http://www.smh.com.au/news/world/soehartos-back-in-the-courts/2008/01/01/1198949818306.html


Soehartos back in the courts
Lindsay Murdoch in Jakarta
January 2, 2008


EVEN the former dictator seemed surprised. "I am becoming rich, suddenly," 
86-year-old Soeharto told the Indonesian magazine Gatra after a court ordered 
he receive a staggering $US109.9 million ($125.8 million) in defamation damages.

But, three months after the shock decision against Time Inc, the magazine 
publisher's lawyers in Jakarta are preparing to file a 100-page legal challenge 
in what is seen as a test case for press freedom in Indonesia.

Todung Mulya Lubis, one of the lawyers, told the Herald the challenge included 
"vindication" of the journalistic practices used by Time when it published a 
cover story in 1999 alleging in part that Soeharto and his family had $US9 
billion stashed in European banks.

"This is not only a case against Time Inc," said Mr Lubis, a prominent human 
rights lawyer. "This is a case that goes to the very fundamental principles of 
press freedom and democracy in Indonesia."

The case is expected to be back in the Supreme Court for review this month. The 
review will coincide with a series of multimillion-dollar claims and 
counter-claims being heard in other Jakarta courts relating to the business 
practices of Hutomo Mandala Putra, Soeharto's youngest son, who is more usually 
known as Tommy.

Since being freed last year after serving a third of a 15-year jail sentence 
for the murder of a Supreme Court judge, the 44-year-old has become locked in 
legal battles with the Government, which has vowed to confront corruption. It 
has moved to seize $US138 million from accounts in an Indonesian bank it says 
was illegally obtained by Tommy Soeharto.

The Government has indicated it would take legal steps to force companies 
controlled by Tommy to pay $US486 million of debt relating to the 1999 
government-agency bale-out of one of his companies. The Government and Tommy 
are also locked in a battle over at least $US52 million another of his myriad 
companies deposited in the British tax haven of Guernsey.

Soeharto told Gatra in a rare interview that he would donate 65 per cent of the 
Time Inc's damages payment to the poor and give the rest to the state.

Government officials are sceptical of the offer and have revived efforts to 
bring him to justice despite his poor health.

The Government has filed a civil suit against him seeking $US1.4 billion in 
assets and damages relating to a charitable foundation he chaired while 
president. Prosecutors have alleged that millions of dollars in cash intended 
for educational and social programs ended up in the pockets of his cronies.

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