Refleksi : Ratusan ribu, anak, isteri, suami, ayah, kakak, saudara juga menanggis dan terus menderita karena kekasih mereka itu dibabat oleh jenderal TNI Edhi Sarwo, jadi sangat berbeda dengan tangisan Any, perbedaannya ialah Ani menanggis seperti anak kecil yang gula-gulanya jatuh di tanah berbecek.
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/world/us-expresses-regret-over-susilo-bambang-yudhoyono-graft-claims/story-e6frg6so-1226020021027 US expresses 'regret' over Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono graft claims Peter Alford, Jakarta correspondent From: The Australian March 12, 2011 12:00AM INDONESIA has protested strongly to Washington over Australian news reports, based on WikiLeaks out of the US Jakarta embassy, accusing President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono of abuses of power and implicating him in corrupt behaviour. Called into the Foreign Ministry yesterday morning, US ambassador Scott Marciel expressed "our deepest regrets to President Yudhoyono and to the Indonesian people". Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa blasted the reports, carried yesterday by The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald, as "completely without foundation" against an administration that had focused on good governance and combating corruption. "That is why what is being reported is especially galling, not only to President Yudhoyono and his family, but most of all to the Indonesian nation itself." Mr Natalegawa said the administration would demand a right of reply from the newspapers. The reports, based on confidential cables out of the US embassy in Jakarta and obtained by the newspapers under a deal with WikiLeaks' Julian Assange, were published as Indonesia's Vice-President Boediono was about to meet Acting Prime Minister Wayne Swan in Canberra. The cables, according to the reports, have Dr Yudhoyono intervening to stop a graft case against Taufik Kiemas, influential husband of former president Megawati Sukarnoputri and suspected of financial links to tycoon Tomy Winata and other Chinese-Indonesian businessmen. The response of the President, who made no comment yesterday, was "very rational, not emotional", Mr Natalegawa said. But State Secretary Sudi Silalahi said First Lady Kristiani Herawati Yudhoyono cried upon reading the stories, in which she is depicted by a 2006 embassy cable as "increasingly seeking to profit personally" from the presidency. The reports are likely to hit Dr Yudhoyono's administration hard, and not only because his has been the most Washington-friendly Jakarta government in the democratic post-Suharto era. The President's reputation for honesty is a huge political asset for an administration that, especially since his re-election in July 2009 for a second five years, has come across as vacillating and, at cabinet level, under-talented. Dr Yudhoyono and presidential officials have been hesitating about whether and how to reshuffle cabinet and eject troublesome parties from the coalition. There is further damage in that the cables name two informants conveying damaging information to the embassy as senior presidential adviser T.B. Silalahi and Co-ordinating Minister for People's Welfare Agung Laksono. [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
