National Unity Cabinet

National Unity Cabinet
Kabinet Persatuan Nasional

36th cabinet of Indonesia
Indonesian Government (Executive Branch)
Date formed 26 October 1999 (1999-10-26)
Date dissolved 9 August 2001 (2001-08-09)
People and organisations
Head of state Abdurrahman Wahid
Status in legislature Coalition
History
Predecessor Development Reform Cabinet
Successor Mutual Assistance Cabinet
Members of the reshuffled National Unity Cabinet in 2000

The National Unity Cabinet (Indonesian: Kabinet Persatuan Nasional) was the Indonesian Cabinet which served under President Abdurrahman Wahid and Vice President Megawati Sukarnoputri from 26 October 1999 until 23 July 2001. The Cabinet was formed after Wahid and Megawati were elected President and Vice President by the People's Consultative Assembly (MPR). The Cabinet was originally designed to look after the interests of the various Indonesian Political Parties and the TNI but this notion quickly disappeared as Wahid's Presidency began to break down.

President and Vice President

Coordinating Ministers

Departmental Ministers

State Ministers

Officials With Ministerial Rank

Changes (Up to August 2000)

Reshuffle

On 23 August 2000, Wahid announced an extensive reshuffle of the Cabinet. He not only moved Ministers to other positions but also removed ministers from the Cabinet and introduced new names to the Cabinet. In terms of organization, Wahid merged Ministries, changed the names of various Ministries and in some cases actually abolishing them.

Coordinating Ministers

Departmental Ministers

State Ministers

Junior Minister

Officials With Ministerial Rank

Changes (Up to June 2001)

Second Reshuffle

On 1 June 2001, with the situation rapidly deteriorating around him, Wahid announced another reshuffle. The changes were:

Third Reshuffle

Wahid announced another reshuffle on 12 June 2001. The changes were:

Changes

Fourth Reshuffle

Wahid announced his fourth and final reshuffle on 10 July 2001. This reshuffle was prompted by Baharuddin Lopa's death. The changes were:

See also

References

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