'Betrayal' A mother's anguish as ex-general wins power
The Guardian Weekly|February 23, 2024
Every Thursday for the past 17 years, in searing heat and pouring rain, Maria Catarina Sumarsih has stood outside the Indonesian presidential palace, demanding justice for her son. He was shot dead in 1998, when authorities opened fire on students protesting against the rule of dictator Suharto.
Rebecca Ratcliffe and Richaldo Hariandja 
'Betrayal' A mother's anguish as ex-general wins power

Soon, it is assumed, the palace behind her will be inhabited by Prabowo Subianto - former son-in-law of Suharto and a special commander under his 32-year brutal and corrupt regime. He is accused of involvement in a series of rights abuses, including enforced disappearances and torture in the Suharto era, which ended in the same year that Sumarsih's son died.

At last week's vigil, held the day after Prabowo declared victory in Indonesia's presidential election, Sumarsih vowed to continue her fight for accountability not only for her son, Wawan, but for all of the victims killed under Suharto.

"When Wawan was shot, my grief transformed into love for others," she said. "What I am fighting for is not only the shooting of Wawan and his friends, but all cases of serious human rights violations."

Sumarsih said she was worried that the prospect of accountability for past abuses would fade further under a Prabowo-led government, and that the country's democracy could weaken. "The possibility of Indonesia returning to an authoritarian, militaristic and corrupt country is very open, very wide open," she said.

This story is from the February 23, 2024 edition of The Guardian Weekly.

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This story is from the February 23, 2024 edition of The Guardian Weekly.

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