On 5/13/06, irwank <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> 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.
> > > > >
> > > >
> > > > http://www.time.com/time/asia/asia/magazine/1999/990524/cover2.html
> > > >
> > > > *GREAT EXPECTATIONS*
> > > >
> > > > How did Suharto Inc. attain its wealth, its power and its hold over
> > > > the imaginations of millions of Indonesians? When Suharto became acting
> > > > President of Indonesia in 1967, his unique blend of forcefulness and
> > > > Javanese political subtlety was already manifest. The ousting of "President
> > > > for Life" Sukarno, the nationalist founder of the country, took two years
> > > > and, through an accompanying anti-communist purge, claimed as many as
> > > > 500,000 lives. But Suharto, an obscure general from a hardscrabble village
> > > > in central Java, led an outwardly modest life. He and his late wife Siti
> > > > Hartinah ("Madam Tien") initially lived in a simple bungalow in the Menteng
> > > > district of Jakarta and drove a 1964 Ford Galaxy. That was in marked
> > > > contrast to Sukarno, the self-styled "God-King," with his grand presidential
> > > > palace and his glamorous third wife Dewi, a former Japanese hostess at
> > > > Tokyo's Copacabana nightclub.
> > > >
> > >
> > > http://www.time.com/time/asia/asia/magazine/1999/990524/cover3.html
> > >
> > > *OIL AND LAND*
> > >
> > > The Suharto reach extended well beyond the foundations' interests, and
> > > few deals were more lucrative than the family's oil businesses. In his first
> > > decade in power, Suharto allowed state oil conglomerate Pertamina to be run
> > > as a private fief by its founder Ibnu Sutowo, a former general once known as
> > > the second most powerful man in Indonesia. Sutowo's plan to build a huge
> > > tanker fleet for Pertamina brought it to the brink of financial collapse in
> > > 1975. He was fired the following year, though it wasn't clear whether the
> > > cause was mismanagement or his political ambitions. Now 84, Sutowo tells
> > > TIME it was neither. He says Suharto asked him in 1976 to set up a second
> > > trading company to ship Indonesian crude oil to Japan. "He said to me, 'I
> > > want you to take $0.10 for every barrel traded by the new company,'" Sutowo
> > > recalls. "When I said no, I think he was shocked."
> > >
> >
> > http://www.time.com/time/asia/asia/magazine/1999/990524/cover4.html
> >
> > *CHILDREN OF FORTUNE*
> >
> > For years, Indonesia's corruption was the kind of petty favor-buying and
> > commission-giving commonly found in the developing world. Two factors pushed
> > the country into a league of its own. The first was Indonesia's position as
> > an up-and-coming star performer in the Asian economic miracle, which brought
> > a cascade of funds pouring into businesses and real estate. The World Bank
> > estimates that between 1988 and 1996, Indonesia received more than $130
> > billion in foreign investment. "All this has been possible under the eyes of
> > the West, which supported Suharto for 30 years," says Carel Mohn,
> > spokesperson for Transparency International, a non-governmental organization
> > based in Berlin.
> >
>
> http://www.time.com/time/asia/asia/magazine/1999/990524/cover5.html
>
> When the Suharto regime fell, the children used their influence to
> extricate themselves from ailing businesses and debts. In April 1994, Tommy
> launched the Goro supermarket chain with two of his companies and the
> Central Village Cooperative, a large, government-run farmers' organization.
> Together they borrowed more than $100 million in loans, according to Bank
> Bumi Daya records. No repayments were ever made on the loans. On May 4,
> 1998, Tommy sold his shares to the farmers and their cooperative for $112
> million in cash, saddling them with the entire debt. "The children were very
> wild," says Ibnu Hartomo, younger brother of Madam Tien. "It seems that they
> have forgotten about ethics." Angry mobs burned down one Goro store in south
> Jakarta during riots in May 1998, a week before Suharto resigned.
>

Siti Hardiyanti Rukmana "Tutut"
Age: 50
Estimated wealth: $700 million
Major holdings: Citra Lamtoro Gung Group, with interests in more than 90
companies ranging from telecommunications to infrastructure, including
tollway projects in Indonesia and the Philippines
Property: 12-room, $1 million house with tennis court and heated pool near
Boston; house on London's Hyde Park Square
Last sighted: Requesting a hike in tollway rates from Indonesia's parliament
Operating style: Politically ambitious, Tutut ascended to the level of
Minister of Social Affairs in her father's last cabinet. Got her start in
business at age 25, when "Uncle" Liem Sioe Liong gave her 14% of BCA, the
country's largest private bank. She has also adopted her nephew Ari Sigit's
out-of-wedlock daughter, Suharto's great-grandchild. A family friend who
traveled to San Francisco on one of Tutut's jets attests to her generosity:
"She gave me a first-class ticket home to Jakarta. I can still remember the
smell of leather seats and Armani cologne in the bathrooms"

----
Bambang Trihatmodjo
Age: 45
Estimated wealth: $3 billion
Major holdings: 38% of Bimantara Citra, one of Indonesia's largest
conglomerates with 27 subsidiaries and interests in everything from oil and
gas to hotels, telecommunications and animal feed
Property: $8.2 million Singapore apartment, $12 million Los Angeles estate
(a visitor says the latter has two houses, two swimming pools, a tennis
court and a basketball court. "The interior design in the guest house was
sort of nouveau riche, but worse, with tiger-striped fabric on the couches")
Last sighted: At a bowling alley near Los Angeles
Operating style: Has been transferring cash overseas and buying shares in
foreign markets for several years. In 1997, say Dutch authorities, he made a
"private visit" to the Netherlands-controlled Caribbean island of
CuraƧao--apparently to make a large deposit in the local branch of an
international bank. A friend says Bambang once cared about the needy but
something happened on the way to the bank: "I think he saw all the people
around him getting rich and felt left out"

------
Hutomo Mandala Putra "Tommy"
Age: 36
Estimated wealth: $800 million
Major holdings: 60% of Humpuss Group, which has more than 60 subsidiaries in
industries ranging from construction to pharmaceuticals
Property: Ranch in New Zealand, Mill Ride Golf Club, an 18-hole course he
partly owns in Ascot, England. Plays there twice a year and is said to have
a respectable 12 handicap
Last sighted: Jakarta courthouse, where he is the only Suharto child to
stand trial for graft
Operating style: Accomplished stock car racer (once sponsored by Marlboro).
Like brother Sigit, he loves to gamble, thinking nothing of losing $1
million in a single sitting. One gaming partner says he used to leave
Jakarta on his plane with millions of dollars to wager in European casinos
and stop in Singapore on the way home to deposit what was left. "Tommy loves
money," says a former business partner. "And he always wanted it up front."
Like his father, says a friend of the family, Tommy is "very polite, very
cool"

------
Sigit Harjoyudanto
Age: 48
Estimated wealth: $800 million
Major holdings: 40% of brother Tommy's Humpuss Group; silent partner in
hundreds of other companies and properties
Property: Two homes in exclusive Hampstead area of London worth $12 million
each, one in Los Angeles, one outside Geneva
Last sighted: Suharto family compound in Jakarta neighborhood of Menteng
Operating style: Serious gambler. Frequented roulette and baccarat tables in
London (he loved the Ritz), Atlantic City, Las Vegas and Perth; gambling
partners say he wagered up to $3 million a night, with career losses of more
than $150 million. After Sigit suffered a bad run in Las Vegas in the late
1980s, his father banned him from gambling abroad. Jakarta bookies organized
a call-in cable TV show featuring a baccarat table; Sigit, a friend says,
lost more than $20 million: "They set up the scam just for Sigit"

-----

Siti Hutami Endang Adiningsih "Mamiek"
Age: 34
Estimated wealth: $30 million
Major holdings: Stakes in several of her siblings' companies plus interests
in fruit, transportation and telecommunications. In 1995 the government
appointed her company Manggala Krida Yudha to undertake a $500 million
reclamation project expanding the North Jakarta seaport. She in turn tried
to subcontract the project to Hyundai Engineering for $100 million, but the
deal was canceled by the government in an effort to purge corruption
Property: 264-hectare fruit park in West Java
Last sighted: At her home in Jakarta
Operating style: Low-profile chain-smoker. Entered business too late to make
much money. Is widely known for her Mekarsari Park near Bogor, set up in
1995 to promote botanical research. A friend says she once approached Mamiek
with a business venture. Mamiek got back to her a week later: "I can't do
it. Daddy already gave that to Tommy"

------

Siti Hediati Hariyadi "Titiek"
Age: 40
Estimated wealth: $75 million
Major holdings: Financial services, power, computers, banking, property
Property: Home on London's Grosvenor Square
Last sighted: Boston, where her son is attending high school. Her husband,
Lieut. General Prabowo Subianto, is in Jordan looking after his brother's
business interests and visiting an old friend, Jordan's King Abdullah
Operating style: Chain smoker. Hates dogs. In Jakarta, she slept in one
room; her husband and his Alsatians in another. Likes Harry Winston, Bulgari
and Cartier. "She loves big chunks of jewelry," says a woman who has
accompanied her on excursions to Switzerland and England. Former chairwoman
of the Indonesian Fine Arts Foundation, Titiek has a personal art collection
valued at more than $5 million. Adores movie stars. At a 1994 Suharto party
in Bali to celebrate the opening of Jakarta's Planet Hollywood, she danced
the night away with martial arts star Steven Seagal
photo: AP


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