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Our Life and Times by Kevin A. Barry and Mary Holmes
News & Letters, July 2001


"Unrest threatens Indonesia's Wahid"

In Indonesia, workers in Jakarta, Bandung, Surabaya and the industrial sectors of East Java began a series of anti-government protests at the beginning of June. They opposed a decree ending the requirement for employers to provide severance and service time payments to workers who retire or quit.

Without the requirements, it will become easier to fire workers. President Abdurrahman Wahid told union officials the decree would make Indonesia more attractive to capitalist investors. The workers' demonstrations have forced Wahid to hold back the law, only for the time being, but a number of unions intend to keep demonstrating until the law is permanently shelved.

Wahid is facing opposition not only on the streets, but from other sectors of the ruling class, including the military. The legislature has already voted a special session of parliament to begin impeachment proceedings against him in August. Since being elected president almost two years ago, defeating Suharto's hand-picked successor Habibe, Wahid has been unable to handle any of the crises besetting Indonesia, be it the economy or the demands for regional autonomy in Irian Jaya and Aceh.

Vice-President Megawati Sukarnoputri, the likely successor to Wahid, has said virtually nothing to indicate her position on these events. While her party, PDI-P, opposed Suharto when he was in power, it is now in alliance with his party, Golkar, along with the military and the right-wing Muslim Central Axis, to remove Wahid.

Sukarnoputri did not condemn the orchestrated appearance in April of a right-wing group, the "Anti-Communist Alliance" (AKA), which set out to burn "subversive" books and attack left-wing political leaders. Its titular chairman, Eurico Guterres, headed one of the most brutal paramilitary squads in East Timor opposed to independence.

Whoever may succeed Wahid will inherit an economy still staggering from the 1997 Asian financial meltdown. Capitalist growth, which soared to 7% in the 1990s, was down to 4.8% in 2000, and is expected to slip as low as 2.8% this year. The estimated total private and public debt is close to $150 billion, with some 40% of government operating expenditures going to debt payment alone.

On the one hand, the IMF is withholding $400 million in funds until the government institutes cutbacks to begin shrinking the deficit. On the other hand, there are an estimated 40 million people already jobless, and at least one-fourth of the population lives below the official poverty line. The long-service payment requirement for dismissed workers was passed only last year, mainly to prevent the kind of mass layoffs, and workers' defiance, that followed the massive economic crisis in 1997-98.

When the government put a 30% fuel price increase into effect on June 16, it deployed over 42,000 military and police in Jakarta to guard property from student and worker protests. This is an indication of the struggles ahead.

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