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Indonesia 2019 elections: All you need to know


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A Balinese woman casts her ballots at a polling station in Kuta on Indonesia's resort island of Bali on December 9, 2015

Some 192 million people in Indonesia will be eligible to cast their votes on 17 April, in what has been called one of the most complicated single-day elections in history.

The election will see two familiar faces square up: the incumbent Joko Widodo, known as Jokowi, and his long-time rival Prabowo Subianto. Here's what you need to know: What's going to happen on 17 April? Indonesia's presidential, parliamentary and regional elections will all be taking place simultaneously. Some 245,000 candidates will be running for more than 20,000 national and local legislative seats across Indonesia. India - with a po[CENSORED]tion of five times as many people - votes in rolling elections that take place over two months. Indonesian voters will have one day, making it "one of the most complicated single-day elections in global history," according to the Lowy Institute. Who is running for the presidency? It's a battle between current President Joko Widodo, and Prabowo Subianto, a former military general. They've come face-to-face before in the 2014 elections. Mr Subianto is closely associated with the traditional elite. He was previously married to the daughter of former dictator General Suharto, who ruled Indonesia with an iron fist. Mr Subianto has been dogged by allegations of human rights abuses committed under Gen Suharto, though he has maintained his innocence. After spending many years overseas, Mr Subianto made his political comeback in 2009. He campaigned on a pro-poor platform in the 2014 presidential election, saying he wanted to reduce unemployment and create new jobs on farms. Mr Widodo comes from humble beginnings, and first came to international prominence as the governor of Jakarta, winning the position in 2012. In the 2014 presidential election he campaigned on a platform of "mind-set revolution" - a strategy to build national character, stamping out corruption, nepotism and intolerance, all of which he says flourished under Gen Suharto's regime.

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