October 1997
Indonesian upheaval led by students, poor
By Anne Jaclard
New York-Edwin Gozal, a leader in the Indonesian pro-democracy and student
movements, spoke on tour in the U.S. in August. He began with a question
posed to him recently by an East Timorese friend: Why has the military
regime not yet fallen? He answered by discussing the strengths and
weaknesses of the pro-democracy movement.
Its strength, he said, lies in its leadership by students and the urban
poor. The students, who were instrumental in the ouster of dictator Suharto
in May, continued to organize during their summer break. Many industries in
Jakarta are on strike, and strikers, including the flight attendants from
the national airlines, joined the democracy demonstrations. Blind people
who were tricked out of the money due them by Suharto-controlled charities
joined. In the countryside, poor farmers are seizing and occupying the land
that was taken from them by Suharto's family. In both urban and rural
areas, corrupt officials are being pushed out of office by mass protests.
The weaknesses in the movement, Gozal said, are opposing tendencies on the
questions of abolishing the military in government vs. giving it some seats
in parliament; whether to allow East Timor independence and possibly Aceh
and Irian Jaya (West Papua); demanding only elections vs. more thorough
reforms; whether there should be restrictions on the parties that can run
for office; and discrimination against ethnic Chinese.
Gozal and others have strong evidence that the violence inflicted on the
ethnic Chinese and urban poor during the May rebellion was planned,
instigated and orchestrated by the government. He did not discuss it
further, but world-wide interest has arisen in the burning, killing and
rapes of ethnic Chinese at that time. There were even protests by women's
and student groups in Beijing Aug. 17-the largest demonstrations there
since Tiananmen Square in 1989 and, of course, illegal. They were
protesting both the horrible violence and their own government's muted
response.
Recently the Indonesian government has denied that the rapes occurred and
tried to discredit the international campaign against them. But numerous
eyewitness accounts and victims' testimonies attest to the truth of the
horrors.
Due to the Asian financial crisis, close to half the country-100 million
people-will soon be living below the official poverty line. Even before the
country's economic collapse, 45% of the one-year-olds were malnourished,
and conditions are much worse now. The 70 multinational corporations who
did business with the Suharto family remain in the country and are taking
advantage of the economic collapse to buy up stock and land.
Indonesia has the fourth largest population in the world, and if its mass
movements prevent the government from complying with IMF demands for
greater and greater austerity measures (read: impoverization), they can
trigger others to defy the IMF and spark a new global order. The East Timor
Action Network/U.S. is urging people to write Congress to cut off military
aid and IMF funding to Indonesia.
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