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A short listing of Chusnul Mar'iyah's NGO
involvements would include the Indonesian Women's Coalition for Justice
and Democracy (Koalisi Perempuan Indonesia untuk Keadilan dan
Demokrasi); the National Commission on Violence Against Women (which
took up the cause of the Chinese women raped during the 'constructed
chaos' before Suharto fell); the Selendang Lila Foundation (for women);
Movement to Promote Women's Political Awareness (Gerakan Perempuan
Sadar Politik), funded by the UN Development Program; the Indonesian
Institute for Democratic Education (funding from USAID and the
Friedrich Neumann Stiftung); and Women's Coalition for Peace and Justice(Perempuan
Peka untuk Perdamaian dan Keadilan). The latter was a force in
organising the path-breaking Women's Congress held in Banda Aceh from
19-22 February this year. Here several Acehnese women (and even some
Javanese, including Chusnul) emerged as players in the peace process
for the first time.
In addition to her not insubstantial
teaching commitments and almost daily NGO activity, Chusnul maintains a
punishing media regime. ('We need a marathon mentality,' she says.)
Apart from regular TV appearances on such booming background and talk
shows as Nol Kilometer (RCTI) and Bincang-Bincang (Interview, on ANTV) and Cuma Dua Jam (Only
Two Hours, on TVRI), she makes endless radio appearances, especially
with Jakarta's Trijaya FM, for whom she filled a slot daily for seven
weeks in the run up to the June elections last year. The daily (or more
frequent) radio stint is often performed on the mobile phone in the
taxi to the new and rather distant (Suharto's idea) Depok campus of the
University of Indonesia.
This media pace has led her to become one of the more quoted Indonesian experts in western media, including Time, Far Eastern Economic Review, Sydney Morning Herald, Radio Australia and the ABC. She is also much profiled domestically, including by Kompas, Prada and several other women's magazines, and the Women and Work program on TVIndosia.
Peter King
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