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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>
-
-