Exclusive: After bruising election,
Indonesia to vet public servants to identify Islamists
Send a link to a friend
[June 21, 2019]
By Kanupriya Kapoor
JAKARTA (Reuters) - Indonesia plans to
tighten vetting of senior public servants amid fears that hardline
Islamist ideology has permeated high levels of government, according to
documents reviewed by Reuters and a senior official involved in the
plan.
Indonesia is officially secular, but there has been a rise in
politicians demanding a larger role for Islam in the world's biggest
Muslim-majority country, with some groups calling for an Islamic state.
The rise in conservatism was a major test for President Joko Widodo in
the April election, with some Islamist groups accusing him of being
anti-Islam and throwing their support behind political rivals, including
challenger Prabowo Subianto.
Widodo was re-elected for a second term but voting patterns revealed
deepening divisions between areas known for a moderate following of
Islam and conservative Muslim regions that backed Prabowo.
The senior government official, who is part of a team formulating the
new vetting policy, said Widodo intends it to be a part of his legacy of
ensuring Indonesia remains a model for moderate Islam.
The official said the president strongly believed that radical Islam
threatened the state apparatus as well as the future of democracy. The
vetting plan was a big priority for him, said the official, who declined
to be identified.
"He wants that before the next election in 2024, hardline and radical
elements be weeded out to aim for a healthier democracy," said the
official.
Widodo's office did not respond to requests for comment.
According to the documents reviewed by Reuters, the government wants to
introduce stricter background checks and a new psychological test to
gauge candidates' political leanings - especially for those seeking
promotions to the top two rungs of the bureaucracy.
The official said the plan will be rolled out by the end of the year at
10 of the country's biggest ministries by budget and several state-owned
enterprises.
Ministries to be targeted as priorities include Finance, Defense,
Health, Education, Religious Affairs, and Public Works. Priority
enterprises include state energy company Pertamina, flag carrier Garuda
Indonesia, the biggest state bank BRI, state miners Antam and Timah, and
two state media companies.
"SEEDS PLANTED YEARS AGO"
Civil servants would not be sacked but the new policy could be used to
keep those with hardline leanings from rising through the ranks, the
official said.
One of the factors driving the new policy is a 2017 survey done by
independent Jakarta-based pollster Alvara Research Center that found one
in five civil servants and 10 percent of state enterprise workers did
not agree with the secular state ideology Pancasila, and instead favored
an Islamic theocratic state.
[to top of second column]
|
Indonesia's Incumbent President Joko Widodo reacts after making a
public address with his running mate Ma'ruf Amin, following the
announcement of the last month's presidential election results at a
rural area of Jakarta, Indonesia, May 21, 2019. REUTERS/Willy
Kurniawan
"What we're seeing is not sudden but the result of seeds that were
planted years ago through small movements that at the time were not
considered a threat to the state. For over 10 years, these ideas
have been tolerated, accepted, and perhaps even used by elements of
the state," one government document said.
The government official who spoke to Reuters is part of a team of 12
officials and experts that will work with the National Agency to
Promote Pancasila and with civil society organizations to formulate
new metrics to strengthen existing recruitment tests.
Pancasila includes upholding national unity, social justice and
democracy alongside belief in God, and enshrines religious diversity
in an officially secular system of government.
The official said the government is expecting a backlash both from
within the state bureaucracy and from rights activists who could
liken the moves to the authoritarian era of former President
Suharto, when loyalty to the state ideology was mandatory and
equated with loyalty to the regime.
"We are aware the Pancasila was used in the past as a tool to
consolidate power, but we believe it is an umbrella that protects
all Indonesians and is a tool to unify against the virus of
radicalism," Benny Susetyo, an official at the national Pancasila
agency, said in an interview.
A representative for the Islamic Defenders Front (FPI), an Islamist
group that calls for sharia law to be imposed in Indonesia, said the
planned vetting procedures would "amount to discrimination against
Islam".
"This government is affected by the disease of secularism and is
trying to separate politics and religion, which is very dangerous,"
said Novel Bamukmin of the FPI's Jakarta chapter.
"They should be focusing on targeting the communists and Shia
(minority Muslims) in the bureaucracy instead," he added.
(Editing by Ed Davies and Raju Gopalakrishnan)
[© 2019 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2019 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |