President Prabowo Subianto Declares Support for Labor Rights as He Dedicates Indonesia's First Labor Rights Museum
Key Takeaways
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NGANJUK, EAST JAVA, Investortrust.id — President Prabowo Subianto executed a major populist maneuver on Saturday by traveling to East Java to personally inaugurate a state museum dedicated to Marsinah, the iconic labor activist whose brutal 1993 assassination remains the ultimate symbol of Indonesia's worker-protection movement. Arriving in a white, domestically manufactured Maung MV3 Garuda Limousine, the President was swarmed by thousands of laborers, students, and union members who lined the streets of Nganjuk to witness the historic state recognition.
For global manufacturers, multi-national conglomerates, and foreign investors operating within Indonesia's massive industrial corridors, President Prabowo's heavy public embrace of a labor martyr signals a sharp institutional shift toward tightening labor law enforcement, safeguarding minimum wage requirements, and elevating corporate accountability. By leveraging the legacy of Marsinah, the administration is drawing a clear regulatory line in the sand, warning the private sector that the era of sacrificing basic human capital for aggressive, unchecked profit margins is officially over.
A Rare Event
The establishment of the Marsinah Museum and its accompanying free traveler lodge is a calculated effort to institutionalize labor history within the state's official narrative. Standing alongside Andi Gani Nena Wea, the President of the Confederation of All Indonesian Trade Unions (KSPSI), the country's most influential labor group, Prabowo toured the facility to inspect personal artifacts from Marsinah's life, including the clothing she wore just before her abduction and murder.
During the dedication ceremony, Prabowo explicitly framed the asset as a monumental breakthrough for the international working class. "With the words bismillahirrahmanirrahim, on this morning, Saturday, May 16, 2026, I, Prabowo Subianto, President of the Republic of Indonesia, hereby inaugurate the Ibu Marsinah Museum and Guest House in Nganjuk Regency, East Java Province,"
Prabowo declared during his live speech broadcast by the Presidential Secretariat. "I think this is a rare event. Perhaps in the entire world, there has never been a labor museum."
While his sentiment underscores how rare it is for a head of state to dedicate a national museum to a labor activist, museums dedicated entirely to labor history, trade unions, and working-class struggles have existed across the globe for decades.
Prabowo's statement also highlights a very real gap in Southeast Asia. In developing and newly industrialized economies across Asia, state narratives heavily prioritize corporate investment, infrastructure, and GDP growth. Erecting a state-backed monument to a labor martyr like Marsinah—who was murdered during a strike for higher wages—is a highly unusual move for a sitting president in this region.
Notable Labor Museums Around the World
- The People's History Museum (Manchester, UK): Located in the cradle of the Industrial Revolution, this is the UK’s national center for the collection, conservation, and study of material relating to the history of working people. It spans centuries of history regarding trade unions, the fight for the right to vote, and workers' rights.
- The Workers Museum (Arbejdermuseet - Copenhagen, Denmark): Established in the 1980s, this museum is located in the historic Workers' Assembly Hall (built in 1879). It documents the history of the Danish working class and the labor movement over the last 150 years and is even listed on the UNESCO tentative list for World Heritage.
- The Labour Museum (Arbetets museum - Norrköping, Sweden): Housed in a historic former textile mill, this museum focuses on industrial work, working life, and the history of the labor market in Sweden, specifically focusing on the lives of everyday laborers.
- The National Labour Museum (Finland): Located in Tampere, Finland, the Werstas Finnish Labour Museum is a massive, free-admission museum that explores the history of work, social history, and the Finnish labor movement.
- The American Labor Museum (Haledon, New Jersey, USA): Located in the historic Pietro Botto House—a meeting place for over 20,000 silk mill workers during the seminal 1913 Paterson Silk Strike—this museum preserves the history of the labor movement in the United States.
- The Workers Museum (Johannesburg, South Africa): This museum stands as a stark reminder of the migrant labor system under Apartheid. It is located in a former municipal compound that used to house hundreds of Black male migrant workers under highly restrictive conditions.
Warning Shot to Exploitative Capital
The President did not mince words when addressing the economic philosophy undergirding his administration, directly connecting the tragic fate of Marsinah to a wider breakdown of constitutional ethics by bad-actor corporations. He insisted that the tragedy should never have occurred under a government built upon the foundation of Pancasila—Indonesia's official five-point state philosophy—and the economic mandates of Article 33 of the 1945 Constitution.
"The event where Marsinah was brutally murdered because she fought for the factory workers of a company, in reality, completely did not need to happen if the foundation of this state was truly thought out and absorbed," Prabowo explained on Saturday, taking a direct jab at historical corporate greed. "That there is a business owner or leader who possesses malicious thoughts solely for the sake of huge profits—this is entirely inconsistent with the founding principles of our republic."
The Path to National Hero Status
The political climax of the visit came when Prabowo revealed that the state is officially moving to elevate Marsinah into the highest echelon of national honor. The President announced that he had officially accepted a unified petition from every major labor syndicate across the archipelago to formally induct her into the pantheon of national heroes. "I have the honor of positioning her to become a National Hero," Prabowo added during his emotional remarks.
The administration intends to use this momentum to enforce an "Indonesia Incorporated" economic framework, which mandates that the state, corporate titans, and the labor force operate as an integrated unit under an umbrella of social justice. Escorted by high-ranking security and regional officials including National Police Chief General Listyo Sigit Prabowo and East Java Governor Khofifah Indar Parawansa, the President reminded public bureaucrats that they hold a mandate derived solely from the working class, stating clearly that the strong must assist the weak to ensure sustainable national wealth.

