>From the latest edition of Inside Indonesia.

--------

http://www.insideindonesia.org/edit58/issue58.htm

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  No. 58
  April
  -            In this issue
  June
  1999

               Never again

               Frankly, as we began preparing this edition ahead of
               Indonesia's first democratic elections in 44 years, I
               expected there to be more joy and optimism than there is
               in the pieces that make it up. Suharto is gone, the
               military is under enormous pressure to justify its
               existence on the political stage, press freedom is wide
               open, political parties and labour unions are free to
               organise.

               There is a deal of euphoria of course, also in the
               articles you are about to read. Women are on the move with
               surging energy. The environmental movement is as vigorous
               as ever. And East Timor could be free within a year.

               And yet there is more anxiety than euphoria. Fear that a
               history of fraudulent New Order elections may have
               permanently ruined the chances of holding a fair one.
               Dismay that the military will still refuse to allow the
               police to civilianise once more. Dread also of the demons
               within society itself. Even in a remote place like Sumba
               that has been peaceful for decades there is now conflict
               between neighbours. Exasperation that even the most
               radical pro-democracy activists, the students, are not
               radical enough to really demand total transformation (this
               last one was pointed out by the remarkable Mangunwijaya,
               who died aged nearly 70 as we went to press).

               But of course it was naïve to think that all would be rosy
               once Suharto was gone. You build a system on
               state-orchestrated violence for three decades and then it
               collapses. When the dust cloud clears what do you see?
               Certainly not a fully functional democratic system. You
               will see ruins, and feel a sense of anxiety.

               So why burden readers in societies whose economies are
               humming along and whose democratic institutions actually
               seem to work with such gloomy reporting? For lots of
               reasons to do with human solidarity and just plain
               neighborliness, first of all.

               But also because we can draw immensely valuable lessons
               here about the end result of authoritarianism. For years
               the West had little trouble thinking of Suharto's regime
               as just something that suited Indonesians, who after all
               hold Asian values dear. Anyway, it was delivering the
               goods of economic growth. Now the long-term consequences
               of that view are becoming clear. Authoritarianism,
               militarism, elitism, kills. It kills individual victims,
               it also kills civic institutions. The lesson surely is:
               whatever the future holds, never again a military
               dictator, never again the short-cut to prosperity that
               Suharto offered.



               Gerry van Klinken

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