Third Working Cabinet

The Third Working Cabinet, (Indonesian: Kabinet Kerja III), was an Indonesian cabinet that resulted from a 6 March 1962 reshuffle of the previous cabinet by President Sukarno. It consisted of a prime minister, two first deputy ministers, eight deputy prime ministers and 36 ministers as well as 13 members who headed government bodies. It was dissolved on 13 November 1963.

Third Working Cabinet
Kabinet Kerja III

21st Cabinet of Indonesia
Indonesian Government (Executive Branch)
Date formed6 March 1962 (1962-03-06)
Date dissolved13 November 1963 (1963-11-13)
People and organisations
Head of stateSukarno
No. of ministers1 Prime Minister, 1 First Minister, 2 Deputies First Minister, 8 Deputy First Ministers, 36 Ministers and 13 Leaders of Government Bodies
History
PredecessorSecond Working Cabinet
SuccessorFourth Working Cabinet

Composition

Cabinet Leadership

Foreign Affairs/Overseas Economic Relations

  • Deputy Prime Minister/Coordinating Minister: Subandrio

Home Affairs

  • Deputy Prime Minister/Coordinating Minister: Sahardjo
  • Minister of General Government and Regional Autonomy: Ipik Gandamana
  • Minister of Justice: Sahardjo
  • Minister/Chairman of the Supreme Court: Wirjono Prodjodikoro

Defense and Security

  • Deputy Prime Minister/Coordinating Minister: Gen. Abdul Haris Nasution
  • Minister/Chief-of-Staff of the Army: Abdul Haris Nasution
  • Minister/Chief-of-Staff of the Navy: Commodore R. E. Martadinata
  • Minister/Chief-of-Staff of the Air Force: Air Vice Marshal Omar Dani
  • Minister/Chief of the National Police: Insp. Gen. Soekarno Djojonegoro
  • Minister/Attorney General: Kadarusman
  • Minister of Veteran Affairs: Brig. Gen. Sambas Atmadinata
  • Minister assigned to the Deputy Prime Minister of Defense and Security: Lt. Gen. Hidajat

Production

  • Deputy Prime Minister/Coordinating Minister: Maj. Gen. Suprajogi
  • Minister of Agriculture/Agrarian Affairs: Sadjarwo
  • Minister of Labor: Ahem Erningpradja
  • Minister of Public Works and Power: Maj. Gen. Suprajogi
  • Minister of Basic Industries and Mining: Chairul Saleh
  • Minister of People's Industry: Maj. Gen. Azis Saleh
  • Minister of National Research: Sudjono Djuned Pusponegoro

Distribution

  • Deputy Prime Minister/Coordinating Minister: Johannes Leimena
  • Minister of Trade: Suharto
  • Minister of Land Transportation and Post, Telecommunications and Tourism: Lt. Gen. Djatikusumo
  • Minister of Maritime Transportation: Abdul Mutalib Danuningrat
  • Minister of Air Transportation: Col. R. Iskander
  • Minister of Cooperatives: Achmadi

Finance

  • Deputy Prime Minister/Coordinating Minister: Notohamiprodjo
  • Minister of Income, Payment and Oversight: Notohamiprodjo
  • Minister of State Budget Affairs: Arifin Harahap
  • Minister of Central Bank Affairs: Sumarno

Welfare

  • Deputy Prime Minister/Coordinating Minister: Muljadi Djojomartono
  • Minister of Religious Affairs: Sjaifuddin Zuchri
  • Minister of Social Affairs: Rusiah Sardjono
  • Minister of Health: Maj. Gen. Dr. Satrio
  • Minister of Basic Education & Culture: Prijono
  • Minister of Higher Education & Science: Thojib Hadiwidjaja
  • Minister of Sport: Maladi

Special Affairs

  • Deputy Prime Minister/Coordinating Minister: Muhammad Yamin
  • Minister of Information: Muhammad Yamin
  • Minister of Relations with the People's Representative Council/People's Consultative Assembly/Supreme Advisory Council/National Planning Agency: W. J. Rumambi
  • Minister of Relations with Religious Scholars: Fattah Jasin
  • Minister/Secretary General of the National Front: Sudibjo

Leaders of State Bodies/Deputy First Ministers

  • Chairman of the Provisional People's Consultative Assembly: Chairul Saleh
  • Speaker of the Mutual Assistance People's Representative Council: Zainul Arifin
  • Deputy Chairman of the Supreme Advisory Council: Sartono
  • Deputy Chairman of the National Planning Agency: Muhammad Yamin

Leaders of State Bodies/Ministers

  • Vice Chairman of the Provisional People's Consultative Assembly: Ali Sastroamidjojo
  • Deputy Chairman of the Provisional People's Consultative Assembly: Idham Chalid
  • Deputy Chairman of the Provisional People's Consultative Assembly: Dipa Nusantara Aidit
  • Deputy Chairman of the Provisional People's Consultative Assembly: Brig. Gen. Wilujo Puspojudo
  • Deputy Speaker of the Mutual Assistance People's Representative Council: Arudji Kartawinata
  • Deputy Speaker of the Mutual Assistance People's Representative Council: IGG Subamia
  • Deputy Speaker of the Mutual Assistance People's Representative Council: M. H. Lukman
  • Deputy Speaker of the Mutual Assistance People's Representative Council: Mursalin Daeng Mamangung

Minister assigned to the President

  • State Minister: Iwa Kusumasumantri

Official with ministerial rank

Changes

  • On 12 April 1962, the State Apparatus Oversight Board was abolished by presidential degree and Sultan Hamengkubuwono IX left the cabinet.
  • On 4 May 1962, Johannes Leimena and Subandrio were appointed First and Second Deputy Prime minister respectively, with effect from 6 March.
  • On 21 June 1962, Ahmad Yani replaced Nasution as Army Chief of Staff. Nasution was appointed Deputy First Minister/Chief of Staff of the Indonesian National Armed Forces.
  • On 23 August 1962, Mohammad Ichsan and Abdul Wahab Surjoadiningrat were both appointed Minister/State Secretary
  • Following the death of Muhammad Yamin, Ruslan Abdulgani was appointed Deputy Prime Minister/Coordinating Minister/Minister of Information on 24 October 1962.
  • From 30 January 1963, chiefs-of-staff were retitled commanders of the respective armed forces* branches.
  • Following the death of Mutual Assistance People's Representative Council Chairman Zainal Arifin, he was replaced by Deputy Chairman Arudji Kartawinata on 4 March 1963, who in turn was replaced by Achmad Sjaichu on 3 September.
  • On 11 April 1963, Minister Hidajat was appointed Minister of Land Transportation and Post, Telecommunications and Tourism, replacing Lt. Gen. Djatikusumo, who was appointed extraordinary ambassador for the Malaya land dispute.
  • Prime Minister Djuanda died on 7 November 1963. He was not replaced.
gollark: Hmm, the existing ECC stuff which exists *isn't* constant-time? I suppose it does seem to have a decent amount of conditionals in it.
gollark: Which is entirely overkill as nothing actually generates keypairs or needs secure randomness at runtime.
gollark: The thing shipped with potatOS uses events, timing *and* memory addresses.
gollark: Yes, I suppose technically the state has absolutely no effect on what it does, hmmm.
gollark: muahahaha.

References

  • Simanjuntak, P. N. H. (2003), Kabinet-Kabinet Republik Indonesia: Dari Awal Kemerdekaan Sampai Reformasi (in Indonesian), Jakarta: Djambatan, pp. 218–238, ISBN 979-428-499-8
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.