Wednesday, 25 September 2013

Fauzi Bowo

Fauzi Bowo

Fauzi Bowo
Fauzi Bowo
Fauzi Bowo was the governor of Jakarta for the 2007â€"2012 term. He previously served as deputy governor.
He has worked for the Jakarta administration since 1987 and was treasurer of the Golkar organization from 1993 to 1997. On 8 August 2007 he was elected governor of Jakarta, beating his only rival Adang Daradjatun 57.9% to 42.1% in the 1st ever election for the post. He was inaugurated on 7 October 2007. Having run a for 2nd term as governor in the 2012 gubernatorial election, he was defeated on 20 September 2012 after a second-round runoff by Joko Widodo.
Fauzi Bowo, known as "Foke" to many Jakartans, was born in Jakarta to a wealthy landowning family. His father, Djohari bin Adiputro, was from Malang, East Java, and his mother, Nuraini binti Abdul Manaf, from Jakarta. After high school at Canisius College in Jakarta, Fauzi studied at the architecture faculty at the University of Indonesia from 1966 to 1967. There, he was involved in the Indonesian Students Action Front, an organization established to counter the communist-influenced Indonesian Student Union. In 1968 he won a scholarship to study in West Germany, where he was a student of town planning at the Technical University at Brunswick, graduating in 1976. While in Germany he was active in the Indonesian Students Association. In 2000, he completed a doctoral degree Doktor Ingenieur from University of Kaiserslautern, Germany.
Two years after graduating, in 1979 Fauzi was appointed acting head of the Jakarta Regional Bureau, eventually being promoted as regional secretary in 1998. He served as treasurer to the government Golkar organization from 1983 to 1997. In 2002 he expressed his intention to stand for the governor of Jakarta, which at the time was chosen by the regional administration. However, he was persuaded to stand aside and become deputy governor to Sutiyoso.
In 2004 he began approaching political and religious organizations to support his bid for the governorship of Jakarta. With the support of 19 political parties, including Golkar, PDI-P and PPP, he stood for the governorship in 2007 with Prijanto as his running mate. Fauzi defeated his opponent Adang Daradjatun in Jakarta's 1st gubernatorial election on 8 August by 57.9% to 42.1% of the vote.
Fauzi was shortlisted
award but failed to finish in
for the 2008 World Mayor
the top 10.
Fauzi is seen by many Jakartans as having failed to solve Jakarta's major problems, traffic jams and flooding. Under his reign, 5 new routes of TransJakarta were added, however TransJakarta users have complained of long waiting time and worsening service. There are constant complaints in the media about the worsening traffic situation. Many Jakartans argue that Governor Fauzi and the Jakarta regional government should be doing more to invest in public transport facilities, and to enforce regulations, in order to improve traffic flows across Jakarta. One response to the problem is a plan to establish a Greater Jakarta Transportation Authority to coordinate the implementation of the numerous proposals that have been made to improve the traffic challenges. In 2012, feasibility study of Mass Rapid Transit (MRT) which integrates with TransJakarta and railway stations has been finished and predicted construction will begin at end of 2012.
One of the policies which Fauzi has pursued is support for an anti-smoking campaign 1st introduced by his predecessor, former Governor Sutiyoso. The 1st tobacco legislation in Jakarta was introduced by Sutiyoso in 2005 when a by-law on air pollution control was issued. Several supporting regulations were subsequently introduced. Anti-smoking regulations introduced by Fauzi in 2011 ban people from smoking inside public buildings and certain other places. The regulations have had a noticeable impact in Jakarta. There has been a marked reduction in smoking in government offices and in places such as large modern hotels which are subject to the regulations. In May 2011 the World Health Organization named Fauzi as one of the recipients of the World No Tobacco Day 2011 Awards. Nevertheless, smoking is still widespread in Indonesia because anti-smoking programs are in an early stage of implementation across the nation.

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