I once had a quarrel with a
Dutch friend who downgraded Indonesia as "a nation of stupid people."
I was really upset when he said, "No Nobel Prize winner will ever come
from Indonesia, because your people have very low IQ [levels]." If I had
met him in Indonesia and not abroad, I would probably have taught him a bitter
lesson.
It took me years before I
realized that he was not totally wrong, being a medical doctor. And the reason is scientific.
According to Agus Pakpahan, executive director of the Indonesian Sugar
Association (AGI), Indonesians' average intelligence quotient is only
87 and the average body height is only 158 centimeters, because of excessive
consumption of sugar, which triggers degenerative diseases.
Upon
learning of Pakpahan's remarks, presented recently at the Assessment Team of
the Indonesian Senate, known as "Team 10," I insisted that he show
scientific evidence to prove his theory.
Pakpahan
pointed to the minister of health's Decree Number 30/2013 and Decree Number
41/2014, which state very clearly that the ministry's approved level of sugar
intake for every citizen is only 27 grams per day, far below the level decreed
by the cabinet's economic team.
Those making
the policy are the ministers of agriculture, trade, industry, state-owned
enterprises, finance, and social affairs, who meet every five or six months in
what is called Rakortas, or a limited coordination meeting, led by the
coordinating minister of the economy. The health minister is not in the team.
For this
year, they have approved a national sugar stock of 5.7 million tons.
Indonesia's domestic production of sugar is not more than 2.5 million tons, so
some 3.5 million tons must be imported, mainly from Thailand, which sells 30
percent of its sugar output to the archipelago.
But putting
the national sugar demand at 5.7 million tons per annum means encouraging
citizens to consume an average of 62 grams of sugar per day to risk contracting
lethal diseases as mentioned in the health minister's decrees.
The two
decrees explain that per capita daily intake of 62 grams of sugar per day is
detrimental to a person's health, because it is far above the safe level of 27
grams and could multiply the risks of cancer, osteoporosis, heart disease,
diabetes and other ailments, if the consumption pattern lasts a long time.
According to
the International Osteoporosis Foundation, one in every four women in Indonesia
aged 50-80 years has a very high risk of catching this bone disease, while the
prevalence in the male population is 1:16.
Meanwhile,
in 2013 up to 8.5 million Indonesians suffered from diabetes. In 2014 the
figure rose to 9.1 million and by 2035 it is predicted that a total of 14.1
million will have caught this disease, according to Achmad Rudjianto, chairman
of the Indonesian Society for Endocrinology.
Indonesia's
cancer prevalence is 1.4 for every 1,000 people, meaning 18.2 million sufferers
nationwide. Excessive sugar consumption is one of the main factors to blame for
this.
The society
is not being educated to consume sugar proportionally, according to health
standards. Sugar imports will continue to soar against declining local
production capacity as sugar cane growers scream loudly about the impact of
climate change and a tragic lack of government attention to the need for
improving irrigation infrastructure.
As a result,
farmers' production costs far exceed their selling price and in some areas such
as Lampung, in the southern part of Sumatra, frustrated farmers have either
destroyed or abandoned their sugar plantations and grown secondary crops
instead, causing a further lack of raw material for state-owned sugar factories
to process.
In East
Java, a more tragic story has been reported by Arum Sabil, chairman of the
Association of Sugar Cane Growers (Aptri). Complaining to the Senate's
assessment team, he revealed that imported sugar was flooding East Java
"because it is a sugar producing province."
Sabil argues
that the government has intentionally allowed either importers or a mafia to
destroy local production capacity by flooding the province with imported sugar.
But who are these importers and why can't such an unfair practice be stopped?
Indonesia
recognizes three kinds of sugar — crystal white sugar, produced locally from
raw material supplied by sugar cane growers; refined sugar made from imported
raw sugar and officially destined for food and beverages industries; and added
sugar from raw materials other than cane.
Crystal
white sugar is for household use. It is produced by 51 state-owned enterprises
and a few other private companies. When there is a market shortage of this kind
of sugar, state procurement agency Bulog floods the market with its stock to
bring down retail prices.
But given
the fact that there is no state-owned factory that can refine raw sugar, sugar
for food and beverage industries must be imported from abroad by 16 private
companies, which are popularly known in local sugar trading as "11
dragons" and "five samurais."
The 11
dragons are the companies Angels Produk, Jawa Manis Rafinasi, Sentra Usahatama
Jaya, Permata Dunia Sukses Usaha, Dharmapala Usaha, Sukses, Sugar Labinta, Duta
Sugar Internasional, Makasar Tene, Berkah Manis Makmur, Andalan/Fornendo, and
Medan Sugar Industri.
The five
samurais are Adikarya Gemilang, Kebun Tebu Mas, Industri Gula Nusantara,
Gendhis Multi Manis and Pabrik Gula Gorontalo, according to the Aptri chairman.
The
government relies entirely on them to produce refined sugar, collecting taxes
in the process, but losing authority and sovereignty over its production and
market domination. As a result, oversupply of refined sugar has caused
permeation into the domestic market in disguised forms to meet sugar shortages
in some areas, and nobody knows what to do, even though this is against the
rules.
One can only
wait to see millions more Indonesians fall victim to various lethal diseases in
coming decades, unless the health minister's decrees are implemented
faithfully.
But
implementation of these decrees would seriously erode the sugar mafia's income.
This prompts speculation that the mafia is so powerful that it does not want to
see the health minister included in the cabinet team that formulates sugar
supply and demand policy. Is that really so?
According to
agricultural economist Nizwar Syafa'at, who sits on the board of the AGI,
a lack of comprehensive law on sugar trading from upstream to downstream levels
is to blame for unfair practices now taking place.
Even Bulog
is using the facilities of the dragons and samurais to refine imported raw
sugar to become refined crystal sugar for distribution.
But here's a
bigger story: the lack of government control over sugar trading has enabled
rent-seekers to accumulate huge sums of money abroad. Aptri researchers have
tracked down a secret bank account in Singapore containing Rp 65 billion ($5
million), which belongs to the retired boss of an Indonesian state-owned
enterprise.
This
money, Sabil believes, is kickbacks from the 100,000-ton sugar trade in
Indonesia. He says President Joko "Jokowi" Widodo's office and the
Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) have known this for a long time and no
action has been taken so far.
So, while
sugar imports continue along with rising domestic consumption to trigger lethal
diseases, mafias are outsmarting a powerless government to accumulate wealth
for themselves. So sweet is the business; so bitter the consequences for
millions of people across the country.
Pitan
Daslani is an expert on foreign affairs at the Indonesian Senate and chief
drafter for Team 10. He was formerly a journalist for the Jakarta Post,
Jakarta Globe, Radio Netherlands, Radio Deutsche Welle and Yomiuri Shimbun.
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