Artinya apa nih boss? English ane cetek nih EB™
-----Original Message----- From: Vernichtung <gambler....@gmail.com> Date: Thu, 4 Mar 2010 20:37:25 To: <obrolan-bandar@yahoogroups.com> Subject: [ob] Indonesia dapat hibah USD 129 T.....nahloh *Cape deh, kalo yg beginian gak pernah dibawa ke jalan hukum.* Markus Junianto Sihaloho Vast Royal Fortune to Be Given to Indonesia, Man Claims The nation’s financial woes will end, the Bank Century saga will cease to be, poverty will be a thing of the past and the Navy will get four near new British-manufactured warships — all thanks to an unbelievably massive fortune hidden away by the successive rulers of old. That was the bizarre claim made by an elderly man who said he was a member of the royal family of Surakarta in Central Java, during a news conference that attracted dozens of journalists and, perhaps not surprisingly, a number of government officials, to Taman Mini Indonesia Indah in East Jakarta on Wednesday. The man, who identified himself as both KGPH Tjokro Koesoemo and KH Chaerul Fathollah and said he was born in 1921, told attendees at the Central Java complex of the miniature amusement park that he had assets totaling more than Rp 1,200,000 trillion ($129.6 trillion), handed down to him by Pakubuwono IX, the ruler of Surakarta, with whom he was “close.” Presumably, given that Pakubuwono ruled from 1861 to his death in 1893, he meant close spiritually. Tjokro said the vast fortune — in the form of gold, bonds and cash deposited in the Union Bank of Switzerland, Standard Chartered Bank, HSBC and, strangely, the World Bank — was accumulated by a succession of rulers who governed over what was to become Indonesia and passed on to Pakubuwono, who at the time was the head of the association of rulers. Much of the money had been reaped from spice trading in pre-independence Indonesia, Tjokro said. Tjokro, who displayed a number of certificates of ownership of many of the accounts, said the assets could only be cashed by the holder of the certificates. One of the documents allegedly issued by UBS to President Sukarno and a certain Chaerul Fathollah — Tjokro’s other name — was for a total of 3,500,000 kilograms of gold, which today would be valued at $140 billion, give or take a couple of billion. “I want to use it for the sake of Indonesian people, by giving it to the government,” Tjokro/Chaerul said. He was quick to add, however, that the funds must be administered by the Graha Manunggal Sentosa Foundation (YGMS), which is managed by his son. He claimed that about Rp 22 trillion of the treasure had already been transferred to accounts in PT Bank Central Asia, PT Bank Negara Indonesia, PT Bank Mega, PT Bank Mandiri and the local branch of HSBC. The accounts are in the name of YMGS chairman GPH Sebenan Mooy, the adopted Moluccan son of Tjokro, who, at the same press conference attended by about 50 members of the foundation, said that he was planning to take over Bank Century. “I will provide Rp 14 trillion for it,” he claimed. Sebenan said starting next week, they would begin to cash in the assets and begin consultation meetings with government ministries on how best to spend the money. Asked why they wanted to give the state the vast fortune, the YGMS chairman said Pakubuwono had left a message mandating the money be given to the government for the sake of the Indonesian people as the real owners of the riches. Col. Wahono, a middle-ranking officer from the treasury division of the Indonesian Armed Forces (TMI), was quick out of the blocks, saying he had given the YGMS a proposal to buy four corvettes worth $400 million from the Brunei government. “The corvettes were manufactured by the British government in 2003,” he said. “Next week, I will bring representatives from the Brunei Government to meet with [the YMGS].”