In
September, groups opposed to alternative perspectives on the events of 30
September 1965 (G-30S/PKI) and its aftermath, mobilized to disrupt a seminar
held in Jakarta.These were the same groups that mobilized against ethnic
Chinese Christian former Jakarta Governor Basuki “Ahok” Tjahaja Purnama in late
2016 to early 2017.
THE SEPTEMBER EVENTS AND THE EROSION OF THE TABOO1
During the month of September until October 1 each year, there are often
official government events relating to what is often officially called the
“abortive communist coup”.2 October 1 is Pancasila Sanctity Day, which
commemorates the defeat in 1965 of what was depicted in the Suharto era as an
attempted seizure of power by the subsequently- banned Indonesian Communist
Party (PKI). Since the fall of the New Order in 1998, human rights groups,
student activists and other organisations have also been holding events
throughout the month of September, but with a focus on discussing the mass
killings and the politics of what happened. There have been many articles
published that discuss alternative assessments of what happened on September
30, including those who argue that the PKI – at the very least its membership –
knew nothing about the conspiracy.
In short, September is a month where this issue is automatically and
unavoidably high up on the political agenda.
In 2017, one of the events organised was a seminar looking at the
history of G-30S/PKI. Organised by a coalition of interested organisations and
individuals called Forum 65, which includes representatives of survivors from
the 1965 repression, prominent human rights lawyers, academics and activists,
the seminar was to take place in the Legal Aid Institute (LBH – Lembaga Bantuan
Hukum) building in Jakarta. The LBH building has been a site for critical and
dissident discussions and activities since the 1970s and operated as a haven
for such activities all through the Suharto period.
As a small closed seminar, it did not need a police permit. However,
participants arriving at LBH in the morning found that the police had cordoned
off the building and were refusing people entry. At the same time, groups of
people protesting the seminar appeared outside the LBH building carrying the
banners of the Indonesian Islamic Student Movement (PMII – Persatuan Mahasiswa
Islam Indonesia), the Laskar Merah Putih (Red White Militia) and GP Ansor
(Gerakan Pemuda Ansor, Ansor Youth Movement). The PMII and Ansor are connected
to the long established Nahdlatul Ulama organisation, which has recently emerged
as a critique of the more hardline Muslim groups. Although the PMII and Ansor
were withdrawn from the protests on the instructions of higher levels of
leadership, the police continued to refuse to allow the seminar to proceed, and
even carried out a second raid in the afternoon.3 This was the first time in
the history of the LBH, since the 1970s, that police had entered the building.
To protest the closure of the seminar and the invasion of the LBH
premises, activists organised a cultural event – poetry reading, music – at the
LBH on September 17. About 200 people are reported to have attended, including
some of the elderly survivors of imprisonment from 1965. This event received an
even more hostile response than the seminar the previous day. Messages quickly
circulated on right-wing social media networks that a meeting of the PKI was
taking place at the LBH, that the song “Genjer-Genjer” – associated with the
PKI via New Order era propaganda – was being sung and that the PKI was actually
meeting. Much larger numbers of demonstrators from hard-line Islamist groups
arrived at LBH hurling rocks at the building, pushing to enter and shouting
death threats. The police formed a barricade outside to prevent this large
crowd from entering, and detained 22 of the protesters. Eventually, the
participants of the cultural activity were evacuated by police bus.
The disruption of the seminar and the show of terror against those no
longer willing to abide by the taboo was clearly a successful intervention by
these forces – even if only in the immediate term. To understand the further
dynamics of this event, it is necessary to look at how the event intersects
with immediate political (electoral) developments, and the extent to which it
actually stopped or slowed the erosion of the G-30S/PKI political taboo.
A NEW APPROACH TO ELECTORAL MOBILISATION
In the lead up to the 2017 Jakarta Gubernorial election, polarisation in
approaches to electoral mobilisation became very apparent. Sectarian and racial
issues were used to oppose the candidacy of then incumbent ethnic Chinese
Christian Governor Basuki “Ahok” Tjahaja Purnama, and to support the candidacy
of Anies Baswedan, nominated by opposition leader Prabowo Subianto’s Gerindra
party and the Islamist-oriented Prosperous Justice Party (PKS – Partai Keadilan
Sejahtera). A part of this campaign against Purnama was a very large
mobilisation – estimated to be up to 500,000 people – organised by a coalition
of hard-line Islamist groups that called for Purnama’s arrest and jailing for
blasphemy against Islam. This was the “Bela Islam” (“Defend Islam”)
mobilisation of December 2, 2016.4 The speeches at this event, held in
Jakarta’s Merdeka Square, with President Widodo present, also opposed
(political and social) liberalism and warned of the rise of the PKI.
This mobilisational perspective – combining opposition to political
liberalism, anti- communism, sectarianism, and racialism and xenophobia to one
extent or another – deployed in a systematic and ongoing way is a new
phenomenon on the mainstream national political stage, at least post-1965. In
the case of the Jakarta Gubernorial election, it was successful, where, despite
Governor Purnama having high approval ratings, Anies Baswedan won a convincing
victory.
The forces that mobilised against the LBH event on 17 September were
drawn from the same milieu. The spokesperson who “claimed responsibility” for
the anti-LBH mobilisation was retired General Kivlen Zen, who, along with FPI
(Front Pembela Islam – Islamic Defenders Front) leader Rizieq Shihab, was also
a key figure in the anti-Ahok demonstrations. Furthermore, the mobilisation
against the LBH was not simply an attack on alternative analyses of the events
of 1965 and its aftermath. It was (and is) also a part of an attempt to
consolidate the organisational and mobilisational base of this perspective. It
is therefore likely that similar mobilisations will occur again if the
appropriate opportunity arises. In the meantime, it also creates an atmosphere
of anxiety at the lower levels of the police, such that the police will act
pre-emptively against events that might provide a pretext for further protests.
Complicating this polarisation is the ambiguous stance of the Widodo
government on these issues. As outlined in my earlier ISEAS Perspective
article,5 the Widodo government did organise in April 2016 in Jakarta a
national-level seminar on 1965, which included participants from among former
political prisoners as well as academics who have been critical of the New
Order narrative, as well as the National Commission on Human Rights
(KOMNASHAM). The seminar concluded that the Indonesian State must be held
responsible for the mass killings and repression of 1965 and afterwards.6
However, this seminar has yet to release any results, even two years
after the event.
The Widodo administration’s overall response to the emerging new
approach appears to be through manoeuvres that make it appear “even-handed”.
Thus, on the one hand, the government had promulgated a decree that gives it
the right to ban organisations alleged to be opposed to Pancasila and has used
that to announce a ban on the hard-line (though so far peaceful) Islamist
organisation, Hizbut Tahir.
On the other hand, and at the same time, Widodo has spoken to military
audiences on several occasions and announced he “would clobber” the PKI if it
raised its head again and that young people should also be taught about the
PKI’s violence – without any reference to the violence against the PKI.7 The
Widodo government’s formal position, to date, is to uphold the New Order
narrative.8 However, the government does not aggressively enforce this
narrative: it is a post-New Order government, not a continuation of the New
Order. This non-enforcement of the official narrative is the central, even if
implied, complaint of those pursuing the new, aggressive approach.
The formal ideological position of the Widodo government is to uphold
“Pancasila”. What this may end up fully meaning awaits the activities of a new
Pancasila unit in the President’s office. However, at a minimum, it is a form
of rejection of an Islamic state or of a political format where one religion
has formal superiority over any other.
INEFFECTIVE AGAINST EROSION OF THE TABOO
The hard-liners’ “success” in preventing the LBH seminar from happening
(at least as scheduled) was echoed to an extent by a campaign by the head of
the then Chief of the Armed Forces, Gatot Nurmantyo, to promote the screening
of the 1984 New Order propaganda film Pengkhianatan G30S/PKI among the armed
forces. However, despite these efforts, it is clear that there was no impact on
the ongoing erosion of taboos surrounding G- 30S/PKI. If anything, September
2017 saw a boost of activities that discussed alternative views on the events
of 1965. The mobilisation against the Forum 65 seminar itself also provided a
publicity boost for even more public discussion of alternative viewpoints.
Throughout September 2017, media outlets such as the Indonesian edition of
Rolling Stone9 as well as the websites such as Rappler and Tirto.id10 all
carried a range of articles that canvassed alternative perspectives on a
diverse range of historical aspects intended to de-demonise the PKI and make it
an object of historical interest. These also included articles referring to the
Indonesian Army Hospital autopsy from 1965 on the bodies of the generals
allegedly killed by PKI militia at the Lubang Buaya site which clearly stated
that they were not tortured as New Order’s popular narrative would have it.11
Among the younger readers of Rappler, Tirto.id, Rolling Stone, and those
plugged into Twitter and Facebook, this is now a familiar fact.12
This erosion of taboos has also been further facilitated by the release
of documents from the U.S. Embassy in Jakarta from the 1965-66 period, which
included material that acknowledged the role of the military and some Islamic
organisations in the anti-communist mass killings. This material was also
widely circulated on the social media.13
Evidence of the boomerang impact of the 17 September mobilisation was
the treatment of the issue by TV One’s Indonesian Lawyers’ Club (ILC)
programme. This programme airs every Monday or Tuesday night. It takes the form
of a panel of political actors, mainly drawn from political elite circles, as
well as commentators who are asked to comment on trending current affairs
topics. On September 19, it aired a programme titled “The PKI: Ghost or Real?”
For a television programme owned by conservative Golkar tycoon, former
Yudhoyono-era minister, and known Jokowi-critic Aburizal Bakrie, it would not
be any surprise to find panel members included who defended the New Order era
narrative on 1965.
Indeed one of the panel members was Gen. Kivlen Zen himself. There were
also representatives from active Islamist groups, as well as a representative
from LBH. However, also present at the panel was Ilham Aidit, one of the sons
of the executed Chairperson of the PKI, D.N. Aidit, as well as a representative
of the organisation of 1965 victims, Bedjo Untung. Their presence and ability
to present their point of view to a national TV audience is in itself a
manifestation of the ongoing erosion of the taboo against presenting
alternative viewpoints.14
Apart from these two figures who many would perceive as being directly
associated with the PKI, another outspoken panellist providing an alternative
perspective to the New Order narrative was Sukmawati Soekarnoputri. A daughter
of Sukarno, she is also the leader of a small political party, the Indonesian
National Party – Marhaenis (PNI – Marhaenis). She argued on the programme that
the actual mastermind of the events of 30 September 1965 was Suharto and that
it should be called G-30S/Suharto. She was interrupted by Kivlen Zen who tried
to contradicted her, but she simply stated her refutation of his position
without being intimidated.15 Again, the ability to present such a perspective
on national television is ground breaking in itself. The issue is not the
particular influence of this programme in society, but that it is a clear
example of the taboo on discussing alternatives eroding – even on mainstream
national television.
CONCLUSION
As long as the current government – and the Indonesian state as a whole
– no longer has the will or the capacity to enforce, by force or totalitarian
control, the effectiveness of the old taboo on an open discussion of what
happened in 1965 and its immediate aftermath, the erosion of taboos surrounding
G-30S/PKI will continue. However, resistance to this will also continue,
especially while the forces most opposed to the erosion of the taboo share
perspectives on other issues related to the new approach to electoral
mobilisation,. Those in opposition to the opening up of discussions on 1965
will continue to use sectarianism, racialism and xenophobia as their tools and
view the emergence of alternative histories as evidence of overt “liberalism”,
which they also oppose.
Meanwhile, the Government and the parties supporting the government are
likely to continue their ambiguous stand. It is likely that many in the broad
political establishment are reluctant to open a Pandora’s box where the
questioning of the New Order’s political narrative may lead to the questioning
of many other historical ambiguities.
About the author:
* Max Lane is Senior Visiting Fellow with the Indonesia Studies Programme at ISEAS – Yusof Ishak Institute and Visiting Lecturer at the Faculty of Social and Political Sciences, Gajah Mada University.
* Max Lane is Senior Visiting Fellow with the Indonesia Studies Programme at ISEAS – Yusof Ishak Institute and Visiting Lecturer at the Faculty of Social and Political Sciences, Gajah Mada University.
Source:
This article was published by ISEAS as ISEAS Perspective ISSUE: 2018 No. 6 (PDF)
This article was published by ISEAS as ISEAS Perspective ISSUE: 2018 No. 6 (PDF)
Notes:
1. Over the last few years, the official history of the alleged abortive communist coup of 30 September 196 5 (G-30S/PKI) and the anti-communist purge of 1965-67 that followed have started to be questioned publicly. The gradual erosion of this political taboo has been outlined in Max Lane, “50 Years since 30 September, 1965: The Gradual Erosion of a Political Taboo”, in ISEAS Perspective, ISSUE: 2015 No.66, published in November 2015: https://www.iseas.edu.sg/images/pdf/ISEAS_Perspective_2015_66.pdf. This process has continued since then, all the while intersecting with the complex political and ideological atmosphere that has been evolving under Joko Widodo’s presidency.
2. For a narrative analysis of these events, I draw on John Roosa, Pretext for Mass Murder. The September 30th Movement and Suharto’s Coup d’État in Indonesia, University of Wisconsin Press, 2006.
3. The most comprehensive English language narrative of this event is Saskia E Wieringa, “When A History Seminar Becomes Toxic”, http://www.insideindonesia.org/when-a-history-seminar- becomes-toxic.
4. A.S. Hikam, “Has Jokowi handed a strategic victory to radicals?”, New Mandala, http://www.newmandala.org/jokowi-hands-strategic-victory-radicals/
5. See footnote 1.
6. http://jakartaglobe.id/archive/ago-rejects-komnas-ham-report-on-1965-massacres/
7. LBH also argued that Widodo’s frequent statements about “gebuk PKI” (clobbering the PKI) has helped legitimise attacks such as those at the LBH. See https://www.cnnindonesia.com/nasional/20170918124636-20-242430/lbh-kaitkan-pengepungan- dengan-gebuk-pki-ala-jokowi
8. See http://nasional.kompas.com/read/2017/10/01/08241591/jokowi-pimpin-upacara-hari- kesaktian-pancasila
9. The erosion of the taboo also seeps into popular culture. See for example the Rolling Stone article on the group Melancholic Bitch, some of whose songs critique the New Order film on 1965, Pengkhiantan G30S/PKI: at http://www.rollingstone.co.id/article/read/2017/08/28/140513825/1093/melancholic-bitch-merilis- single-terbaru-quot-bioskop-pisau-lipat-quot-
10. To review the diverse range of articles referring to the PKI on Tirto, see: https://tirto.id/q/pki- 6m/1 and for Rappler see: https://www.rappler.com/previous-articles?filterMeta=G30S%2FPKI
11. Such reports were very widespread, even on local regional newsites. Here is one report from the widely accessed Detik website: https://news.detik.com/berita/1523011/indoleaks-rilis-hasil-visum- pahlawan-revolusi
12. At this point, the size of the readership amongst youths is hard to determine.
13. The US National Security Archive published Indonesian language guides to this archival material that made circulation on news sites and social media very rapid: https://nsarchive.gwu.edu/kedutaan-besar-mengikuti-berjalannya-pembunuhan-massal-di- indonesia-pada-tahun-1965
14. For this programme see: https://sketsanews.com/video/video-indonesia-lawyers-club-pki-hantu- atau-nyata-fullpart-ilc-tvone/
15. See this exchange here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AMZeTfbJ7JM
1. Over the last few years, the official history of the alleged abortive communist coup of 30 September 196 5 (G-30S/PKI) and the anti-communist purge of 1965-67 that followed have started to be questioned publicly. The gradual erosion of this political taboo has been outlined in Max Lane, “50 Years since 30 September, 1965: The Gradual Erosion of a Political Taboo”, in ISEAS Perspective, ISSUE: 2015 No.66, published in November 2015: https://www.iseas.edu.sg/images/pdf/ISEAS_Perspective_2015_66.pdf. This process has continued since then, all the while intersecting with the complex political and ideological atmosphere that has been evolving under Joko Widodo’s presidency.
2. For a narrative analysis of these events, I draw on John Roosa, Pretext for Mass Murder. The September 30th Movement and Suharto’s Coup d’État in Indonesia, University of Wisconsin Press, 2006.
3. The most comprehensive English language narrative of this event is Saskia E Wieringa, “When A History Seminar Becomes Toxic”, http://www.insideindonesia.org/when-a-history-seminar- becomes-toxic.
4. A.S. Hikam, “Has Jokowi handed a strategic victory to radicals?”, New Mandala, http://www.newmandala.org/jokowi-hands-strategic-victory-radicals/
5. See footnote 1.
6. http://jakartaglobe.id/archive/ago-rejects-komnas-ham-report-on-1965-massacres/
7. LBH also argued that Widodo’s frequent statements about “gebuk PKI” (clobbering the PKI) has helped legitimise attacks such as those at the LBH. See https://www.cnnindonesia.com/nasional/20170918124636-20-242430/lbh-kaitkan-pengepungan- dengan-gebuk-pki-ala-jokowi
8. See http://nasional.kompas.com/read/2017/10/01/08241591/jokowi-pimpin-upacara-hari- kesaktian-pancasila
9. The erosion of the taboo also seeps into popular culture. See for example the Rolling Stone article on the group Melancholic Bitch, some of whose songs critique the New Order film on 1965, Pengkhiantan G30S/PKI: at http://www.rollingstone.co.id/article/read/2017/08/28/140513825/1093/melancholic-bitch-merilis- single-terbaru-quot-bioskop-pisau-lipat-quot-
10. To review the diverse range of articles referring to the PKI on Tirto, see: https://tirto.id/q/pki- 6m/1 and for Rappler see: https://www.rappler.com/previous-articles?filterMeta=G30S%2FPKI
11. Such reports were very widespread, even on local regional newsites. Here is one report from the widely accessed Detik website: https://news.detik.com/berita/1523011/indoleaks-rilis-hasil-visum- pahlawan-revolusi
12. At this point, the size of the readership amongst youths is hard to determine.
13. The US National Security Archive published Indonesian language guides to this archival material that made circulation on news sites and social media very rapid: https://nsarchive.gwu.edu/kedutaan-besar-mengikuti-berjalannya-pembunuhan-massal-di- indonesia-pada-tahun-1965
14. For this programme see: https://sketsanews.com/video/video-indonesia-lawyers-club-pki-hantu- atau-nyata-fullpart-ilc-tvone/
15. See this exchange here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AMZeTfbJ7JM
Institute of Southeast Asian Studies
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Institute of Southeast Asian Studies (ISEAS), an autonomous organization
established by an Act of Parliament in 1968, was renamed ISEAS - Yusof Ishak
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