Why
anti-Chinese rhetoric is likely to be a potent political force in the run-up to
Indonesia’s 2019 election
In May, multiple suicide bomb attacks
targeting three churches and the police headquarters in Surabaya highlighted
long-standing concerns about the threat of Islamist militancy in Indonesia.
While these attacks
demonstrated worrying trends in domestic Islamist militancy, they are also
illustrative of broader problems regarding ethno-religious intolerance in
Indonesian society and politics, particularly ahead of the April 2019 general election.
The attacks resulted in the
deaths of some 30 people, including the 13 perpetrators, and at least 57
injuries. Indonesian authorities identified Jemaah Anshurat Daulah (JAD), a
local Islamic State
affiliate – reportedly led by imprisoned cleric Aman
Abdurrahman – as being being responsible for the attacks.
Following the attacks,
Indonesian authorities passed new anti-terrorism
legislation, allowing security forces to detain suspects for up to
21 days without charge and expanding the role of the military in
counterterrorism operations.
Most international
commentary on the attacks focused on the disturbing fact that the perpetrators
were members of individual families, arguing that this represents a shift
in domestic militant tactics, and provided an overall analysis of
the threat of Islamist terrorism in Indonesia.
Watch: Suicide bombers target Surabaya police
headquarters in Indonesia
Within Indonesia, however,
much of the discussion has focused on issues of ethno-religious intolerance,
putting the church attacks, in particular, in a broader sociological context.
This intolerance
feeds the propaganda of Jamaah
Ansharut Daulah (JAD) and other terrorist groups, as well as
Islamist vigilante groups, such as the Front Pembela Islam (FPI – Islamic
Defenders Front) led by Rizieq Shihab. These groups violently enforce their
interpretations of Islam by, for example, threatening to raid businesses
celebrating Christmas and attacking religious minorities, such as Christians
and Ahmadis.
While the Surabaya
church bombings highlight the continued threat of Islamist terrorism in
Indonesia, particularly to religious and ethnic minorities, reports show that
mob violence by the FPI and similar groups are a more prevalent phenomenon.
As in most
Muslim-majority countries, multiple versions of Islam have been promulgated and
practised in Indonesia, some of which were progressive and others less so.
After Indonesian independence from the Netherlands in 1949, the Darul Islam
movement mounted a rebellion against the new Indonesian authorities and
attempted to establish a countrywide Islamic state under sharia law.
While the movement was defeated in 1962, contemporary
militant and vigilante groups, including the JAD and FPI, have inherited a
long-standing Islamist tradition. This goes against Indonesia’s
post-independence Pancasila
ideology which stresses national unity through religious and ethnic
diversity.
Widespread
intolerance needs to be confronted, something Indonesia’s politicians seem
reluctant to do, for fear of offending the Muslim majority
Following the
Surabaya attacks, President Joko Widodo, or Jokowi, called for Pancasila
ideology to be made part of the Indonesian way of life. However, for this to
happen, widespread intolerance needs to be confronted, something Indonesia’s
politicians seem reluctant to do, for fear of offending the Muslim majority.
These concerns are further complicated by the April
2019 general election.
The main opposition
candidate, Prabowo
Subianto, chairman of the Partai Gerakan Indonesia Raya (Gerindra –
Great Indonesia Movement Party), is a former military general accused of human
rights abuses in what is now East
Timor. Some claim he has a history of aligning himself with Islamist
groups, as well as peddling anti-Chinese conspiracy theories before the 1998
race riots, in which some 1,000 ethnic Chinese Indonesians were
killed.
Ethnic Chinese
Indonesians comprise between one and four per cent of the Indonesian
population. Suspicions about their national loyalty, as well resentment
stemming from their supposedly high levels of wealth, make anti-Chinese
sentiment a potent political force in Indonesia.
This was on full
display during the country’s last significant election in April 2017 when
Basuki Tjahaja Purnama, or Ahok, was
ousted. He was Jakarta’s first ethnically Chinese Christian
governor, and was accused
of blasphemy and insulting Islam in the months leading up to the
election, prompting large protests by the FPI and other Islamist groups.
These sentiments
significantly contributed to Gerindra candidate Anies
Baswedan’s subsequent victory. Baswedan became governor, Ahok was
convicted and sentenced
to two years in prison for blasphemy, and Gerindra and the FPI
learnt that divisive identity politics can be a winning electoral strategy.
Gerindra will
continue to capitalise on intolerance ahead of the general election next year.
The party entered into a formal coalition with a conservative Islamic party,
and received endorsements from the FPI and similar groups. Notably, FPI leader
Rizieq Shihab is reportedly trying to help create a four-party coalition to
bolster Gerindra in the election.
President Jokowi
remains popular, with some surveys saying he enjoys a 76 per cent approval
rating. This is in part due to the popularity of planned infrastructure
development initiatives, such as the US$6 billion Jakarta-Bandung
high-speed rail project. Many of these projects, however, depend on
Chinese money and labour, raising concerns about potential threats to foreign
workers and commercial interests.
This makes it
likely that the opposition will politicise
Beijing’s involvement in these projects. Resentment towards the
local Chinese-Indonesian population could influence attitudes towards foreign
nationals as well, particularly towards the 24,000 or so Chinese workers in the
country. With about 10 per cent of the population – around 26 million people –
living below the poverty line, it is likely that foreign workers will be
accused of stealing local jobs.
Given the emergent
coalition of Gerindra, the FPI and other conservative groups, next year’s election
is likely to see continued xenophobic rhetoric.
Rob Attwell is an Asia-Pacific analyst with global
consultancy S-RM
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