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Students to demand President Jokowi remain neutral ahead of poll

Just a week out from the poll, up to 2,000 students from several universities are expected to join a rally in the center of the capital Jakarta, calling for President Joko "Jokowi" Widodo to remain neutral in the hotly contested race.

Reuters
Jakarta
Wed, February 7, 2024

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Students to demand President Jokowi remain neutral ahead of poll A woman sits near flags and posters promoting the presidential and legislative candidates for the upcoming general election, in Jakarta, February 6, 2024. (Reuters/WILLY KURNIAWAN)
Indonesia Decides

Hundreds of students were set to protest on Wednesday against outgoing President Joko Widodo's perceived interference in the Feb. 14 election to replace the leader of the world's third-largest democracy, an organizer said.

Just a week out from the poll, up to 2,000 students from several universities are expected to join a rally in the center of the capital Jakarta, calling for President Joko "Jokowi" Widodo to remain neutral in the hotly contested race.

Although he has not explicitly endorsed any candidate, Jokowi has made highly publicized appearances with frontrunner Prabowo Subianto whose running mate is the president's eldest son, Gibran Rakabuming Raka.

Jokowi has faced mounting allegations of ethical breaches and meddling in the election, especially after a top court tweaked eligibility rules in October, allowing Gibran to run.

"We want to make the public aware that Joko Widodo is the main actor behind the unfair election," said student activist and protest organizer Tegar Afriansyah, adding he hoped similar protests would be held across the country.

"We are done with the president's intervention in the 2024 election especially to help a human rights criminal win the election," he said. He was referring to allegations of past human rights abuses made against ex-special forces commander Prabowo, who has denied them.

Read also: More universities throw their weight behind calls for fair election

Jokowi sought to reassure citizens on Wednesday, saying he would not join any campaign events in the run-up to voting day.

"By law, the president is allowed to join any campaign. But if the question is whether or not I'll campaign, the answer is, I will not campaign," he said.

Students can be a formidable political force in Indonesia. Among Wednesday's protesters are activists from Jakarta's Trisakti University, where in 1998 four students were shot dead and dozens were injured, triggering riots and national scale protests that ultimately brought down former authoritarian leader Soeharto.

The rally comes after academics from dozens of universities last week held a press conference to raise concerns over Indonesia's democratic decline and urge Jokowi and state officials to remain neutral in the run-up to the election.

Prabowo maintains a solid lead over rivals, ex-Jakarta governor Anies Baswedan and ex-Central Java governor Ganjar Pranowo, according to latest opinion surveys.

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