Monday, September 20, 2004 12:11:31 PM
Ex-general, Washington favorite, cruising to Indonesian victory
This will give the United States a strategic ally close to the Strait of Malacca and in Southeast Asia which is to be a hotbed of Bush’s war as he takes it global in his second term.
In the Pacific Theatre Southeast Asia will be a crucial component of Bush’s world war.
#msg-3542419
The United States is trying for control of the Strait of Malacca. US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said during a visit to Singapore that he hoped to have US troops fighting terrorism in Southeast Asia "pretty soon". His comments fuelled speculation that the United States wants to deploy US forces in the Strait of Malacca, the narrow and busy shipping lane straddled by Malaysia, Indonesia and Singapore that is seen as a likely terrorist target. More than one million tonnes of oil a year -- well over 80 percent of China's imports -- are shipped through the narrow strait.
#msg-3404130
#msg-3998608
-Am
Ex-general, Washington favorite, cruising to Indonesian victory
Ex-general cruising to victory in Indonesia
Jane Perlez/NYT NYT Monday, September 20, 2004
Lackluster economy and terrorism doom Megawati in runoff
JAKARTA A former general who has promised to uphold civilian rule appears to have easily defeated the incumbent, Megawati Sukarnoputri, in Indonesia's presidential election Monday, according to a nationwide survey of votes.
General Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono was expected to win 61 percent of the vote compared with 39 percent for Megawati in the runoff election, according to the survey by the Washington-based National Democratic Institute.
"There could be a shift of a couple of percentage points, but the count is pretty stable," said Paul Rowland, the executive director of the Institute here in Indonesia. The survey, called a "quick count," is based on votes cast at 2,000 polling places throughout the archipelago nation.
Yudhoyono, 55, would become Indonesia's sixth president since independence in 1945, and the fourth leader since the fall of the authoritarian leader, General Suharto in 1998.
The voting Monday, which proceeded in a well-organized and peaceful manner, was the final round in the first direct balloting for president in the world's most populous Muslim country.
The results indicated that Indonesians were yearning for change after three years of lackluster leadership from Megawati, who presided over an anemic economy and three terrorist attacks by a homegrown radical Islamic group.
Yudhoyono presented himself as a man of competence who could set things right, though he gave few details of precisely what he would do.
He pledged to continue the civilian rule that was established after Suharto's ouster, and was viewed as more the reformer than Megawati, who represented status quo politics.
The Bush administration, particularly Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz, who was ambassador to Indonesia in the late 1980s, has argued that the Indonesian elections demonstrate that Islam and democracy are compatible.
During the Suharto era, Yudhoyono was sent to the United States twice for military training, and American officials said they hoped lessons he learned there would infuse his administration.
The United States did not publicly express its preference in the election, but Washington officials made clear that they believed the general had a better grasp of how to control Jemaah Islamiyah, the radical Islamic group held responsible for the three terror attacks.
During the campaign, Yudhoyono suggested he would curb rampant corruption, create jobs and improve security. But his precise plans remained unclear.
Those who know him describe him as careful. "He's a cautious reformer," said Harold Crouch, an Australian expert on the Indonesian military.
An estimated 150 million Indonesians were registered to vote. Thousands of domestic and foreign observers watched the polling from Aceh in the northwest to Irian Jaya in the east.
They reported few disruptions, though those in Yudhoyono's camp said they would be especially watchful for possible fraud as the ballot boxes were moved from the polling stations to collection points at the sub-district level.
Yudhoyono suggested the possibility of fraud when he went to vote this morning at his home in Bogor, just outside Jakarta. "With the assumption there is no violation in the counting of the ballots, I do believe, God willing, I could win this election," the general said.
In Jakarta much of the voting was completed by 11 a.m. Polls closed at 1 p.m. and less than an hour later the results were known at some polling places.
At one voting place in Kebonkacang, a working-class area in the city center, Yudhoyono received 137 votes and Megawati 39 votes.
Those who had voted for Megawati seemed conciliatory. "I hope SBY will fulfill his promise to the people," said Ceisar Saragih, 27, using the popular acronym for the former general. "I hope he does not pressure people with his military stick."
Another Megawati voter, Joni Tampubolon, 53, said: "We're still learning democracy. As long as he continues democracy and is not like Suharto, it's O.K. "
The Indonesian Election Commission trained hundreds of thousands of election workers to man the polling stations, and the political campaigns trained observers to watch out for their interests as voting got under way.
For many of the election day workers, helping give voters the ballots and ticking off names on the register proved a rewarding way to promote the new democracy.
"I have to be involved," said Rudi Halim, 25, who usually works with his father at the family store but this morning was wearing the bright orange vest of an official election worker. "It's an obligation of being a citizen."
Yudhoyono won a first round of the election on July 5. But he failed to win more than 50 percent against Megawati and three other candidates.
His strong showing in the election is likely to spell a sea change in Indonesian politics.
The general's political rise was swift - he only left Megawati's cabinet, where he had served as minister for security, in March. His entrance into the presidential race was predicated on the sense that he did not need a major political party.
The gamble of running with the backing of only a small new party, the Democratic Party, worked.
One of the outcomes is a likely housecleaning of Golkar, the party that Suharto created in the 1960s and developed into the political machine that kept him in power.
The leader of Golkar, Akbar Tanjung, decided to back Megawati against the wishes of his rank and file. Golkar handily won parliamentary elections in April, and Yudhoyono will have to work with the party to get his programs through the legislature.
In a Golkar stronghold in the southern area of the province of Sulawesi, the party fared exceptionally badly. Instead of choosing Golkar, voters overwhelmingly voted for Yudhoyono and his running mate, Jusuf Kalla, who comes from that region.
The New York Times
http://www.iht.com/articles/539640.html
This will give the United States a strategic ally close to the Strait of Malacca and in Southeast Asia which is to be a hotbed of Bush’s war as he takes it global in his second term.
In the Pacific Theatre Southeast Asia will be a crucial component of Bush’s world war.
#msg-3542419
The United States is trying for control of the Strait of Malacca. US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said during a visit to Singapore that he hoped to have US troops fighting terrorism in Southeast Asia "pretty soon". His comments fuelled speculation that the United States wants to deploy US forces in the Strait of Malacca, the narrow and busy shipping lane straddled by Malaysia, Indonesia and Singapore that is seen as a likely terrorist target. More than one million tonnes of oil a year -- well over 80 percent of China's imports -- are shipped through the narrow strait.
#msg-3404130
#msg-3998608
-Am
Ex-general, Washington favorite, cruising to Indonesian victory
Ex-general cruising to victory in Indonesia
Jane Perlez/NYT NYT Monday, September 20, 2004
Lackluster economy and terrorism doom Megawati in runoff
JAKARTA A former general who has promised to uphold civilian rule appears to have easily defeated the incumbent, Megawati Sukarnoputri, in Indonesia's presidential election Monday, according to a nationwide survey of votes.
General Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono was expected to win 61 percent of the vote compared with 39 percent for Megawati in the runoff election, according to the survey by the Washington-based National Democratic Institute.
"There could be a shift of a couple of percentage points, but the count is pretty stable," said Paul Rowland, the executive director of the Institute here in Indonesia. The survey, called a "quick count," is based on votes cast at 2,000 polling places throughout the archipelago nation.
Yudhoyono, 55, would become Indonesia's sixth president since independence in 1945, and the fourth leader since the fall of the authoritarian leader, General Suharto in 1998.
The voting Monday, which proceeded in a well-organized and peaceful manner, was the final round in the first direct balloting for president in the world's most populous Muslim country.
The results indicated that Indonesians were yearning for change after three years of lackluster leadership from Megawati, who presided over an anemic economy and three terrorist attacks by a homegrown radical Islamic group.
Yudhoyono presented himself as a man of competence who could set things right, though he gave few details of precisely what he would do.
He pledged to continue the civilian rule that was established after Suharto's ouster, and was viewed as more the reformer than Megawati, who represented status quo politics.
The Bush administration, particularly Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz, who was ambassador to Indonesia in the late 1980s, has argued that the Indonesian elections demonstrate that Islam and democracy are compatible.
During the Suharto era, Yudhoyono was sent to the United States twice for military training, and American officials said they hoped lessons he learned there would infuse his administration.
The United States did not publicly express its preference in the election, but Washington officials made clear that they believed the general had a better grasp of how to control Jemaah Islamiyah, the radical Islamic group held responsible for the three terror attacks.
During the campaign, Yudhoyono suggested he would curb rampant corruption, create jobs and improve security. But his precise plans remained unclear.
Those who know him describe him as careful. "He's a cautious reformer," said Harold Crouch, an Australian expert on the Indonesian military.
An estimated 150 million Indonesians were registered to vote. Thousands of domestic and foreign observers watched the polling from Aceh in the northwest to Irian Jaya in the east.
They reported few disruptions, though those in Yudhoyono's camp said they would be especially watchful for possible fraud as the ballot boxes were moved from the polling stations to collection points at the sub-district level.
Yudhoyono suggested the possibility of fraud when he went to vote this morning at his home in Bogor, just outside Jakarta. "With the assumption there is no violation in the counting of the ballots, I do believe, God willing, I could win this election," the general said.
In Jakarta much of the voting was completed by 11 a.m. Polls closed at 1 p.m. and less than an hour later the results were known at some polling places.
At one voting place in Kebonkacang, a working-class area in the city center, Yudhoyono received 137 votes and Megawati 39 votes.
Those who had voted for Megawati seemed conciliatory. "I hope SBY will fulfill his promise to the people," said Ceisar Saragih, 27, using the popular acronym for the former general. "I hope he does not pressure people with his military stick."
Another Megawati voter, Joni Tampubolon, 53, said: "We're still learning democracy. As long as he continues democracy and is not like Suharto, it's O.K. "
The Indonesian Election Commission trained hundreds of thousands of election workers to man the polling stations, and the political campaigns trained observers to watch out for their interests as voting got under way.
For many of the election day workers, helping give voters the ballots and ticking off names on the register proved a rewarding way to promote the new democracy.
"I have to be involved," said Rudi Halim, 25, who usually works with his father at the family store but this morning was wearing the bright orange vest of an official election worker. "It's an obligation of being a citizen."
Yudhoyono won a first round of the election on July 5. But he failed to win more than 50 percent against Megawati and three other candidates.
His strong showing in the election is likely to spell a sea change in Indonesian politics.
The general's political rise was swift - he only left Megawati's cabinet, where he had served as minister for security, in March. His entrance into the presidential race was predicated on the sense that he did not need a major political party.
The gamble of running with the backing of only a small new party, the Democratic Party, worked.
One of the outcomes is a likely housecleaning of Golkar, the party that Suharto created in the 1960s and developed into the political machine that kept him in power.
The leader of Golkar, Akbar Tanjung, decided to back Megawati against the wishes of his rank and file. Golkar handily won parliamentary elections in April, and Yudhoyono will have to work with the party to get his programs through the legislature.
In a Golkar stronghold in the southern area of the province of Sulawesi, the party fared exceptionally badly. Instead of choosing Golkar, voters overwhelmingly voted for Yudhoyono and his running mate, Jusuf Kalla, who comes from that region.
The New York Times
http://www.iht.com/articles/539640.html
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