Indon protestors win. President Prabowo removes excessive ministerial pay

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Indonesia unrest: Prabowo says parliament to remove controversial perks for MPs, suspend errant lawmakers​

The president was addressing the nation in a live broadcast from the State Palace in Central Jakarta, flanked by leaders of major political parties including PDI-P chair Megawati Soekarnoputri.
Indonesia unrest: Prabowo says parliament to remove controversial perks for MPs, suspend errant lawmakers

Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto standing between the speaker of the People's Consultative Assembly, Ahmad Muzani (left), and PDI-P chair Megawati Soekarnoputri (right), while speaking at Istana Merdeka, Jakarta, on Aug 31, 2025. (Image: Youtube/Sekretariat Presiden)

31 Aug 2025 04:51PM (Updated: 31 Aug 2025 07:08PM)

JAKARTA: Indonesian political parties have agreed to revoke a number of perks and privileges for parliamentarians, President Prabowo Subianto said on Sunday (Aug 31), following protests and rioting across the Southeast Asian country.

Widespread anti-government protests and rioting over issues such as extra pay for parliamentarians and housing allowances have rocked Indonesia, resulting in at least five deaths in recent days.

Public outrage boiled over after police violence claimed the life of Affan Kurniawan, a 21-year-old ride-hailing rider, during a protest on Thursday prompting angry crowds to later target police stations and the national parliament building.

Angry demonstrators have also looted the homes of senior officials and torched regional parliament buildings over the weekend.

Prabowo was addressing the nation in a live broadcast from the State Palace in Central Jakarta, flanked by leaders of major political parties.

These included PDI-P chair Megawati Soekarnoputri, Golkar chief Bahlil Lahadalia, NasDem chair Surya Paloh and PKB leader Muhaimin Iskandar, alongside House Speaker Puan Maharani and Senate Speaker Sultan Bachtiar Najamudin.

He acknowledged the scale of public anger, pledged to act on lawmakers’ perks, and promised that the government would listen to citizens’ demands while maintaining law and order.

Prabowo said party leaders had “taken firm action” against their members of parliament, with sanctions to take effect from Monday.

“The leadership of the House has conveyed that a number of policies will be revoked, including the size of allowances for members and a moratorium on overseas work visits,” he said.

Party chiefs had also agreed to strip errant lawmakers of their seats, with Prabowo stressing that “members of the House must always be sensitive and side with the interests of the people”.

The president underlined that freedom of expression would be respected.

“The right to peaceful assembly must be protected,” Prabowo said, citing Indonesia’s law on demonstrations and international conventions. But he warned that violence — including looting and the destruction of facilities — would not be tolerated.

“If there are anarchic activities destabilising the state, damaging or burning public facilities, looting homes or institutions, this is a violation of the law. The state must be present to protect its people.”

Prabowo added that “signs of subversion and terrorism” had begun to appear as he ordered the police and military “to take the firmest possible action” against destruction of public facilities, looting of private homes and attacks on economic centres.

Prabowo called for dialogue, instructing parliament to invite students, community figures and civil society leaders to convey their aspirations directly.

“We assure you that your voices will be heard and followed up,” he said, urging ministries and agencies to receive delegations and consider proposals for reform.

He also appealed for calm.

“I urge citizens to trust the government,” he said, adding that all political parties were committed to fighting for the interests of the people, including “the most vulnerable and disadvantaged.”

Prabowo warned Indonesians not to get their family members to join the unrest and cautioned against groups that “do not want Indonesia to prosper and rise".

LOOTING OF MINISTER AND LAWMAKERS’ RESIDENCES

Protests over what demonstrators termed excessive pay and housing allowances for parliamentarians started last Monday. They expanded into riots on Thursday after Affan, a motorcycle rideshare driver, was killed in police action at a protest site.

The incident occurred at around 7.25pm in the Pejompongan area in central Jakarta, near the parliament building where various protests have taken place this week.

Affan was killed when he was struck and run over by a police armored vehicle deployed to disperse protesters. At the time, he had been delivering a food order and was not part of the protest.

Seven police officers involved in the armored vehicle incident were found to have breached the force’s code of ethics. They have been placed in 20 days’ internal detention for questioning, which may be extended pending further investigation and trial.

Over the weekend, angry demonstrators have looted the homes of senior officials, torched regional parliament buildings and overwhelmed local security in several cities.

In the capital and its outskirts, looters targeted at least four lawmakers’ homes and the residence of Finance Minister Sri Mulyani.

Local media Detik reported that Sri Mulyani’s house in Bintaro, South Tangerang, was ransacked twice within hours on Sunday shortly after midnight. A resident said one wave of looters arrived around 00.30am, followed by a larger group at about 3.30am.

In successive raids, groups carted away televisions, a sound system, air-conditioners, refrigerators and other appliances, as well as kitchenware including plates and a rice cooker.

Furniture, clothing, mattresses and even life-size standing statues of Lionel Messi and Kylian Mbappé were seized. Fireworks were reportedly set off before entry as a signal to the crowd. Soldiers later secured the property.

Local outlet Kumparan reported that lawmakers’ residences were also stripped.

Earlier on Saturday afternoon at Ahmad Sahroni’s house in North Jakarta, protesters took household items, land certificate, and personal collectibles, including Iron Man and Spider-Man statues valued at more than 100 million rupiah (US$6,400) each.

A Richard Mille watch reportedly valued at about 11.7 billion rupiah (US$750,000) was taken by protesters, along with two Louis Vuitton handbags and large amounts of Singapore dollars. Sahroni was not home at the time, as he had reportedly flown to Singapore.

Sahroni, a senior member of parliament from the NasDem Party, has faced criticism for responding insensitively to calls for parliament to be dissolved amid anger over lawmakers’ allowances. He previously described such critics as “the stupidest people in the world.”

Amid mounting criticism of lawmakers’ perks and conduct, the NasDem Party announced on Sunday that it has suspended both Sahroni and fellow lawmakers Nafa Urbach effective Sep 1, citing statements made by them that “offended and hurt” public sentiment.

Nafa Urbach’s residence in Bintaro was also raided in the early hours of Sunday, with protesters taking a television and clothing.

Lawmaker Eko Patrio’s South Jakarta home was breached, with doors and windows smashed on Saturday night. Looters carried off refrigerators, water dispensers, televisions, wall décor, carpets, clothing and studio speakers.
 
According to PAP, this backward move will lead to more corruption in government.
 
u only know how to fuck pap .. fuck pap .... with ur mouth... see wat the Indon did with action..

Sinkies had the chance before floodgates to foreign cunts opened long ago but they chose to sleep at home and live on government money handouts instead
 
Stupid maximum Bodohration plan to implement such perks which obviously is going to invite anger among Mat peasant.

When those poor Mat commoners hear things like Housing Allowance, Fuel Allowance, 'Rice Allowance' (actually is food allowance) and Overseas Work Visit Allowance, who the fark won't riot? LMAO.

If he is smart enough, it should just follow PAP style to increase the MP allowance to a fixed 'clean wage' with zero perks so that it becomes legitimate corruption LOL.

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The unrest in Indonesia, which prompted President Prabowo Subianto to announce the removal of controversial perks for Members of Parliament (MPs) and the suspension of errant lawmakers, centers on several lavish allowances and privileges that have sparked public outrage. Based on recent reports from late August 2025, particularly following Prabowo’s address on August 31, the perks in question include the following:

Perks Given to Indonesian MPs​

  1. Housing Allowance:
    • Details: MPs receive a monthly housing allowance of 50 million rupiah (approximately US$3,075, based on current exchange rates of ~1 USD = 16,250 IDR). This was introduced in 2024 to replace deteriorating official residences and is nearly 10 times the minimum wage in Jakarta (~5.3 million IDR/month) and up to 20 times in poorer regions.
    • Controversy: Protesters viewed this as excessive, especially amid President Prabowo’s austerity measures and economic challenges, leading to widespread demonstrations starting August 25, 2025.
  2. Rice Allowance:
    • Details: A monthly rice allowance increased from 10 million rupiah to 12 million rupiah (US$615 to US$738), intended to cover food costs.
    • Controversy: Seen as an unnecessary perk given the public’s struggle with inflation and living costs, this fueled anger during the protests.
  3. Fuel Allowance:
    • Details: The fuel allowance rose from 5 million rupiah to 7 million rupiah per month (US$307 to US$430), supporting MPs’ transportation needs.
    • Controversy: Critics highlighted the disparity with ordinary citizens facing rising fuel prices, adding to the perception of elite privilege.
  4. Overseas Work Visit Allowances:
    • Details: MPs received funding for international trips, often criticized as junkets with little oversight, including travel, accommodation, and per diem expenses.
    • Controversy: Public and student groups, such as Gejayan Memanggil, demanded a moratorium, arguing these trips lacked accountability and contributed to the unrest.

Context and Response​

  • Public Outrage: The perks, totaling significant monthly sums (e.g., housing + rice + fuel could exceed 69 million IDR or US$4,243 per MP), were a flashpoint in protests that began on August 25, 2025, escalating after the death of ride-hail driver Affan Kurniawan on August 28. Riots and property damage followed, prompting Prabowo’s August 31 announcement to revoke these allowances and suspend errant MPs.
  • Prabowo’s Action: In a live broadcast from the State Palace, flanked by political leaders, Prabowo stated that parliament would revoke the size of allowances and impose a moratorium on overseas trips, effective from September 1, 2025. This concession aims to address public demands while maintaining order.
  • Scale: With 580 MPs in Indonesia’s House of Representatives, the total monthly cost of these perks could exceed 40 billion IDR (US$2.46 million), amplifying the financial burden perception.

Additional Notes​

  • Historical Context: These allowances built on earlier petitions for cash benefits after official residences were deemed uninhabitable, as noted by House Secretary-General Indra Iskandar in 2023.
  • Ongoing Debate: Some MPs defend the perks as “carefully calculated” (e.g., House Speaker Puan Maharani, August 2025), but the government’s response suggests a shift toward reform amid pressure.
This information reflects the latest developments as reported in the week leading to September 1, 2025, based on Prabowo’s statements and protest-related coverage. For updates, monitoring Indonesian news outlets or official government releases is recommended.
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IQ matters economically. South Korean is a high median IQ population nation. Ghana is a low median IQ population nation. Indonesia and the Philippines are an in-between median IQ population nation. Ghana, Indonesia and the Philippines are resource rich nations, South Korean is not. In the 1950s they were all equally poor. Economists were predicting that Ghana, Indonesia and the Philippines were going to become wealthy and that the South Koreans were doomed to poverty. IQ trumped resources.

There are always 1% percentiles that have lower and higher echelon.
E.g Singapore Population is 5.8 miillion as above.

1 Standard deviation is 15 IQ points.
Those with 108 + 15 = 123 points will be 10% ( 508,000 individuals)
2 Standard Deviation = 108 +30 = 138 will be 1% ( 50,800 individuals)

So a country like Indonesia which has a population of 276 Million with an Average IQ of 87
1 Standard deviation
87 +15 = 102 points (10% equates 27.6 million indivduals)

2 Standard Deviation = 87 +30 = 118 will be 1% ( 2.7 Million individuals)
3 Standard Deviation = 87 +45 = 132 will be 0.1% ( 207,000 Million individuals)

For a country to become great, you need high IQ (130 >) individual to run. As of Indonesia case above, even though they have many high IQ individuals. However, it is not adequate to sustain or lead its population. It does not matter if your country is big or small, it deviates towards the mean IQ. That is the main reason why there is no "poor" Western countries no matter what is the size of each country.

Race and IQ
national-iq-scores.jpg
 
Indonesia, despite its many obvious flaws, is still a 'democratic' country.

Sinkieland is still stuck in the equivalent of the Indons' Suharto era. :cool:
 
Those highly overpaid ministers are just mercenaries ,NOT servants to really serve the people.
LKY introduced money politics into the PAP. From 1955 to 1973, the PM's salary was $3,500 per month. A significant salary revision in 1973 increased the PM's pay rise to $9,500 monthly, and other ministers' salaries from $4,500 to $7,000. In 2016 values, these amounts were equivalent to approximately $27,742 (annual $360,646, including 13th month) and $20,441 (annual $265,733, including 13th month) respectively. Then PM LKY justified the increases by emphasising the need to attract qualified individuals to govt service, stating that ministerial salaries needed to be competitive with private sector earnings. He was greedy to the extreme, and every PAP politician has followed his lead since.
 
Indonesia, despite its many obvious flaws, is still a 'democratic' country. Sinkieland is still stuck in the equivalent of the Indons' Suharto era.
The PAP transforms what was previously illegal into legal
through legislation. It's far easier than stealing public funds.
LHL Money.jpg
 
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