AFP/Jakarta

The ex-general who lost Indonesia’s presidential election to Joko Widodo will challenge the result in court, his campaign team said yesterday, a move that could spell weeks of uncertainty for the world’s third-biggest democracy.
But Prabowo Subianto’s last-ditch bid to overturn the result did little to dampen the enthusiasm of Widodo’s supporters, with thousands staging a noisy rally next to a Jakarta monument commemorating Indonesia’s proclamation of independence in 1945.
Widodo, the reform-minded governor of Jakarta seen as a break from the autocratic era of dictator Suharto, was named the winner Tuesday after results showed he resoundingly defeated Prabowo, his only challenger.
Before the result was announced following a lengthy vote-tallying process, Prabowo — a senior general during the Suharto era who has been dogged by allegations of human rights abuses — angrily announced he was withdrawing from the election.
Prabowo, who had earlier claimed victory in the July 9 election, accused his opponent of cheating in the vote count.
Yesterday a spokesman for the ex-general’s team said he plans to contest the result at the Consitutional Court, with the challenge directed at the election commission for allegedly mishandling the count.
Analysts believe the poll was largely free and fair and do not expect a court challenge to succeed given the size of Widodo’s victory — he won by more than six percentage points, or about 8.4mn votes.
But the move nevertheless signals weeks of uncertainty ahead, as the court will likely only issue a ruling on August 21.
The challenge would be filed within three days, said Prabowo spokesman Tantowi Yahya, adding his side considered 21mn votes to be in dispute. Prabowo’s brother Hashim Djojohadikusumo, a wealthy businessman who has provided financial backing for the campaign, added: “We are looking for justice... we are expecting some fairness.”
He also urged foreign leaders not to congratulate Widodo, saying that “the legal process has not ended yet”.
Congratulations flooded in nevertheless, from US Secretary of State John Kerry and Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott, as well as the leaders of neighbouring Singapore and Malaysia.
Widodo seemed unperturbed by his rival’s challenge and returned to his duties as Jakarta governor at city hall yesterday. He will not be inaugurated as president until October.
He said preparations for his new job were “in progress” and a special office to help with the transition had already been set up. At the Jakarta rally, rock bands played to a crowd of about 3,000 of his supporters, who were waving banners using Widodo’s nickname and reading “Jokowi: honest, man of the people”.
As the sun set over the historic site, Widodo arrived to loud cheers from the crowd and thanked all the campaign volunteers “who have been working day and night” to secure victory.
“Please now get back to your lives, to your day jobs,” he joked.
Newspapers welcomed his victory, with the major Indonesian-language paper Kompas showing a photo of a grinning Widodo alongside his running mate Jusuf Kalla, under the headline: “It’s time to move together”.
The words were from Widodo’s victory speech delivered late Tuesday, in which he urged Indonesia to unite following the country’s tightest and most divisive election since the downfall of Suharto in 1998.
A Constitutional Court official said that if Prabowo’s team filed the appeal by tomorrow, then hearings would begin on August 6 and a ruling would be delivered on August 21.
There have been concerns about the court’s impartiality after its former chief justice was jailed for life last month for accepting bribes in return for favourable rulings in local election disputes. However analysts believe the institution will be desperate to appear clean following the scandal.






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