Indonesia declares late dictator Suharto ‘national hero’ despite protests
Critics say move reflects attempts to whitewash military dictator’s legacy

Indonesia on Monday awarded the title of national hero to late leader Suharto, who was ousted in 1998 by violent protests that ended three decades of rule plagued by accusations of mass human rights violations, corruption and nepotism.
The title was conferred in a ceremony overseen by president Prabowo Subianto, Suharto’s former son-in-law, despite protests by pro-democracy activists and the families of Indonesians affected by the military dictator’s iron-fisted rule.
Mr Prabowo took office one year ago.
“A prominent figure from Central Java, a hero of the struggle for independence, General Suharto stood out since the independence era,” an announcer said as Mr Prabowo handed the award to Suharto’s daughter and son.
Indonesia suffered centuries of colonial rule by the Dutch and, briefly during the Second World War, the Japanese before gaining independence in 1945.
Every year, the title of national hero is awarded to Indonesians who are considered to have contributed significantly to the Southeast Asian nation’s development.
Suharto, who died in 2008, was one of 10 people to get the title on Monday.
Suharto, a military officer, formally became president in 1967 after seizing control of Indonesia from the country’s first president and independence leader Sukarno.
He steered Indonesia through three decades of rapid economic growth and stability, only to see much of his work unravel as the nation was plunged into chaos during the Asian financial crisis in 1997-98.
On Monday morning, ahead of the ceremony, a Reuters reporter saw Suharto’s portrait among a display of framed pictures of 10 people chosen for the title at Jakarta’s state palace.

Suharto was wearing his military uniform in the portrait, placed between a picture of former president Abdurrahman Wahid and labour activist Marsinah, who was kidnapped and murdered during Suharto’s rule.
“The government has decided. I cannot... that is not my right. I am only here for Marsinah,” said the activist’s sister, Marsini, on being asked by journalists about Marsinah getting the award alongside Suharto.
Presidential spokesperson Prasetyo Hadi urged all Indonesians on Monday to “look forward together” when asked about Marsinah, adding that the newly minted heroes had shortcomings, too.
‘Struggles disregarded’
Activists gathered last week in Jakarta to protest against the proposal to grant the title, reflecting wider concerns about historical revisionism in the country.
Among them was Tadius Priyo Utomo, 47, an Indonesian living in East Timor for the past 19 years, who was one of tens of thousands of students who protested across the country against Suharto in 1998.
“Our past struggles will be disregarded...we are the traitors to the country because we fought Suharto and he is now a hero,” Utomo told Reuters at a protest last week in Jakarta, to which he flew from Dili, the capital of East Timor, especially to attend.

Under Suharto, Indonesia invaded East Timor in 1975 at the end of Portuguese rule and annexed the territory later that year, maintaining a heavy and sometimes harsh military presence. East Timor only won independence after Suharto was forced to step down.
Suharto, a former soldier, used the military to dominate civilian affairs and crush dissent. He was also accused of massive corruption and nepotism benefiting his family and cronies, although no charge was proven, and he never went on trial due to his failing health.
Utomo said the current government was composed of people favoured by Suharto. For others, the move is also a red flag for things to come under Prabowo, who was a special forces commander under Suharto, aside from being married to his daughter before the two were divorced after Suharto’s ouster. Prabowo has also been accused of human rights violations in East Timor by troops under his command, although he has denied the charges.
“Prabowo can do everything that President Suharto did because he is protected by his heroism,” said Marzuki Darusman, a former attorney general who was also the head of the 1998 riots fact-finding team. Marzuki specifically pointed to the expanded role for the military that has already taken place since Prabowo took office last year.

“We don’t need to defend it ourselves...nothing is being hidden,” Siti Hardijanti Rukmana, Suharto’s daughter, told journalists after the ceremony.
“We have expressed our gratitude to the president for appointing our father as the national hero, and maybe because he is also a soldier so he knows what my father had done.”
Whitewashing history
Even after his death, Suharto’s party, Golkar, remains a major political force which backs Prabowo in his current presidency and holds key ministries in his cabinet. Political analyst Kevin O’Rourke, author of the book Reformasi: The Struggle for Power in Post-Soeharto Indonesia, said naming Suharto a national hero could whitewash history and be an attempt to restore some authoritarianism, although it would not be easy.
“It’s quite hard to put democracy back in the box when people are used to it,” he said. Half of Indonesia’s population would not have been born or be old enough to remember Suharto’s rule, according to official statistics.
But many still remember the hardships. A group of people, known as the Aksi Kamisan, has held silent vigils outside the presidential palace in Jakarta every Thursday for nearly 20 years, dressing in black and demanding justice for excesses endured under Suharto.
Many of them say they still do not know the whereabouts of loved ones who went missing under his rule. Culture minister Fadli Zon said the government had conducted research and all candidates, including Suharto, had met the requirements, adding the former leader’s role in mass killings in 1965 that ultimately spelled the end of Sukarno’s rule was never proven.
Historians say about 500,000 people were killed. Indonesia has never investigated the killings.
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