Facilitated by a largely unquestioning media, Indonesian President Joko Widodo’s government has become a master at the game of smoke and mirrors, which in its simplistic form is all about convincing the public that things are happening when they really aren’t.
The protracted negotiations with US mining giant Freeport McMoran Copper & Gold are a good example, but going back to the presidency of Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono the deceptive game-playing has covered everything from beef to natural resources to infrastructure.
While not new, the official obfuscation and embellishment of the truth has become more apparent as the 2019 legislative and presidential elections approach and Widodo and his palace spin doctors perceive the need to display his accomplishments.

Yudhoyono played this game back in mid-2011 when the Australian government suspended live cattle exports to Indonesia over animal welfare issues, and Jakarta decided some payback was in order by ordering a ban of its own.
Over the next two years, it slashed cattle imports by half and sought to convince consumers that the local industry could fill the gap when rising prices – and one of the lowest per capita beef consumption rates in Asia — clearly showed it could not.
Fast forward to the much-vaunted China-backed US$5.8 billion Jakarta-Bandung fast-rail project, once seen as the showcase of Widodo’s ambitious infrastructure program and now stalled over land acquisition issues that should have been foreseen.

Getting it started hasn’t been for the want of trying. Widodo attended a ground-breaking ceremony in January 2016, only to see Transport Minister Jonan Ignasius call a halt to the project five days later because of several “unresolved issues.”
Widodo and the Chinese weren’t amused. In July, the same month the construction permit for the project was finally issued, Ignasius — the former, highly successful chief executive of state-run railway Kareta Api — was unceremoniously sacked.
The president should have already learnt his lesson. In mid-2015, he had presided over the ground-breaking of the US$4 billion, Japan-funded Batang power station in Central Java, only to discover local farmers were still refusing to sell a key patch of land.
The courts finally resolved that one, but the railway still isn’t going anywhere despite the efforts of State Enterprise Minister Rini Soemarno, who showed up last July for yet another ground-breaking event – this one a tunnel.
It takes a lot to beat the whole Freeport saga, though, starting with last year’s framework agreement which was hailed at the time as a major victory for the Widodo government in forcing the company to agree to divest 51% of its shares in its local subsidiary.
Maybe so, but no-one seemed to notice that the devil was in the small print. In fact, the Indonesia media failed to point out at the time that the crucial questions of valuation and management control had yet to be settled.

Little surprise then that the negotiations continue, interspersed on frequent occasions with reassuring pronouncements by senior government officials that a final, final deal is just around the corner. It has been a long corner.
So far, there have been at least four government-imposed deadlines, all based on the extension of Freeport’s permit allowing it to continue exporting copper concentrate from its high-altitude Grasberg mine in Papua’s Central Highlands. The next one is in June.
Refusing the permit would clearly hurt the company’s profits, but it would also cut deeply into government revenues and, perhaps more importantly, lead to worker lay-offs that could spark unrest in the country’s already volatile Papua region.
In the latest show-and-tell, the government last week ceremonially signed a memorandum of understanding under which it will hand over 10% of the Freeport Indonesia shares it still needs to acquire to the Papua provincial administration.
The government spin machine has also recently turned to eastern Indonesia’s Marsela natural gas project, which for reasons even some senior Indonesian politicians can’t figure, Widodo wants to be developed on a remote, sparsely-inhabited island.

Joint venture partners Inpex and Shell have been dragging their feet, arguing that only an offshore facility makes sense, given the undersea terrain and a lack of existing infrastructure.
With the project seemingly in limbo, the government announced earlier this month that the partners were working on detailed plans for an onshore plant that would be finished by the end of this year. Tellingly, there was no word from either company.
“The officials are talking on behalf of the company, without the company knowing anything about it,” says one Indonesian oil veteran. “That’s politics, but for me as an industrialist it is very troubling.”
The French oil giant Total has maintained a similarly stoic silence since the state-run Pertamina oil company claimed the firm wanted back into the Mahakham gas field, which it had to leave when its contract expired last December.
In fact, with little money to maintain the Mahakham, it is the government that has been offering Total a slightly higher 39% participating interest to entice it to return as a partner in the field it ran for more than 40 years.
Widodo also adopted Yudhoyono’s cattle chicanery, part of an economic self-sufficiency program in which, with little planning and a lot of wishful thinking, Indonesia was hoping to produce all its own beef, rice, sugar, corn and soybeans.

In 2015, it was proudly announced that the proportion of beef imports to total consumption had dropped from 31% to 24%, without anyone noting that Indonesians were eating just 2.7 kilograms a year, the lowest per capita rate in the region.
A year later, that figure had shot back up again to 32% and last year it increased yet again to 41% with the price of beef at US$10 a kilogram and officials acknowledging the obvious: that Widodo’s five-year self-sufficiency target was now unattainable.
Again, that has a familiar ring to it. By importing rice, seen as almost a crime in some nationalistic quarters, past governments have often been forced to admit (if anyone is listening) that Indonesia’s supposed self-sufficiency in rice is nothing but a myth.
That would have former President Suharto, who did achieve rice self-sufficiency back in the early 1980s with careful planning and a slew of coordinated programs, rolling over in his grave.
Sooner or later, the smoke and the mirrors will inevitably lift to reveal hard realities.

FAKE NEWS, HOAX AND FFULL OF SH*T
Emmanuel Christian Do you know that Freeport’s contract will be expired in 2021 and by law the extension including the divestiture should take place by then anyway? The path had been there since the mining law 2009 implementation. He just need to capitalize this for the next year vote. See the mirror now?
Schillachi Bianco I have double degrees in Politics and Economics. My GPA was 3.73. And currently I am pursuing my masters. It’s just that due to my parents calling that I did curtain. How about you? This I pray for you. To feel how to be hungry while having greedy corporations sucking your country for decades. Then, you will know how to be Indonesian. Can I get amens?
yaopo yo aku ra iso english e ?
Simple response: just look at the official statistics released either locally or internationally. Is Indonesia getting better? I hope you guys can arrive at your own answer.
Don’t believe in statistics? Then what indicators do you use to arrive at your conclusion? Your own eyes, without looking at the bigger picture? Be real guys : ))
I believe this is the most reasonable opinion i ever read. In fact, Indonesia never had the resources. We dont have natural resources like some people always claim. Education Index is low. Politicians divided into many factions that stabbing each other.
I didn’t chose him before, and I Will not choose him in 2019. I hope the rival ia much greater than him !
well said
hey hey this media is the bold one ^-^
Schillachi Bianco true it is not yet attained … But we Indonesian would like it if the resource mined from indonesia to be used for indonesian interest.
The fact that indonesian government only has one digit of share for 40 or so years shouldnt be attributed to Jokowi. He has only began his term and he is as far the only president who really show the intention to do so.
By saying smoke and mirror in this particular part is not doing just to his effort and achievements in so many other aspect of governing Indonesia.
Teresa Dewi secara gak langsung si Agus Nizami sama kaya kaya sipenulis artikel ini,sahabat prabowo,,karna penulis artikel ini juga bilangnya presiden prabowo,maklum temenan udah lama
Only brainwashed die-hard bigots who will vote for jokowi.
Hany Renando Are u blaming Suharto for Jokowi super stuffed up ?, be real .
Teresa Dewi Umm… I consider myself have better knowledge on Indonesia rather than world of curtains. Is that fair statement? Aha… I can see you are smiling. Cheese…
Dont be that far judging somebody. He may be not a good one, but I can assure he is not the worst – let’s hope a better one arise next year.
Agus Nizami uh, please… you hate Joko Widodo because Joko Widodo lets your radical imams in prison and exile. And now you are writing lie against Joko Widodo. Islamic white lies, eh?
Laughing… cant cope the fact served by the article, let’s shoot the messenger!
Rara Zava I agree with you. This article is biased. I’m not gonna be surprised if the writer gets backups from big companies which hate Joko Widodo because of the higher taxes that he imposes on them. Freeport has been in Indonesia for decades. Had it been contributing much, we wouldn’t have tried to get rid of Freeport. I remember during the lengthy financial crisis many Indonesians didn’t have enough to eat while Freeport could keep taking diamonds, gold and uranium from Papua (because Freeport knew the dirty secrets of our government at that time).
Just curious. Is Papua governed by Freeport? I guess Antam is also responsible for under-developed villages and malnutrition cases in West Java. Wohoo… brilliant!
Schillachi Bianco and you’re not even Indonesian to begin with. Why are you blabbering about something that you don’t know firsthand?