constitution and the Unitary Republic of Indonesia (NKRI) was unwavering. Things such as a regency adopting sharia-inspired bylaws or any moves toward secession were hardly ever heard of, and if they were, they were harshly dealt with. 

His principle as a leader at the time was well reflected in one of his statements quoted by Habibie, “Indonesian people’s demands are simple. What’s most important is that you can meet their basic needs, with their security and future guaranteed — that’s it, they will stay calm. So what’s the use of revolution?”

Back then, the press was firmly muzzled, democracy was nonexistent and human rights were regularly abused. But prices were affordable and security was in place. 

Now at a time when corruption is only worsening, security is lousy and living costs are forever climbing, who knows, perhaps public approval of Soeharto being nominated as national hero is also ascending. 

In 2011, Indo Barometer found in a survey — conducted in conjunction with the 13th anniversary of the reform movement and the eighth month of SBY’s second term administration — that Soeharto was the most popular president that Indonesia ever had. Also, most respondents viewed Soeharto’s New Order regime as better than Sukarno’s Old Order and Reform Order. 

There is even a Soeharto fan club called “Paguyuban Rindu Soeharto (Longing for Soeharto)”, which is on Facebook, too.

So, how’s life treatin’ you under SBY, guys?

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