Two months before last week’s presidential election in Indonesia, prize-winning novelist Eka Kurniawan declared in an opinion column that “the Islamists have already won.”
Unofficial results from Wednesday’s poll show that Indonesian President Joko Widodo was actually the winner and is set for a second five-year term — but they also reveal a hardening bloc of conservative Muslims who voted for his challenger.
Widodo’s commitment to pluralism in the world’s largest Muslim-majority country might have narrowly won him the race.
However, the Indonesia he must govern is now more polarized by religion, and he might struggle to meet the demands of Muslim groups that backed him and fend off more hardline Islamists who did not.
“In the short term, Widodo will have to accommodate the opinions and interests of the Muslim-majority because, if the majority feels insecure, it is difficult to protect minorities,” Control Risks political analyst Achmad Sukarsono said.
“This is just being pro-people. It doesn’t mean Indonesia will turn into Saudi Arabia or that the country will go straight to amputating a hand for theft,” he said.
While nearly 90 percent of Indonesians are Muslim, the country is officially secular and is home to sizeable Hindu, Christian, Buddhist and other minorities.
However, some fear that Indonesia’s tradition of religious tolerance is now at risk, as conservative interpretations of Islam become more popular.
Among myriad measures of this, demand for Shariah finance is growing and more women are covering their heads or donning full veils in public.
Widodo’s rival, retired general Prabowo Subianto, buttressed his challenge by forging an alliance with hardline Islamist groups and religious parties to tap into this trend.
Unofficial results show that not only did Prabowo maintain support in three conservative strongholds — Aceh, West Java and West Sumatra — he won four more provinces that had gone to the incumbent when he ran against him in 2014.
These provinces are widely seen as among the country’s most conservative, because they have introduced Shariah-based by-laws and their demographic makeup is more than 97 percent Muslim.
Analysts have said such divisions are there to stay.
“This election has produced a more divided political map,” said Eve Warburton, a research fellow at Australian National University. “When Widodo and Prabowo are no longer on the front line, divisions may mellow, but they will not disappear.”
Prabowo has complained of widespread cheating and has threatend to contest the results.
Many of the hardline Islamist clerics and groups backing Prabowo’s presidential bid were the same as those who in 2016 and 2017 led mass protests to topple the ethnic-Chinese, Christian governor of Jakarta, Basuki Tjahaja Purnama, a one-time close ally of the president.
Widodo, at risk of appearing anti-Islam, distanced himself from Purnama, who was eventually jailed for blasphemy.
He also launched a systematic campaign to woo the country’s largest moderate Muslim organization, Nahdlatul Ulama (NU) and to appeal to Muslim voters by appearing “more Islamic” himself.
However, the president shocked more moderate and progressive supporters when he chose as his running mate the NU’s Maruf Amin.
As chairman of the Indonesia Clerics Council in 2016, Amin issued a fatwa banning Muslims from joining Christmas mass and his testimony helped convict Purnama.
Nonetheless, Amin helped in the eyes of some voters to remove any doubt about Widodo’s commitment to Islam and neutralize the overall threat to Indonesia’s official secularity from groups gunning for an Islamic state.
One presidential aide, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said that as vice president, Amin, who is an expert on Islamic finance, was expected to “have an important role, particularly on religious issues and policies.”
However, aides are confident of Widodo’s ability to “handle” the demands of religious groups that helped propel him to victory.
“The president can embrace [the religious forces] with all kinds of social and economic efforts, but at the same time he will be forceful to reject their agenda to change the ‘Pancasila’ in any way,” the aide said, referring to the country’s secular ideology.
Hardline groups that were once on the fringes of Indonesian politics, most notably the Islamic Defenders Front (FPI), have increasingly muscled their way into the mainstream and arguably provide a political voice for conservative Indonesian Muslims.
The FPI and similar groups call for an Islamic state, with Islamic law for all Muslims in the country.
That might be popular with many voters — according to a 2017 study by the Pew Research Center, 72 percent of Muslims favor making Shariah the official law.
However, for prominent moderate Muslim figure and Widodo campaign adviser Yenny Wahid, the election nonetheless represents a victory for moderate Islam.
“Widodo will be bolder now than before in sealing off space that Islamists have tried to occupy in politics and social life,” she said. “It is time now for moderate Muslims to consolidate based on the election win.”
Additional reporting by Tom Allard
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