Polling Kompas : sampai detik ini Pk.10:29 Pacific Time, hasil
adalah 91% dari lebih dari 7600 orang, memilih Pemerintah Australia
tidak perlu meminta maaf atas insiden yang terjadi terhadap Sutiyoso.

MJ

--- In [email protected], "marthajan04"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Untuk menye-imbangkan berita, kita harus dengar/baca juga versi
> lawan.
> supaya kita bisa lebih bijak menanggapi suatu issue itu.
> Mengapa Sutiyoso sebagai tamu terhormat tidak mau membuka pintu
> kamar hotelnya ketika di bell ber-kali2?
> Kalau dia tidak merasa bersalah, kenapa harus tidak mau menanggapi
> ketukan polisi dikamarnya?
>
> Dari milis KT.
>
> "And then the senior member of staff went up to the room with the
> police and the doorbell was rung on several occasions and then
they
> proceeded to go into the room (with a master key) following the
> directions given by the state police."
> =========================================================
> polisi dinegara manapun berhak membuka pintu bila
> tersangka "SEMBUNYI DIDALAM KAMAR". Sudah jelas Sutiyoso, kabur
> tunggang langgang, karena takut menghadapi hukum dan pertanggungan
> jawabnya terhadap warga negara Australia beserta semua keluarga
yang
> terbunuh pada 1975.
> Ketika dia sebagai aparat yang terlibat!
>
> Walaupun kasusnya ditutup di Indonesia[May'98, Munir, Suharto pun
> kasusnya ditutup??]tapi sebagai negara yang mempunyai hukum
keadilan
> harus ditegakkan.
>
> AL
>
> http://www.worldnewsaustralia.com.au/region.php?id=137415®ion=7
>
>
> Iemma apologises to Sutiyoso
> 31.5.2007. 19:37:40
>
> NSW Premier Morris Iemma has written to Jakarta Governor Sutiyoso
> apologising for a police intrusion during his stay in Sydney.
>
> Mr Sutiyoso this week cut short his visit to Australia, made at
the
> invitation of the NSW government, after police entered his Sydney
> hotel room and asked him to testify at an inquest into the deaths
of
> five Australian-based journalists at Balibo in East Timor in 1975.
>
> Mr Sutiyoso said police used a master key to barge into his hotel
> room and ask him to testify, labelling their treatment of him rude
> and inappropriate.
>
> Letter of apology
>
> Mr Iemma tonight said he had written Sutiyoso, saying he
> was "disturbed by the initial advice received on the circumstances
> of the entry" into the hotel room.
>
> "I apologise for the distress and inconvenience caused and regret
> your early departure from New South Wales," the premier wrote.
>
> Mr Iemma said the police action was not sanctioned by his
> government.
>
> He said the investigation into the incident would
be "comprehensive"
> and undertaken by senior police.
>
> "I have also been advised ... that a review of the circumstances
> around the entry to your room suggests that NSW government's
> coordination of security and protocol was less than satisfactory,"
> he wrote.
>
> "This is extremely disappointing to me."
>
> "I trust that the spirit of goodwill so obvious in the past will
> overcome the events of this week."
>
> A NSW police officer is under investigation as a result of the
> incident.
>
> "The Commissioner of Police Ken Moroney will today provide interim
> advice to the police minister of the matter regarding the Governor
> of Jakarta, Mr Sutiyoso," the statement said.
>
> "In the meantime, an officer attached to the coronial
investigation
> unit is the subject of departmental inquiry into the circumstances
> surrounding his contact with the Governor of Jakarta."
>
> Subpoena not served
>
> A spokeswoman for the NSW Coroner's Court today said the officer
had
> been in possession of a subpoena for Mr Sutiyoso, but that it was
> not served on him.
>
> "Instead, a verbal invitation was issued to attend the inquest and
> he (Mr Sutiyoso) declined," the spokeswoman said.
>
> Deputy state coroner Dorelle Pinch, who is presiding over the
Balibo
> inquest, yesterday said that after speaking with the officer
> assisting the inquest, Detective Sergeant Steve Thomas, she was
> assured there had been no unauthorised access to the room.
>
> Today, a spokeswoman for the Shangri-La Hotel said police arrived
> with identification and documentation and asked to be taken to Mr
> Sutiyoso's room.
>
> "They (the police) came on Tuesday afternoon and one of our senior
> members of staff obviously dealt with them," the spokeswoman said.
>
> "They presented their ID and also some documentation, which the
> senior member of staff reviewed.
>
> "Then, yes, they did demand access to the guest room.
>
> "And then the senior member of staff went up to the room with the
> police and the doorbell was rung on several occasions and then
they
> proceeded to go into the room (with a master key) following the
> directions given by the state police."

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