Outgoing Indonesian President Jokowi names Prabowo aides to Cabinet

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FILE PHOTO: Indonesian President Joko Widodo, wearing the traditional attire from Jakarta, waves to journalists as he enters the parliament building before delivering the annual State of the Nation Address, ahead of the country's Independence Day, in Jakarta, Indonesia, August 16, 2024. REUTERS/Ajeng Dinar Ulfiana/Pool/File Photo

Indonesian President Joko Widodo (above) will leave office in October and be replaced by Defence Minister Prabowo Subianto, who won the election in February.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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JAKARTA - Outgoing Indonesian President Joko Widodo on Aug 19 appointed new Cabinet ministers with close ties to his successor Prabowo Subianto, in a move aimed at smoothing the transition of power two months ahead of his departure.

Defence Minister

Prabowo, 72, won the February election

by a massive margin with the help of Mr Widodo’s huge popularity and political clout, in what is widely interpreted as a quid pro quo that will ensure the outgoing leader maintains influence after a decade in charge.

Mr Widodo, more popularly known as Jokowi, appointed new ministers for energy, investment and law, as well as the heads of three agencies, with most of the new appointments close to Mr Prabowo, having supported his candidacy or campaigned for him.

Mr Bahlil Lahadalia, the investment minister, will move to the post of energy minister, while former ambassador to the United States Rosan Roeslani will be the new investment minister.

Mr Bahlil said he would prioritise working on incentives to promote efforts to reactivate idle energy wells and reverse the decline in Indonesia’s crude oil output.

Mr Widodo also named Dr Dadan Hindayana, a professor at Bogor Agricultural Ministry and a member of Mr Prabowo’s campaign team, to head the new National Nutrition Agency and oversee Mr Prabowo’s signature free school meals programme, which will cost 71 trillion rupiah (S$5.97 billion) in its first year.

Dr Dadan, a member of Mr Prabowo’s campaign teams, was quoted telling local media that the meals programme would start on Jan 2, 2024.

Mr Widodo also appointed Mr Prabowo’s spokesman Hasan Nasbi as head of the presidential communications body.

The changes “are needed to prepare and support the government transition so it works well, smooth and effectively”, said Mr Ari Dwipayana, a presidential palace official, in a statement.

The appointments come during a transition period in which Mr Prabowo has been racing to consolidate power ahead of his presidency, including months of talks that led to him

securing a parliamentary majority

late last week, with support from parties that had backed his election rival.

Mr Prabowo, a former rival who lost two presidential elections to Mr Widodo, has also been seeking to boost his profile overseas, with trips to Russia, Qatar, Japan and China since his victory.

On Aug 19, he was in Australia.

Dr Ujang Komarudin, a politics expert at Al-Azhar Indonesia University, said the appointments announced on Aug 19 were “accommodation politics” that could see Mr Widodo’s loyalists given posts in Mr Prabowo’s Cabinet once he takes office.

Mr Widodo’s son Gibran Rakabuming Raka will be vice-president, after playing a key role in Mr Prabowo’s campaign as his running mate.

It is unclear what future role, if any, Mr Widodo might play in Indonesia, having served the maximum two terms allowed as president. REUTERS

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