February 10, 2000
Indonesia Names Suharto a Corruption Suspect

By SETH MYDANS


JAKARTA, Indonesia, Feb. 10 -- In what appeared to be a serious new
effort to prosecute Indonesia's former president, Suharto, the government
named him today as a suspect in a widening corruption investigation and
summoned him for questioning next week.

Mr. Suharto's lawyers immediately responded that he was too sick to
attend. The former president is 78 and was hospitalized twice last year
following a stroke. "He is physically and mentally unfit to appear for the
questioning," said one of the lawyers, Juan Felix Tampubolon.

Taking a less deferential tone than investigators in the past, who had
dropped a probe of Mr. Suharto, a spokesman for the attorney general's
office said illness was no excuse.

"Suharto is now named as a suspect and we hope he'll turn up for
questioning," the spokesman, Suhandoyo, told reporters. "We have also
looked at the state of Suharto's health, and it seems to be improving."

The renewed move to bring Mr. Suharto to account appeared to be part
of a broad policy by the new government of President Abdurrahman
Wahid to address past abuses and begin building a new society based
on civilian government and the rule of law.

The former president, who was forced to resign in May 1998, is widely
believed to have amassed billions of dollars in illegal wealth for himself,
his children and his associates. He has denied the accusation.

Despite public demands for an accounting, investigations under his
friend and immediate successor, B.J. Habibie, seemed half-hearted.

Mr. Suharto was treated with elaborate deference when he was called
to give evidence at the attorney general's office in late 1998. His
questioners were former members of his own administration.

Just before Mr. Habibie was voted out of office last October, those
investigators announced that they had not found enough evidence
to bring charges and closed the case. That highly unpopular move
was one of the last straws in Mr. Habibie's failed bid for election.

Days later, Mr. Wahid's new attorney general, Marzuki Darusman,
reopened the case, which involved allegations of the misuse of
millions of dollars in seven charitable organizations controlled by
Mr. Suharto.

"We will not tolerate any monkey business any more,"
Mr. Marzuki said at the time.

Softening the harshness of a the idea of putting a former president
on trial, Mr. Wahid later said that in the event Mr. Suharto is
convicted, he would be pardoned if he apologized and returned
any stolen funds.

Officials today said they now also wanted to question Mr. Suharto
regarding a failed national car project, in which he bent investment
rules to favor one of his sons, and about lucrative monopolies in
cloves and fruits that were run by his children.

Mr. Suharto's youngest son, Hutomo Mandala Putra, was
acquitted last year during Mr. Habibie's administration of
corruption charges involving a land deal. But he and other
family members and friends remain under investigation for
other deals.

Seeing Mr. Suharto investigated and put on trial was one of
the loudest demands made by the students and other opponents
whose demonstrations helped bring an end to his corrupt 32-year
rule.

While overturning much of Mr. Suharto's legacy with a range of
political reforms, Mr. Habibie appeared committed to protecting
the personal welfare of his longtime mentor.

Mr. Wahid's new administration is advancing on virtually every
front to reform the government and to clear the ledger of past
abuses that range from corruption to military killings.

The president is now engaged in a high-stakes standoff with
Indonesia's most prominent general, Wiranto, who has refused
his demand to resign as coordinating minister for security affairs.

The demand followed an accusation by a government commission
that the general was guilty of human rights abuses in the violence
that followed a vote for independence last August in the territory of
East Timor.

That commission is conducting just one of several investigations
into abuses by the military during the years it acted as Mr. Suharto's
enforcer.

Some analysts believe that Mr. Wahid is making a public example of
General Wiranto because he symbolizes the old order. Like
Mr. Habibie, he is a prot�g� of Mr. Suharto, having been appointed
defense minister after serving for years as his personal adjutant.

On the morning Mr. Suharto resigned, General Wiranto made a public
pledge to protect his interests.

Mr. Wahid is a contrast to Mr. Suharto in almost every way -- voluble
where Mr. Suharto was enigmatic, informal (and often barefoot) where
he was solemn, welcoming public discussion and dispute, committed
to democratic reforms.

Mr. Suharto gave only three news conferences in 32 years.
Mr. Wahid seems to have something to say every day, if not every
hour.

Now he seems almost to be taunting General Wiranto with new
statements at every stop on a 16-day foreign tour, which will end on
Sunday. The general says he is waiting for the president's return to
plead his case.

While General Wiranto smiles gamely in Jakarta, saying little, the
president alternates between expressions of personal regard and
repeated, humiliating demands for his resignation.

The latest version came today in Seoul.

"The best thing is for him to resign, and we can pay our respects
to him in a capacity we will decide later," the president said. "He
will not be in the cabinet but I still have great respect for him."

Was it a veiled threat when he added: "It is in the interest of
General Wiranto himself because if he refuses to step down
voluntarily, then the country will lose the opportunity to have
investors, to have an economic comeback. It will not be good
for his career later."

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