Indonesia court overturns order to delay 2024 elections
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[April 11, 2023]
By Stanley Widianto and Ananda Teresia
JAKARTA (Reuters) - An Indonesian court on Tuesday overturned a lower
court's controversial order to delay the 2024 national elections by two
years, arguing it had overstepped its jurisdiction and had no authority
to make the decision.
The ruling by the Jakarta High Court will ease political uncertainty in
the world's third-largest democracy and means the February 2024
presidential and general elections should be able to go ahead as
scheduled.
The March 2 decision by the Central Jakarta district court stunned many
politicians and voters in Indonesia, after it ordered a halt of more
than two years on all election activities over a complaint from an
obscure party whose application to run had been denied.
The elections will decide among many posts who will be Indonesia's next
president, with incumbent Joko Widodo now in the final year of his
second term, the maximum allowed by the constitution.
Ruling on an appeal filed by the election commission, or KPU, deciding
chief judge Sugeng Riyono on Tuesday said the lower court had no
authority or competence to deliberate on the matter.
The recently formed Prima Party, which filed the initial complaint, had
argued there were flaws in the KPU's registration process and software.
The district court has said it accepted the case because other courts
would not take it on.
Afifuddin, a KPU commissioner, said the latest verdict made clear which
bodies had the power to decide on election disputes.
"The court ruling has affirmed that general court has no authority or
absolute competence to settle this case," he told Reuters.
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A worker carries election materials as
he prepares ballot boxes before their distribution to polling
stations in a warehouse in Jakarta, Indonesia, April 15, 2019.
REUTERS/Willy Kurniawan/File Photo
Mahfud MD, a senior cabinet minister responsible for legal,
political and security affairs, said Indonesians must now turn their
attention back to the election.
"Everybody must now concentrate on elections being held in
February," he told a news conference. "Election matters cannot be
presided over by district courts."
The Prima Party had yet to decide if it would appeal to the Supreme
Court, said its chairman Agus Jabo Priyono.
Titi Anggraini of the Association for Elections and Democracy said
filing an appeal to the Supreme Court would not impact election
proceedings or the schedule for the vote.
Tuesday's outcome could take the heat out of speculation that Jokowi,
as the president is popularly known, could seek to stay in office
beyond his second term, an idea floated by some of his allies that
he himself has rejected.
Jaleswari Pramodhawardhani, an adviser to the president's chief of
staff, said: "By this court ruling, all unnecessary noise can be
silenced".
(Reporting by Stanley Widianto and Ananda Teresia; Editing by Martin
Petty)
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