Jusuf Muda Dalam
Dalam, c. 1950s
5th Governor of Bank Indonesia
In office
13 November 1963  27 March 1966
PresidentSukarno
Preceded bySumarno
Succeeded byRadius Prawiro
2nd Minister for Central Bank Affairs
In office
27 August 1964  18 March 1966
PresidentSukarno
Preceded bySumarno
Succeeded bySumarno (ad interim)
Radius Prawiro
Personal details
Born
Teuku Jusuf Muda Dalam

(1914-12-10)10 December 1914
Sigli, Aceh, Dutch East Indies
Died26 August 1976(1976-08-26) (aged 61)
Cimahi, West Java, Indonesia
Political partyIndonesian Communist Party
Indonesian National Party
Profession
  • Journalist
  • Politician

Teuku Jusuf Muda Dalam (10 December 1914 – 26 August 1976) was an Indonesian journalist and politician who served as the Governor of Bank Indonesia, Indonesia's central bank, from 1963 to 1966.

Originating from Aceh, he studied in the Netherlands where he developed communist ties, became active in journalism, and took part in the Dutch resistance. After returning to Indonesia, he for a time was a member of the Indonesian Communist Party, until he moved to the Indonesian National Party in 1954. He led the party newspaper Suluh Indonesia and became leader of Bank Negara Indonesia, before being appointed BI governor in 1963. After Sukarno's fall, he was removed from power in 1966, sentenced to death on corruption charges, and died as a prisoner.

Early life and education

Dalam was born in Sigli, Aceh on 10 December 1914.[1] He moved to the Netherlands for studies in 1929,[2] went to the Netherlands School of Economics and became active in the Roepi Indonesian student organization where he served as its vice-chairman and managed the organization's magazine.[3] During the German occupation of the Netherlands, Dalam took part in the Dutch resistance, managing the underground newspaper De Bevrijding ("Liberation") in Rotterdam.[4] He developed relations with the Communist Party of the Netherlands, and became a journalist for the party's newspaper De Waarheid.[5] He returned to Indonesia in March 1947.[6]

Career

After his return to Indonesia, he joined the Indonesian Communist Party (PKI), and worked in the propaganda department of the Indonesian Ministry of Defense.[1] In the aftermath of the Madiun Affair in 1948, he was incarcerated for several months in Yogyakarta.[7] In 1950, he had been released, and along with I. J. Kasimo was tasked with an investigation of land use in East Sumatra. He later left PKI, and joined the Indonesian National Party (PNI) in 1954. At that time, he was already a member of the Provisional People's Representative Council.[1]

He was then appointed as first a staffer in the state-owned Bank Negara Indonesia in 1956, then as a director in 1957 and president director by 1959.[8] Around the same time, he was also editor-in-chief of the PNI's party newspaper, Suluh Indonesia, until his replacement by Mohammad Isnaeni in 1957.[9] In the midst of the Western New Guinea dispute, president Sukarno appointed Dalam into the National Economic Command in April 1962,[10] before he was appointed as State Minister for Central Bank Affairs (i.e. Central Bank Governor) in the Third Working Cabinet on 13 November 1963. He would maintain this position until his replacement on 27 March 1966 by Radius Prawiro in the Second Revised Dwikora Cabinet.[11] During this three-year tenure, he consolidated all state-owned banks, including Bank Indonesia and Bank Negara Indonesia, into a single institution, ostensibly to make it easier to manage.[6]

Trial and death

After the 30 September movement and Sukarno's fall from power, Dalam was arrested and accused of corruption amounting to Rp 97.3 billion through irregularities in duties paid by importers to obtain foreign currency.[6][lower-alpha 1] Newspapers at that time reported that Dalam had multiple mistresses who enjoyed luxurious lifestyles. On top of his corruption charge, he was also accused of illegal firearms possession, subversion, and extralegal marriage. Dalam was sentenced to death on 8 April 1967, making him the first, and as of 2022 the only, Indonesian politician to be sentenced to death on corruption charges. His appeals were rejected.[6][13]

Jusuf was held in a home instead of a regular prison, with all his wives and mistresses except his first wife Sutiasmi divorcing him. Before his sentence could be carried out, he died from tetanus in Cimahi on 26 August 1976, still as a death row prisoner.[13]

Notes

  1. In December 1966, the Indonesian rupiah had an exchange rate of around 125 rupiah to the U.S. dollar.[12]

References

  1. 1 2 3 Kami perkenalkan (in Indonesian). Ministry of Information. 1954. p. 93.
  2. Poeze, Harry A.; Dijk, Cornelis; van der Meulen, Inge (2008). Di negeri penjajah: orang Indonesia di negeri Belanda, 1600-1950 (in Indonesian). Kepustakaan Populer Gramedia. p. 317. ISBN 978-979-9101-23-5.
  3. Poeze, Dijk & van der Meulen 2008, p. 310.
  4. Poeze, Dijk & van der Meulen 2008, p. 334.
  5. Poeze, Dijk & van der Meulen 2008, p. 344.
  6. 1 2 3 4 "Jusuf Muda Dalam, dari Uang Panas hingga Selebritas". Historia (in Indonesian). 5 April 2017. Retrieved 18 April 2022.
  7. Proses Jusuf Muda Dalam, ex Ment. Urusan Bank Sentral "Kabinet 100 Menteri" (gema dari ruang sidang Pengadilan Subversi Djakarta) (in Indonesian). Attorney General's Office of Indonesia. 1967. p. 224. walaupun ia mengaku pernah ditahan beberapa bulan di Djogjakarta dalam peristiwa Madiun tahun 1948
  8. Proses Jusuf Muda Dalam, p. 287.
  9. "Ketika Suluh Indonesia Merajai Pers Indonesia". Merdeka (in Indonesian). 23 October 2021. Retrieved 18 April 2022.
  10. Mimbar Penerangan (in Indonesian). Ministry of Information. 1962. p. 279.
  11. Rupiah di tengah rentang sejarah: 45 tahun uang Republik Indonesia, 1946-1991 (in Indonesian). Ministry of Finance. 1991. pp. 25–26.
  12. Economic Trends and Their Implications for the United States. U.S. Government Printing Office. 1968.
  13. 1 2 "Ditunggu, Vonis Mati Koruptor Kedua". rmol.id (in Indonesian). 7 December 2021. Retrieved 18 April 2022.
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