The Jakarta Post May 21, 2005

'The luckiest ex-dictator' 7 years on


Aboeprijadi Santoso, Amsterdam


Like it or not, Soeharto is an item of hype. Whatever
he did or didn't do can easily become a topic of
public debate. While he reigned, it seemed as though
his every statement was made into a headline. He has
outlived many of his friends and foes, so when he fell
ill recently he became a celebrity of sorts, emerging
as a topic of spirited discourse among politicians,
observers and journalists alike. So, how are we to
interpret this phenomenon of this former dictator,
seven years after he stepped, not down, but aside?

How Soeharto sees himself as a public phenomenon is
anybody's guess, but one leading magazine -- probably
correctly -- described him as he was leaving the
hospital as a man "who laughed while his intestines
were laid open".

His admirers are still around, as are his critics;
opponents and enemies keep watching him. So
controversy is inevitable, both publicly and
privately, in mainstream and other media. A leading
newspaper recently carried an article discussing the
corruption of power, and urged the public not to
ignore it amid the noise of the war on corruption, yet
without mentioning even once the man who ruthlessly
and cleverly ruled this country for decades.

A naive ego tripper, who has admired Soeharto and his
power in the past, could write an appeal on behalf of
the nation asking "forgiveness" from the former
president for all of their anger and criticism, rather
than the other way around.

Thus, to the dismay of his opponents and pro-democracy
reformists, the five-star retired general so many
Indonesians hate for so many various and important
reasons, seems to be far from being unpopular.

Is it surprising, then, that Benedict R.O.G. Anderson,
a well-known Indonesianist, not long after Soeharto
resigned, wondered: why is it that Indonesians after
three decades of the authoritarian and repressive New
Order regime still pay homage to their ex-dictator?
For example, many still address him in writing and in
conversation with the honorific title Pak (Father)
Harto? Or even more affectionately calling him Eyang
(grandpa)?

As Ben Anderson perhaps suggests, many Indonesians not
only admire but actually harbor problems and awe in
dealing with the phenomenon of power like Soeharto's
-- wondering, that is, how man like Soeharto, or any
able general and politician for that matter, could
hold the reins of state power for so long, and create
a myth of stability despite problems and resistance.

To many, that image has become a syndrome. People,
both for and against, sometimes unintentionally
reflect a mix of admiration, awe and troubling
questions about power.

This love-hate ambiguity concerning Soeharto and his
power is stunning, and its consequences are perhaps
most dramatically expressed and graphically
illustrated when he, at the hospital, was visited by
his friends and (ex-) foes.

A.M. Fatwa, for one, told Radio Netherlands that he
felt emotionally deeply affected meeting the old man
in his hospital bed, and kissed him with tears in his
eyes. The same Fatwa who was sentenced by Soeharto's
regime to 18 years jail, and who now claims that he
did it because of his faith.

And, as if to add justification, he said, "Yesterday,
President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono was also here, and
did the same". Fatwa, a prominent politician who had
for years been advocated by human rights bodies like
Amnesty International and Tapol, could have become a
human rights champion within Indonesia's political
Islam, yet he called that kiss to the ex-dictator "a
humanitarian kiss".

"I have never heard of such an idea," said Sobron
Aidit, a poet and political refugee now living in
Paris. "I respect Pak Fatwa, he (was jailed for) 18
years, but what about us? The decree of the MPRS
(Provisional People's Consultative Assembly) No. 25
(1966, the decree that bans communism and Marxism) is
still there. In the church, I pray, and God knows, I
can't forgive Soeharto. Millions were killed or
suffered because of him. His sword is still bloody,"
said Sobron.

While Fatwa would like to have Soeharto remembered as
"the ex-ruler who was forced to step down and failed
to be tried because of his sickness".

But, with Soeharto-syndrome alive and well, the
controversy remains. Put in the present-day context,
this belated sympathy for Soeharto may in effect be a
support for President Susilo's leadership. Not because
Susilo is seen as having the same qualities, but
because he, Susilo, is somehow seen as facing the same
challenges and problems that all his post-Soeharto
predecessors failed to solve (the economy, corruption,
Aceh, etc.).

Many hope President Susilo would take strong and bold
actions. For the military, it is often not the method,
but the results that matters. Which means, in case of
great failure, the Soeharto-syndrome could potentially
cause the pendulum to swing.


The writer is a journalist with Radio Netherlands.

P.S.The title of this article is a quotation from
Sobron Aidit.






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