Selangor Journal
Indonesia’s Defence Minister and presidential candidate Prabowo Subianto greets his supporters during his campaign rally at the Gelora Delta Stadium in Sidoarjo, East Java province, in Indonesia, on February 9, 2024, — Picture via REUTERS

Huge rallies in Indonesia as candidates finish election campaign

JAKARTA, Feb 11 — Hundreds of thousands of supporters of Indonesia’s presidential contenders packed final rallies in the capital Jakarta and the Central Java city of Solo on Saturday, ahead of the world’s biggest single-day election.

Candidates enter a cooling-off period on Sunday, running through election day on Wednesday, when voters will choose among three contestants running to succeed the hugely popular President Joko Widodo, who has led Indonesia for a decade and cannot run again.

The contenders to lead the world’s third-largest democracy are popular ex-governors Ganjar Pranowo and Anies Baswedan, and former special forces commander Prabowo Subianto, who has soared in opinion polls with the tacit backing of the president, and with the incumbent’s son, Gibran Rakabuming Raka, as his running mate.

At stake is the leadership for the next five years of a mineral-rich Group of 20 economy of 270 million people positioning itself as a future destination for multinational firms in the electric vehicle supply chain.

A light-blue wave took over Jakarta’s main sports complex as hundreds of thousands of Prabowo’s supporters gathered, many wearing T-shirts in his signature colour.

High-schooler Alfiatnan, 18, said she would vote for Prabowo because this was his third attempt at the presidency. “I think there’s no harm giving opportunity to someone who is

Supporters at Anies’ rally in the capital filled an 82,000-capacity stadium, chanting Islamic prayers. Some stayed overnight to secure a spot to see the former Jakarta governor.

“I arrived here yesterday on purpose because if I had come today, I’m afraid I couldn’t have gotten inside,” said Ida Zubaedah, 50.

“I need to be inside because I want to see Anies.”

Anies fired up the crowd, urging them to “fight with conscience” any intimidation before or on voting day.

“Hearing that in the next few days there will be operations, intimidation, opinions being led so that voting will be done in one round for a certain candidate, I believe Indonesian people… will show they are the ones who determine their future,” he said, without naming anyone or presenting any evidence.

Responding to Anies’ claim of expected intimidation, Prabowo’s vice presidential candidate Gibran asked in a campaign appearance for his rival to bring proof.

A spokesperson for Jokowi, as the president is popularly known, did not respond to a request for comment. His administration has ordered civil servants and law enforcement officers to remain neutral.

In Solo, Ganjar rode a cart filled with produce pulled by oxen, underscoring his man-of-the-people style, greeting thousands of supporters braving the rain.

Ganjar, Central Java’s former governor, called on people to vote for him to show “true resistance” against the use of state resources during campaigning, without naming any of his rivals.

At another rally in Central Java, Ganjar’s running mate, Mahfud MD, said Indonesian democracy was “in crisis” and “heading into darkness” because corruption was rising, law had been misused and “the constitution has been played.”

— Reuters

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