Jakarta (Ten Years After, Inside Indonesia)

University of Indonesia

Jakarta Urban Blog highly  recommends  Issue 92: April - June edition of Inside Indonesia . With the ten year anniversary of the May 12, 1998 events at Trisakti University and the Jakarta riots just passing the current issue of Inside Indonesia is well worth spending some time with. …> go to site

From the Introduction by Gerry van Klinken:

“Indonesia has made an amazing transformation these last ten years. Too often this story is buried among the bad news. The military no longer dominates every level of government, as it did during the New Order. Free elections have been held many times. The long-running separatist wars in East Timor and Aceh have been resolved. This edition of Inside Indonesia looks backward and forward. It takes an honest look at how far the country has come down the road towards meaningful democracy, and how much further it might still go.

Vedi Hadiz and Olle Törnquist lead off with their answers to the central question: ‘How far to meaningful democracy?’ They agree on two points. First, Indonesia is now definitely a democracy, but second, it is a democracy with weaknesses. They differ on how much more forward movement can be expected. Read them both, then make up your own mind! We value your response.

Two other articles focus specifically on political parties. Both Marcus Mietzner and Andreas Ufen think the parties are better than most people seem to feel. Indonesian parties have deeper roots in society and history than Philippine and Thai ones, writes Ufen. Rather than give the parties a bad rap for corruption, writes Mietzner, people should make sure they are properly financed so they don’t have to be corrupt.

The last two articles look at the two toughest nuts for post-Suharto democratisers to crack. Have a look at Edward Aspinall ’s piece on Aceh, and Jun Honna ’s on the military. Here the record is mixed: an astonishing turn for the better in Aceh on the one hand, but far too little change in the military, on the other. One thing is for sure: Indonesia does not need the military to ‘hold the country together’, as so many people said for so long”.

 

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One Response to “Jakarta (Ten Years After, Inside Indonesia)”

  1. Jakartass Says:

    I totally agree about that particular issue of Inside Indonesia.

    Anyone with any interest in any aspect of Indonesia would be well-advised to subscribe to their email by clicking on this link

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