http://www.asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2900&Itemid=175


SBY's Wife for Indonesia's President?

Written by Our Correspondent    
Wednesday, 05 January 2011 
Don't Cry for Me, Indonesia 



It may seem a bit early given that elections are three years away, but 
Jakarta's political circles are beginning to buzz with reports that Kristiani 
Herawati, the wife of President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, plans to run for 
president when his second term expires in 2014. The whole thing, pundits and 
insiders say, is about building a Yudhoyono dynasty.

Mrs Yudhoyono, known universally as Ibu Ani, is the daughter and eldest child 
of the late Gen. Sarwo Edhie Wibowo, who played a key role in the events of 
1965 in which the late strongman Suharto took advantage of a failed coup to 
elevate himself into power over founding president Sukarno. Initially a close 
ally of Suharto who also played a role in the bloody purge of Indonesian 
communists in 1965-66, Sarwo Edhie was said to have been pushed aside in 1970 
after he reportedly complained about government corruption. 

>From that point on, he was given positions that largely kept him outside the 
>political sphere of the central government. He was appointed Indonesian 
>Ambassador to South Korea and Inspector General of the Department of Foreign 
>Affairs from 1978 to 1983.

While it is difficult to pin down her motivations with any certainty, Ibu Ani 
is said by palace observers and others to believe it is her family's turn to 
rule Indonesia after the derailing of her father by Suharto. 

According to this line of thinking, Ibu Ani would fill the chair until one of 
the couple's two sons, currently too young to go for the top job, are 
sufficiently mature to run. That would be in 2019 at the earliest, when the 
family's eldest son, Agus, a military officer, would be 40. The couple's 
younger son, Edhie, was elected a member of the Democratic Party's House of 
Representatives contingent. Both sons reportedly have political ambitions.

The presidential palace in Jakarta Tuesday denied suggesting that the first 
lady is a likely presidential candidate. The president's spokesman, Julian 
Pasha, told reporters that any talk that she would succeed her husband was 
simply "a discourse, aspiration or opinion that was privately conveyed." 

Nonetheless, a senior official of the powerful Golkar Party, which is nominally 
allied with Yudhoyono currently, said recently, "Ibu Ani is the choice. She is 
likely to lead the ticket in 2014." The man said the president's party simply 
had no other recognizable leader that could move into the job. "There is no one 
else," he said. 

A spokesman for the Democratic Party, which Yudhoyono founded, hinted Monday 
that Aburizal Bakrie, the head of Golkar, the scandal-plagued party set up by 
Suharto, could be Mrs Yudhoyono's running mate. The idea is that a vice 
presidential candidate should be drawn from one of the two or three biggest 
political parties to solidify grass roots support. Along with the Democrats and 
Golkar, the third is the opposition Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle, or 
PDI-P as it is known by its Indonesian language initials. The party's leader, 
Megawati Sukarnoputri, is regarded largely as a spent force in Indonesian 
politics and her husband is said to be eyeing a partnership with the Democrats 
as a way into power.

Mrs Yudhoyono would face some stiff competition, although none of it is arising 
from the Democratic Party. The party's chairman, Anas Urbaningrum, is 
considered too young at age 41, and has little grassroots support. Dino Patti 
Djalal, the president's former spokesman, could be considered a long shot but 
he too is considered to be young at 45 and is in Washington, DC as ambassador 
to the US. 

Another candidate is Hatta Rajasa, the head of the National Mandate Party and 
coordinating Minister for the Economy in Yudhoyono's cabinet. But Hatta was 
pushed aside from being selected as Yudhoyono's vice presidential candidate in 
the 2009 national presidential election in favor of Boediono, a respected 
banker and technocrat who is not a politician.

Any suggestion that Bakrie might be a running mate to Ibu Ani seems equally far 
fetched. He covets the presidency himself and is now a front runner of sorts 
despite the fact that he consistently polls no more than 3 or 4 opercent in 
opinion surveys given his reputation as bare-fisted backroom businessman. But 
while he holds no official role in the cabinet, in May Bakrie was appointed 
"managing chairman" of a new government joint political secretariat - a 
position he got the day after his allies in the House succeeded in driving Sri 
Mulyani Indrawati, the widely respected former finance minister, out of town. 

Persistent reports, however, have Sri Mulyani plotting a return to Indonesia to 
run for President in 2014 as a reform candidate. One suggestion making the 
rounds is that Sri Mulyani, who was hounded from office in a nasty political 
fight over a bank bailout and is currently a managing director of the World 
Bank, would even lead the Democrats. It is tantalizing to consider but 
unlikely, given her lack of a popular base beyond academics, intellectuals and 
journalists. 

Despite Yudhoyono's reputation as a reformer, Sri Mulyani herself has compared 
the current situation in Jakarta to Suharto's crony dictatorship, telling 
business leaders last May that "We have learned from the 30-year regime of 
President Suharto, where relationships between personal and public interests 
were so mixed up. We all knew what occurred during the New Order era was like a 
disease. But at that time it was done behind closed doors. Now it's more 
sophisticated and the skills of power enable the decision-making process to be 
co-opted." 

Certainly, despite 12 years of undeniable economic, social and political 
strides since Suharto lost power in 1998, the country remains mired in 
pervasive corruption, with its political institutions largely undeveloped and 
its law enforcement and judicial systems shot through with questionable 
practices. 

But with today's admirably free press, at least the coffee shop mutterings and 
speculation surface for all to hear. Unlike the days when Gen. Sarwo Edhie and 
his erstwhile pal Suharto maneuvered themselves into power through stealth and 
a bloody purge, Indonesia's future is discussed and pondered openly, just like 
in what the country has become, a democracy. 

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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