http://www.asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2580&Itemid=202


The Test of Indonesia's Press Freedom 


Written by Our Correspondent    
Wednesday, 07 July 2010 
Ominous concerns over whether the police firebombed the offices of Tempo 
magazine over a news story 

A June 27 story by Indonesia's most respected news magazine, Tempo, detailing 
the fat bank accounts of six top national policemen is starting to appear to be 
a major test of press freedom in the country.

In the early hours of July 6, two black-clad men on a motorcycle were seen by 
witnesses
throwing three firebombs at the magazine's editorial offices in central 
Jakarta, causing relatively minor damage. Only two of the Molotov cocktails 
ignited and Wahyu Muryadi, Tempo's editor-in-chief, said there had been no 
injuries.

Although the motorcyclists have not been identified, they are widely presumed 
in Jakarta
to be connected to the police officials who were embarrassed by the Tempo 
story. A police spokesman, however, denied that the firebombing was related to 
the story, or that the police had anything to do with it.
 
In recent days, rather than investigating the billions of rupiah the officials 
reportedly have in their accounts, the police appear to be more preoccupied 
with who leaked the details of the accounts rather than how officials were able 
to amass such massive amounts of cash. They have threatened to sue Tempo for 
the illustration on the cover of the magazine, which depicted a policeman being 
towed along by three leashed piggybanks, and have also threatened to prosecute 
whoever leaked the details of the accounts to a reform organization that passed 
them on to Tempo. A police official lodged a protest over the cover with the 
Indonesian Press Council, although not over the story itself.

A week earlier, on the same day the story broke, officials presumed to be 
connected with the police rushed around in the early morning hours to try to 
buy up all the copies of the offending story from almost all of Tempo's 29 
vendors in the central city. The attempt was futile, since they were only able 
to buy up 30,000 copies in central Jakarta, leaving the rest of the country 
free to buy them. Subscribers also got their copies through the mail. The 
action by the mystery buyers backfired and stirred up even more publicity, with 
buyers clamoring for copies and vendors offering the ones they have left for 
double the price. Tempo printed 30,000 more and sold them to replace the ones 
the mystery buyers had purchased.

The story printed the names of six officials with as much as US$10.45 million 
in their accounts. They were Inspector General Mathius Salempang, Inspector 
General Sylvanus Yulian Wenas, Inspector General Budi Gunawan, Inspector 
General Badrodin Haiti, Commissioner General Susno Duadji and Inspector General 
Bambang Suparno. At the very top, police officials earn only about Rp15 
million, or about US$1,600 per month.

The Tempo article kicked off a storm in Indonesia, not just from the public but 
from community leaders and politicians including the opposition Indonesian 
Democratic Party of Struggle, or PDI-P, criticizing the massive amounts of 
money in the accounts. On Tuesday, President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, reacting 
to public pressure, ordered Gen. Bambang Hendarso Danuri, the National Police 
chief, to investigate the Tempo report. Speaking with reporters prior to a 
cabinet meeting, Yudhoyono said he had received hundreds of messages from the 
public questioning how police officials could have amassed such wealth.

"Please respond to this issue, resolve it and manage it well," Yudhoyono told 
Danuri. "If there are legal violations, impose sanctions. If you don't, explain 
why."

That leaves the question of why the president would ask the police, who are 
among the most corrupt of Indonesia's corrupt institutions, to investigate 
themselves, rather than asking the feared Corruption Eradication Commission to 
take on the case. The commission, known by its initials KPK, has won 
convictions on every case it has brought before its own special court, tossing 
scores of politicians and others in jail.

Indeed, Gen. Ito Sumardi, the new chief of detectives who replaced Susno 
Duadji, who himself was ousted on corruption charges and who was named as one 
of the six, hardly inspired confidence when he confirmed that the officials 
named in the report had bulging bank accounts. But, Sumardi said, that didn't 
mean a crime had been committed.

"If [the money] was given voluntarily, then we should not force them to 
confess," he told local reporters. The cash, he said, was identified as from 
parties identified as either "good friends" or businessmen with no connection 
to any case. "So there's no crime." However, he said the investigation would 
continue.

It isn't the first time Tempo has come under fire from government officials. 
Founded in 1971 by Goenawan Mohamad and Yusril Djalinus, it was later banned by 
the Information Minister, Harmoko, on orders from President Suharto as a 
"threat to national stability." It came back into existence after the strongman 
passed from the scene in the wake of the Asian Financial Crisis of 1997 and 
1998.

Since that time, Indonesia has developed a lively and independent press. With 
Suharto's fall, the new government headed by Suharto's vice president, B J 
Habibie, abolished state censorship, established legal guarantees of freedom of 
the press and allowed many new media outlets to receive licenses, according to 
the annual Freedom House Survey.

There are continuing problems, however, including a draconian law that has the 
potential to put editors and reporters in jail if the courts - which are hardly 
corruption-free - rule that they have criminally libeled their subjects. Now it 
remains to be seen if intimidation by firebomb will make a difference.

Kirim email ke