Vous êtes sur la page 1sur 3

A QUIET CHANGE: MORE THAN A REVOLUTION

January 1, 2015 | Filed under: Opinions | Posted by: yazdan

F. R. Chowdhury

Indonesia was a Dutch colony. During the World War II Holland itself was occupied by the
Germans. At the end of the War, Netherlands never got the opportunity to re-establish their
authority over Indonesia as on 17-August-1945 President Soekarno (also written as (Sukarno) read
the proclamation of independence. Holland eventually recognized Indonesia as an independent
country in 1947. Sukarno was a great freedom fighter who mobilized all freedom loving people of
Indonesia for declaring it as an independent country in 1945. He is also credited with the
development of new national language of Indonesia. He got all the intellectuals of the country and
called up on them to develop a common language for the new born state. The present state language
Bhasa Indonesia is the outcome of the research initiated by Sukarno.
It has taken Indonesia almost 60 years to establish itself as a truly modern democracy. For long 31
years the country was ruled by Dictator President Suharto. The country suffered from corruption,
favouritism, nepotism and total misrule. Suharto was succeeded by Vice President Habibie who was
in government for two decades before taking over as President. After Habibie came Mr. Wahid who
headed the largest Muslim organization that his grand- father founded. Then came Megawati, the
daughter of first president Sukarno. The last was Susilo Bambang who was a legislator as well as a
general in Suhartos army. They all had a common link. They belonged to elite political or the army
family. The voters were also to some extent influenced by sympathy, emotion and tradition. They
were still not prepared to experiment with new blood. This legacy continued until 2014.
The people of Indonesia finally showed their maturity of democratic process. In 2014 they elected
Joko Widodo (known as Jokowi) as their President. He served neither in the armed forces nor the
legislature. He was one of the four children born to a timber collector, and he was raised in a shack
on a flood-prone river bank. Jokowi graduated from university with a forestry degree, then built up a
successful furniture export business before serving first as mayor of Solo, his home town, and then as
governor of Jakarta. In office he built a reputation for clean governance with accountability. He

improved citys tax receipts, put public services including his budget, salary and public meetings
online and built markets for vendors to stop them blocking traffic.
The young educated people of the society recognised his talents, honesty and sincerity. There was no
shortage of volunteers to campaign for him. He was the candidate of the common people and that is
how he became the president of the republic. Indeed it is a revolutionary change for Indonesia by
which Indonesia can now be rightly called a model of true democracy.
The country already witnessed some changes through his policy, approach and action. He has
forbidden unnecessary expenditure of the public money. The ministers and civil servants are not
allowed to travel abroad unless it is genuinely essential. They shall now travel only in economy class.
The president had to attend the graduation ceremony of his younger son in Singapore. He informed
the government of Singapore in advance of his intention for the trip to be considered as his private
visit. He purchased economy class ticket for him and his wife and they took seats in the economy
class. The message was clear. All those in the government or working for the government understood
the message. It has already resulted into some degree of clean-up. More will take place with the
passage of time. At the outset of the New Year we wish the President every success in his efforts for
democratic reforms and hope the people of Indonesia will enjoy the benefit of his hard work and
sincerity.
Many of the developing countries in Asia, Africa and Latin America are yet to see such changes. Most
of the political leaders once voted to power forget their past or even do not want to think about
future. They start considering themselves as the only saviours of the country. They become
indispensable. They cannot believe that the nation can survive without them nor can think of
becoming a common citizen again. Most of them start thinking and planning how to perpetuate their
power. In the process they curtail the democratic rights of the people. Many of them appoint their
family members as advisers. Once they get a chance, they even change or amend the constitution.
They extend their unlawful political influence over judiciary and civil service. Most of them cannot
stand criticism. Any criticism of the government or its leaders is termed as anti-state activity. They
resort to suppression and oppression. Extra judicial killing in the name of cross-fire becomes a
routine. The elite law enforcement units are used for killing political opponents. Some of the
opponents are even made to disappear. When they travel abroad they go with a big group of
supporters and family members at state expense. Corruption gets so deep rooted that international
agencies pull back from development projects. Elections are held without voters in the name of
continuity of the constitutional process. Every street, roads, bridges and institutions start bearing
their name. Such governments often spend more time, energy and money working to perpetuate
power than development work. They think that if they stay in power for a decade then they can even
re-write the history.
Readers are aware as to what happens when people cannot exercise their democratic rights. If the
doors for democratic change and reform close, it results into violent change. We have seen that. We
must not forget that. Let us learn lessons from Indonesia. Leaders should try to serve the people who
vote them to power. They should not betray the trust reposed on them. Only their good work can
make them genuinely popular and bring them back to power. If power of expression, human rights
and independent judiciary are respected then there would be no need for suppression or oppression.
Violence will disappear and democracy will find its rightful place.

London, 01-January-2015

Vous aimerez peut-être aussi