In recent weeks he has drawn neck-and-neck with his rival,Joko Widodo,despite persistent allegations of discipline violations and human rights abuses during his time in the military,including while commandingKopassusspecial forces in East Timor in the 1980s and heading the Kostrad strategic command in Jakarta at the time of his father-in-law’s downfall in 1998.
Mr Prabowo has admitted to abducting 23 student activists in Jakarta in the dying days of the Suharto regime,while denying all knowledge of why 13 of those activists have never resurfaced.
Such allegations led to visa bans in the United States,preventing him from attending his son’s graduation in 2000.
They also led to a visa ban in Australia,which has not been publicly acknowledged,and which it seems Mr Prabowo has not tried to test.
"The formulation from high-ranking[Department of Foreign Affairs] officials has always been:‘If he applied for one,he wouldn't get it’,” said Marcus Mietzner,an expert on elite Indonesian politics at the Australian National University.
The recent surge in Mr Prabowo's electoral fortunes,however,appears to have cured his visa troubles and ensured he will have no trouble attending the Brisbane G20 leaders'forum in November,should he be elected president.