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Tri Rismaharini, mayoral candidate and current mayor of Indonesia’s second largest city, Surabaya, c

Indonesians vote in regional elections


AFP/Jakarta

Tens of millions of Indonesians were voting yesterday in the country’s first nationwide regional elections, the latest step in years-long efforts to strengthen democracy following the end of authoritarian rule.
About 100mn voters are eligible to elect 269 provincial governors, district heads and city mayors, with polls taking place in around half the local administrations of the world’s third-biggest democracy.
Direct elections for local leaders were introduced a decade ago, when power was heavily decentralised as democratic reforms were rolled out in the years after the 1998 downfall of dictator Suharto.
President Joko Widodo rose to power thanks to the system, starting his political career as a city mayor. Local leader polls were abolished last year after a parliament vote pushed by Widodo’s rivals, but reinstated several months later following an outcry.
Never before have so many been held at the same time, however, with local polls in the past taking place across the country on a rolling basis.
By holding votes simultaneously, election officials hope to make the system more efficient and save money, and plan to eventually have local polls across the whole country at the same time.
Philips Vermonte, a political analyst at Jakarta think-tank the Centre for Strategic and International Studies, said the vote was “very significant”, as it marked progress in Indonesia’s democratic reforms.
“What we’ve been learning so far in the past 15 years since we started the democratic process, is that we have to reform along the way,” he said.  
Analysts say the votes have been focused solely on local issues. But Vermonte said when they happen simultaneously across the country in future, people may begin to treat them as more of a referendum on how national parties
are doing, like US midterms.
Elections are an enormous undertaking in the archipelago, with officials struggling to get ballots to voters in a country that stretches over three time zones from the jungle-clad island of Sumatra in the west, to mountainous Papua in the east.  
Cheating is a worry at any election in corruption-riddled Indonesia, as is security, with about 200,000 police and military personnel deployed for the vote.  
Complete results are not
expected for several days.
The elections were taking place in nine provinces, 224 districts and 36 cities, including Surabaya, the country’s second-largest city where popular mayor Tri Rismaharini is seeking a second term.
Vice President Jusuf Kalla said he hoped the elections would further cement Indonesia’s democratic reputation, after a successful presidential poll over a year ago.


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