Friday, April 10, 2026

From “Chugga Chugga Choo-Choo” to “Whoosh Goes The Treasury”

Once upon a time, in the rather charming era of Ibu Soed, the railways of Indonesia were a thoroughly democratic affair. One could board a train from Jakarta to Bandung with a packed lunch, a cheerful disposition, and a ticket that cost roughly the same as a decent nasi bungkus. Nobody mentioned "foreign loan interest rates." Nobody needed to. The train went toot, the people were happy, and the national budget remained, one imagines, more or less intact. Bliss.

Then came the era of Elvy Sukaesih, the undisputed queen of dangdut, whose rhythms were best described as jug-gicak-gicuk—a sound that made one's hips move involuntarily and one's worries dissolve entirely. Trains were still the stuff of romance: a journey to Surabaya to visit Grandmother, a tin of nastar biscuits in one's bag, and the warm glow of a simple life well-lived. No briefcases stuffed with loan agreements. No emergency telephone calls from creditors in Beijing. Just the gentle rocking of a carriage and the passing of rice paddies.

But history, much like a high-speed rail project, has a terrible habit of accelerating before anyone has properly asked: "Right, and who exactly is paying for the tracks?"

Whoosh: A Train Faster Than the Government's Ability to Foot the Bill

Let us pause for a moment to admire the name "Whoosh." As onomatopoeia goes, it is rather good—evocative of speed, of modernity, of wind rushing past one's ears at 350 kilometres per hour. It sounds, frankly, magnificent. That is, until one contextualises it within the national budget, whereupon "Whoooosh" becomes less the sound of a train and more the sound of public funds making a hasty departure. And over time, the wind that shot out was not DC Comics' "Flash" or "Gundala's" lightning, but rather became wind that came out of the buttocks.

The Jakarta–Bandung High-Speed Railway does, to its credit, move at a tremendous lick. Forty-five minutes to Bandung! Marvellous! Extraordinary! One is almost moved to stand and applaud — until one idly wonders where the funding came from, at which point one sits down rather quickly and stares at one's shoes.

The project was financed through loans from China. Not modest loans, mind you — the sort of modest loan one takes out to replace a boiler. No, these are loans of the variety that bloat well beyond their original estimate, rather like a restaurant bill that arrives with seventeen separate "service charges" one had not anticipated. And like all debts of distinction, this one does not sit quietly: it compounds, it accrues, it reproduces, until one's grandchildren are born already technically in arrears.

The train dashes to Bandung at full pelt, not unlike a debtor who has spotted the bailiff at the end of the street.

The Irony Upon the Rails of Progress: An Uninvited Plot Twist

We inhabit a nation of extraordinary scale—an archipelago so vast it stretches across three time zones—and yet our infrastructure priorities have, on occasion, displayed a certain... flair for the dramatic. On one hand, there are schoolchildren in remote Kalimantan crossing rivers on rubber dinghies because the bridge predates their grandparents. On the other hand, there is a gleaming high-speed railway serving 142 kilometres between two cities that are, by Indonesian standards, practically neighbours.

Progress, one hastens to say, is not inherently objectionable. Progress is splendid. We are all broadly in favour of progress. The question—the rather persistent, irritating little question that keeps raising its hand at the back of the press conference—is simply: progress for whom, precisely?

I. A Rather Special Inheritance for Future Generations

Previous generations bequeathed to their descendants land, property, or at the very least a reliable recipe for beef rendang. The current generation, in a spirit of breathtaking generosity, is bequeathing something altogether more novel: the repayment schedule of an infrastructure project whose break-even point, according to analysts who have presumably not yet taken to drink, is expected to arrive sometime around the era of commercial space colonisation. The passenger projections underpinning this optimism are, one is reliably informed, somewhat more bullish than the meteorological forecast.
 
II. First-Class Tickets for a Decidedly First-Class Clientele

Whoosh does, admittedly, get one to Bandung in forty-five minutes. One applauds. However, the ticket price is such that a sizeable portion of the population has concluded that two hours in Jakarta traffic is, on balance, the more fiscally responsible option. This is not, one senses, quite what the brochure had in mind.

There is a rather delicious paradox at work here: a railway financed by the taxes of all Indonesians, yet patronised primarily by those for whom taxes are more of a theoretical concern. It is, in the grandest tradition of vanity projects, a lighthouse: the beam sweeps magnificently across the sea, but only those already standing on the headland get the view.
 
III. Benefits vs. Burdens: An Eternal Duel on the Balance Sheet

Supporters of the project will say, quite reasonably, that this is a long-term investment. They may well be right. Whoosh could indeed catalyse economic activity, improve connectivity, attract capital, and so forth. In the language of macroeconomic theory, the argument holds together tolerably well.

What the rather handsomely designed PowerPoint presentations tend to gloss over, however, is the following trifling detail: somebody is servicing the interest right now, today, at this very moment, while the long-term benefits remain, as yet, a series of encouraging projections. That somebody is, in the fullest and most democratic sense of the word, everyone — including Old Ujang, whose roadside stall has never once been patronised by a Whoosh passenger, and Bu Sari, who has no earthly reason to visit Bandung at speed or otherwise.

A Concise Glossary of Whoosh-Related Terminology

Break-even point: The moment at which a project begins to pay for itself. In the context of Whoosh, this functions rather like the horizon — always present, perpetually retreating, never quite arrived at.

Cost overrun: The polite term for when a project costs substantially more than initially advertised. In the vernacular: "Yes, well, it turns out we were a touch optimistic."

Vanity project (proyek mercusuar): A project whose primary function is to appear impressive from a distance. The greater the distance, the more impressive it appears.

Future generations: Those who shall inherit the invoice for decisions in which they had no vote and to which they were not invited.

Interest payments: Not, one stresses, the interesting kind. The kind that grows quietly in the background, harvested by creditors, and paid for by the public.

Conclusion: Who Boards, and Who Foots the Fare?

In all fairness—and one does try to be fair—Whoosh is a genuinely impressive piece of engineering. The fastest railway in South-East Asia, running smoothly (one hopes) on time, and rather handsome to look at. If one has money to spare and a pressing need to be in Bandung within the hour, it is, by all accounts, a perfectly pleasant way to travel.

But as a nation engaged in the ongoing project of honest self-examination, it seems worthwhile to pause, amid the ribbon-cutting and the ministerial pronouncements, and ask a simple question: is this for everyone, or is it for some people, paid for by everyone?

Because the story of Whoosh is not, at its heart, merely the story of a train travelling at 350 kilometres per hour. It is the story of who gets to sit in the upholstered seats—and who stands at the side of the track, watching the future accelerate past them without stopping.

Where once the railway asked: "Who is alighting here?"
Now, beneath a mountain of debt, the question has rather changed:
"Who on earth can afford to pay?" 
Author's Note: This essay was written with equal measures of affection for Indonesia and concern for its finances. One sincerely hopes the railway proves its critics wrong, that the benefits materialise, and that the debt is somehow settled before one's grandchildren are old enough to read the repayment schedule. One is, at heart, an optimist. A deeply sceptical optimist.

— Finis —

Indonesian Democracy on Trial

In early April 2026, the political atmosphere in Jakarta was stirred by reports that Saiful Mujani, a well-known political analyst, and Islah Bahrawi, the director of Jaringan Moderat Indonesia, had been formally reported to the police. The allegations centred on claims that both figures had engaged in acts of incitement and had encouraged efforts to overthrow the legitimate government of President Prabowo Subianto. These accusations were not made lightly; they were accompanied by video recordings and screenshots that the complainants believed demonstrated the seriousness of the offence.

The reports were lodged by two different groups. On 8 April, the Aliansi Masyarakat Jakarta Timur submitted a complaint to Polda Metro Jaya, which was duly registered under an official case number. Shortly afterwards, on 10 April, the Praesidium Kebangsaan 08, led by H. Kurniawan, took the matter to Bareskrim Mabes Polri. Both organisations framed their actions as a defence of constitutional order, arguing that public figures must be held accountable when their words are perceived to threaten national stability.

The police confirmed receipt of the reports, with Kombes Budi Hermanto of Polda Metro Jaya acknowledging that the complaint had been formally accepted and would be processed according to legal procedure. This meant that investigators would examine the evidence, summon witnesses, and potentially call the accused for questioning.

Politically, the case carried weight beyond the legal process itself. It highlighted the tension between freedom of expression and the imperative of maintaining governmental authority. For supporters of Prabowo, the reports were seen as a necessary step to safeguard the presidency from destabilising rhetoric. For critics, however, the move raised concerns about the narrowing space for dissent and the potential criminalisation of political discourse.

In this way, the incident became more than a matter of law; it was a reflection of the broader struggle over Indonesia’s democratic trajectory, testing how far the state would go to protect itself and how much room would remain for intellectuals and activists to challenge power.

Public reaction to the reports against Saiful Mujani and Islah Bahrawi has been far from uniform, and many voices have emerged to challenge the framing of the accusations. A significant portion of the public has argued that the two figures were not attempting to incite rebellion or to topple President Prabowo Subianto, but rather were exercising their democratic right to criticise the government. In this view, their statements were part of a broader tradition of intellectual and civic engagement, where critique is seen as essential to holding power accountable and ensuring that governance remains transparent and responsive.

For these observers, the reports to the police are troubling because they risk conflating legitimate criticism with subversive intent. They contend that if every sharp commentary or analytical observation is treated as an act of hostility against the state, then the space for public discourse will shrink dramatically. This, they warn, could undermine Indonesia’s democratic fabric, which relies on the ability of citizens, academics, and activists to question authority without fear of reprisal.

Others have pointed out that the controversy itself has sparked a wider debate about the boundaries of free speech in Indonesia. While some believe that strong measures are necessary to protect national stability, many insist that democracy cannot thrive without robust criticism, even when such criticism is uncomfortable for those in power. In this sense, the public reaction has transformed the case into a litmus test for how the government and law enforcement will balance security with liberty in the years ahead.

The comparison with earlier regimes is particularly telling. Observers highlight that Indonesia has long struggled with the tension between safeguarding order and allowing free expression, and that the current case risks repeating cycles of repression. By treating sharp criticism as a criminal act, the authorities may inadvertently reinforce the perception that freedom of speech is being curtailed, echoing the methods of governments that sought to limit opposition rather than engage with it.

In this way, the defence of Mujani and Bahrawi rests not only on the content of their statements but also on the principle that democracy requires space for dissent. Their supporters maintain that criticism of government policy, however forceful, should never be equated with attempts to overthrow the state. Instead, they argue, such criticism is a vital safeguard against authoritarian drift and a reminder that the legitimacy of power depends on its willingness to be questioned.

When examining the reports against Saiful Mujani and Islah Bahrawi, many observers have drawn parallels with earlier regimes in Indonesia. They argue that the use of police complaints to silence critical voices mirrors patterns of repression that were common in the past, where dissent was often met with intimidation rather than dialogue. This resemblance raises concerns that the current government may be repeating cycles of restriction, thereby undermining the democratic progress that Indonesia has fought hard to achieve. Pause.

From this perspective, the issue becomes not only about two individuals but about the principle of free speech itself. Critics of the reports insist that democracy cannot function without the ability to question authority, and that criticism—even when sharp or uncomfortable—should be protected as a fundamental right. They warn that equating critique with subversion risks eroding the very foundation of democratic life, where open debate and accountability are indispensable. Pause.

The defence of Mujani and Bahrawi rests on the recognition that intellectual critique is vital to the health of any society. Their supporters maintain that both men were fulfilling their civic duty by pointing out flaws in governance and urging greater responsibility from those in power. Far from being acts of rebellion, such interventions are seen as safeguards against authoritarian drift, ensuring that the legitimacy of government remains tied to its willingness to be questioned and scrutinised.

The implications of the reports against Saiful Mujani and Islah Bahrawi reach far beyond the immediate controversy, touching upon the very foundations of Indonesia’s democratic life. Many observers argue that the case demonstrates how fragile democratic freedoms remain, particularly when criticism of government policy is treated as a threat to national stability. If the state continues to equate dissent with subversion, the democratic project itself risks being hollowed out, leaving only the form of democracy without its substance. This concern is amplified by the historical echoes of past regimes, where similar tactics were used to silence opposition and restrict public debate. Pause.

Civil society has responded with a mixture of alarm and determination. Advocacy groups, academics, and activists have voiced strong objections, insisting that the right to free expression must be defended. They argue that the vitality of civil society depends on its ability to challenge authority, and that the reports against Mujani and Bahrawi represent an attempt to shrink the space for such engagement. For many, this is not merely about two individuals but about the collective right of citizens to speak truth to power without fear of reprisal. Pause.

The long-term consequences of this case could be profound. If criticism continues to be criminalised, Indonesia may face a gradual erosion of democratic culture, where self-censorship becomes the norm and intellectual debate is stifled. On the other hand, if civil society succeeds in resisting these pressures, the controversy could strengthen democratic resilience by reaffirming the importance of free speech and critical thought. In either scenario, the case of Mujani and Bahrawi will likely be remembered as a pivotal moment in Indonesia’s struggle to balance authority with liberty.

Civil society’s resistance in Indonesia has taken on a strategic dimension, as groups seek to counter what they perceive as attempts to silence dissent. Organisations have mobilised through public statements, demonstrations, and digital campaigns, emphasising that criticism of government policy is not only legitimate but necessary. These strategies are designed to keep the issue visible, to prevent it from being quietly buried under legal proceedings, and to remind the authorities that the public is watching. By combining intellectual critique with grassroots mobilisation, civil society is attempting to build a shield against intimidation, ensuring that democratic space remains open. Pause.

The mechanisms of democratic erosion, however, remain a pressing concern. Observers warn that repression rarely arrives dramatically; instead, it creeps in through incremental measures—police reports, legal harassment, and the stigmatisation of dissent. Each act of suppression may appear minor in isolation, but together they create a climate of fear that discourages citizens from speaking out. Over time, this erodes the culture of debate, weakens accountability, and leaves democracy vulnerable to authoritarian tendencies. The danger lies in normalising such practices, where silencing critics becomes routine rather than exceptional. Pause.

Yet, within this struggle lies the possibility of strengthening freedom. The controversy surrounding Mujani and Bahrawi has already galvanised civil society, sparking renewed debates about the boundaries of free speech and the role of intellectuals in public life. If resistance continues and succeeds, the case could mark a turning point, reinforcing the idea that dissent is not a threat but a safeguard. In this way, the incident may paradoxically serve to deepen Indonesia’s democratic resilience, reminding both leaders and citizens that liberty must be defended actively, not passively accepted.

The role of social media in civil society’s resistance has become increasingly central. Platforms such as Twitter, Instagram, and TikTok have been transformed into arenas where dissenting voices can be amplified and shared widely. Activists and advocacy groups have used hashtags, viral videos, and online petitions to mobilise support, ensuring that criticism of government policy cannot be easily silenced. These digital strategies allow resistance to transcend physical boundaries, connecting diverse communities and creating solidarity across regions. In this way, social media has become both a tool of empowerment and a shield against intimidation, enabling civil society to keep democratic discourse alive. Pause.

Yet, the danger of normalising repression remains a profound concern. When police reports, legal harassment, and the stigmatisation of critics become routine, society risks accepting them as part of the political order. This normalisation is insidious, for it gradually conditions citizens to expect punishment for dissent, thereby discouraging them from speaking out. Over time, such practices erode democratic culture, replacing open debate with silence and fear. The true danger lies not in isolated acts of suppression but in their accumulation, which can hollow out democracy until it exists only in form, not in spirit. Pause.

Nevertheless, the controversy surrounding Saiful Mujani and Islah Bahrawi may serve as a catalyst for democratic consolidation. By galvanising civil society and sparking renewed debates about free speech, the case has created an opportunity to reaffirm the importance of dissent. If resistance succeeds, it could strengthen democratic resilience, reminding both leaders and citizens that liberty must be actively defended. In this sense, the incident may paradoxically become a turning point, deepening Indonesia’s democratic foundations and ensuring that its future is shaped not by fear but by the courage to speak truth to power.

In closing, the controversy surrounding Saiful Mujani and Islah Bahrawi has become more than a legal dispute; it has evolved into a symbol of Indonesia’s democratic crossroads. The reports against them highlight the tension between authority and liberty, reminding the nation that the health of democracy depends on the ability of citizens to speak freely, even when their words challenge those in power. Civil society’s resistance, particularly through digital mobilisation, has shown that the public is unwilling to accept silence as the norm.

The danger of normalising repression remains real, for each act of suppression risks eroding the democratic spirit and conditioning society to fear dissent. Yet, paradoxically, this very struggle may serve as a catalyst for democratic consolidation. By defending free speech and intellectual critique, Indonesia has the chance to reaffirm its commitment to liberty and accountability. The case of Mujani and Bahrawi will likely be remembered not only for its immediate controversy but for the way it tested—and perhaps strengthened—the resilience of Indonesia’s democracy.

In reflecting on this controversy, it is impossible to ignore the historical echoes that reverberate through Indonesia’s democratic journey. The reports against Saiful Mujani and Islah Bahrawi recall earlier periods when dissent was met with suppression rather than dialogue, reminding the nation of the fragility of freedoms that were hard-won after years of struggle. This historical lens underscores the importance of vigilance, for democracy is never guaranteed but must be continually defended against the temptation of authoritarian practices. Pause.

The moral lesson that emerges is clear: criticism is not an enemy of the state but a vital safeguard of its integrity. To silence intellectuals and activists is to weaken the very foundation upon which democracy rests. The courage to speak truth to power, even when uncomfortable, is not only a right but a responsibility that sustains the collective health of society. Pause.

Looking to the future, the case of Mujani and Bahrawi may serve as a pivotal moment in Indonesia’s democratic consolidation. If civil society continues to resist repression and insists on protecting free speech, the controversy could strengthen democratic resilience, ensuring that liberty is not eroded but reinforced. In this way, the incident may be remembered not merely as a challenge but as a turning point, shaping a future where Indonesia’s democracy grows deeper, more inclusive, and more robust.
Bibliography

Crouch, M. (Ed.). Constitutional Democracy in Indonesia. Oxford University Press, 2022.

Beittinger-Lee, V. (Un) Civil Society and Political Change in Indonesia. Routledge, 2010.

Fung, A., Moss, D., & Westad, O. A. (Eds.). When Democracy Breaks: Studies in Democratic Erosion and Collapse. Cambridge University Press, 2024.