Australia’s Gillard unlikely to shift foreign policy

(Reuters) – Australia’s foreign policy and strategic reliance upon the United States will be unlikely to change after Julia Gillard replaced Kevin Rudd as prime minister, analysts said on Friday.

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Gillard was sworn in as Australia’s first female prime minister on Thursday after the ruling Labor Party dumped Rudd due to falling opinion poll support ahead of elections due before the end of the year.

She spoke to U.S. President Barack Obama and Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono on Friday, and told reporters she remained committed to the 60-year Australia-U.S. strategic alliance and would maintain Australian forces in Afghanistan.

“Nothing will change. I can’t see that she will make any changes to foreign policy,” Michael McKinley, from the Australian National University’s school of international relations, told Reuters on Friday.

“She has reassured the Americans that Australia will be as obsequious as we have been in the past. And I can’t see her changing our commitment in Afghanistan, or to the U.S. alliance.”

Rudd, a Mandarin-speaking former diplomat, kept tight control over the foreign affairs portfolio. Gillard, however, is likely to focus more on domestic issues as she tries to rebuild voter support ahead of national polls expected around October.

That means Gillard could retain Stephen Smith as foreign minister when she announces her cabinet, although there is strong speculation she could give Rudd the foreign affairs portfolio as a consolation for losing the prime ministership.

“If Rudd wants it, he would get it,” McKinley said, adding Rudd might prefer not to join the Gillard cabinet until after an election.

Andrew O’Neil, director of the Asia Institute at Griffith University, said it would be difficult to see any changes in Australia’s key relationships under Gillard because the Labor Party was committed to a strong regional focus.

“But it is equally hard to see how she will be able to match Rudd’s natural affinity with, and genuine knowledge of, Asian affairs,” O’Neil wrote on the website of foreign affairs think tank the Lowy Institute on Friday.

“The fall of Kevin Rudd also robs President Barack Obama of one of his key political allies on Afghanistan, climate change, and global economic reform. The two have struck up a close working relationship — an ideal fit as two like-minded policy wonks — and Obama will probably miss Rudd’s close counsel on these, and other, issues,” he said.

Foreign policy analyst Graeme Dobell, in a column for the Lowy Institute, said Gillard would make little difference to the key U.S. relationship.

“Australia has its first left-wing Labor prime minister in a lifetime, but one thing that will not change is Labor’s adherence to the U.S. alliance,” Dobell said on the institute’s website (www.lowyinterpreter.org/).

Oil spill forces Obama to postpone foreign travel

(Reuters) – With the worst oil spill in U.S. history presenting a key test of his presidency, President Barack Obama postponed a trip scheduled for this month to Australia and Indonesia, the White House said early on Friday.

Politics | Indonesia | Barack Obama

It was the second time in a little more than two months that Obama canceled a trip to the two countries. He previously was due to have gone in March but postponed to stay at home to give a final push to his healthcare overhaul plan in Congress.

White House spokesman Robert Gibbs told Reuters in an email that Obama postponed the trip again in order to deal with the Gulf of Mexico oil spill and other important issues.

The president is due to travel to the Louisiana Gulf coast to visit affected communities on Friday, his third trip there since an April 20 offshore oil rig explosion that killed 11 workers and triggered the huge spill.

After a series of failed attempts to plug the gushing mile-deep BP-owned oil well, the Obama administration has come under growing pressure to take a more direct role in the oil spill crisis. Opinion polls show many Americans are unhappy with Obama’s handling of the disaster so far.

In an already difficult congressional election year for Obama’s fellow Democrats, a foreign trip in the midst of what the president himself has called an unprecedented environmental catastrophe would have been hard to sell to Americans frustrated and angered by the six-week-old crisis.

The White House said in a statement that Obama had spoken on Thursday night to Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd and Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono to inform them of his decision. The trip had been scheduled for June 13-19.

“President Obama underscored his commitment to our close alliance with Australia and our deepening partnership with Indonesia. He plans to hold full bilateral meetings with Prime Minister Rudd and President Yudhoyono on the margins of the G-20 meeting in Canada,” the White House said in a statement.

RARE CANCELLATION

The rare double cancellation of a presidential trip abroad underscored how Obama’s challenges at home have begun complicating his activity overseas.

The trip would have been his first major foreign travel this year and was aimed at deepening U.S. ties in the Asia-Pacific region in the face of rising Chinese influence.

Indonesia is the world’s most populous Muslim nation and where he spent four years as a child. Australia is a stalwart U.S. friend in the Pacific and key military ally in Afghanistan.

There was no immediate response from the two countries to the White House announcement.

Cleaning up the biggest oil spill in U.S. history and capping the well has become Obama’s top priority, complicating his efforts to keep the focus on job creation in an economy in which unemployment is still close to 10 percent nationwide.

The White House announcement on the trip came shortly after BP managed to lower a containment cap onto its ruptured deep-sea wellhead to siphon off some of the billowing oil. U.S. authorities called it a positive development.

Obama said in an interview with CNN’s Larry King broadcast on Thursday night that he was furious at the situation in the Gulf of Mexico and again vowed to hold BP accountable.

“It’s imperiling not just a handful of people,” he said of the oil spill. “This is imperiling an entire way of life and an entire region for potentially years.”

From the beginning of the crisis, the Obama administration has sought to show that it is control, but it has struggled to shake off a public perception that it has been too reliant on BP for solutions and too slow to bring the full force of the federal government to bear on the crisis.

Obama said on Thursday that his administration had mobilized scientists, hundreds of ships and thousands of military personnel to deal with the disaster.

Analysts say Obama’s fellow Democrats risk being punished in November congressional elections that are already expected to erode their majorities in both the Senate and the House of Representatives.

(Reporting by Ross Colvin; Editing by Will Dunham)

Indonesia’s commissions: do they help or hinder reform?

When Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono formed a special taskforce to root out graft in the judiciary, many hoped a parliamentary commission tasked with overseeing legal matters would be a help, not a hindrance.

Indonesia’s 11 parliamentary commissions — each made up of around 50 lawmakers — are responsible for portfolios ranging from energy and finance to law enforcement and foreign affairs, and are often influential in government policy.

But criticism abounds that the commissions merely adds another layer of bureaucracy — and opportunity for graft — to a system already tangled in red tape and corruption.

“The main problem of corruption in Indonesia is within the political parties, so it is hard to have any hope the commissions will do something to address corruption — even if there are some individuals who want to try,” said Adnan Topan Husodo of Indonesia Corruption Watch.

A case in point is commission number 3, tasked with overseeing the legal system that Yudhoyono has vowed to clean up during his second term — reform seen as vital if Indonesia is to continue to attract the sort of investment that made it Southeast Asia’s most attractive investment destination last year.

The head of the commission, Benny Kabur Harman of Yudhoyono’s own Democrat Party, dismayed many when he said he thought the government should pare back wiretapping powers of the ant-graft watchdog, the KPK, a move likely to neutralise one of its most effective weapons.

Harman also caused a surprise by saying he preferred career judges — widely seen as tainted by the corrupt system in which they have worked so long — to non-career judges, usually academics who are seen as more independent and clean.

COMPETITION FOR COMMISSION PLACES IS FIERCE

Political parties work hard to get as many members as they can on each commission to help control policy, and competition for the post of chairman is fierce.

“In theory they can and are supposed to vigorously test proposed laws, but this is politics,” said Aleksius Jemadu, a political analyst at Pelita Harapan University, adding that politicians usually put their party before the public interest.

Now, Musharraf accused of selling properties ‘gifted’ by Indonesian Prez for ‘peanuts’

Islamabad, Apr.28 (ANI): A report prepared by the Pakistan Foreign Affairs Ministry has charged former President General Pervez Musharraf and his cronies of selling government owned non-movable properties in Jakarta at the rate of peanuts.

The report said the government-owned Chancery building and the ambassador’s residence in Jakarta, which were gifted to Musharraf by former Indonesian President Soeakarno, were sold in 2002 by passing all rules and regulations.

The report indicts former Pakistani ambassador to Indonesia Major General (retired) Mustafa Anwar Hussain for the irregular sale of the ‘gifted’ properties, saying he forced the authorities to sideline normal procedures in order to avoid heavy penalties.

The report noted that the ambassador’s huge residence was sold for a mere f 2.28 million dollars.

The foreign ministry had even told Hussain that he cannot proceed with the deal without the approval of the inter-ministerial committee, and asked him to refrain from finalising the agreement.

However, he went ahead with the sale, claiming he had acted in line with “a directive by the chief executive on the sale of both properties,” The Daily Times reports.

Quoting the then defence attaché Colonel. Khalid Mehmood, the report says that Hussain and one of his close friends had extracted massive kickbacks in the sale of the properties in Jakarta. (ANI)

Six held over links to embassy attack

Indonesian police have detained six suspected terrorists on Sumatra island, including people who allegedly took part in the 2004 truck bombing of the Australian embassy in Jakarta.

The swoop was a prelude to two raids in Aceh province on Monday in which police killed one suspected terrorist and arrested four others.

The man killed by police during a raid on a house in Aceh Besar district was identified as Enaltao, 38, who was suspected of assisting Indonesians in military training in the southern Philippines.

National police spokesman Edward Aritong said the six men arrested at a road block on Sumatra were part of a new terrorist group that was disrupted in February when police found a training camp in Aceh.

He says two of those suspects, identified as Ibrahim and Lutfi, had been arrested earlier for their roles in the bombing of the Australian embassy, an attack which killed 10 people.

Mr Aritong described Ibrahim as a “motivator” for trainee terrorists while Lutfi was a “fundraiser”.

Both men are believed to be accomplices of terror leader Noordin Mohammed Top, who was killed by police last September.

They had reportedly served time in prison and been released.

Mr Aritong says another suspect, Bayu Sena, was involved in the making of bombs intended for an attack on Indonesian president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono last year.

The assassination plan was uncovered during investigations into twin suicide attacks on luxury hotels in Jakarta last July which killed seven people.

A fourth detainee, Pandu Wicaksono, was wanted for harbouring Noordin, whose network, dubbed Al Qaeda in the Malay Archipelago, carried out the embassy attack and the Jakarta hotel bombings.

Mixed signals on asylum seeker stand-off

There are mixed signals coming out of Indonesia over whether the stand-off between the country’s government and a boatload of Sri Lankan asylum seekers has been resolved.

For the past six months the asylum seekers, mostly Tamils, have steadfastly refused to leave the Indonesian port of Merak until they are given a new country to live in.

The head of Indonesia’s diplomatic security, Sujatmiko, told the ABC all 181 asylum seekers on board the boat have now gone ashore after accepting an offer of temporary accommodation.

But the asylum seekers maintain they were told they had five days to consider their options.

Sujatmiko describes it as an embarrassing situation but he believes it has been resolved.

He says with help from United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) officials, he convinced the asylum seekers to accept an offer of temporary accommodation.

He would not say if that meant a detention centre.

“We convinced them we are using a very nice approach, even sometimes I make a joke, and I think this perhaps makes them happy,” he said.

“So I invited 10 people – five women, five men – to talk with us. We explained everything, interpreted in Tamil. Then we asked those 10 people to go – [the] majority of them – I gave 20 minutes and they came back and said okay.”

The Sri Lankans were intercepted en route to Australia after Prime Minister Kevin Rudd made a phone call to Indonesian president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono.

Sujatmiko says the asylum seekers will be taken by bus to temporary accommodation some time this week.

“We are going to combine them in the same accommodation. We have to finish the process then we can disclose [the location] to you,” he said.

“Even in Australia, this kind of people will be put in detention centres… for the Australian Government these are illegal people, illegal migrants and the place for them is actually jail.

“But we are not going to do that… I think as long as they are cooperating we will continue to assist them in the process, as well as the settlement process.”

But one asylum seeker on board the boat, Nimal, says he is confused. He says none of the officials could tell them exactly where they would be going and he thought they had five days to decide.

“They didn’t tell us anything. That is what I’m saying. We didn’t get a clear message from them. They didn’t ask any questions,” he said.

While confusion reigns, Sujatmiko says he is disappointed with the Australian response.

He says he told the Australian ambassador in Jakarta that he would need help talking to the asylum seekers, but no-one from the Australian embassy showed up.

“I advised the Australian embassy to send one or two officials to get a grasp, but until this morning nobody was coming from the embassy of Australia,” he said.

“So we thought that we would very much appreciate if Australia was involved in this process because this is not only an Indonesian problem. I think I’ll leave it to the public to interpret.”

The Australian embassy in Jakarta declined to comment.

MP Slipper angry over ‘snooze’ photo

A Federal Liberal backbencher has complained that another MP has breached parliamentary privilege by taking a photo of him in the parliamentary chamber.

The picture showed the Member for Fisher, Peter Slipper, apparently asleep during the Indonesian president’s speech last week.

Mr Slipper says another MP took the picture and emailed it anonymously to the Sunshine Coast Daily newspaper, which published it.

He has asked for the matter to be referred to the privileges committee.

He says he was sitting adjacent to the chief Opposition whip, Alex Somlyay, and points out the photo was taken by someone in that position.

“It is clear to me Mr Speaker that a close examination of the photograph in the Sunshine Coast daily makes it clear it was taken from very close to where I was sitting from my right from the same level on which I was sitting and that there were no other persons between me and the photographer,” he said.

“I also seek a forensic examination of the photograph by a qualified person to ascertain formally from which seat the photograph was taken and thus to confirm the identity of the culprit.”

The House of Representatives Speaker, Harry Jenkins, says he will consider the issue.

“The taking of such a photograph would indeed be outside the guidelines for photography in the chamber and it would also be contrary to the advice that has been given to members about the use of mobile devices in the chamber,” he said.

A matter of taste: the crappuccino delicacy

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has raised a few eyebrows with his choice of a gift for the Prime Minister Kevin Rudd during the Indonesian president’s state visit to Australia.

Kopi luwak or civet coffee comes from the rear end of a small furry animal found in the jungles of Indonesia and quite a few other countries in the region.

Perhaps it’s no surprise that the Prime Minister’s aides immediately and possibly ungraciously handed the unopened packet over to AQIS, the Australian Quarantine Inspection Service for a once over.

Kopi luwak is the rarest, the most expensive and most fabled coffee in the world. Selling for prices of $1,500 a pound or more in the United States and 50 pounds a cup in London , it’s also the most counterfeited.

A few years back I went to the mountains of Sumatra to track down the source of kopi luwak for the ABC’s Foreign Correspondent program.

Yes, kopi luwak really is the poo of the common palm civet, a small weasel-like animal found across Asia and Africa.

This is what it looks like “fresh” from the forest floor.
And this is where it comes from.
Jenny was the first civet domesticated by brothers Joko Basuki and Susanto when they set up their luwak farm at a secret location in the mountains near Lampung. Sadly I had a message recently from Joe to tell me that Jenny had died, but her fellow luwaks were still hard at work consuming the luscious red coffee cherries at the front end and producing kopi luwak at the other.

Sorting the precious beans from everything else that emerges is not the world’s most glamorous job.
So what can Kevin Rudd expect from his precious gift?

This is how I described the taste for ABC online at the time:

“The aroma is smoky and pungent and even somewhat reminiscent of its immediate origin but the flavour is unique, mild and smooth with a hint of rich dark chocolate and secondary notes of earth and musk.”

Rudd, SBY sign people-smuggling framework

Australia and Indonesia have agreed to work together to do more to stop people smuggling and terrorism in the region.

Prime Minister Kevin Rudd and Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono made the pledge today after an extensive meeting on a range of topics.

Mr Yudhoyono is on a three-day visit to Australia and will address a joint sitting of Parliament this afternoon.

The agreement comes after Indonesia’s foreign minister, Marty Natalegawa, and his Australian counterpart, Stephen Smith, met yesterday to discuss its details.

Mr Rudd has announced they have agreed to have annual meetings between senior ministers of the two countries and closer co-operation on issues including education and climate change.

But the centrepiece of today’s announcement was a new agreement to try to stop the flow of asylum seekers reaching Australia.

“Our officials yesterday signed an implementation framework on people smuggling and trafficking,” Mr Rudd said.

“This will enhance and intensify our co-operation on dealing with this complex regional and global challenge.”

The two leaders have also agreed to work together to combat terrorist groups in the region.

Mr Rudd said he and Mr Yudhoyono had had a “long and intimate discussion” on the two countries’ relationship.

“For us in Australia, Indonesia is a major partner for our future in the region and the world at large,” Mr Rudd said.

Earlier, Dr Natalegawa said he did not support any policy to turn boats back from Australian waters.

“We have been working with successive Australian governments recently of different political inclinations in a very good way on people smuggling,” he said.

“I think going to this kind of approach of simply pushing back boats to where they have come from would be a backward step.

“It would not be a useful step because it would be inconsistent with that approach of having the three elements [of] origin, transit and destination countries working hand in hand.”

Dr Natalegawa says Indonesia will also enact laws to fight people-smuggling.

“The Indonesian government is determined to formally and legally criminalise people-smuggling as an activity, notwithstanding our tremendous co-operation and work on the issue in the past,” he said.

“And so it is part and parcel of that architecture in addressing the problem.”

Meanwhile, Federal Opposition Leader Tony Abbott has described his talks with the Indonesian president this morning as cordial, constructive and candid.

Mr Abbott said he discussed several issues with Mr Yudhoyono.

“We talked about the potential for deepening economic cooperation between Australia and Indonesia,” Mr Abbott said.

“We talked about the need to have strong policies against people smuggling. We also talked about the circumstances of people in Indonesian jails.”

Mr Abbott has signalled that a Coalition government would turn back asylum seeker boats making their way to Australian waters.

Redmond chases health policy detail

South Australian Opposition Leader Isobel Redmond has gone to Canberra with health policy on her mind.

She is keen to secure a meeting with Prime Minister Kevin Rudd, saying she wants a full briefing on the Federal Government’s hospital funding plan and what it would mean for South Australians.

Ms Redmond says there will be a meeting at Parliament House but she is not sure if the Prime Minister will be there.

“The Prime Minister’s office is organising it but I don’t know whether it will be with the Prime Minister,” she said.

“I do know that [Indonesian president] Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono is in town today so the Prime Minister himself might not be available.

“But the people who put the proposal together may well be available and they’re putting together a briefing together.”

The Liberal leader says she must be given detail of the federal plan for hospitals.

“The Federal Government should have offered us a briefing, they must have known we were in caretaker mode,” she said.

“No such briefing was offered and I want the people of South Australia to know that, when things like that happen, not only will I expect a briefing I’ll be on the first plane to make sure it happens.”

Federal Opposition Leader Tony Abbott says Mr Rudd has acted unilaterally on the hospitals plan.

“He seems to be engaging in fights with everyone and neglecting the basic courtesies of a Westminster system which are that you treat both the Premier and the alternative premier equally in an election period,” he said.

Alcohol-soaked Bali is running out of booze!

Sydney, Aug 21 (ANI): In an unusual instance, a British-owned hotel in Bali has reportedly requested its guests to bring in some extra alcohol.

After the re-election of Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono as Indonesian president last month, the nation’s liquor importation laws have been further tightened.

The government has cracked down on illegal alcohol importation too.

And now, the booze stocks are so low and prices so high that a particular hotel has resorted to asking guests to import alcohol, promising reimbursement.

The hotel is apparently asking quests for namely top-shelf spirits and wine.

Australia-Indonesia Business Council claims that 90 per cent of liquor found in the country is illegally imported in order to avoid the 200 per cent duties and taxes generally levied.

“It’s not because they cant get access to suppliers, it’s more to do with … the procedure for clearing wine through customs has been tightened up considerably,” the Sydney Morning Herald quoted Ross Taylor, the national vice-president of the Australia Indonesia Business Council as telling Radio 6PR. (ANI)

President’s party wins Indonesian election

Jakarta – The Democratic Party of Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono won the country’s legislative elections, according to unofficial counts Friday, setting the stage for political horse-trading ahead of the July presidential polls. Three survey groups conducting so-called quick counts said the Democratic Party secured 20 per cent of the vote, a day after millions of Indonesians went the polls in the third legislative election since the 1998 downfall of autocratic president Suharto.

The nationalist Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P) of former president Megawati Sukarnoputri was neck and neck with the Golkar Party, currently the country’s biggest, at around 14 per cent.

The Muslim-based Justice and Prosperity Party came fourth with around 8 per cent of the vote, according to the counts, based on samples of votes taken from polling stations across the country.

“The first and forth positions are secure,” said Burhanuddin Muhtadi, a senior researcher at the Indonesian Survey Institute, one of the pollsters conducting the counts.

“Either Golkar or PDI-P could win the third position because the difference is small,” he said.

The unofficial results were consistent with opinion polls that predicted the Democratic Party would win the election after finishing fifth in the 2004 elections.

Thursday’s polls were marred by violence in the easternmost Papua region, where five people were killed hours before the voting started in a series of attacks blamed on separatist rebels, who have waged a sporadic guerrilla war for an independent Papua since the
1960s.

Thirty-eight political parties contested the polls, but only nine parties were expected to win seats in the national House of Representatives.

Parties, or coalitions of parties, that win at least 20 per cent of seats in the 560-member House, or 25 per cent of the popular vote, may nominate candidates for the July presidential election.

A run-off would be held in September if no ticket wins a clear majority in that vote’s first round.

Yudhoyono is a favourite to win in July with his popularity rating above 60 per cent while his closest rival, Megawati, comes a distant second in opinion polls.

Yudhoyono’s government has been credited with stabilizing the economy, improving security after a spate of deadly bombings blamed on Islamic militants and overseeing an aggressive campaign against corruption, seen as endemic as a result of Suharto’s 32 years of autocratic rule.

Analysts said the Democrats were expected to be the only party to get the 20 per cent of House seats needed to run a candidate without forming a coalition, but Yudhoyono was likely to ally with smaller parties to give him a more comfortable support base in parliament.

Megawati and Vice President Jusuf Kalla, head of the Golkar Party, held a closed-door meeting last month, sparking speculations that the two parties could team up against Yudhoyono.

Kalla has expressed readiness to run for the top job, but polls indicated he would get less than 5 per cent of the vote, and some analysts said he might decide to team up with Yudhoyono again as a vice presidential candidate.

Former army generals Prabowo Subianto and Wiranto, both considered to have poor human rights records in the eyes of activists, also have presidential ambitions, but it was not clear whether either of them would be able to get the necessary parliamentary backing to run.

Their parties were in the seventh and eighth positions, respectively, in the quick count tallies.(dpa)

Indonesian president’s party pulls ahead in polls

Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono’s Democrat Party led in a partial quick count of voting in Thursday’s elections, but was not doing as well as some polls had forecast in a vote considered key for further reforms.

The Democrats, which have led in most opinion polls up to now, were ahead with about 20 percent followed by PDI-P with 15.5 percent based on about 45 percent of the quick count vote sample by the widely followed polling agency LSI.

Golkar, the long-time political vehicle for Suharto, the country’s late autocratic ruler, had 13.7 percent.

The early results indicate it will be difficult for Yudhoyono’s party to win a strong mandate, relying instead on coalition partners and reducing the prospects for reform in Southeast Asia’s biggest economy.

“It’s a very disappointing performance for the Democrat Party at this stage,” said Kevin O’Rourke, a political risk analyst, noting that after earlier expectations it would get close to 30 percent it now looked likely to get in the low 20s.

“Yudhoyono is going to have to rely on other parties as allies and this could mean another slow five years for institutional reform,” he added.

“Yudhoyono is probably most likely to make practical alliances in the next parliament, allying with Golkar on market-oriented issues, but allowing the Islamic-oriented parties to influence institutional reform issues.”

A party or coalition needs to get 25 percent of the national votes or a fifth of the total seats in parliament in order to field a candidate for the July 8 presidential vote.

Yudhoyono has pushed reform in a bid to attract much-needed foreign investment, whereas analysts say parties such as the PDI-P of former President Megawati Sukarnoputri and Golkar have shown less appetite for attacking vested interests.

PAPUA VIOLENCE

The elections, a massive exercise in democracy with more than 170 million eligible voters, were marred by overnight violence in which five people died in the eastern province of Papua.

“Hopefully all this can bring better times for Indonesia, no more corruption,” said Muhammad Zakaria, 18, a first-time voter in Jakarta.

The ballot has faced logistical problems ranging from incorrect voter rolls to confusion over new voting procedures, but the economy, jobs and corruption were among the top issues.

The Democrat Party had been tipped to win the most seats in the poll, lifting its share of the vote from 7.5 percent in 2004 to as much as 29 percent, according to one recent poll.

The results of the parliamentary elections determine which parties can field presidential candidates.

Local financial markets were closed, but Indonesia’s five-year CDS spread was quoted steady at 510 basis points, although markets were very quiet ahead of a holiday weekend.

Investors were awaiting the full results, but the CDS spread is at its tightest in five months, reflecting a general improvement in credit markets and risk appetite as well as reduced worries about Jakarta’s ability to raise funds this year.

KINGMAKERS

Thirty-eight parties contested the elections, but opinion polls had suggested only three would end up with major blocs of votes — the Democrats, PDI-P and Golkar.

But smaller parties, including many Islamic ones, could end up as kingmakers to form coalitions ahead of the presidential elections.

Yudhoyono, who has an approval rating of 45-52 percent, according to recent opinion polls, was Indonesia’s first directly elected president and the first to serve a full five-year term since Suharto was forced to step down in 1998.

His administration has delivered stronger economic growth and brought relative peace and stability to the world’s most populous Muslim nation, which also has sizeable religious minorities.

But tackling endemic graft in one of the world’s most corrupt nations has proved far tougher.

Indonesian polls open after Papua violence kills 6

Indonesians kicked off voting on Thursday in parliamentary polls, although the start of elections seen as key to shaping further reforms in Southeast Asia’s top economy was marred by overnight violence in Papua.

The election atmosphere in Papua, in the easternmost part of the country where polling stations opened first, was tense.

Police said at least six people died and a string of buildings, including a university in the provincial capital Jayapura, were set ablaze after attacks on several police posts by gunmen and by a crowd with bows and arrows and hurling petrol bombs.

“The gunmen and other groups tried to make the elections fail,” Papua Police Chief Bagus Ekodanto said, calling for calm.

Tensions in Papua, where a separatist movement has simmered for decades, have been running high in recent weeks and some Papuans have called for a boycott of the election.

Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono’s Democrat Party is tipped to win the most seats in the parliamentary poll, lifting its share of the vote from 7.5 percent in 2004 to as much as 29 percent, according to one recent poll.

That would pave the way for Yudhoyono, a reform-driven ex-general, to run for re-election in the July presidential poll, most likely with a stronger mandate to continue his pro-investment policies of reducing graft and shaking up institutions such as the judiciary, civil service, and police.

The first indications of the winner may come within a couple of hours of polling stations closing at midday in a quick count to be taken from a sample of polling stations.

The parliamentary elections are seen as referendum on Yudhoyono’s performance, particularly when it comes to clamping down on corruption and reviving economic growth.

Yudhoyono, who has an approval rating of 45-52 percent according to recent opinion polls, was Indonesia’s first directly elected president and the first to serve a full five-year term since the autocratic Suharto was forced to step down in 1998.

His administration has delivered stronger economic growth and brought relative peace and stability to the world’s most populous Muslim nation, which also has sizeable religious minorities.

But tackling endemic graft in one of the world’s most corrupt countries has proved far tougher.

Several high-profile officials, including central bankers, have been investigated and imprisoned but some Indonesians feel the worst offenders, particularly the powerful, escape punishment.

The parliamentary elections are a massive exercise in democracy, with more than 170 million eligible voters scattered across a vast archipelago of some 17,000 islands.

After the overnight violence, a polling station in Heram subdistrict in Papua’s provincial capital Jayapura had opened and appeared ready although no one was immediately voting, a Reuters photographer said.

In another polling station in Nabire, west of Jayapura, voting had started although an official said it might be delayed since only 55 ballot papers had arrived for 576 eligible voters.

The elections have seen glitches in distributing ballot papers, ensuring the electoral registers are correct, and educating the public about the process when they vote on ballot papers the size of a broadsheet newspaper.

Because of time differences, voting kicked off in Papua and Maluku, also in Indonesia’s east.

Polling stations open in areas such as the resort island of Bali and the capital Jakarta over the next couple of hours, and close at midday.

Yudhoyono tipped to win, but recession Achilles’ heel

Jakarta – Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono looks poised for re-election this year in the absence of a credible challenger, but his popularity could wane as Indonesians begin to feel the effects of the global financial crisis, analysts said.

Opinion polls show Yudhoyono is a hands-on favourite in the July 8 presidential election, be the second time for a president to be directly elected by the people, with about 50 per cent of the vote.

Former president Megawati Sukarnoputri, daughter of Indonesia’s founding president Sukarno, comes in a distant second.

Thirty-eight political parties will contest for seats in national, provincial and district legislatures on April 9, the third legislative elections since the fall of autocratic president Suharto in 1998.

Six local parties in Aceh province will compete with national parties for seats in provincial and district councils.

A party, or a coalition of parties, can nominate a candidate for the presidential election if it holds 20 per cent of the 560 seats in the House of Representatives or 25 per cent of the popular vote in the April elections.

A second round will be held in September if no presidential candidate wins a clear majority.

Recent polls indicated that Yudhoyono’s Democratic Party would leap from fifth place in the 2004 elections to first, predicted to win about 24 per cent of the vote.

Yudhoyono’s government has been credited with establishing peace in Aceh province after decades of separatist conflict and making good some of his 2004 campaign promises such as leading an aggressive campaign against corruption and maintaining economic stability.

“It will be hard for Megawati to beat Yudhoyono, unless her running mate is popular,” said Rizal Sukma, an analyst at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Jakarta.

But Rizal said Yudhoyono’s popularity could be tested in May or June when Indonesians begin to feel the pinch of the global financial crisis.

“We don’t know how much the global financial crisis will affect our economy and how many people will lose their jobs. The extent of its impact will influence people’s views of the president’s performance,” he said.

Jobs, food prices, corruption eradication, education and healthcare are among key issues in a country where around half of its 237 million people live on less than 2 dollars a day.

Yudhoyono’s popularity surged after he cut fuel prices twice in line with a slump in global oil prices. The former general had been forced to raise fuel costs earlier as global prices soared.

But critics say the president allows too much foreign involvement in the economy by privatizing state-owned companies.

Megawati, who has promised to lower prices of basic commodities if elected, has been nominated by the Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P), the second largest party in parliament after the Golkar Party, Suharto’s former political vehicle now led by Vice President Jusuf Kalla.

Megawati, known for being taciturn, lost the country’s first direct presidential election in 2004 to Yudhoyono partly due to her perceived aloofness.

Megawati and Kalla held a closed-door meeting last month, sparking speculations that the two parties could team up against Yudhoyono.

Kalla and Yudhoyono are expected to go separate ways and the vice president has expressed readiness to run for the top job, but polls indicated he would get less than 5 per cent of the vote.

A Golkar-PDI-P alliance may force Yudhoyono, who has not picked a running mate, to rely on small Islamic parties for support, unless his party wins big enough vote to nominate him for the presidency without forming a coalition.

The Muslim-based Justice and Prosperity Party (PKS) is a member of Yudhoyono’s ruling coalition and expected to improve its voter share from now 7 per cent thanks to its strong anti-corruption stance.

Prabowo Subianto, a former commander of the army special forces, whose military career was cut short after he was implicated in the kidnapping of pro-democracy activists in the dying days of Suharto’s rule, is considered by many a dark horse.

Prabowo, backed by his businessman brother Hashim Djojohadikusumo, has mounted populist television advertisements depicting his Great Indonesia Movement Party (Gerindra) as a champion of farmers and the poor.

Another former general with presidential ambitions is Wiranto, an armed forces chief under Suharto, who has founded the People’s Conscience Party.

“SBY is likely to be re-elected because his main opponents are old faces whose economic approaches will not be much different from the past,” said Latif Adam, an economist at the National Institute of Sciences, using Yudhoyono’s popular initials.

“But Yudhoyono’s popularity will depend on how the government deals with the impact of the global economic turmoil, though I expect election-related activities will cushion its impact a bit on the poor,” Latif said. For many poor Indonesians, elections mean free T-shirts and taking part in campaign rallies where food and cash are handed out.

Many voters have their minds made up about who they will support for president, but unsure whether to vote in the legislative elections, citing unfamiliarity with the candidates and their programmes.

Polls suggest about 20 per cent of voters remain undecided.

“I’m just a supporter of our current president, that’s why I’d like him to stay on,” said Johannes Mantiri, who works for a business consulting company.

“There are a lot of posters with candidates for the legislative elections, but I have no idea about the background of any of those people,” he said.