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What do you know about BJ Habibie
by Peter Symonds
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Jusef Habibie, 61, sworn in yesterday as the new Indonesian president, is one of 
Suharto's most trusted and longstanding political lieutenants. Suharto has acted as 
Habibie's patron and sponsor since the 1950s, when he came to know the young man and 
his family during a military posting to the South Sulawesi.

In 1954 Habibie was given a scholarship by the Ministry of Education and Culture to 
study aircraft construction engineering in Aachen, Germany. After obtaining a 
doctorate in 1965, he joined the Hamburger Flugzeugbau (HF) aircraft industry and 
later the Messerschmitt Boelkow Blohm (MBB) aircraft manufacturer, where he became a 
vice-president.

In 1974, Suharto asked Habibie to return to Indonesia, and placed him in charge of the 
strategic state-owned oil company. In 1978, Habibie was appointed Minister of Research 
and Technology, a post he held until March when he was endorsed as vice-president and 
the ageing dictator's anointed successor.

In his post as technology minister, Habibie was notorious as an advocate for expensive 
state-funded economic projects aimed at making Indonesia technologically 
self-sufficient.

Using his connections with German corporations, he began by assembling Messerschmitt 
helicopters in a hangar at Bandung. The operation expanded to employ 20,000 workers in 
making small and medium-sized turboprop aircraft. Ambitious plans were drawn up for an 
Indonesian-made commercial airliner to rival the US and European aerospace companies.

His other projects included the costly purchase of the entire navy of the former East 
Germany in the 1990s, and plans for a string of nuclear reactors throughout Java.

Critics point to the high cost of these industries which rely heavily on huge tariff 
protection and guaranteed sales to the armed forces and national airlines.

When Suharto first indicated earlier this year that Habibie would be vice-president, 
the rupiah slumped immediately by 20 percent. Habibie's support for protected national 
industries runs directly counter to the demands of the IMF and global investors for an 
end to any form of national economic regulation. The IMF has explicitly demanded the 
removal of the protection and huge state subsidies given to Habibie's aircraft 
corporation.

With the endorsement of Suharto, Habibie was central to the establishment of the 
Association of Indonesian Moslem Intellectuals (ICMI) in 1990.  The association has 
its own bank and daily newspaper Republika.

Under the Suharto regime, the Habibie family has also amassed its own private business 
empire, centred around the Timsco Group which is involved in construction, chemicals, 
engineering, transportation, telecommunications and industrial development.

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Didistribusikan tgl. 26 Jul 1999 jam 05:07:01 GMT+1
oleh: Indonesia Daily News Online <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
http://www.Indo-News.com/
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