Wiyogo Atmodarminto | |
Order: | 7th |
Office: | Governor of Jakarta |
Term Start: | 1987 |
Term End: | 1992 |
Predecessor: | R. Soeprapto |
Successor: | Soerjadi Soedirdja |
Birth Date: | 22 November 1922 |
Birth Place: | Yogyakarta, Dutch East Indies |
Death Place: | Jakarta, Indonesia |
Signature: | Signature of Wiyogo Atmodarminto.svg |
Branch: | Indonesian Army |
Wiyogo Atmodarminto (22 November 1922 – 19 October 2012) or better known as Bang Wi, is an Indonesian military figure, diplomat and politician. He served as Governor of Jakarta, the country's capital, from 1987–1992. Previously, he served as the Indonesian Ambassador to Japan and occupied several important army posts.[1] [2] Wiyogo participated in the General Offensive of 1 March 1949.[3]
Wiyogo Atmodarminto was born in Yogyakarta, Dutch East Indies, on 22 November 1922, at the Yogyakarta Palace. He underwent formal education in the Taman Siswa environment, before continuing to the Yogya Military Academy. As a cadet, he was involved in the independence struggle, and continued his career in the army. In 1954, he continued his education at the Rangers Course at Fort Benning in the United States.[4]
In his capacity as Deputy Commander of Battalion 330 in Majalengka, he faced the Darul Islam rebellion. In 1965, he studied in Germany before becoming the Commander of Garuda IV in South Vietnam. In 1973 he was appointed Chief of Staff of the Army Strategic Command unit (Kostrad), then he was appointed as Governor of the Indonesian Military Academy, Commander of Kostrad and Commander of the Defense Area Command I & II.
During his leadership as the governor of Jakarta, he applied, what a journalist colleague called it, the BMW concept, which stands for Clean, Humane, Authoritative in Jakarta (Indonesian: Bersih, Manusiawi dan Berwibawa).[5]
As governor, Wiyogo Atmodarminto continued a ban on becaks, which were Cycle rickshaws in Indonesia that were considered an icon of the capital city, a ban that was similar to that of the ban instituted by governor Ali Sadikin, who served from 1966 until 1977.[6]
On 19 October 2012, Wiyogo Atmodarminto collapsed after performing the maghrib prayer at home and was rushed to the Metropolitan Medical Center hospital on Jl. Rasuna Said, South Jakarta. He died shortly thereafter. His remains were escorted by soldiers to the Kalibata Heroes' Cemetery in South Jakarta.[7]