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<text id=93CT1727>
<title>
Indonesia--History
</title>
<history>
Compact ALMANAC--CIA Factbook
Southeast Asia
Indonesia
</history>
<article>
<source>CIA World Factbook</source>
<hdr>
History
</hdr>
<body>
<p> In the 15th century, when the Renaissance was just pulling
Europe from the Middle Ages, the islands of Java and Sumatra
already had a 1,000-year heritage of advanced civilization,
which spanned two major empires. During the 7th-14th centuries,
the Buddhist kingdom of Srivijaya flourished on Sumatra. At its
peak, the Indianized Srivijaya Empire reached as far as West
Java and the Malay Peninsula. By the 14th century also, the
Hindu Kingdom of Majapahit had risen in eastern Java. Gadjah
Mada, the chief minister who virtually ruled the empire from
1331-64, succeeded in gaining allegiance from most of what is
now modern Indonesia and much of the Malay archipelago as well.
Legacies from Gadjah Mada's time include a codification of law
and an epic poem.
</p>
<p> Islam arrived in Indonesia in the 12th century and had almost
wholly supplanted Hinduism by the end of the 16th century in
Java and Sumatra. Bali, however, retains its Hindu heritage to
this day. In the eastern archipelago, both Christian and Islamic
proselytizing took place in the 16th and 17th centuries and,
currently, there are large communities of both religions on
these islands. The Islamization of Indonesia was, in general, a
process of gradual assimilation rather than violent conquest.
</p>
<p> Beginning in 1602 the Dutch, exploiting the weakness of the
fragmented small kingdoms that were the heirs of Majapahit,
slowly established themselves as rulers of all the islands of
present-day Indonesia, except the eastern half of the island of
Timor, which Portuguese authorities occupied until 1975. During
their 300-year rule (interrupted only by a brief British
interregnum during the Napoleonic period), the Dutch developed
the Netherlands East Indies into one of the world's richest
colonial possessions.
</p>
<p> The Indonesian independence movement began during the first
decade of the 20th century and expanded rapidly between the two
World Wars. Its leaders came from a small group of young
professional men and students, some of whom had been educated in
the Netherlands. Many were imprisoned for their political
activities, including Indonesia's first president, Sukarno.
</p>
<p> The Japanese occupied Indonesia for 3 years during World War
II and, for their own purposes, encouraged a nationalist
movement. Many Indonesians took up positions in the civil
administration, which had been closed to all but token ruling
nobles under the Dutch. On August 17, 1945, 3 days after the
Japanese surrender, a small group of Indonesians, led by
Sukarno, proclaimed independence and established the Republic of
Indonesia. Dutch efforts to reestablish complete control met
strong resistance from the new republic. After 4 years of
warfare and negotiations, the Dutch transferred sovereignty to a
federal Indonesian entity in 1949. U.S. diplomatic efforts were
instrumental in helping Indonesia to achieve independence. In
1950, Indonesia became the 60th member of the United Nations.
</p>
<p> At the time of independence, the Dutch retained control over
the western half of New Guinea, known as West Irian.
Negotiations with the Dutch on the incorporation of West Irian
into Indonesia failed, and armed clashes broke out between
Indonesian and Dutch troops in 1961. In August 1962, the two
sides reached an agreement, and Indonesia assumed
administrative responsibility for West Irian on May 1, 1963. An
Act of Free Choice, held in West Irian under UN supervision in
1969, confirmed the transfer of sovereignty to Indonesia.
</p>
<p> For more than four centuries, until 1975, East Timor was a
Portuguese colony. As a result of political events in Portugal,
Portuguese authorities abruptly withdrew from Timor in 1975,
exacerbating power struggles among several Timorese political
factions. An avowedly Marxist faction called "Fretilin" achieved
military superiority. Fretilin's ascent in an area contiguous
to Indonesian territory alarmed the Indonesian Government, which
regarded it as a threatening movement. Following appeals from
some of Fretilin's Timorese opponents, Indonesian military
forces intervened in East Timor and overcame Fretilin's regular
forces. Indonesia declared East Timor its 27th province in 1976.
</p>
<p> Shortly after hostilities with the Dutch ended in 1949,
Indonesia adopted a new constitution providing for a
parliamentary system of government in which the executive was
chosen by and made responsible to parliament. Parliament was
divided among many political parties before and after the
country's first nationwide election in 1955, and stable
governmental coalitions were difficult to attain. Unsuccessful
rebellions in Sumatra, Sulawesi, and other islands beginning in
1958 and a long succession of short-lived national governments
discredited the parliamentary system so that President Sukarno
met little opposition when, in 1959, he reinstated by decree
the 1945 constitution, which provided for broad presidential
authority.
</p>
<p> During the early 1960s, President Sukarno moved rapidly to
impose an authoritarian regime under the label of "Guided
Democracy." Concurrently, he pushed Indonesia's foreign policy
toward what became, after the 1955 meeting in the Indonesian
city of Bandung, the Nonaligned Movement. He closely worked
with Asian communist states and increasingly favored the
Indonesian Communist Party (PKI) in domestic affairs.
</p>
<p> By 1965, the PKI controlled many of the mass organizations
that Sukarno had established to mobilize support for his regime
and, with Sukarno's acquiescence, embarked on a campaign to
establish a "fifth armed force" to arm its supporters. Army
leaders resisted this campaign. On October 1, 1965, PKI
sympathizers within the military, including elements from
Sukarno's palace guards, occupied key locations in Jakarta and
kidnapped and murdered six senior generals.
</p>
<p> The army liquidated the plotters within a few days, but
unsettled conditions persisted through 1966. Violence swept
throughout Indonesia. Rightist gangs killed tens of thousands,
perhaps more than 100,000 alleged communists in rural areas. The
violence was especially brutal in Java and Bali. The emotions
created by this crisis persist today.
</p>
<p> After the failed coup, President Sukarno vainly attempted to
restore his political position and shift the country back to its
pre-October 1965 position. Although he remained president, in
March 1966, Sukarno had to transfer key political and military
powers to Gen. Soeharto, the officer who had rallied the
military to defeat the coup attempt. In March 1967, the People's
Consultative Assembly (MPR) named Gen. Soeharto acting
president. Sukarno ceased to be a political force and lived
quietly until his death in 1970.
</p>
<p> President Soeharto proclaimed a "New Order" in Indonesian
politics and dramatically shifted foreign and domestic policies
away from the course of the final years of Sukarno's government.
The New Order set economic rehabilitation and development as its
primary goals and pursued its policies through an administrative
structure dominated by the military but with advice from
Western-educated economic experts.
</p>
<p> In 1968, the MPR formally elected Soeharto to a full-year
term as president, and he was reelected to additional 5-year
terms in 1973, 1978, 1983, and 1988. Parliamentary elections
held in 1987 gave a 73% majority to Golkar, a federation of
groups--civil servants, youth, labor, farmers, and women--which, in effect, operates as a government political party.
</p>
<p>Current Political Conditions
</p>
<p> Indonesia is a republic based on the 1945 constitution
providing for a limited separation of executive, legislative,
and judicial power. The president, elected for a 5-year term, is
the overwhelmingly dominant government and political figure.
</p>
<p> The president appoints the cabinet, currently composed of
three coordinating ministers (in the fields of political and
security affairs, economic affairs, and people's welfare), 8
state ministers, 20 ministers, and 6 junior ministers, and 3
high-ranking nonministerial figures.
</p>
<p> Although constitutionally the judiciary is a separate branch
of government, in practice, judges are employees of, and
beholden to, the executive branch.
</p>
<p> Legislative authority is divided between the House of
Representatives (DPR) and the People's Consultative Assembly
(MPR), both renewed every 5 years. The House, with 400 elected
and 100 appointed members, performs legislative functions,
although not in the manner of similar bodies in Western
democratic systems. The MPR, consisting of the House plus an
equal number of appointed members, meets only once in its
5-year term, to formulate the overall principles and aims of
the government and to elect the president and vice president.
Representative bodies at all levels in Indonesia shun voting,
preferring to arrive at decisions through "consultation and
consensus."
</p>
<p> The party system reflects the Soeharto government's
determination to shift the political focus from Indonesia's deep
ethnic and religious differences, which caused the collapse of
an earlier experiment in parliamentary democracy, to an
authoritarian, program-based, development-oriented politics. In
1973, a large number of disparate parties, some representing
ethnic and religious constituencies, were amalgamated into two
new organization--the United Development Party (PPP),
composed of various Muslim groups; and the Indonesian Democracy
Party (PDI), composed of Christian, socialist, and nationalist
elements. Appointed parliamentary members from the military and
the government Golkar organization dominate the House and the
MPR.
</p>
<p> The armed forces have shaped and staffed Soeharto's New Order
since it came to power in the wake of the abortive 1965
uprising. Military officers, especially from the army, have
been key advisers to Soeharto and have great influence on
policy. Under the dwi fungsi (dual function) concept, military
officers serve in the civilian bureaucracy at all government
levels.
</p>
<p> Indonesia is divided into 27 provinces and subdivided into
246 districts and 55 municipalities. The governors of provinces
are appointed by the president from nominees submitted by the
provincial legislatures. The executive branch also may reject
all of a provincial legislature's nominees and request it to
submit a new list of candidates.
</p>
<p>Source: U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Public Affairs,
April 1989.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>