The poor must come first
As the annual supreme legislative body
(MPR) got underway in Jakarta early November, costing US$1.5 million,
8,000 informal workers, garbage collectors and transport drivers were
evicted from their tiny shacks in a dozen locations across Jakarta. In
the dark and the rain, their dwellings were burnt the ground. The
following week the inter-governmental Consultative Group on Indonesia
approved US$3.1 billion in new loans for Indonesia, bringing the public
debt burden to a total US$74.2 billion. (Of this US$8.7 billion had to
be repaid between September and December alone).
If within Indonesia the poor seemed hardly
to matter, outside it the terrorist attack of 11 September gave narrow
minds the excuse to narrow them more (as reflected in some of our
readers' letters...). In Australia, 11 September strengthened an
anti-refugee mood that eventually came to dominate the federal
election. In America, it boosted conservative agendas that prioritised
military strength over justice for the poor.
Yet the most basic fact about Indonesia is
not whether it is harbouring terrorists, or Afghan refugees. It is -
still! - that it is a very poor country. We dedicate this edition of Inside Indonesia to the poor, and to those enquiring minds (also found among our readers' letters) who want to learn about them.
Four years after the economic crisis hit,
its harmful impact is still felt in millions of homes around Indonesia.
Though poverty levels are notoriously difficult to determine, several
estimates predict Indonesia will not recover to pre-crisis levels till
2005. The government, meanwhile, is burdened with a debt to rich
creditors so mountainous it can simply never be repaid.
Until the world has solved these basic problems, that is where we should begin.
Gerry van Klinken
Editor
Inside Indonesia 90: Oct-Dec 2007
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