Drunken Republic Cartoons

July 2010

Indonesia
Kompas – July 24, 2010

Man: The Bank Century case, this case that case, case XYZ, to the piggy bank case, they will all be fully investigated! Full, full, fully!

Kid: Will!

Indonesia
Kompas – July 21, 2010

1st Man: By 2050 many of our islands will be under water.

2nd Man: What’s important is they’re safe till 2014, right?

Indonesia
Kompas – July 17, 2010

Politicians: My job is to make policy, my job is to procure canisters... my job is this, my job is that...

Man holding gas canister: My job... is to accept my fate...

Indonesia
Kompas – July 14, 2010

Man: The rice-reform order (era) huh? – report nasi (difficulties buying rice), a play on the word reform[n]asi (political reform).

Signs read: Going up. Going up.

Indonesia
Kompas – July 13, 2010

Kid: So where’s your commitment to the ideal of serving the people’s interests?

Lawmaker: In spite of not turning up for work, falling asleep during hearings, using my position to earn extra on the side, throwing bribes around... nevertheless I do represent the prosperity of the ordinary people...

Indonesia
Kompas – July 7, 2010

Man: Going sightseeing Mr?

Legislator: It’s a working visit don’t you know!

Indonesia
Kompas – July 3, 2010

Kid: There are may roads to Rome, but when will we get there Dad?

Signs: Police St, AGO St, Judiciary St, Finance St, Corruption Eradication Commission St, Judicial Mafia Task Force St, Commission XYZ St, Road Without End St. Damaged road!

June 2010

Indonesia
Kompas – June 30, 2010

Man: His conscious is in there... (arm band reads candidate regional head)

With the cost of campaign spending for regional elections reaching into the millions of dollars, candidate regional heads see running for public office as financial investment rather than a chance to serve the public.

Indonesia
Kompas – June 26, 2010

Man: As I’ve said, it’s porno if it’s done openly... if it’s secret it’s not porno!

Kid: So we live in the Republic of Pornography right Dad?

Indonesia
Kompas – June 23, 2010

Busker: Have a long and glorious life... a long and glorious life...

Indonesia
Kompas – June 23, 2010

Ever the opportunist, at its national congress on June 16-20 the Islamic based Justice and Prosperity Party (PKS) – known for its anti-US stance – announced it was seeking stronger links with the US to counter its exclusive image and broaden its political base.

Indonesia
Kompas – June 19, 2010

Kid: The Republic of Clowns League welcomes the world cup!

Indonesia
Kompas – June 16, 2010

Man: Don’t forget them (TV reads ‘South Africa 2010’)

For most Indonesians, the allegations of bribery and corruption surrounding South Africa’s hosting of the 2010 World Cup are all to familiar.

Indonesia
Kompas – June 12, 2010

Tongue reads Aspiration fund

Indonesia
Kompas – June 9, 2010

Man: It’s looking more and more crooked yeah...? (Bag reads aspiration fund)

Indonesia
Kompas – June 8, 2010

While environmental groups have welcomed a promised moratorium on deforestation as part of a deal with Norway to protect Indonesia’s rain forests, they say the details remain vague and question whether it will have much impact unless it is extended to existing concessions.

Indonesia
Kompas – June 2, 2010

1st Man: Tomorrow we commemorate the birth of Pancasila, remember?

2nd Man: When will it be put into practice?...

Indonesia
Kompas – June 1, 2010

Despite the recent rift in the pro-government coalition and the continuing outcry over the Lapindo mudflow disaster, regional elections in Sidoarjo, East Java, have seen the Democrat and Golkar parties joining forces to back candidates from Lapindo Brantas Inc, the company widely blamed for the massive social and ecological disaster that has inu

May 2010

Indonesia
Kompas – May 29, 2010

Sri when will you come home. You left without telling me. They say you went to the market to buy prawn paste, but you still haven’t come home... come back now Sri... come back now. (adapted from Sri Ran Away by Sony Josz)

Indonesia
Kompas – May 26, 2010

Man: Rattan also needs image building, right?

Rattan producers say that the government needs to promote the rattan industry and lift a ban on the export of unprocessed fiber, which has resulted in a dramatic decline in the numbers of raw rattan producers and threatens a formerly a reliable source of income for many local communities.