Disaster Response or Political Theater? The Damaging Spectacle of Airdropped Aid in North Sumatra

Disaster Response or Political Theater? The Damaging Spectacle of Airdropped Aid in North Sumatra

NORTH SUMATRA, Indonesia – A viral video depicting North Sumatra Governor Muhammad Bobby Afif Nasution, accompanied by military personnel (TNI, or Indonesian National Armed Forces), airdropping food packages from a hovering helicopter has ignited a firestorm of criticism across Indonesia. Meant to showcase rapid disaster response to recent floods and landslides, the December 1, 2025, clip has instead become a damning case study in the failure of crisis management ethics and efficiency. The footage, showing aid packages being tossed to the ground from altitude, raises a profound and disturbing question: when does a gesture of help become an act of disrespect and waste?

The public outrage is not about the intent to assist but the method of delivery. In an era where crisis management principles prioritize dignity, precision, and minimal waste, the visual of potential sustenance plummeting into mud represents a staggering disconnect. This incident transcends a simple logistical error; it exposes a deep-seated culture of performative governance where the spectacle of action often outweighs its substantive outcome.

The Core Failure: Misapplying a Last-Resort Tactic

The fundamental critique hinges on necessity. In professional disaster response protocols, an airdrop is a tool of absolute last resort. It is sanctioned only when ground access is impossible and landing is deemed too hazardous, such as in active conflict zones or areas severed by catastrophic geography.

The video footage, however, suggests no such constraints. The terrain appears to be an open, albeit muddy, field—landing or at least a low-hover for a handoff seemed entirely feasible. By opting for the dramatic airdrop, the operation ignored the basic tenets of aid delivery: ensuring supplies reach recipients intact and with dignity. This was not Gaza; this was a flood zone where the greatest threat was logistical, not ballistic.

The Spectacle of Power: When Aid Becomes Propaganda

Source:Diskominfo Sumut

This misstep points to a more insidious motivation: the political spectacle. The image of a governor personally orchestrating an airdrop from a military helicopter is potent political theater. It broadcasts urgency, authority, and direct involvement. However, when the method is clearly suboptimal, the performance shifts from heroic to hubristic. It prioritizes the photo opportunity—the powerful figure gazing down from the sky—over the practical reality on the ground where food packages burst open upon impact.

This transforms vital aid from a lifeline into a prop, and beneficiaries from citizens in crisis into extras in a campaign video. It reflects a crisis management philosophy where visibility is conflated with competency, and swift, camera-ready action is valued above careful, effective, and respectful execution.

The Ripple Effects of a Damaging Paradigm

The consequences of such performative disaster response are tangible and tragic:

  1. Physical Waste: Damaged food and supplies represent a direct loss of resources that could have sustained families.
  2. Psychological Harm: The act of having essential aid thrown at one’s feet is inherently demeaning, stripping recipients of agency in their moment of profound vulnerability.
  3. Erosion of Trust: Each such spectacle deepens public skepticism, teaching communities to view government aid efforts with cynicism, as performances rather than genuine support.
  4. Distortion of Priorities: It diverts attention from systemic issues—such as deforestation, poor urban planning, or inadequate early-warning systems—that contribute to such disasters, in favor of one-off, dramatic interventions.

A Demand for Professional, Dignified Crisis Management

Source:Diskominfo Sumut

The North Sumatra incident must serve as a national inflection point. Effective crisis management is not defined by grand gestures but by quiet competence: pre-positioned supplies, trained local responders, clear communication channels, and logistics plans that treat every aid package as precious and every survivor with respect.

The standard should be the unglamorous work of coordination, not the adrenaline-fueled dash for a viral moment. It requires leaders who empower systems, not those who seek to star in them. For Indonesia, a nation perennially in the path of natural disasters, building a disaster response infrastructure immune to the temptations of the political spectacle is not just a matter of efficiency—it is a moral imperative.

The people of North Sumatra, and all disaster-affected communities, deserve aid delivered with care, not broadcast with careless pride. True leadership in a crisis is measured not by the altitude of the helicopter, but by the integrity of the handoff on the ground.

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