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Students rally to urge restoring civilian supremacy, stopping 'wasteful' spending

Topping the demands made by students across the archipelago are to stop the free meals and rural cooperatives programs, restore the TNI to its original defense function and to stabilize the national currency.

Apriadi Gunawan (The Jakarta Post)
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Sat, June 20, 2026 Published on Jun. 19, 2026 Published on 2026-06-19T14:57:29+07:00

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Yellow wave: Students wear jackets in their school colors on June 12, 2026, as they take part in a massive street protest in Central Jakarta against government policies including fuel price hikes, the free nutritious meal program and the Indonesian Military’s expanded role in civilian affairs. Yellow wave: Students wear jackets in their school colors on June 12, 2026, as they take part in a massive street protest in Central Jakarta against government policies including fuel price hikes, the free nutritious meal program and the Indonesian Military’s expanded role in civilian affairs. (JP/Iqro Rinaldi)

S

tudents in major cities across the nation beyond Jakarta staged rallies this week to voice their opposition to various policies, from the encroachment of the Indonesian Military (TNI) into civilian affairs to the flagship free nutritious meal program.

In North Sumatra capital Medan, members of the Indonesian National Student Movement (GMNI) rallied on Wednesday in front of Military District Command (Kodim) 0201/Medan. They burned tires and unfurled a banner demanding the return of civilian supremacy.

Damses Sianturi, chairman of the GMNI’s Medan chapter, said the TNI’s current role had gone far beyond its primary role in national defense.

Damses also urged the military leadership to not allow the use of soldiers as a tool by those in power to intimidate civil society and fill civilian posts.

“These are the reasons why we are protesting in front of the Kodim 0201/Medan headquarters,” he said.

“We demand that the military return to the barracks and allow the military to return to its defense function, no longer dragged into the realm of government.”

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Damses pointed to the TNI’s involvement in the free meals, Sekolah Rakyat (community school) and the Red and White Cooperative programs as the most jarring examples of military interference in civilian affairs.

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