Benarkah Eyang Harto hanya terkait dengan 7 Yayasan saja?
Atau itu hanya 'seolah-olah' ada upaya penyelidikan hukum saja?
Mari hilangkan (minimal kikis) budaya/politik 'klaim dan seolah-olah'!!
Mari..

Wassalam,

Irwan.K

http://www.time.com/time/asia/asia/magazine/1999/990524/cover1.html

*The Family Firm*
*A TIME investigation into the wealth of Indonesia's Suharto and his
children uncovers a $15 billion fortune in cash, property, art, jewelry and
jets *
By JOHN COLMEY and DAVID LIEBHOLD Jakarta

When the end came for Suharto, Indonesia's long-serving President appeared
oddly passive. As students and angry mobs took to the streets and soldiers
responded with gunfire and tear gas, the five-star general hovered in the
background, making few attempts to set things right. When he finally quit a
year ago this week, he stood meekly to the side as his successor, B.J.
Habibie, took the oath of office. Suharto has hardly been heard from since.

But Indonesia's onetime autocrat has been far busier than most of his
countrymen realize. Just after his fall from power there began feverish
movements of his personal fortune. In July 1998, reports emerged that a
staggering sum of money linked to Indonesia had been shifted from a bank in
Switzerland to another in Austria, now considered a safer haven for
hush-hush deposits. The transfer caught the attention of the United States
Treasury, which tracks such movements, and set in motion diplomatic
inquiries in Vienna. Now, as part of a four-month investigation that covered
11 countries, TIME has learned that $9 billion of Suharto money was
transferred from Switzerland to a nominee bank account in Austria. Not bad
for a man whose presidential salary was $1,764 a month when he left office.
(Suharto, for his part, denies that he has any bank deposits abroad and
insists that his wealth amounts to a mere 19 hectares of land in Indonesia,
plus $2.4 million in savings.)

Those billions are just part of the Suharto wealth. Though the Asian
financial crisis has trimmed the family empire considerably, the former
President and his children retain a staggering fortune. It was built over
three decades from a skein of companies, monopolies and control over vast
sectors of economic activity in Indonesia--from oil exports to humble
pilgrims making the yearly visit to Mecca. (They flew on planes leased from
companies controlled by Suharto's children.) According to data from the
National Land Agency and Properti Indonesia magazine, the Suharto family on
its own or through corporate entities controls some 3.6 million hectares of
real estate in Indonesia, an area larger than Belgium. That includes 100,000
sq m of prime office space in Jakarta and nearly 40% of the entire province
of East Timor.

Within Indonesia, the six Suharto offspring have significant equity in at
least 564 companies, and their overseas interests include hundreds of other
firms, scattered from the U.S. to Uzbekistan, the Netherlands, Nigeria and
Vanuatu. The Suhartos also possess plenty of the trappings of wealth. In
addition to a $4 million hunting ranch in New Zealand and a half-share in a
$4 million yacht moored outside Darwin, Australia, youngest son Hutomo
Mandala Putra 
<javascript:openDocumentWindow('suharto_family_tommy.html')>(nicknamed
Tommy) owns a 75% stake in an 18-hole golf course with 22 luxury
apartments in Ascot, England. Bambang
Trihatmodjo,<javascript:openDocumentWindow('suharto_family_bambang.html')>Suharto's
second son, has an $8 million penthouse in Singapore and a $12
million mansion in an exclusive neighborhood of Los Angeles, two doors down
from rock star Rod Stewart and just up the street from his brother Sigit
Harjoyudanto's <javascript:openDocumentWindow('suharto_family_sigit.html')>$9
million home. Eldest daughter Siti Hardiyanti Rukmana may have sold
her
Boeing 747-200 jumbo jet, but the family's fleet of planes included, at
least until recently, a DC-10, a blue-and-red Boeing 737, a Canadian
Challenger 601 and a BAC-111. The latter once belonged to the Royal Squadron
of Britain's Queen Elizabeth II, according to Dudi Sudibyo, managing editor
of Indonesia's Angkasa aerospace magazine.

Neither Suharto nor his six children responded to requests for interviews,
though lawyers for the former President and son Bambang asserted that their
clients did nothing illegal. Indeed, no one has proven that the Suhartos
broke any laws. Their companies mostly consist of operating entities that
turn profits, create jobs and import Western technology. Yet allegations
that the former First Family benefited from favoritism, commonly heard in
Indonesia since the early 1980s, began to grow louder when the former
President resigned. His successor quickly announced an official
investigation into such charges. Tommy, the youngest son whose corporate
empire at one point included the Lamborghini sports car company, is already
in legal jeopardy, facing charges of defrauding a state agency of $11
million in a real estate deal. The South Jakarta district court recently
rejected a plea from Tommy's lawyers that he be tried in a civil court and
is proceeding with a criminal trial.

In an interview at the State Palace, Habibie told TIME he will not cover up
for his former mentor, but he has so far declined to freeze the family's
holdings or to follow up on the investigation in any meaningful way. Private
asset-tracing firms are excited at the prospect of a Suharto treasure hunt,
if only Jakarta would hire them. "In terms of dollars, we think this could
be bigger than anything we have ever seen before," says Stephen Vickers,
Asia chief for Kroll Associates, which helped investigate the wealth of the
Philippines' former President Ferdinand Marcos. "My bags are packed."

The search won't start in earnest unless the man in charge of the
government's investigation, Attorney General Andi Muhammad Ghalib, gives the
go-ahead. Ghalib, a three-star general in the Indonesian military, told TIME
that he has found no evidence that his former supreme commander wrongly
acquired state assets. But Ghalib has been moving slowly, and some of his
own staff members are not convinced the investigation is serious. In the
opinion of an official in the Attorney General's office, "Ghalib is on a
mission to protect Suharto."

Nonetheless, the code of secrecy shielding the family is breaking down.
After hundreds of interviews with former and current Suharto friends and
government officials, business associates, lawyers, accountants, bankers and
relatives, as well as examinations of dozens of documents (including bank
records of outstanding loans), TIME correspondents found indications that at
least $73 billion passed through the family's hands between 1966 and last
year. Much of that was from the mining, timber, commodities and petroleum
industries. Bad investments and Indonesia's financial crisis have reduced
the sum substantially. But evidence indicates that Suharto and his six
children still have a conservatively estimated $15 billion in cash, shares,
corporate assets, real estate, jewelry and fine art--including works by
Indonesian masters Affandi and Basoeki Abdullah in the collection of Siti
Hediati Hariyadi, the middle daughter known as
"Titiek<javascript:openDocumentWindow('suharto_family_titiek.html')>."


Suharto laid the foundation for the family fortune by establishing the
intricate nationwide system of patronage that kept him in power for 32
years. His children, in turn, parlayed their ties to the President into the
role of middlemen for government purchases and sales of oil products,
plastics, arms, airplane parts and petrochemicals. They held monopolies on
the distribution and import of major commodities. They obtained low-interest
loans by colluding with or even strong-arming bankers, who were often afraid
to ask for repayment. Subarjo Joyosumarto, managing director of Bank
Indonesia, the central bank, confirms that during the time of Suharto,
"there was an environment that made it difficult for the state banks to
refuse them."

While the Indonesian economy was growing fast, it was possible to make light
of the Suhartos' rent-seeking ways. Now, with half the population below the
poverty line as a result of the financial crash, there is little doubt that
the family grew wealthy at the expense of the nation. A former business
associate of the children estimates that they skipped tax payments of
between $2.5 billion and $10 billion on commissions alone. "It is very
likely that none of the Suharto companies has ever paid more than 10% of its
real tax obligations," says Teten Masduki, an executive member of Indonesian
Corruption Watch, an anti-graft non-governmental organization. "Can you
imagine how much revenue has been forgone?"

Many Indonesians also blame Suharto for creating a climate of corruption
that pervaded the entire economy. The World Bank estimates that as much as
30% of Indonesia's development budget over two decades disappeared through
civil-service-wide corruption that filtered down from the top. "If you don't
pay bribes, people think you're odd," says Edwin Soeryadjaya, a director of
an Indonesian-U.S. telecommunications joint venture. "It's very sad. I
cannot say that I'm proud to be an Indonesian. This is one of the most
corrupt countries in the world."

PAGE 1  |  
2<http://www.time.com/time/asia/asia/magazine/1999/990524/cover2.html>
  |  3 <http://www.time.com/time/asia/asia/magazine/1999/990524/cover3.html>
  |  4 <http://www.time.com/time/asia/asia/magazine/1999/990524/cover4.html>
  |  5 <http://www.time.com/time/asia/asia/magazine/1999/990524/cover5.html>

*The Suharto Children*
(click to open a pop-up window)
• *Siti Hardiyanti Rukmana
"Tutut"*<javascript:openDocumentWindow('suharto_family_tutut.html')>
• *Bambang 
Trihatmodjo*<javascript:openDocumentWindow('suharto_family_bambang.html')>
• *Hutomo Mandala Putra
"Tommy"*<javascript:openDocumentWindow('suharto_family_tommy.html')>
• *Sigit 
Harjoyudanto*<javascript:openDocumentWindow('suharto_family_sigit.html')>
• *Siti Hutami Endang Adiningsih
"Mamiek"*<javascript:openDocumentWindow('suharto_family_mamiek.html')>
• *Siti Hediati Hariyadi
"Titiek"*<javascript:openDocumentWindow('suharto_family_titiek.html')>


On 5/13/06, samiaji <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>  *Quote: -- Mantan Presiden Soeharto dipastikan bisa menghabiskan hari tua
> dengan nyaman tanpa diganggu lagi oleh persoalan-persoalan hukum ..... *
>
> *Jumat, 12 Mei 2006,
> **Surat Penghentian Sudah Keluar
> *[image: KINI DIBIDIK: Mantan Presiden Soeharto ketika berburu di Garut,
> Jawa Barat. Foto ini diambil Desember 1994. Kini, dia tergolek di RS Pusat
> Pertamina Jakarta.]
>
> Diserahkan Jaksa Agung ke SBY, Tinggal Putusan Politik
> JAKARTA - Mantan Presiden Soeharto dipastikan bisa menghabiskan hari tua
> dengan nyaman tanpa diganggu lagi oleh persoalan-persoalan hukum. Ini
> setelah tadi malam Kejaksaan Negeri Jakarta Selatan menerbitkan Surat
> Ketetapan Penghentian Penuntutan (SKPP) atas kasus dugaan korupsi Pak Harto.
>
>
> Jaksa Agung Abdul Rahman Saleh telah menyerahkan surat tersebut kepada
> Presiden SBY. Sebelumnya, Rabu malam Menko Polhukam Widodo A.S.
> mengumumkan sikap pemerintah yang memutuskan menghentikan kasus hukum Pak
> Harto.
>
> Dengan bekal SKPP, perkara korupsi di tujuh yayasan yang dipimpin Pak
> Harto tidak akan diteruskan ke persidangan. Otomatis Pak Harto tidak akan
> dihadapkan ke meja hijau.
>


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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