Skip to main content

Rivals attack Yudhoyono's black magic claims

The Jakarta Post , Jakarta | Mon, 07/06/2009 1:09 PM | Headlines

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono's rivals in next week's presidential election claim the incumbent is clutching at straws to retain his presidency, after Yudhoyono's recent statement that his rivals were using black magic against him.

"It's very surprising that a former general with a doctorate could make such a statement," Alvin Lie, a member of Vice President Jusuf Kalla's campaign team, told The Jakarta Post in Jakarta on Saturday.

"It shows he's panicking. It's also a sign he has lost his self-confidence and rationality."

Yudhoyono made the statement Friday night during a gathering with the Nurussalam Islamic prayer group at his home in Cikeas, Bogor, West Java. Yudhoyono told the gathering, as quoted by detik.com, that "in this period of campaigning, there are many people out there who use black magic".





SBY also said that he was so concerned about it that he, his wife and his driver continuously prayed on their way to Jakarta to take part in Thursday night's final presidential debate.

"Thankfully we got to our destination safely," he said.

Hasto Kristianto, from Megawati Soekarnoputri's campaign team, said the whole thing was a ploy by the President.

"The statement truly depicts Yudhoyono's strategy to gain support by playing the victim," he said.

"He just wants to garner more and more votes by claiming he's under attack from magic spells by his rivals."

Criticism of Yudhoyono's statement has not been limited to his rivals, but has also come from the ranks of prominent political experts.

Fadjroel Rachman, head of the Research Institute for Democracy and a Prosperous State (Pedoman), said the President's remarks that effectively affirmed his belief in black magic were shameful and pathetic.

"Where would this nation go if its own president, who has a doctorate, believes in superstition?" he said.

"Believing in black magic is irrational. If Dr. Yudhoyono behaves irrationally, then he's effectively burying the nation's rationality and common sense."

University of Indonesia political expert Rocky Gerung said Yudhoyono had dragged the country back to the dark ages with his statement.

"If a war of magic really does take place, then we might as well give politicians' posts to shamans," he said.

However, members of Yudhoyono's campaign team said his remarks were based on real-life experiences.

"The President revealed his personal experiences dealing with paranormal occurrences. The experiences were real," said Anas Urbaningrum, deputy chairman of Yudhoyono's Democratic Party.

Another party executive, Achmad Mubarok, said black magic was a discipline that could not be easily comprehended by regular scholars and common religious leaders.

"Scientists do not have the capability to access the world of black magic," said the professor at the University of Indonesia. (hdt)

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Iranian Clerics Protest Election Results

By VOA News 05 July 2009 A group of leading Iranian clerics has criticized the results of the country's disputed presidential election. In a statement released Sunday, clerics from the Association of Researchers and Teachers of Qom said Iran's official electoral watchdog, the Guardian Council, failed to adequately investigate claims of vote rigging by the opposition. The pro-reform group questioned whether the Council's validation is enough to legitimize the vote. Last week, the 12-member Council upheld the re-election of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. I ranian reformist presidential candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi during a press conference after polls closed in Tehran, 12 June 2009 Defeated presidential candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi has criticized the outcome. In a 24-page report posted to his Web site Saturday, Mr. Mousavi accuses supporters of Mr. Ahmadinejad of handing out cash to voters in the run-up to...

Military chief promotes 35 generals

Indonesian Military (TNI) chief Gen. Djoko Santoso has promoted 35 generals, consisting of 16 army generals, 11 navy admirals and 8 air force marshals. “It is expected that this time promotion will further enhance and improve the military performance so that we could give out the best output,” he said on Friday. Among those generals who receive the promotion is Rear Adm. Gunadi who is now posted as inspector general at the Defense Ministry, Maj. Gen. Langgeng Sulistyono, who is now posted as Diponegoro Military Commander and Rear Marshal Agus Dwi Putranto, who is installed as Abdulrahman Saleh Air Force Base Commander.

Chinese

Identifying someone in Indonesia as a member of the Chinese ( orang Tionghoa ) ethnic group is not an easy matter, because physical characteristics, language, name, geographical location, and life-style of Chinese Indonesians are not always distinct from those of the rest of the population. Census figures do not record Chinese as a special group, and there are no simple racial criteria for membership in this group. There are some people who are considered Chinese by themselves and others, despite generations of intermarriage with the local population, resulting in offspring who are less than one-quarter Chinese in ancestry. On the other hand, there are some people who by ancestry could be considered halfChinese or more, but who regard themselves as fully Indonesian. Furthermore, many people who identify themselves as Chinese Indonesians cannot read or write the Chinese language. Alth...