Suharto and wife |
Unfinished journey (30)
(Part thirty, Depok, West Java, Indonesia, September 3,
2014, 6:34 pm).
Just one year I became a reporter Antara News Agency
(Antara LKBN) around 1986, graduated after attending courses Journalistic
reporter for six months (Susdape IV) in LKBN Antara, which teachers by senior journalist Subagyo In, Andi Baso
Mappatoto, senior photographer Nurdin AS I assigned to cover the inauguration
of the Youth Graha minister Dr. Abdul Gafur held. When the young man at the
Senayan Graha inaugurated by President Soeharto.
I still remember when I was equipped with a pocket
camera, and a letter of invitation from the Ministry of Youth and Sports. I do
not have a photo ID for covering the activities of the President in the Palace.
No wonder as I photographed the show courage even to a
distance of several meters from the position of President Soeharto, so
sometimes I almost '' clubbed 'the guards because the photograph is too close.
Since then I just cover activities through Press Room
Soeharto's Palace, which has been recorded tapes heard other reporters were
Be post in the Palace, except covering the fall of
Suharto in the Assembly building, which at the same time building an D & R
Magazine in Salemba newly occupied three months of mass burned, at the time of
the riots in July 27.
Sukarno and Suharto |
Suharto
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Suharto
President Suharto, 1993.jpg
Suharto in 1993
2nd President of Indonesia
In office
12 March 1967 – 21 May 1998
Acting to 27 March 1968
Vice President Hamengkubuwono
IX
Adam Malik
Umar Wirahadikusumah
Sudharmono
Try Sutrisno
B. J. Habibie
Preceded by Sukarno
Succeeded by B.
J. Habibie
16th Secretary General of Non-Aligned Movement
In office
7 September 1992 – 20 October 1995
Preceded by Dobrica
Ćosić
Succeeded by Ernesto
Samper Pizano
4th Indonesian Armed Forces Commander
In office
1969–1973
Preceded by Abdul
Haris Nasution
Succeeded by Maraden
Panggabean
8th Indonesian Army Chief of Staff
In office
1965–1967
Preceded by Pranoto
Reksosamudra
Succeeded by Maraden
Panggabean
1st Armed Force and Strategic Reserve (KOSTRAD) Commander
In office
1961–1965
Preceded by Position
created
Succeeded by Umar
Wirahadikusumah
Personal details
Born 8 June 1921
Kemusuk, Dutch East Indies
Died 27 January
2008 (aged 86)
Jakarta, Indonesia
Nationality Indonesian
Political party Golkar
Spouse(s) Siti
Hartinah (m. 1947–1996; her death)
Children Siti
Hardiyanti Hastuti[1]
Sigit Harjojudanto
Bambang Trihatmodjo
Siti Hediyati Hariyadi
Hutomo Mandala Putra
Siti Hutami Endang Adiningsih
Profession Military
Religion Islam[2]
Signature
Suharto (About this sound pronunciation (help·info); 8
June 1921 – 27 January 2008) was the second President of Indonesia, holding the
office for 31 years from Sukarno's ouster in 1967 until his resignation in
1998.
Suharto was born in a small village, Kemusuk, in the
Godean area near the city of Yogyakarta, during the Dutch colonial era.[3] He
grew up in humble circumstances.[4] His Javanese Muslim parents divorced not
long after his birth, and he was passed between foster parents for much of his
childhood. During the Japanese occupation of Indonesia, Suharto served in
Japanese-organised Indonesian security forces. Indonesia's independence
struggle saw him joining the newly formed Indonesian army. Suharto rose to the
rank of Major General following Indonesian independence. An attempted coup on
30 September 1965 was countered by Suharto-led troops and was blamed on the
Indonesian Communist Party.[5] The army subsequently led an anti-communist
purge, and Suharto wrested power from Indonesia's founding president, Sukarno.
He was appointed acting president in 1967 and President the following year.
Support for Suharto's presidency was strong throughout the 1970s and 1980s but
eroded following a severe financial crisis that led to widespread unrest and
his resignation in May 1998. Suharto died in 2008.
The legacy of Suharto's 31-year rule is debated both in
Indonesia and abroad. Under his "New Order" administration, Suharto
constructed a strong, centralised and military-dominated government. An ability
to maintain stability over a sprawling and diverse Indonesia and an avowedly
anti-Communist stance won him the economic and diplomatic support of the West
during the Cold War. For most of his presidency, Indonesia experienced
significant economic growth and industrialisation,[6] dramatically improving
health, education and living standards.[7] Indonesia's invasion and occupation
of East Timor during Suharto's presidency resulted in at least 100,000
deaths.[8] By the 1990s, the New Order's authoritarianism and widespread
corruption[9] were a source of discontent.[10] In the years after his
presidency, attempts to try him on charges of corruption and genocide failed
because of his poor health and because of lack of support within Indonesia.
Main article: Early life and career of Suharto
Suharto was born on 8 June 1921 during the Dutch East
Indies era, in a plaited bamboo walled house in the hamlet of Kemusuk, a part
of the larger village of Godean. The village is 15 kilometres (9 mi) west of
Yogyakarta, the cultural heartland of the Javanese.[7][11] Born to ethnic
Javanese parents of peasant class, he was the only child of his father's second
marriage. His father, Kertosudiro, had two children from his previous marriage,
and was a village irrigation official. His mother, Sukirah, a local woman, was
distantly related to Sultan Hamengkubuwono V by his first concubine.[12]
Official Portrait of Suharto and First Lady Siti
Hartinah.
Five weeks after Suharto's birth, his mother suffered a
nervous breakdown and he was placed in the care of his paternal great-aunt,
Kromodirjo.[13] Kertosudiro and Sukirah divorced early in Suharto's life and
both later remarried. At the age of three, Suharto was returned to his mother,
who had married a local farmer whom Suharto helped in the rice paddies.[13] In
1929, Suharto's father took him to live with his sister, who was married to an
agricultural supervisor, Prawirowihardjo, in the town of Wuryantoro in a poor
and low-yielding farming area near Wonogiri. Over the following two years, he
was taken back to his mother in Kemusuk by his stepfather and then back again
to Wuryantoro by his father.[14]
Prawirowihardjo took to raising the boy as his own, which
provided Suharto a father-figure and a stable home in Wuryantoro. In 1931, he
moved to the town of Wonogiri to attend the primary school (schakelschool),
living first with Prawirohardjo's son Sulardi, and later with his father's
relative Hardjowijono. While living with Hardjowijono, Suharto became acquinted
with Darjatmo, a dukun ("guru") of Javanese mystical arts and faith
healing. The experience deeply affected him and later, as president, Suharto
surrounded himself with powerful symbolic language.[7] Difficulties in paying
the fees for his education in Wonogiri resulted in another move back to his
father in Kemusuk, where he continued studying at a lower-fee Muhammadiyah
middle school in the city of Yogyakarta until 1939.[14][15]
Like many Javanese, Suharto had only one name.[16] In
religious contexts in recent years he has sometimes been called
"Haji" or "el-Haj Mohammed Suharto" but these names were
not part of his formal name or generally used. The spelling "Suharto"
reflects modern Indonesian spelling, although the general approach in Indonesia
is to rely on the spelling preferred by the person concerned. At the time of
his birth, the standard transcription was "Soeharto" and he preferred
the original spelling. The international English-language press generally uses
the spelling 'Suharto' while the Indonesian government and media use
'Soeharto'.[17]
Suharto's upbringing contrasts with that of leading
Indonesian nationalists such as Sukarno in that he is believed to have had
little interest in anti-colonialism, or political concerns beyond his immediate
surroundings. Unlike Sukarno and his circle, Suharto had little or no contact
with European colonizers. Consequently, he did not learn to speak Dutch or
other European languages in his youth. He learned to speak Dutch after his
induction into the Dutch military in 1940.[15]
Military career[edit]
Main article: Early life and career of Suharto
World War II and Japanese occupation[edit]
See also: Japanese occupation of Indonesia
Suharto finished middle school at the age of 18 and took
a clerical job at a bank in Wuryantaro. He was forced to resign after a bicycle
mishap tore his only working clothes.[18] Following a spell of unemployment, he
joined the Royal Netherlands East Indies Army (KNIL) in June 1940, and
undertook basic training in Gombong near Yogyakarta. With the Netherlands under
German occupation and the Japanese pressing for access to Indonesian oil
supplies, the Dutch had opened up the KNIL to large intakes of previously
excluded Javanese.[19] Suharto was assigned to Battalion XIII at Rampal,
graduated from a short training course at KNIL Kaderschool in Gombong to become
a sergeant, and was posted to a KNIL reserve battalion in Cisarua.[20]
Following the Dutch surrender to the invading Japanese
forces in March 1942, Suharto abandoned his KNIL uniform and went back to
Wurjantoro. After months of unemployment, he then became one of thousands of
Indonesians who took the opportunity to join Japanese-organised security forces
by joining the Yogyakarta police force.[19] In October 1943, Suharto was
transferred from the police force to the newly formed Japanese-sponsored
militia, the PETA (Defenders of the Fatherland) in which Indonesians served as
officers. In his training to serve with the rank of shodancho (platoon
commander) he encountered a localised version of the Japanese bushido, or
"way of the warrior", used to indoctrinate troops. This training
encouraged an anti-Dutch and pro-nationalist thought, although toward the aims
of the Imperial Japanese militarists. The encounter with a nationalistic and
militarist ideology is believed to have profoundly influenced Suharto's own way
of thinking.[21]
Suharto was posted to a PETA coastal defence battalion at
Wates, south of Yogyakarta, until he was admitted for training for company
commander (chudancho) in Bogor from April to August 1944. As company commander,
he conducted training for new PETA recruits in Surakarta, Jakarta, and Madiun.
The Japanese surrender and Proclamation of Indonesian Independence in August
1945 occurred while Suharto was posted to the remote Brebeg area (on the slopes
of Mount Wilis) to train new NCOs to replace those executed by the Japanese in
the aftermath of the failed PETA rebellion of February 1945 in Blitar, led by
Supriyadi.
Indonesian National Revolution[edit]
See also: Indonesian National Revolution
Two days after the Japanese surrender in the Pacific,
independence leaders Sukarno and Hatta declared Indonesian independence, and
were appointed President and Vice-President respectively of the new Republic.
Suharto disbanded his regiment in accordance with orders from the Japanese
command, and returned to Yogyakarta.[22] As republican groups rose to assert Indonesian
independence, Suharto joined a new unit of the newly formed Indonesian army. On
the basis of his PETA experience, he was appointed deputy commander, and
subsequently a battalion commander when the republican forces were formally
organised in October 1945.[22] Suharto was involved in fighting against Allied
troops around Magelang and Semarang, and was subsequently appointed head of a
brigade as lieutenant-colonel, having earned respect as a field commander.[23]
In the early years of the War, he organised local armed forces into Battalion X
of Regiment I; Suharto was promoted Major and became Battalion X's leader.[24]
The arrival of the Allies, under a mandate to return the
situation to the status quo ante bellum, quickly led to clashes between Indonesian
republicans and Allied forces, i.e. returning Dutch and assisting British
forces. Suharto led his Division X troops to halt an advance by the Dutch T
("Tiger") Brigade on 17 May 1946. It earned him the respect of
Lieutenant-Colonel Sunarto Kusumodirjo, who invited him to draft the working
guidelines for the Battle Leadership Headquarters (MPP), a body created to
organise and unify the command structure of the Indonesian Nationalist
forces.[25] The military forces of the still infant Republic of Indonesia were
constantly restructuring. By August 1946, Suharto was head of the 22nd Regiment
of Division III (the "Diponegoro Division") stationed in Yogyakarta.
In late 1946, the Diponegoro Division assumed responsibility for defence of the
west and southwest of Yogyakarta from Dutch forces. Conditions at the time are
reported by Dutch sources as miserable; Suharto himself is reported as
assisting smuggling syndicates in the transport of opium through the territory
he controlled, to generate income. On September 1948, Suharto was dispatched to
meet Musso, chairman of the Indonesian Communist Party (PKI) in an unsuccessful
attempt at a peaceful reconciliation of the communist uprising in Madiun.[26]
Lieutenant Colonel Suharto in 1947.
In December 1948, the Dutch launched "Operation
Crow", which resulted in the capture of Sukarno and Hatta and the capital
Yogyakarta. Suharto was appointed to lead the Wehrkreise III, consisting of two
battalions, which waged guerilla warfare against the Dutch from the hills south
of Yogyakarta.[26] In dawn raids on 1 March 1949, Suharto's forces and local
militia recaptured the city, holding it until noon.[27] Suharto's later
accounts had him as the lone plotter, although other sources say Sultan
Hamengkubuwono IX of Yogyakarta, and the Panglima of the Third Division,
ordered the attack. However, General Abdul Nasution said that Suharto took
great care in preparing the "General Offensive" (Indonesian Serangan
Umum). Civilians sympathetic to the Republican cause within the city had been
galvanised by the show of force which proved that the Dutch had failed to win
the guerrilla war. Internationally, the United Nations Security Council
pressured the Dutch to cease the military offensive and to recommence
negotiations, which eventually led to the Dutch withdrawal from Yogyakarta area
in June 1949 and to complete transfer of sovereignty in December 1949. Suharto
was responsible for the takeover of Yogyakarta city from the withdrawing Dutch
in June 1949.[28]
During the Revolution, Suharto married Siti Hartinah
(known as Madam Tien), the daughter of a minor noble in the Mangkunegaran royal
house of Solo. The arranged marriage was enduring and supportive, lasting until
Tien's death in 1996.[7] The couple had six children: Siti Hardiyanti Rukmana
(Tutut, born 1949), Sigit Harjojudanto (born 1951), Bambang Trihatmodjo (born
1953), Siti Hediati (Titiek, born 1959), Hutomo Mandala Putra (Tommy, born
1962), and Siti Hutami Endang Adiningish (Mamiek, born 1964). Within the
Javanese upper class, it was considered acceptable for the wife to pursue
genteel commerce[clarification needed] to supplement the family budget,
allowing her husband to keep his dignity in his official role. The commercial
dealings[clarification needed] of Tien, her children and grandchildren became
extensive and ultimately undermined Suharto's presidency.[7]
Post-Independence military career[edit]
Suharto with his wife and six children in 1967.
In the years following Indonesian independence, Suharto
served in the Indonesian National Army, primarily in Java. In 1950, as a
Colonel, he led the Garuda Brigade in suppressing Makassar Uprising, a
rebellion of former colonial soldiers who supported the Dutch-established State
of East Indonesia and its federal entity, the United States of Indonesia.[29]
During his year in Makassar, Suharto became acquainted with his neighbours, the
Habibie family, whose eldest son BJ Habibie was later Suharto's vice-president,
and went on to succeed him as President. In 1951-1952, Suharto led his troops
in defeating the Islamic-inspired rebellion of Battalion 426 in the Klaten area
of Central Java.[30] Appointed to lead four battalions in early 1953, he
organised their participation in battling Darul Islam insurgents in
northwestern Central Java and anti-bandit operations in the Mount Merapi area.
He also sought to stem leftist sympathies amongst his troops. His experience in
this period left Suharto with a deep distaste for both Islamic and communist
radicalism.[28]
In his office as the head of the Strategic Reserve, 1963
Between 1956 and 1959, he served in the important
position of commander of Diponegoro Division based in Semarang, responsible for
Central Java and Yogyakarta provinces. His relationship with prominent
businessmen Liem Sioe Liong and Bob Hasan, which extended throughout his
presidency, began in Central Java, where he was involved in a series of
"profit generating" enterprises conducted primarily to keep the
poorly-funded military unit functioning.[31] Army anti-corruption investigations
implicated Suharto in a 1959 smuggling scandal. Relieved of his position, he
was transferred to the army's Staff and Command School (Seskoad) in the city of
Bandung.[32] While in Bandung, he was promoted to brigadier-general, and in
late 1960, promoted to army deputy chief of staff.[7] In 1961, he was given an
additional command, as head of the army's new Strategic Reserve (later
KOSTRAD), a ready-reaction air-mobile force based in Jakarta.[7]
In January 1962, Suharto was promoted to the rank of
major general and appointed to lead Operation Mandala, a joint army-navy-air
force command based in Makassar. This formed the military side of the campaign
to win western New Guinea from the Dutch, who were preparing it for its own
independence, separate from Indonesia.[7] In 1965, Suharto was assigned
operational command of Sukarno's Konfrontasi, against the newly formed
Malaysia. Fearful that Konfrontasi would leave Java thinly covered by the army,
and hand control to the 2 million-strong Indonesian Communist Party (PKI), he
authorised a Kostrad intelligence officer, Ali Murtopo, to open secret contacts
with the British and Malaysians.[7]
Overthrow of Sukarno (1965)[edit]
Main article: Transition to the New Order
Background[edit]
See also: Guided Democracy in Indonesia
Tensions between the military and communists increased in
April 1965, when Sukarno endorsed the immediate implementation of the PKI’s
proposal for a "fifth armed force" consisting of armed peasants and
workers. However, this idea was rejected by the army’s leadership as being
tantamount to the PKI establishing its own armed forces. In May, the
"Gilchrist Document" aroused Sukarno's fear of a military plot to
overthrow him, a fear which he mentioned repeatedly during the next few months.
On his independence day speech in August, Sukarno declared his intention to
commit Indonesia to an anti-imperialist alliance with China and other communist
regimes, and warned the Army not to interfere.[33]
While Sukarno devoted his energy for domestic and
international politics, the economy of Indonesia deteriorated rapidly with
worsening widespread poverty and hunger, while foreign debt obligations became
unmanageable and infrastructure crumbled. Sukarno's Guided Democracy stood on
fragile grounds due to the inherent conflict between its two underlying support
pillars, the military and the communists. The military, nationalists, and the
Islamic groups were shocked by the rapid growth of the communist party under
Sukarno's protection. They feared imminent establishment of communist state in
Indonesia. By 1965, the PKI had 3 million members, and were particularly strong
in Central Java and Bali. PKI has become the strongest political party in
Indonesia.
Abortive coup and anti-communist purge[edit]
Main articles: 30 September Movement and Indonesian
killings of 1965–1966
As Major General, Suharto (at right, foreground) attends
funeral for assassinated generals 5 October 1965.
Before dawn on 1 October 1965, six army generals were
kidnapped and executed in Jakarta by soldiers from the Presidential Guard,
Diponegoro Division, and Brawidjaja Division.[34] Soldiers occupied Merdeka
Square including the areas in front of the Presidential Palace, the national
radio station, and telecommunications centre. At 7:10 am Untung bin Sjamsuri
announced on radio that the "30 September Movement" had forestalled a
coup attempt on Sukarno by "CIA-backed power-mad generals", and that
it was "an internal army affair". The 30 September Movement never
made any attempt on Suharto's life.[35] Suharto had been in Jakarta army
hospital that evening with his three-year-old son Tommy who had a scalding
injury. It was here that he was visited by Colonel Abdul Latief, a key member
of 30 September Movement and close family friend of Suharto. According to
Latief's later testimony, the conspirators assumed Suharto to be a
Sukarno-loyalist, hence Latief went to inform him of the impending kidnapping
plan to save Sukarno from treacherous generals, upon which Suharto seemed to
offer his neutrality.[36]
Upon being told of the killings, Suharto went to KOSTRAD
headquarters just before dawn from where he could see soldiers occupying
Merdeka Square. He mobilized KOSTRAD and RPKAD (now Kopassus) special forces to
seize control of the centre of Jakarta, capturing key strategic sites including
the radio station without resistance. Suharto announced over the radio at 9:00
pm that six generals had been kidnapped by "counter-revolutionaries"
and that the 30 September Movement actually intended to overthrow Sukarno. He
said he was in control of the army, and that he would crush the 30 September
Movement and safeguard Sukarno.[37] Suharto issued an ultimatum to Halim Air
Force Base, where the G30S had based themselves and where Sukarno, air force
commander Omar Dhani and PKI chairman Dipa Nusantara Aidit had gathered,
causing them to disperse before Suhartoist soldiers occupied the air base on 2
October after short fighting.[38] With the failure of the poorly organised
coup,[39] and having secured authority from the president to restore order and
security, Suharto's faction was firmly in control of the army by 2 October (he
was officially appointed army commander on 14 October). On 5 October, Suharto
led a dramatic public ceremony to bury the generals' bodies.
Complicated and partisan theories continue to this day
over the identity of the attempted coup's organisers and their aims. The army's
version, and subsequently that of the "New Order", was that the PKI
was solely responsible. A propaganda campaign by the army, and Islamic and
Catholic student groups, convinced both Indonesian and international audiences
that it was a communist coup attempt, and that the killings were cowardly
atrocities against Indonesian heroes.[40] The army in alliance with religious
civilian groups led a campaign to purge Indonesian society, government, and
armed forces of the communist party and leftist organisations.[40] The purge
spread from Jakarta to much of the rest of the country.[41] (see: Indonesian
killings of 1965–1966). The most widely accepted estimates are that at least
half a million were killed.[42][43][44][45] As many as 1.5 million were
imprisoned at one stage or another.[46] As a result of the purge, one of
Sukarno's three pillars of support, the Indonesian Communist Party, was
effectively eliminated by the other two, the military and political Islam.[47]
Power struggle[edit]
See also: Supersemar
Sukarno continued to command loyalty from large sections
of the armed forces as well as the general population, and Suharto was careful
not to be seen to be seizing power in his own coup. For eighteen months
following the quashing of the 30 September Movement, there was a complicated
process of political manoeuvres against Sukarno, including student agitation,
stacking of parliament, media propaganda and military threats.[48]
In January 1966, university students under the banner of
KAMI, begin demonstrations against the Sukarno government voicing demands for
the disbandment of PKI and control of hyperinflation. The students received
support and protection with the army, with Suharto often engaging in
coordination meetings with student leaders. Street fights broke out between the
students and pro-Sukarno loyalists with the pro-Suharto students prevailing due
to army protection.
In February 1966, Sukarno promoted Suharto to
lieutenant-general (and to full general in July 1966).[28] The killing of a
student demonstrator and Sukarno's order for the disbandment of KAMI in
February 1966 further galvanised public opinion against the president. On 11
March 1966, the appearance of unidentified troops around Merdeka Palace during
a cabinet meeting (which Suharto had not attended) forced Sukarno to flee to
Bogor Palace (60 km away) by helicopter. Three Suhartoist generals,
Major-General Basuki Rahmat, Brigadier-General M Jusuf, and Brigadier-General
Amirmachmud went to Bogor to meet Sukarno. There, they secured a presidential
decree (see Supersemar) that gave Suharto authority to take any action necessary
to maintain security.[48]
Using the Supersemar letter, Suharto ordered the banning
of PKI the following day, and proceeded to purge pro-Sukarno elements from the
parliament, the government and military, accusing them of being communist
sympathisers. The army arrested 15 cabinet ministers and forced Sukarno to
appoint a new cabinet consisting of Suharto supporters. The army arrested
pro-Sukarno and pro-communist members of the MPRS (parliament), and Suharto
replaced chiefs of the navy, air force, and the police force with his
supporters, who then began an extensive purge within each services.[28]
In June 1966, the now-purged parliament passed 24
resolutions including the banning of Marxism-Leninism, ratifying the
Supersemar, and stripping Sukarno of his title of President for Life. Against
the wishes of Sukarno, the government ended Konfrontasi with Malaysia and
rejoined the United Nations (Sukarno had removed Indonesia from the UN in the
previous year). Suharto did not seek Sukarno's outright removal at this MPRS
session due to the remaining support for the president amongst elements of the
armed forces.
By January 1967, Suharto felt confident that he has
removed all significant support for Sukarno within the armed forces, and the
MPRS decided to hold another session to impeach Sukarno. On 22 February 1967,
Sukarno announced he would resign from the presidency, and on 12 March, the
MPRS session stripped him of his remaining power and named Suharto acting
president.[49] Sukarno was placed under house arrest in Bogor Palace; little
more was heard from him, and he died in June 1970.[50] On 27 March 1968, the
MPRS appointed Suharto for the first of his five-year terms as President.[51]
Suharto Family |
The "New Order" (1967–1998)[edit]
See also: New Order (Indonesia)
Ideology[edit]
Suharto promoted his "New Order", as opposed to
Sukarno's "Old Order", as a society based on the Pancasila ideology.
After initially being careful not to offend sensitivities of Islamic scholars
who feared Pancasila might develop into a quasi-religious cult, Suharto secured
a parliamentary resolution in 1983 which obliged all organisations in Indonesia
to adhere to Pancasila as basic principle. He also instituted mandatory
Pancasila training programs for all Indonesians, from primary school students
to office workers. In practice, however, the vagueness of Pancasila was
exploited by Suharto's government to justify their actions and to condemn their
opponents as "anti-Pancasila".[52]
The New Order also implemented the Dwifungsi ("Dual
Function") policy enabled the military to have an active role in all
levels of Indonesian government, economy, and society.
Consolidation of power[edit]
See also: Acting Presidency of Suharto
Suharto is appointed President of Indonesia at a
ceremony, March 1968.
Having been appointed president, Suharto still needed to
share power with various elements including Indonesian generals who considered
Suharto as mere primus inter pares and Islamic and student groups who
participated in the anti-communist purge. Suharto, aided by his "Office of
Personal Assistants" (Aspri) clique of military officers from his days as
commander of Diponegoro Division, particularly Ali Murtopo, began to
systematically cement his hold on power by subtly sidelining potential rivals
while rewarding loyalists with political position and monetary incentives.
Having successfully stood-down MPRS chairman General
Nasution's 1968 attempt to introduce bill which will severely curtail
presidential authority, Suharto had him removed from his position as MPRS
chairman in 1969 and forced his early retirement from the military in 1972. In
1967, generals Hartono Rekso Dharsono, Kemal Idris, and Sarwo Edhie Wibowo
(dubbed "New Order Radicals") opposed Suharto's decision to allow
participation of existing political parties in elections in favour of a
non-ideological two-party system similar to those found in many Western
countries. Suharto then proceeded to send Dharsono overseas as ambassador,
while Kemal Idris and Sarwo Edhie Wibowo were sent to distant North Sumatera
and South Sulawesi as regional commanders.[53]
Suharto's previously strong relationship with the student
movement soured over the increasing authoritarianism and corruption of his
regime. While many original leaders of the 1966 student movement (Angkatan '66)
were successfully co-opted into the regime, Suharto was faced with large
student demonstrations challenging the legitimacy of 1971 elections
("Golput" movement), the costly construction of Taman Mini Indonesia
Indah theme park (1972), the domination of foreign capitalists (Malari Incident
of 1974), and lack of term limits of Suharto's presidency (1978). The regime
responded by imprisoning many student activists (such as future national
figures Dorodjatun Kuntjoro-Jakti, Adnan Buyung Nasution, Hariman Siregar, and
Sjahrir) and even sending army units to occupy university campus of ITB (Bandung
Institute of Technology) from January–March 1978. In April 1978, Suharto moved
decisively by issuing decree on "Normalization of Campus Life" (NKK)
which prohibited political activities on-campus not related to academic
pursuits.[54][55]
On 15–16 January 1974, Suharto faced a significant
challenge when violent riots broke-out in Jakarta during visit of Japanese
prime minister Kakuei Tanaka. Students demonstrating against increasing
dominance of Japanese investors was encouraged by General Sumitro, deputy commander
of armed forces. Sumitro was an ambitious general who disliked the strong
influence of Suharto's Aspri inner circle. It was reported to Suharto that the
riots were engineered by Sumitro who wished to destabilize the regime utilizing
the student unrest, resulting in Sumitro's dismissal and forced retirement.
This incident is referred as Malari Incident (Malapetaka Lima Belas Januari /
Disaster of 15 January). However, Suharto also disbanded Aspri to appease
popular dissent.[56]
In 1980, fifty prominent figures political figures signed
the Petition of Fifty which criticised Suharto's use of Pancasila to silence
his critics. Suharto refused to address the petitioners' concerns, and some of
them were imprisoned with others having restrictions imposed on their
movements.[57]
Domestic politics and security[edit]
To placate demands from civilian politicians for the
holding of elections, as manifested in MPRS resolutions of 1966 and 1967,
Suharto government formulated a series of laws regarding elections as well as
the structure and duties of parliament which were passed by MPRS in November
1969 after protracted negotiations. The law provided for a parliament (Madjelis
Permusjawaratan Rakjat/MPR) with the power to elect presidents, consisting of a
lower house (Dewan Perwakilan Rakjat/DPR) and regional representatives. 100 of
the 460 members of DPR will be directly appointed by the government, while the
remaining seats were allocated to political parties based on results of general
election. This mechanism ensures significant government control over
legislative affairs, particularly the appointment of presidents.[58][59]
To participate in the elections, Suharto realized the
need to align himself with a political party. After initially considering
alignment with Sukarno's old party the PNI, in 1969 Suharto decided to
take-over control of an obscure military-run federation of NGOs called Golkar
("Functional Group") and transform it into his electoral vehicle
under the coordination of his right-hand man Ali Murtopo. The first general
election was held on 3 July 1971 with ten participants; consisting of Golkar,
four Islamic parties, as well as five nationalist and Christian parties.
Campaigning on a non-ideological platform of "development", and aided
by official government support and subtle intimidation tactics, Golkar managed
to secure 62.8% of the popular vote. The March 1973 general session of newly
elected MPR promptly appointed Suharto to second-term in office with Sultan
Hamengkubuwono IX as vice-president.[60]
On 5 January 1973, to allow better control, the
government forced the four Islamic parties to merge into PPP (Partai Persatuan
Pembangunan/United Development Party) while the five non-Islamic parties were
fused into PDI (Partai Demokrasi Indonesia/Indonesian Democratic Party). The
government ensured that these parties never developed effective opposition by
controlling their leadership, while establishing the "re-call" system
to remove any outspoken legislators from their positions. Using this system
dubbed the "Pancasila Democracy", Suharto was re-elected unopposed by
the MPR in 1978, 1983, 1988, 1993, and 1998.[61] Golkar won landslide
majorities in the MPR at every election, ensuring that Suharto would be able to
pass his agenda with virtually no opposition. For all intents and purposes, he
held all governing power in the nation.
Suharto proceeded with various social engineering
projects designed to transform Indonesian society into a de-politicized
"floating mass" supportive of the national mission of
"development", a concept similar to corporatism. The government
formed various civil society groups to unite the populace in support of
government programs. For instance, the government created Korpri (Korps Pegawai
Republik Indonesia) in November 1971 as union of civil servants to ensure their
loyalty, organized the FBSI (Federasi Buruh Seluruh Indonesia) as the only
legal labour union in February 1973, and established the MUI in 1975 to control
Islamic clerics. In 1966 to 1967, to promote assimiliation of the influential
Chinese-Indonesians, the Suharto government passed several laws as part of
so-called "Basic Policy for the Solution of Chinese Problem", whereby
only one Chinese-language publication (controlled by the army) was allowed to
continue, all Chinese cultural and religious expressions (including display of
Chinese characters) were prohibited from public space, Chinese schools were
phased-out, and the ethnic-Chinese were encouraged to take-up
Indonesian-sounding names. In 1968, Suharto commenced the very successful
family-planning program (Keluarga Berentjana / KB) to stem the huge population
growth rate and hence increasing per-capita income. A lasting legacy from this
period is the spelling reform of Indonesian language decreed by Suharto on 17
August 1972.[62]
Suharto relied on the military to ruthlessly maintain
domestic security, organized by the Kopkamtib (Operation Command for the
Restoration of Security and Order) and BAKIN (State Intelligence Coordination
Agency). To maintain strict control over the country, Suharto expanded the
army's territorial system down to village-level, while military officers were
appointed as regional heads under the rubric of the Dwifungsi ("Dual
Function") of the military. By 1969, 70% of Indonesia's provincial
governors and more than half of its district chiefs were active military
officers. Suharto authorized Operasi Trisula which destroyed PKI-remnants
trying to organize a guerilla base in Blitar area in 1968, and ordered several
military operations which ended the communist PGRS-Paraku insurgency in West
Kalimantan (1967–1972). Attacks on oil workers by the first incarnation of Free
Aceh Movement separatists under Hasan di Tiro in 1977 led to dispatch of small
special forces detachments who quickly either killed or forced the movement's
members to flee abroad.[63] Notably, in March 1981, Suharto authorised a
successful special forces mission to end hijacking of a Garuda Indonesia flight
by Islamic extremists at Don Muang Airport in Bangkok.[64]
To comply with New York Agreement of 1962 which required
a plebiscite on integration of West Irian into Indonesia before end of 1969,
the Suharto government begin organizing for a so-called "Act of Free
Choice" scheduled for July–August 1969. The government sent RPKAD special
forces under Sarwo Edhie Wibowo which secured the surrender of several bands of
former Dutch-organized militia (Papoea Vrijwilligers Korps / PVK) at large in
the jungles since the Indonesian takeover in 1963, while sending Catholic
volunteers under Jusuf Wanandi to distribute consumer goods to promote
pro-Indonesian sentiments. In March 1969, it was agreed that the plebiscite
will be channeled via 1,025 tribal chiefs, citing the logistical challenge and
political ignorance of the population. Using the above strategy, the plebiscite
produced a unanimous decision for integration with Indonesia, which was duly
noted by United Nations General Assembly in November 1969.[65]
Economy[edit]
Suharto on a visit to West Germany in 1970.
To stabilize the economy and to ensure long-term support
for the New Order, Suharto’s administration enlisted a group of mostly
American-educated Indonesian economists, dubbed the "Berkeley Mafia",
to formulate significant changes in economic policy. By cutting subsidies,
decreasing government debt, and reforming the exchange rate mechanism,
inflation was lowered from 660% in 1966 to 19% in 1969. The threat of famine
was alleviated by influx of USAID rice aid shipments in 1967 to 1968.[66]
With a lack of domestic capital that was required for
economic growth, the New Order reversed Sukarno's economic self-sufficiency
policies and opened selected economic sectors of the country to foreign
investment though the 1967 Foreign Investment Law. Suharto travelled to Western
Europe and Japan to promote investment in Indonesia. The first foreign
investors to re-enter Indonesia included mining companies Freeport Sulphur
Company and International Nickel Company. Following government regulatory
frameworks, domestic entrepreneurs (mostly Chinese-Indonesians) emerged in the
late 1960s and early 1970s in the import-substitution light-manufacturing
sector such as Astra Group and Salim Group.[67]
From 1967, the government secured low-interest foreign
aid from ten countries grouped under the Inter-Governmental Group on Indonesia
(IGGI) to cover its budget deficit.[68] With the IGGI funds and the later the
jump in oil export revenue from the 1973 oil crisis, the government invested in
infrastructure under a series of five-year plans, dubbed REPELITA (Rencana
Pembangunan Lima Tahun) I to VI from 1969 to 1998.[7][67][69]
Outside the formal economy, Suharto created a network of
charitable organizations ("yayasan") run by the military and his
family members, which extracted "donations" from domestic and foreign
enterprises in exchange for necessary government support and permits. While
some proceeds were used for charitable purposes, much of the money was
re-cycled as slush fund to reward political allies and to maintain support for
the New Order.[7] [70]
Suharto step down |
In 1975, the state-owned oil company, Pertamina,
defaulted on its foreign loans as a result of mismanagement and corruption
under the leadership of Suharto’s close ally, Ibnu Sutowo. The government
bail-out of the company nearly doubled the national debt.[71]
Foreign policy[edit]
Suharto attends 1970 meeting of the Non-Aligned Movement
in Lusaka.
Upon assuming power, Suharto government adopted policy of
neutrality in the Cold War, but was nevertheless quietly aligned with the
Western bloc (including Japan and South Korea) with the objective of securing
support for Indonesia's economic recovery. Western countries, impressed by
Suharto's strong anti-communist credentials, were quick to offer their support.
Diplomatic relations with China were suspended in October 1967 due to suspicion
of Chinese involvement in 30 September Movement (diplomatic relations was only
restored in 1990). Due to Suharto's destruction of PKI, Soviet Union embargoed
military sales to Indonesia. However, from 1967 to 1970 foreign minister Adam
Malik managed to secure several agreements to restructure massive debts
incurred by Sukarno from Soviet Union and other Eastern European communist
states. Regionally, having ended confrontation with Malaysia in August 1966,
Indonesia became a founding member of Association of Southeast Asian Nations
(ASEAN) in August 1967. This organization is designed to establish peaceful
relationship between Southeast Asian countries free from conflicts such as
ongoing Vietnam War.[7]
In 1974, the neighbouring colony of Portuguese Timor
descended into civil war after the withdrawal of Portuguese authority following
the Carnation Revolution, whereby the left wing populist Fretilin (Frente
Revolucionária de Timor-Leste Independente) emerged triumphant. With approval
from Western countries (including from US president Gerald Ford and Australian
prime minister Gough Whitlam during their visits to Indonesia), Suharto decided
to intervene claiming to prevent establishment of a communist state. After an
unsuccessful attempt of covert support to Timorese groups UDT and APODETI,
Suharto authorized full-scale invasion of the colony on 7 December 1975
followed with its official annexation as Indonesia's 27th province of East
Timor in July 1976. The "encirclement and annihilation" campaigns of
1977–1979 broke the back of Fretilin control over the hinterlands, although
continuing guerilla resistance caused the government to maintain strong
military force in the half-island until 1999. An estimated minimum of 90,800
and maximum of 213,600 conflict-related deaths occurred in East Timor during
Indonesian rule (1974–1999); namely, 17,600–19,600 killings and 73,200 to
194,000 'excess' deaths from hunger and illness, although Indonesian forces
were responsible for about 70% of the violent killings.[72]
Socio-economic progress and growing corruption[edit]
Real socio-economic progress sustained support for
Suharto's regime across three decades. By 1996, Indonesia's poverty rate has
dropped to around 11% compared with 45% in 1970. From 1966 to 1997, Indonesia
recorded real GDP growth of 5.03% pa, pushing real GDP per capita upwards from
US$ 806 to US$ 4,114. In 1966, manufacturing sector made-up less than 10% of
GDP (mostly industries related to oil and agriculture). By 1997, manufacturing
had risen to 25% of GDP whereby 53% of exports consisted of manufactured
products. The government invested into massive infrastructure development
(notably the launching of series of Palapa telecommunication satellites),
consequently Indonesian infrastructure in mid-1990s was considered at par with
China. Suharto was keen to capitalize on such achievements to justify his
regime, and an MPR resolution in 1983 granted him the title of "Father of
Development".[73]
Suharto government's health-care programs (such as the
Puskesmas program) increased life expectancy from 47 years (1966) to 67 years
(1997) while cutting infant mortality rate by more than 60%. The government's
Inpres program launched in 1973 resulted in primary school enrollment ratio
reaching 90% by 1983 while almost eliminating education gap between boys and
girls. Sustained support for agriculture resulted in Indonesia reaching rice
self-sufficiency by 1984, an unprecedented achievement which earns Suharto a
gold medal from FAO in November 1985.[74]
In early 1980s, Suharto government responded to fall in
oil exports due to the 1980s oil glut by successfully shifting pillar of the
economy into export-oriented labour-intensive manufacturing, made globally
competitive by Indonesia's low wages and a series of currency devaluations.
Industrialization was mostly undertaken by ethnic-Chinese companies which
evolved into immense conglomerates dominating the nation's economy. The largest
conglomeracies are the Salim Group led by Liem Sioe Liong (Sudono Salim), Sinar
Mas Group led by Oei Ek Tjong (Eka Tjipta Widjaja), Astra Group led by Tjia Han
Poen (William Soeryadjaya), Lippo Group led by Lie Mo Tie (Mochtar Riady),
Barito Pacific Group led by Pang Djun Phen (Prajogo Pangestu), and Nusamba
Group led by Bob Hasan. Suharto decided to support the growth of small number
of Chinese-Indonesian conglomerates since they cannot pose political challenge
due to their ethnic-minority status, but from his past experience he deemed
them to possess the skills and capital needed to create real growth for the
country. In exchange for Suharto's patronage, the conglomerates provided vital
financing for his "regime maintenance" activities.[75]
In late 1980s, Suharto government decided to de-regulate
the banking sector to encourage savings and providing domestic source of
financing required for growth. Suharto decreed the "October Package of
1988" (PAKTO 88) which eased requirements for establishing banks and
extending credit; resulting in a 50% increase in number of banks from
1989–1991. To promote savings, the government introduced the TABANAS program to
the populace. Jakarta Stock Exchange, re-opened in 1977, recorded bull-run due
to spree of domestic IPOs and influx of foreign funds after deregulation in
1990. The sudden availability of credit fueled strong economic growth in the
early 1990s, but the weak regulatory environment of the financial sector sowed
the seeds of the catastrophic crisis in 1997 which eventually destroyed
Suharto's regime.[76]
The growth of the economy is coincided by rapid expansion
in corruption, collusion, and nepotism (Korupsi, Kolusi, dan Nepotisme / KKN).
In the early 1980s, Suharto's children, particularly Siti Hardiyanti Rukmana
("Tutut"), Hutomo Mandala Putra ("Tommy"), and Bambang
Trihatmodjo, had grown into greedy adults. Their companies were given lucrative
government contracts and protected from market competition by monopolies.
Examples include the toll-expressway market which was monopolized by Tutut,
national car project monopolized by Bambang and Tommy, and even the cinema
market monopolized by 21 Cineplex owned by Suharto's cousin Sudwikatmono. The
family is said to control about 36,000 km² of real estate in Indonesia,
including 100,000 m² of prime office space in Jakarta and nearly 40% of the
land in East Timor. Additionally, Suharto's family members received free shares
in 1,251 of Indonesia's most lucrative domestic companies (mostly run by
Suharto's ethnic-Chinese cronies), while foreign-owned companies were
encouraged to establish "strategic partnerships" with Suharto
family's companies. Meanwhile, the myriad of yayasans run by Suharto family
grew even larger, levying millions of dollars in "donations" from the
public and private sectors each year.[10][77]
The New Order in the 1980s and 1990s[edit]
Suharto with U.S. Secretary of Defense William Cohen, 14
January 1998.
By the 1980s, Suharto's grip on power was maintained by
the emasculation of civil society, engineered elections, and use of the
military's coercive powers. Upon his retirement from the military in June 1976,
Suharto undertook a re-organisation of the armed forces that concentrated power
away from commanders to the president. In March 1983, he appointed General
Leonardus Benjamin Moerdani as head of the armed forces who adopted a hardline
on elements who challenged the administration. As a Roman Catholic, he was not
a political threat to Suharto.[78]
From 1983 to 1985, army squads killed up to 10,000
suspected criminals in response to a spike in the crime rate (see "Petrus
Killings"). Suharto's imposition of Pancasila as the sole ideology caused
protests from conservative Islamic groups who considered Islamic law to be
above all other conceptions. The Tanjung Priok massacre saw the army kill up to
100 conservative Muslim protesters in September 1984. A retaliatory series of
small bombings, including the bombing of Borobudur, led to arrests of hundreds
of conservative Islamic activists, including future parliamentary leader AM
Fatwa and Abu Bakar Bashir (later leader of Jemaah Islamiyah). Attacks on
police by a resurgent Free Aceh Movement in 1989 led to a military operation
which killed 2,000 people and ended the insurgency by 1992. In 1984, the
Suharto government sought increased control over the press by issuing a law
requiring all media to possess a press operating license (SIUPP) which could be
revoked at any time by Ministry of Information.[79]
Western concern over communism waned with end of Cold
War, and Suharto's human rights record came under greater international
scrutiny, particularly following the 1991 Santa Cruz Massacre in East Timor.
Suharto was elected as head of the Non-Aligned Movement in 1992, while
Indonesia became a founding member of APEC in 1989 and host to the Bogor APEC
Summit in 1994.[80]
Domestically, the business dealings of Suharto's family
created discontent amongst the military who lost access to power and lucrative
rent-seeking opportunities. The March 1988 MPR session, military legislators
attempted to pressure Suharto by unsuccessfully seeking to block the nomination
of Sudharmono, a Suharto-loyalist, as vice-president. Moerdani’s criticism of
the Suharto family's corruption saw the President dismiss him from the position
of military chief. Suharto proceeded to slowly "de-militarize" his
regime; he dissolved the powerful Kopkamtib on September 1988 and ensured key
military positions were held by loyalists.[81]
Suharto and his wife in Islamic attire after performing
hajj in 1991
In an attempt to diversify his power base away from the
military, Suharto begin courting support from Islamic elements. He undertook a
much-publicised hajj pilgrimage in 1991, took up the name of Haji Mohammad
Suharto, and promoted Islamic values and the careers of Islamic-oriented
generals. To win support from the nascent Muslim business community who
resented dominance of Chinese-Indonesian conglomerates, Suharto formed the ICMI
(Indonesian Islamic Intellectuals' Association) in November 1990, which was led
by his protégé BJ Habibie, the Minister for Research and Technology since 1978.
During this period, race riots against ethnic-Chinese begin to occur quite
regularly, beginning with April 1994 riot in Medan.[82]
By the 1990s, Suharto's government came to be dominated
by civilian politicians such as Habibie, Harmoko, Ginandjar Kartasasmita, and
Akbar Tanjung, who owed their position solely to Suharto. As sign of Habibie's
growing clout, when several prominent Indonesian magazines criticised Habibie's
purchase of almost the entire fleet of the disbanded East German Navy in 1993
(most of the vessels were of scrap-value), Suharto ordered the offending
publications be closed down on 21 June 1994.[82]
In the 1990s, elements within the growing Indonesian
middle class created by Suharto's economic development, were becoming restless
with his autocracy and corruption of his children, fueling demands for
"Reformasi" (reform) of the almost 30-year-old New Order government.
By 1996, Megawati Sukarnoputri, the daughter of Sukarno and chairwoman of the
normally compliant PDI, was becoming a rallying point for this growing
discontent. In response, Suharto backed a co-opted faction of PDI led by
Suryadi, which removed Megawati from the chair. On 27 July 1996, an attack by
soldiers and hired thugs led by Lieutenant-General Sutiyoso on demonstrating
Megawati supporters in Jakarta resulted in fatal riots and looting. This
incident was followed by the arrest of 200 democracy activists, 23 of whom were
kidnapped, and some killed, by army squads led by Suharto's son-in-law,
Major-General Prabowo Subianto.[83]
Economic crisis and resignation[edit]
Main article: Fall of Suharto
Suharto reads his address of resignation at Merdeka
Palace on 21 May 1998. Suharto's successor, B. J. Habibie, is to his right.
Wikisource
has original text related to this article:
Suharto's Resignation Speech
Indonesia was the country hardest hit by the Asian
financial crisis of 1997–98. From mid-1997 there were large capital outflows
and against the US dollar, the Indonesian Rupiah dropped from a pre-crisis
level of Rp. 2,600 to a low point in early 1998 of around Rp. 17,000. Many
companies were bankrupted and the economy shrank by 13.7% leading to sharp
increases in unemployment and poverty across the country.[84] In exchange for
US$ 43 billion in liquidity aid, between October 1997 and the following April,
Suharto signed three letters of intent with the International Monetary Fund
(IMF) for an economic reform process.
In December 1997, Suharto for the first time did not
attend an ASEAN presidents' summit, which was later revealed to be due to a
minor stroke, creating speculation about his health and the immediate future of
his presidency. In mid-December, as the crisis swept through Indonesia and an
estimated $150 billion of capital was being withdrawn from the country, he
appeared at a press conference to re-assert his authority and to urge people to
trust the government and the collapsing Rupiah.[85] However, his attempts to
re-instill confidence had little effect. Evidence suggested that his family and
associates were being spared the toughest requirements of the IMF reform
process, further undermining confidence in the economy and his leadership.[86]
The economic meltdown was accompanied by increasing
political tension. Anti-Chinese riots occurred in Situbondo (1996), Tasikmalaya
(1996), Banjarmasin (1997), and Makassar (1997); while violent ethnic clashes
broke-out between the Dayak and Madurese settlers in Central Kalimantan in
1997. Golkar won the rigged 1997 MPR elections and in March 1998, Suharto was
voted unanimously to another five-year term. He appointed his protégé BJ
Habibie as vice-president while stacking the cabinet with his own family and
business associates (his daughter Tutut became Minister of Social Affairs). The
appointments and the government's unreaslistic 1998 budget created further
currency instability,[87] and rumours and panic led to a run on stores and
pushed up prices.[88] The Government's May 1998 increase in fuel prices by 70%
triggered riots in Medan.
With Suharto increasingly seen as the source of the
country's mounting economic and political crises, prominent political figures,
including Muslim politician Amien Rais, spoke out against his presidency, and
in January 1998 university students began organising nation-wide
demonstrations.[89] The crisis climaxed in May 1998 when security forces killed
four demonstrators from Jakarta's Trisakti University. Rioting and looting
across Jakarta and other cities over the following days destroyed thousands of
buildings and killed over 1,000 people. Ethnic Chinese and their businesses
were particular targets in the violence. Theories on the origin of the violence
include rivalry between military chief General Wiranto and Prabowo, and the
suggestion of deliberate provocation by Suharto to divert blame for the crisis
to the ethnic-Chinese and discredit the student movement.[90]
On 16 May, tens of thousands of university students demanding
Suharto’s resignation, occupied the grounds and roof of the parliament
building. Upon Suharto's return to Jakarta, he offered to resign in 2003 and to
reshuffle his cabinet. These efforts failed when his political allies deserted
him by refusing to join the proposed new cabinet. According to Wiranto, on 18
May, Suharto issued a decree which provided authority to him to take any
measures to restore security; however, Wiranto decided not to enforce the
decree to prevent conflict with the population.[91] On 21 May 1998, Suharto
announced his resignation, upon which vice-president Habibie assumed the
presidency in accordance with the constitution.[7][92][93]
Post-presidency[edit]
After resigning from the presidency, Suharto reclused
himself in his family compound in the Menteng area of Jakarta, protected by
soldiers and rarely making public appearances. Suharto's family spend much of
their time fending-off corruption investigations. However, Suharto himself was
protected from serious prosecution by politicians who owed their positions to
the former president, as indicated in the leaked telephone conversation between
President Habibie and attorney-general Andi Muhammad Ghalib in February
1999.[94]
In May 1999, Time Asia estimated Suharto's family fortune
at US$15 billion in cash, shares, corporate assets, real estate, jewelry and
fine art. Suharto sued the magazine seeking more than $US 27 billion in damages
for libel over the article.[95] On 10 September 2007, Indonesia's Supreme Court
awarded Suharto damages against Time Asia magazine, ordering it to pay him one
trillion rupiah ($128.59 million). The High Court reversed the judgment of an
appellate court and Central Jakarta district court (made in 2000 and 2001).
Suharto was placed highest on Transparency
International's list of corrupt leaders with an alleged misappropriation of
between US $15–35 billion during his 32-year presidency.[10][77]
On 29 May 2000, Suharto was placed under house arrest
when Indonesian authorities began to investigate the corruption during his
presidency. In July 2000, it was announced that he was to be accused of
embezzling US$571 million of government donations to one of a number of
foundations under his control and then using the money to finance family
investments. But in September court-appointed doctors announced that he could
not stand trial because of his declining health. State prosecutors tried again
in 2002 but then doctors cited an unspecified brain disease. On 26 March 2008,
a civil court judge acquitted Suharto of corruption but ordered his charitable
foundation, Supersemar, to pay US$110 m (£55 m).[96]
In 2002, Suharto's son Tommy, was sentenced to 15 years'
jail. He had been convicted of ordering the killing of a judge who had
sentenced him to 18 months jail for corruption and illegal weapons possession.
In 2006, he was freed on "conditional release."[97]
In 2003, Suharto's half-brother Probosutedjo was tried
and convicted for corruption and the loss of $10 million from the Indonesian
state. He was sentenced to four years in jail. He later won a reduction of his
sentence to two years, initiating a probe by the Indonesian Corruption
Eradication Commission into the alleged scandal of the "judicial
mafia" which uncovered offers of $600,000 to various judges. Probosutedjo
confessed to the scheme in October 2005, leading to the arrest of his lawyers. His
full four-year term was reinstated. After a brief standoff at a hospital, in
which he was reportedly protected by a group of police officers, he was
arrested on 30 November 2005.[citation needed]
On 9 July 2007, Indonesian prosecutors filed a civil
lawsuit against former President Suharto, to recover state funds ($440 m or
£219 m, which allegedly disappeared from a scholarship fund, and a further $1.1
billion in damages).[98]
Health crises
After resigning from the presidency, Suharto was
hospitalised repeatedly for stroke, heart, and intestinal problems. His
declining health hindered attempts to prosecute him as his lawyers successfully
claimed that his condition rendered him unfit for trial. Moreover, there was
little support within Indonesia for any attempts to prosecute him. In 2006,
Attorney General Abdurrahman announced that a team of twenty doctors would be
asked to evaluate Suharto's health and fitness for trial. One physician,
Brigadier-General Dr Marjo Subiandono, stated his doubts about by noting that
"[Suharto] has two permanent cerebral defects."[99] In a later
Financial Times report, Attorney General Abdurrahman discussed the
re-examination, and called it part of a "last opportunity" to
prosecute Suharto criminally. Attorney General Abdurrahman left open the
possibility of filing suit against the Suharto estate."[100]
Death[edit]
On 4 January 2008, Suharto was taken to the Pertamina
hospital, Jakarta with complications arising from a weak heart, swelling of
limbs and stomach, and partial renal failure.[101] His health fluctuated for
several weeks but progressively worsened with anaemia and low blood pressure
due to heart and kidney complications, internal bleeding, fluid on his lungs,
and blood in his feces and urine which caused a haemoglobin drop.[102] On 23
January, Suharto's health worsened further, as a sepsis infection spread
through his body.[103] His family consented to the removal of life support
machines, and he died on 27 January at 1:10 pm[104][105]
Suharto's body was taken from Jakarta to the Giri Bangun
mausoleum complex near the Central Java city of Solo. He was buried alongside
his late wife in a state military funeral with full honours, with the Kopassus
elite forces and KOSTRAD commandos as the honour guard and pallbearers and Commander
of Group II Kopassus Surakarta Lt. Colonel Asep Subarkah.[106] In attendance
were the incumbent president, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono as "Ceremony
Inspector", and vice-president, government ministers, and armed forces
chiefs of staff. Tens of thousands of people lined the streets to see the
convoy.[107] Condolences were offered by many regional heads of state, and
Indonesia's President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono declared a week of official
mourning.[108] During this tenure, all flags of Indonesia were flown at
half-mast. (Continue)
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