Tuesday, April 2, 2019

Indonesia - The Pancasila


Indonesia Table of Contents

Suharto"s regime transformed and marginalized political parties,
which, minus the PKI, still retained considerable popular support in the
late 1960s. Party influence was diminished by limiting the parties" role
in newly established legislative bodies, the DPR and the MPR, about 20
percent of whose members were appointed by the government. Parties were
forced to amalgamate: in January 1973, four Islamic parties were obliged
to establish a single body known as the Unity Development Party (PPP)
and nonIslamic parties, including the PNI, were obliged to merge into
the Indonesian Democratic Party (PDI). Established by the armed forces
in 1964, the Joint Secretariat of Functional Groups (Golkar) was given a
central role in rallying popular support for the New Order in carefully
staged national legislative elections.

Designed to bring diverse social groups into a harmonious
organization based on "consensus," by 1969 Golkar had a
membership of some 270 associations representing civil servants,
workers, students, women, intellectuals, and other groups. Backed both
financially and organizationally by the government, it had mastered
Indonesia"s political stage so completely by the 1970s that speculation
centered not on whether it would gain a legislative majority, but on how
large that majority would be and how the minority opposition vote would
be divided between the PPP and the PDI. In the general elections of
1971, 1977, and 1982, Golkar won 62.8, 62.1, and 64.3 percent of the
popular vote, respectively. As the 1980s progressed, Golkar continued to
consolidate its electoral dominance.

In 1985 the legislature passed government-backed bills requiring all
political parties and associations to declare their support for the
Pancasila as their ideological foundation. Declaring such support was an
extremely delicate issue for Muslim groups, including the PPP, since it
attacked the basis of their identity (the government demanded that the
Muslim parties not be exclusive and allow non-Muslim memberships).
Although the Pancasila includes the principle of belief in a
"supreme being," use of the term Maha Esa, rather than Allah,
was designed to encompass diverse religious groups: Christians, Hindus,
and Buddhists as well as Muslims. The Pancasila policy aroused strong
opposition among politically active Muslims. Riots broke out in the
Tanjung Priok port area of Jakarta on September 12, 1984, and a wave of
bombings and arson took place in 1985. Targets included the Borobudur
Buddhist temple, the palace of the Sunan of Surakarta, commercial
districts in Jakarta, and the headquarters of the Indonesian state
radio.

Voices of democratic opposition were heard May 5, 1980, when a group
called the Petition of Fifty, composed of former generals, political
leaders, academicians, students, and others, called for greater
political freedom. In 1984 the group accused Suharto of attempting to
establish a one-party state through his Pancasila policy. In the wake of
the 1984-85 violence, one of the Petition of Fifty"s leaders, Lieutenant
General H.R. Dharsono, who had served as secretary general of ASEAN, was
put on trial for antigovernment activities and sentenced to a ten-year
jail term (from which he was released in 1990).






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Source: U.S. Library of Congress



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