Prabowo Subianto to run for 2019 Indonesian presidential election with Jakarta deputy governor

Gerindra Party leader Prabowo Subianto waves to reporters as he arrives for a meeting with former Indonesian president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono at the Yudhoyono's residence in Jakarta on Aug 9, 2018. PHOTO: INDONESIA OUT/ANTARA FOTO VIA REUTERS

JAKARTA (REUTERS, THE JAKARTA POST/ASIA NEWS NETWORK) - Coalition partners Gerindra Party, National Mandate Party (PAN) and Prosperous Justice Party (PKS) have decided to pair Gerindra leader Prabowo Subianto and Jakarta deputy governor Sandiaga Uno in next year's national election, without the support of fouth coalition partner Democratic Party.

Meanwhile, Indonesian President Joko Widodo said on Thursday (Aug 9) he had chosen 75-year-old Islamic cleric Ma'ruf Amin as his running mate in next year's presidential election.

Indonesia, the world's third-largest democracy and biggest Muslim-majority country, goes to the polls in April.

"This is not an easy process. This process is tiring. I have tried to build a big coalition," Prabowo told reporters at his residence in South Jakarta 11.30pm on Thursday.

"Sandiaga is the best choice there is. He has made a sacrifice. He is willing to resign from his position as deputy governor so that he can serve the nation and the state."

Prabowo has practically ignored the reccommendation made by Islamist groups that he picked celebrity preacher Abdul Somad as his running mate.

As of 10.30pm on Thursday, former president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono's Democratic Party said it still rejected Sandiaga's candidacy. The party is left with the option of joining either the Prabowo or Jokowi camp. The Election Law bans political parties from sitting out the presidential election.

The contest, at least in terms of the presidential candidates, is shaping up as a repeat of the 2014 election, when political outsider Widodo defeated Prabowo, who has deep ties to Indonesia's business and military elite.

Widodo is a popular moderate who has had mixed success with his reform agenda. Prabowo is a charismatic nationalist with strong links to Islamists who frequently rails against foreigners.

On a dramatic day of political manoeuvring and intrigue, Widodo made a surprise decision to pick Amin, just hours after former chief justice Mahfud MD appeared to confirm he was the vice presidential choice of Widodo.

Amin is the influential head of the Indonesian Ulema Council (MUI), who issued a statement condemning Widodo's political ally, the ethnic Chinese Christian former Jakarta governor Basuki Tjahaja Purnama, as a blasphemer for insulting the Koran in the middle of a heated Jakarta election campaign.

Prabowo's candidate for Jakarta governor won the election, which analysts and rights advocates condemned for inflaming sectarian sentiment.

Amin had been a presidential adviser and had served in local and national legislatures in the past.

"Maybe there are questions from the people all over Indonesia why Professor Dr. Ma'ruf Amin was chosen. Because he is a wise religious figure," said Widodo.

"I think we complete each other, nationalistic and religious." But Human Rights Watch researcher Andreas Harsono told Reuters Amin, as head of the MUI, had overseen a rise in religious intolerance across Indonesia, a pluralist country with significant minority communities.

"He issued fatwas condemning religious and gender minorities like the Ahmadiyah and LGBT individuals at a time they were subject to violent assaults," he said.

DIVISIONS

"He also oversaw the creation of so-called religious harmony forums across the country. These forums replaced the principle of religious freedom, stoked divisions and favoured the majority Sunni Muslim community."

Prabowo said his candidacy was supported by three political parties, but left out the Democratic Party in his nomination speech in an apparent sign of rifts in the opposition coalition.

"It is not easy to build a coalition because many things have to be brought together," Prabowo said.

The Democratic Party views the choice of Uno as a betrayal. Just last week, chairman of the party, Dr Yudhoyono, and Prabowo's Gerindra party announced an alliance.

Agus Yudhoyono, a 39-year-old retired soldier and the ex-president's son, was expected to be the vice presidential candidate after the deal.

An hour before Prabowo's near-midnight announcement, the Democrats threatened to quit the coalition unless Prabowo went with the younger Yudhoyono or reconsidered his pick for running mate, party secretary general Andi Arief said on his Twitter account.

Arief had earlier tweeted a stream of derogatory comments about Prabowo.

Former investment banker Uno said he would work with Prabowo "to present a strong government ... build the economy and stabilise food prices".

Uno played a pivotal role plotting the campaign to oust then incumbent governor Purnama. After the victory, Uno said it was regrettable race and religion had dominated the campaign.

Gerindra's deputy chairman Arief Poyuono said the Prabowo-Uno team would mean the opposition had candidates from both Java and outside Indonesia's most populous island. Uno has roots in Gorontalo in Sulawesi.

Many Indonesians from outside Java resent Java's political and economic dominance.

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