HEYBALI.NEWS – While many Indonesians celebrated with festivities, President Prabowo Subianto ushered in the year 2026 in a markedly different setting: a modest evacuation post in South Tapanuli, North Sumatra, surrounded by families displaced by recent natural disasters. The gesture was a symbolic demonstration of solidarity, emphasizing a core message of his nascent administration: that the state would not abandon its most vulnerable citizens.
Arriving at the Batu Hula evacuation post just before midnight on December 31, President Prabowo was greeted by residents who had waited for hours. Eschewing the fireworks and fanfare typical of New Year’s celebrations, the event was simple yet poignant. The President mingled freely, embracing children, listening to concerns, and leading the gathered community in singing national songs like “Tanah Airku” (My Homeland) as the clock struck twelve.
“Happy New Year 2026. May the Almighty always give the best for all of us,” he stated, his words met with applause from the crowd huddled in the camp.
In an atmosphere of direct, unscripted interaction, President Prabowo delivered a firm reassurance. “Believe that your government, that your president, will never leave you, brothers and sisters,” he affirmed. “We were chosen by the people to work for the people.” He detailed that cabinet ministers had been deployed across disaster-affected regions to monitor relief efforts and ensure services were reaching those in need.
The President’s visit to South Tapanuli, an area that had suffered from severe flooding and landslides leading to isolation, served as a platform to highlight both ongoing challenges and progress. He noted reports of significantly improved access to previously cut-off villages, framing recovery as a collective, gotong royong (mutual cooperation) effort.
“We must remain spirited, sincere, and strong in our souls. Most importantly, we must work together to face these difficulties,” he urged the survivors.
The high-level delegation accompanying the President included key figures such as Defense Minister Sjafrie Sjamsoeddin, Coordinating Minister for Infrastructure Agus Harimurti Yudhoyono, and North Sumatra Governor Bobby Nasution, underscoring the cross-ministerial focus on the disaster response.
For the international community in Bali—a region itself no stranger to natural threats from volcanoes to tidal surges—the President’s choice of venue resonates. It highlights the ever-present vulnerability across the Indonesian archipelago and the profound expectation for tangible state support in times of crisis. The image of a president spending New Year’s Eve in an evacuation camp sets a powerful, if challenging, precedent for hands-on governance in the year ahead.
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