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Jakarta Post
24 July 1999

How fares Soeharto?

As the Dutch say, hoge bomen vangen veel wind (tall trees catch much wind).
During the 32 years that Soeharto was president of Indonesia, even the
slightest sign of illness was enough to set off rumors of a power struggle
within the political elite and rattle the market.

Those years are over, of course. But even after his fall from power in May
last year, it cannot be denied that Indonesia's former second president
continues to exert a considerable influence, at least in certain segments of
our community. How else to explain the persistent speculation circulating at
present that the former strongman is still pulling strings behind the scene
to ensure the new government that will emerge after the November presidential
elections will be favorably inclined toward protecting him and his clan's
interests?

For that reason there is no cause to feel either shocked, surprised or
resentful -- depending on the kind of emotional relationship one has with the
ex-president -- about the seemingly nosy attitude the media has been
displaying around the Pertamina Hospital sickroom and facilities where
Soeharto is being treated after a mild stroke he is said to have suffered
last Tuesday.

Soeharto is the former chief executive of Southeast Asia's biggest country
and the fourth most populous in the world. He is the man who, during his long
tenure, managed, among other things, to raise the standard of life for
millions of Indonesians, even if much of that economic progress later turned
out to be hollow in many important sectors due to rampant power abuse and
mismanagement.

Soeharto, at the same time, is the man who, through his iron-fisted rule,
fashioned the executive branch of government into a power apparatus so
overbearing, it turned the legislative and judiciary branches, together with
the military, into mere subordinate extensions of the state's executive
powers. Soeharto is the man who effectively dealt a death blow to democracy
after his predecessor, Sukarno, stunted its functioning by his introduction
of "guided democracy". Soeharto, in other words, was the main architect of
much of what was both good and bad in this country's most recent past.

At this moment, even in his present impaired condition -- or perhaps because
of it -- Soeharto continues to draw the attention of millions of Indonesians.
For one thing, the legal process of going after his and his family's alleged
personal wealth with which his successor, B.J. Habibie, is burdened by
legislative order, has barely started and is now dangling in uncertainty. For
another, many Indonesians are watching with interest what Soeharto's illness
and possible permanent disability could have on the process of electing a new
president for the country in November.

Given the huge impact Soeharto's legacy still has on the lives of so many
Indonesians, it would be needless to say the public has a right to be
accurately informed of the former president's condition. Under these
circumstances, Indonesians think with envy of how most modern democratic
countries release reliable information to the public in times such as these.

Surely, especially considering the precarious times in which Indonesians are
living at present, it is better -- if worse comes to worse -- to have our
medical authorities handle the task of informing the public in the same way
American doctors did during President Reagan's illness or President
Eisenhower's demise, rather than to shroud Soeharto in the same kind of
secrecy Russian doctors did with Stalin at the time of the Soviet leader's
death.

One more suggestion to conclude this commentary: It would help if somebody in
the family could tell Soeharto's legal advisors to stop issuing medical
statements and leave this particular task to the medical authorities in
charge. Too much confusion has already been caused by one and all giving out
contrary statements about the ex-president's condition.

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Didistribusikan tgl. 24 Jul 1999 jam 03:56:39 GMT+1
oleh: Indonesia Daily News Online <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
http://www.Indo-News.com/
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