Suwiryo was born in Wonogiri, Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia), on 17 February 1903. After completing his education, he worked at the central statistical body, became a teacher, worked at an insurance company, and founded a pharmaceutical business. He became a participant in the Indonesian National Party, and upon its dissolution in 1931, was one of the co-founders of the succeeding Indonesia Party.[1] During the Japanese occupation of the Dutch East Indies, Suwiryo worked as head of economic affairs at the headquarters of the Japan-founded labor organization Putera before later working at Jawa Hokokai.[2] In 1945, he became a deputy mayor of Jakarta under Japanese mayor Hasegawa Shigeo. Following the surrender of Japan, a group of Indonesian officials approached Hasegawa and requested him to hand over power peacefully to Suwiryo on 7 September 1945. Though he refused the demand, Hasegawa stopped attending office, resulting in Suwiryo becoming de facto mayor.[3]
Political career
Mayor of Jakarta
Suwiryo was elected by municipal employees of Jakarta's government as the new mayor on 23 September 1945.[3] During the early parts of the Indonesian National Revolution, Suwiryo continued to lead the city administration of Jakarta despite the military occupation of the Allied forces. He also joined a committee that was meant to establish cooperation between the Indonesian police forces and the British military.[4] During this period, there was competition between the authorities established by the Dutch East Indies government and the Republican government, though in general the former focused on European affairs and the latter focused on the Indonesian inhabitants.[5]
Suwiryo was arrested by Dutch forces alongside some other Republican administrators on 20 July 1947, shortly before Operation Product.[6] After being arrested for several months, Suwiryo was flown to Yogyakarta - the Republic of Indonesia's new capital - in November 1947 and he became head of demographic affairs of the government, with Daan Jahja becoming the military governor of Jakarta.[1][7]
Following his reappointment as mayor by Sukarno on 17 February 1950 during the United States of Indonesia period,[1] Suwiryo began developing Jakarta as a metropolitan city, through the development of new areas and issuance of some regulations. In 1951, he was appointed as Deputy Prime Minister and left the office, which was briefly vacant until Suwiryo was succeeded by Syamsurizal.[8]
Suwiryo was often criticized by senior pro-parliamentary PNI members such as Sartono and Iskaq Tjokrohadisurjo for his compromises with Sukarno. This eventually led to the fracturing of PNI's unity in its provincial branches, several members broke off and formed Partindo, and multiple army-backed PNI-affiliated organizations challenged Suwiryo's chairmanship.[10] Suwiryo was defeated by Ali Sastroamidjojo in the chairman vote during the July 1960 party congress.[11][12]
^Sedyawati, Edi; Rahardjo, Supratnikno; Johan, Irmawati Marwoto; Ohorella, G. A. Manilet- (1986). Sejarah Kota Jakarta 1950-1980 (in Indonesian). Direktorat Jenderal Kebudayaan. p. 139.