Munafri Arifuddin (born 20 September 1975) is an Indonesian politician and businessman who is the former CEO of the football club PSM Makassar and the current Director of PT Liga Indonesia Baru.
Munafri studied for primary, secondary and tertiary school all in Makassar, and earns his bachelor's degree in law from Hasanuddin University in 1999.[1]
Career
Munafri worked for his father-in-law for some time, including as CEO for several of the companies within the group. He also served as chairman of South Sulawesi's young entrepreneurs association between 2007 and 2010.[1]
PSM Makassar
In 2016, shareholders of PSM Makassar elected Munafri as the new CEO for the club, replacing Rully Habibie. Before, Munafri had worked on clubs such as Hasanuddin FC and Perseka Bosowa.[5] At that time, he was working at Corporate Relations in Bosowa.[6]
After becoming the last-ranked team in the league following the first four matches in his first season, Munafri fired the club manager Luciano Leandro and brought in Robert Alberts. In addition, nine foreign players were also removed. PSM finished sixth that season.[7]
During the 2018 Indonesian local elections, Munafri registered to run as mayor of Makassar, the capital and largest city of South Sulawesi. Being a member of Golkar,[8] he was supported by 10 political parties representing 43 of the 50 seats in Makassar's city council.[9] His opponent was incumbent mayor Mohammad Ramdhan Pomanto. However, Pomanto was disqualified by the city's electoral commission, citing procedural flaws.[10] This resulted in Munafri running as a single candidate, but he was still required to win over half of the votes to be elected as a none of the above option was available.[11]
In the election itself, Munafri secured 264,245 votes, while 300,795 voted for the empty ballot.[12] While Munafri brought the case to the Constitutional Court, the court denied his case and reiterated the electoral commission's ruling, forcing a repeat election to be held in 2020 and an appointee to act as mayor.[13][14] Munafri's loss marked the first ever victory for the none of the above option in elections for Indonesian regional leaders.[15][16]
In his second run in 2020, Arifuddin again faced Pomanto alongside two other tickets and lost, winning 34.7% of votes to Pomanto's 41.3%.[17]