I Wayan Koster | |
|---|---|
Official portrait,c. 2023 | |
| 9thGovernor of Bali | |
| Assumed office 20 February 2025 | |
| Vice Governor | I Nyoman Giri Prasta |
| Preceded by | Sang Made Mahendra Jaya(acting) |
| In office 5 September 2018 – 5 September 2023 | |
| Vice Governor | Tjokorda Oka A. A. Sukawati |
| Preceded by | I Made Mangku Pastika |
| Succeeded by | Sang Made Mahendra Jaya(acting) |
| Member of thePeople's Representative Council | |
| In office 1 October 2004 – 14 May 2018 | |
| Succeeded by | I Gusti Agung Putri Astrid |
| Constituency | Bali |
| Personal details | |
| Born | (1962-10-20)20 October 1962 (age 63) |
| Party | PDIP |
| Alma mater | Bandung Institute of Technology(BMath) International Golden Institute Jakarta State University |
I Wayan Koster (born 20 October 1962) is an Indonesian politician who is the 10th governor ofBali. Before becoming governor, he was a member of thePeople's Representative Council representing the province.
A three-term parliamentarian representing his home province, Koster studied atBandung Institute of Technology andJakarta State University before becoming a lecturer and eventually joiningPDI-P.
Koster was born in the town ofSingaraja on 20 October 1962. He completed his first twelve years of education there from 1968, graduating high school in 1980. Afterward, he moved toBandung to study at theBandung Institute of Technology, from where he graduated in 1987 with a bachelor's degree in mathematics. Later on, he received a masters from the International Golden Institute (1995) and a doctorate fromJakarta State University (1999).[1][2]
After earning his bachelor's degree, Koster worked at theMinistry of Education and Culture as a researcher between 1988 and 1995.[1] He then became a non-permanent lecturer atTarumanagara University,Pelita Harapan University,Jakarta State University and an economic institute.[3][4]
By 2003, Koster was a specialist staff member inPDI-P.[3] In 2004, he ran for a seat in thePeople's Representative Council as part ofPDI-P. During the campaigning process, he headed a committee for a rally supporting the party in his hometown. Participants of the rally clashed with that of another rally supportingGolkar, resulting in two deaths from the latter group. Koster received acivil suit due to his position.[5] Regardless, Koster secured a seat in the parliament after the2004 election, and was sworn in on 1 October that year.[4][6]
After being reelected in 2009 with 185,901 votes,[4][7] Koster was investigated by theCorruption Eradication Commission several times during his second term. He was questioned in 2011 regarding a case in the education ministry,[8] in 2013 regarding another case related to theNational Sports Week,[9] and in 2014 about the cases ofAkil Mochtar[10] and the Hambalang sports complex.[11] He was reelected for a third term in 2014, winning 260,342 votes. This was the most votes for Bali candidates and the third-most votes won by a parliamentary candidate nationally, after fellowPDI-P membersKarolin Margret Natasa andPuan Maharani.[7][12]
During most of his time in parliament, Koster was part of the tenth commission covering education, culture, sports, tourism, and the creative economy.[3] He had voiced opposition against a 2014 law that would alter the selection of the parliamentary speaker from appointment by the largest party in an election to that of a parliamentary vote.[13] He also voiced his support for a law which would allow Balinese villages to pick between being a "cultural village" or a standard village.[14] He was eventually retasked to the fifth commission on public works, transportation and rural development.[15]
In 2018, Koster ran in thegubernatorial elections for Bali, resigning from his parliament seat in order to do so.[16] Running with Tjok Oka Artha Ardhana Sukawati, the pair won with 57.68 percent of the votes.[17] He was sworn in on 5 September 2018.[18]
During the campaigning period, Koster stated that he wished to alter the family planning program in Bali by changing the recommended number of children from two to four in order to fit Balinese traditions.[19]
Koster announced a ban on plastic, as stipulated in Gubernatorial Regulation (Pergub) No. 97/2018, expressing hope that the policy would lead to a 70 percent decline in Bali's marine plastics within a year.[20] In 2021, he was one of twelve individuals named in a suit by theInternational Society for Krishna Consciousness (ISKCON, known locally as the "Hare Krishna") for allegedly hindering worship activities.[21]
On 21 March 2023, Koster stated that he rejected the participation of theIsrael national under-19 football team in the2023 FIFA U-20 World Cup, then scheduled to be held in Bali.[22] His decision received a protest from the head of Local House of Representative of the Province of Bali.[23] After FIFA announced that Indonesia was removed as a host of the U-20 World Cup, Indonesian internet users expressed their frustration by flooding Koster's Instagram account comment column.[24]
2023 World Beach Games
On 4 July 2023, Indonesia announced it would no longer host the 2023 Association of National Olympic Committees (ANOC) World Beach Games. About 1,500 athletes from 100 countries were set to compete in Bali from August 5 to 15 in the youth-focused tournament featuring sports including beach soccer, surfing, sailing and beach volleyball.[25] ANOC cited no political reason for Indonesia’s withdrawal in its statement but it follows reported comments from Bali Governor Wayan Koster rejecting Israel’s presence in Bali ahead of the games.
Koster tak pernah pindah tugas komisi selama di DPR, yaitu di Komisi X (bidang pendidikan, olahraga, pariwisata, dan ekonomi kreatif), hingga digeser ke Komisi V (bidang pekerjaan umum, transportasi, dan pembangunan desa).
| Political offices | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by | Governor of Bali 2018–2023 | Succeeded by Sang Ade Mahendra |