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To: allen v.w. who wrote (22312)7/25/1999 3:22:00 PM
From: allen v.w.  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 40688
 
Jakarta Post
25 July 1999

Timely analysis of Indonesian affairs

Reformasi, Crisis and Change in Indonesia Edited by Arief Budiman, Barbara
Hatley and Damien Kingsbury published by Monash Asia Institute, Melbourne,
1999 402 pages AU$24.95

MELBOURNE (JP): As a trading partner, Australia's interest in Indonesia has
not only been limited to the country's ability to generate profit. Australia
is also increasingly becoming a center for open and erudite fora on
Indonesian affairs. The perspectives of these fora go beyond mere trade and
pecuniary profitability, neither are the forms limited to seminars or
conferences. An important book recently published by Monash Asia Institute is
indeed a written form of an extensive and intensive forum on Indonesia.

Most of the chapters in Reformasi, Crisis and Change in Indonesia was
prepared and written between two landmark events, Soeharto's resignation in
May 1998 and Indonesia's first free and fair legislative elections in June
1999. The period itself was saturated with history, and it would have filled
a thick volume for that reason alone. The fact that these chapters were
written just before the June 7 elections makes them more interesting, for
readers can gradually match the theories and predictions with events now
unraveling before them.

Arief Budiman, Barbara Hatley and Damien Kingsbury have thus gathered and
edited writings which explore the political, social and intellectual realms
of events, that might, intentionally or inadvertently, shape the series of
occurrence, separately as well as collectively.

In section one, which discusses the economic crisis, Mark McGillivray and
Oliver Morrissey's chapter takes us several steps back to find the causes of
the economic and financial meltdown in Indonesia. McGillivray and Morrissey
question the World Bank's assertion that precrisis economic growth in
Southeast Asia was a miracle, and offer arguments and figures to counter the
assertion. As for lessons to be learned from the onset of the crisis,
particularly in Indonesia, McGillivray and Morrissey point to over-
borrowing, corruption and nepotism. Inevitably the bubble, built on debt and
implicitly underwritten by the government, burst and the country was
immediately overwhelmed by political and economic turmoil.

Adding to this dimension, Muhammad Chatib Basri says there was a need for a
radical departure from the past, since democratic institutions for good
governance, which were so far lacking, were essential for credible economic
policies.

Section two discusses the events, predictions and actors of the political
crisis, covering a vast area of historical movements and future challenges.
Here, Arief Budiman cautiously agreed with Francis Fukuyama's theory that
democracy, despite backlashes, was inevitable for all countries. Budiman
suggests Indonesia's crisis had was "an economic-cum-political crisis". He
also describes the hole out of which the country must crawl. He says domestic
and overseas investments are desperately needed, but to gain investors'
confidence, a credible and legitimate government needs to be in place.
Interestingly, at the time he wrote this, Budiman believed a fair general
election would very likely end President Habibie's rule. We are obviously
still witnessing history in the making.

Gerry van Klinken looks at ways of striking a democratic deal. He theorizes
that ruling hard-liners could have offered opposition reformists a trade-off
by promising their own reformation into a much more modest, accountable
political force, and asking the reformists to share power until elections
were held. The way van Klinken reads the situation, the Ciganjur statement
indicated opposition reformists would be open to such a deal, but he doubts
the inclination of radical oppositionists to accept it.

Ken Young reminds the reader of the complexity of the reform issue, and what
the word means to different people. In brief, Young identifies three themes
which in late-1998 underlaid the demands for reform. In political terms, the
themes were the demand for greater democracy, honesty and accountability in
public life, and policies which secured people's welfare. Young introduces
some optimism in his chapter by saying that even if the reform movement was
able to concentrate on core reforms that did not solve all problems instantly
but succeeded in creating powerful obstacles for restorationists, the course
of Indonesian democracy would be well on its way.

The likelihood for political change after Soeharto, the issue of
military-civilian relations since May 1998 and how the Armed Forces fell from
grace with the revelation of their involvement in the activities of
vigilantes, are respectively explored in detail by Vedi Hadiz, Harold Crouch
and David Bourchier.

The role of Islam is also elaborated on in Marcus Mietzner's chapter
"Nationalism and Islamic Politics: Political Islam in the Post-Suharto Era",
and Mohammad Fajrul Falaakh's "Islam and the Current Transition to Democracy
in Indonesia". Edward Aspinall chronicles and analyzes student activism since
1967, Max Lane discusses mass politics and political change in Indonesia, and
Th Sumartana writes about the endeavor to build cooperation between religious
groups in a time of national crisis.

Section three not only jolts the reader's mind, but also reaches the heart.
The anger, fear and bewilderment it invokes are mixed with amusement and a
sense of loss. Barbara Hatley recounts events relating to cultural expression
and social transformation, allowing the reader can see a story of bravery and
persistent creativity in the face of the state's organized repression.

This is reinforced by Halim HD's chapter on arts networks and the struggle
for democratization. The most thought-provoking and emotional piece in this
section is Ariel Heryanto's chapter, "Rape, Race and Reporting". Rita
Kolibonso is particularly enlightening as she discusses the perspective and
roles of women in the country's democratization process, which is extremely
important despite the fact that the problem of violence against women had
long been denied and pushed to the background by various authorities. Of
particular concern also is the enormous need for law reform, as detailed by
T. Mulya Lubis, Mas Achmad Santosa and Tim Lindsey.

Reformasi, Crisis and Change in Indonesia is not only worth reading, it
should be recommended reading for everyone who cares about what is happening
in Indonesia.

-- Dewi Anggraeni

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Didistribusikan tgl. 24 Jul 1999 jam 20:51:21 GMT+1
oleh: Indonesia Daily News Online <IndoNews@indo-news.com>
indo-news.com
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++



To: allen v.w. who wrote (22312)7/25/1999 4:24:00 PM
From: j7119  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 40688
 
You are right Allen its 30,000 members. When I thought about the possibility of ~10,000 member sign-up or anywhere near that number, I lost it.

Similar possibilities are in the works with the German and Egyptian COC's.

Here is a re-post of the 11/98 PR:

Shira Trading Tel Aviv, the Federation of Israeli Chambers of Commerce (FICC)and ProNetLink Sign Letter of Intent Shira Trading Ltd., Tel Aviv is pleased to announce the signing of a letter of intent with ProNetLink(OTC Bulletin Board: PNLK), the world's largest Import Export Web tool. Shira Trading intends, through an agreement with the FICC, to market and promote ProNetLink in Israel. The Federation of Israeli Chambers of Commerce has well over 30,000 company members in the Import Export fields. "We are very happy to have chosen ProNetLink. Their exclusive and well-designed Website, as well as their vision of the future, will enable us to subscribe thousands of Israeli Companies to the ProNetLink webtool. Our aim together with the Federation of Israeli Chambers of Commerce is to reach 10,000 members from Israel within a short period of time," said Uri Grebenau, President of Shira Trading Ltd.

Israeli Companies have grown over the last few years in the field of High Technology and Internet Technology. Companies such as CHECKPOINT, MIRABILIS-ICQ recently acquired by AOL, MEMCO, IMERCIA, and many others have proven their capacity to export Israeli technology throughout the world.

Many other companies will seek new trading partners on a global market basis through the capabilities given by ProNetLink.

Mr. Grebenau is also in the process of negotiating the same terms through the German Chamber of Commerce as well as the Egyptian Chamber of Commerce.

______________________________________________________________________