(Arsip Lama) Ban on Political Forums Muzzles Campuses

Inilah hikmahnya punya akses ke Lexis-Nexis, aku bisa menemukan arsip lama tulisanku ...enjoy pals!



--israr



May 23, 1997, Friday

LENGTH: 960 words



HEADLINE: BAN ON POLITICAL FORUMS MUZZLES CAMPUSES



BYLINE: ISRAR ARDIANSYAH



YOGYAKARTA (JP): With open political discussions declared off-limits at
university campuses, the question remains whether students need to be
involved in politics.

Although the government believes in political education for the public
in general, it prohibits university campuses from serving as
campaigning arenas.



This policy has not prevented the government-endorsed Golkar from
recruiting rectors and professors as its campaigners. Golkar has also
been accused of trying to persuade high school students to cast their
vote for them. Indonesia's voting age is 17 years.

Many students say the result of the ban is university campuses locked in the doldrums of stifled political expression.



In 1978, the government banned university student councils, often seen
as the prime mover in the founding of critical and democratically
inspired youth movements, in what it argued was an effort to
"normalize" life on campuses.



The government also forbade student organizations from setting up
office on campus grounds. These organizations include Pergerakan
Mahasiswa Katolik Republik Indonesia (PMKRI, Movement of Indonesian
Catholic Students), Himpunan Mahasiswa Islam (HMI, Association of
Moslem Students) and Gerakan Mahasiswa Nasional Indonesia (GMNI,
Indonesian National Students Movement), which in the mid-1960s had
spawned the student activists who helped usher in the New Order
administration of President Soeharto.



Daoed Joesoef, education minister in the late 1970s, earned the wrath
of many students. Despite their protests of lengthy strikes and
boycotts of classes, the policies remain in effect.

With the loss of vibrant political activities on campus came the perception that students now prefer to study and party.



The view is debatable, of course, as there is plenty of proof that
students still wish to express their political beliefs. Witness the
hundreds of youths carrying university flags who established
non-governmental organizations to help poor farmers and small-scale
landowners.

Many students remain a "moral force". It follows that they do not take
kindly to political aspirations of professors and seniors university
administrators.



Several rectors of notable universities, including Gadjah Mada
University here (UGM) and University of Indonesia in Depok, West Java,
are legislative candidates for the ruling Golkar.

UGM Rector Soekanto Reksohadiprodjo faced stiff opposition from most
students, who alleged the campus grounds had been transformed into a
Golkar promotional stage.



"It is the students' right if they choose to disagree with my
candidacy," Soekanto told The Jakarta Post recently. "Students also
have the right to practise politics outside of the campus grounds and
choose their candidates from the parties."



Non-voting

The forced separation between campuses and politics, in addition to the
widespread discontent over the current political situation, has led
some analysts to warn of a possible rise in students boycotting the
polls.



A survey last month here found that 36.6 percent of UGM students and
39.3 percent of those at Yogyakarta State Institute for Islamic Studies
(IAIN) have decided not to vote because they professed little
confidence in the election process.



They fall under the category of Golput (literally "white group"),
people who abstain from voting. Only 24.4 percent of UGM and 32.5
percent of IAIN students planned to vote on May 29. The remaining
surveyed students said they were undecided while only 6 percent of IAIN
students were of the opinion that the Indonesian elections will be held
in an honest and fair manner.

"How can I have confidence in the coming elections if the total number
of appointed members at the House of Representatives is larger than
those who were elected?" said Titok Haryanto of the UGM Students
Council.



Many students apparently agree with him as several campus protests in April and May called for an election boycott.



The popularity of abstaining from the vote is common among students, says M.T. Arifin, a political observer from Surakarta.



"Golput will be found among student groups. Generally speaking, they
are in-different to the situation. They believe that nothing is going
to be changed anyway and that they are right in their protest against
the elections," said Arifin.



Not significant

Arifin believes many youths, student groups and urban groups will
become nonvoters, but their number is not significant on the national
scale.

"Students are likely to change their minds once they graduate and join
the workforce, or even become officials," Arifin said. "They would no
longer be golput."



Alfian Dharmawan of the Yogyakarta chapter of the United Development
Party (PPP), said students become nonvoters because they do not have
confidence in the local political parties.

"Those nonvoters won't be able to share our pride when we, as the
members of political parties, finally prove to have changed conditions
for the better," Alfian said.



"I am a student, but I am into politics, too," he added. "Substantial
public changes cannot be separated from campus life, it happens in all
countries."



He stressed that the absence of politics on campuses have robbed students of the testing ground to become national leaders.



"The present government wants to make students into technocrats and bureaucrats," he said.

Arifin defended Golkar's recruitment of high school students. "That's
politics," he said. "Rectors wishing to become Golkar candidates? Go
ahead as long as they are not active on the campus grounds.



"Many of the intellectuals joining political parties are not really
serious," he added. "They're doing it only for appearance sake."
(Copyright 1997 The Jakarta Post - Israr Ardiansyah)



COUNTRY: INDONESIA  ASIA (95%); INDONESIA (95%);

LOAD-DATE: May 23, 1997





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