Jump to content

Suharto

This is a good article. Click here for more information.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Haji Mohammad Suharto)

Suharto
Official portrait, 1993
2nd President of Indonesia
In office
12 March 1967 – 21 May 1998[a]
Acting until 27 March 1968
Vice President
See list
Preceded bySukarno
Succeeded byB. J. Habibie
Chairman of the Cabinet Presidium
In office
25 July 1966 – 17 October 1967
President
  • Sukarno
  • Himself (acting)
Preceded bySukarno (as Prime Minister)
Succeeded byOffice abolished
16th Secretary-General of the
Non-Aligned Movement
In office
7 September 1992 – 20 October 1995
Preceded byDobrica Ćosić
Succeeded byErnesto Samper
Additional offices
13th Minister of Defense and Security
In office
28 March 1966 – 9 September 1971
President
  • Sukarno
  • Himself
Preceded bySarbini Martodihardjo [id]
Succeeded byMaraden Panggabean
1st and 4th Commander of Kopkamtib
In office
28 January 1974 – 17 April 1978
PresidentHimself
Preceded byGeneral Sumitro Sastrodihardjo
Succeeded byAdmiral Sudomo
In office
5 October 1965 – 19 November 1969
President
  • Sukarno
  • Himself
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byGeneral Maraden Panggabean
5th Commander of the Armed Forces of the Republic of Indonesia
In office
6 June 1968 – 28 March 1973
PresidentHimself
Preceded byGeneral Abdul Haris Nasution (1966)
Succeeded byGeneral Maraden Panggabean
7th Chief of Staff of the Indonesian Army
In office
16 October 1965 – 1 May 1968
President
  • Sukarno
  • Himself
Preceded by
Succeeded byGeneral Maraden Panggabean
1st Commander of the Strategic Reserve
In office
6 March 1961 – 2 December 1965
PresidentSukarno
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byMaj. Gen. Umar Wirahadikusumah
Personal details
Born(1921-06-08)8 June 1921
Bantoel, Dutch East Indies
Died27 January 2008(2008-01-27) (aged 86)
Jakarta, Indonesia
Resting placeAstana Giribangun
Political partyGolkar
Height168 cm (5 ft 6 in)[1]
Spouse
(m. 1947; died 1996)
Children6, including Tutut Suharto, Titiek, and Tommy Suharto
Parents
  • Kertosudiro (father)
  • Sukirah (mother)
Alma materKNIL Kadetschool
Occupation
  • Politician
  • army officer
Signature
Nicknames
  • Pak Harto
  • Smiling General
Military service
Allegiance
Branch/service
Years of service1940–1974
RankGeneral of the army
UnitInfantry (Kostrad)
Commands
Battles/wars
See list
AwardsList of awards
Service no.10684[2]

Suharto[b][c] (8 June 1921 – 27 January 2008) was an Indonesian military officer and the second president of Indonesia. Widely regarded as a military dictator by international observers, Suharto led Indonesia as an authoritarian regime from 1967 until his resignation in 1998 following nationwide unrest.[3][4][5] His 31-year dictatorship is considered one of the most brutal and corrupt of the 20th century: he was central to the perpetration of mass killings against alleged communists and subsequent persecution of ethnic Chinese, irreligious people, and trade unionists.[6][7][8]

Suharto was born in Kemusuk, near the city of Yogyakarta, during the Dutch colonial era.[9] He grew up in humble circumstances.[10] His Javanese Muslim parents divorced not long after his birth, and he lived with foster parents for much of his childhood. During the Japanese occupation, Suharto served in the Japanese-organized Indonesian security forces. During Indonesia's independence struggle, he joined the newly formed Indonesian Army and rose to the rank of major general some time after full Indonesian independence was achieved. An attempted coup on 30 September and 1 October 1965 was countered by Suharto-led troops. The army subsequently led a nationwide violent anti-communist purge and Suharto wrested power from Indonesia's founding president, Sukarno. He was appointed acting president in 1967 and elected president the following year. He then mounted a social campaign known as "de-Sukarnoization" to reduce the former president's influence. Suharto ordered an invasion of East Timor in 1975, followed by a deadly 23-year occupation of the country and genocide. By the 1990s, the New Order's increasing authoritarianism and widespread corruption[11][12] were a source of discontent and, following the 1997 Asian financial crisis which led to widespread unrest, he resigned in May 1998.

Under his "New Order" administration, Suharto constructed a strong, centralised, and military-dominated government. What started as an oligarchic military dictatorship evolved into a personalistic authoritarian regime centred around him.[13] An ability to maintain stability over a sprawling and diverse Indonesia and an avowedly anti-communist stance won him the economic and diplomatic support of the West during the Cold War. For most of his presidency, Indonesia experienced significant industrialisation, economic growth, and improved levels of education.[14][15] As a result, he was given the title "Father of Development."[16] According to Transparency International, Suharto was one of the most corrupt leaders in modern history, having embezzled an alleged US$15–35 billion during his rule.[17][18] Suharto died in January 2008.

Suharto remains a controversial and divisive figure within the Indonesian general public. Many Indonesians have praised his 31-year regime for its economic development, rapid industrialisation, and perceived political stability, while others have denounced his dictatorial rule, extensive human rights violations and corruption.[19][20] Plans to award the status of National Hero to Suharto are being considered by the Indonesian government and have been debated vigorously.[21]

Name

[edit]

Like many Javanese, Suharto had only one name.[12] Religious contexts in recent years had sometimes referred to him as Haji/Al-Haj Mohammed Suharto, but these names were neither part of his formal name nor generally used. The spelling "Suharto" reflects modern Indonesian orthography, although the general approach in Indonesia is to rely on the spelling preferred by the person concerned. At the time of his birth, the standard transcription was Soeharto, and he used the original spelling throughout his life. The international English-language press generally uses the spelling "Suharto," while the Indonesian government and media use "Soeharto."[22]

Early life and family

[edit]

Suharto was born on 8 June 1921 in a plaited-bamboo-walled house in the hamlet of Kemusuk, a part of the larger village of Godean, then part of the Dutch East Indies. The village is 15 kilometres (9 mi) west of Yogyakarta, the cultural heartland of the Javanese.[15][23] Born to ethnic Javanese parents, he was the only child of his father's second marriage. His father, Kertosudiro, had two children from his previous marriage and was a village irrigation official. His mother, Sukirah, a local woman, was distantly related to Hamengkubuwono V by his first concubine.[24] Five weeks after Suharto's birth, his mother suffered a nervous breakdown; he was placed in the care of his paternal great-aunt, Kromodirjo as a result.[25] Kertosudiro and Sukirah divorced early in Suharto's life and both later remarried. At the age of three, Suharto was returned to his mother, who had married a local farmer whom Suharto helped in the rice paddies.[25] In 1929, Suharto's father took him to live with his sister, who was married to an agricultural supervisor, Prawirowihardjo, in the town of Wuryantoro in a poor and low-yielding farming area near Wonogiri. Over the following two years, he was taken back to his mother in Kemusuk by his stepfather and then back again to Wuryantoro by his father.[26]

Prawirowihardjo took to raising the boy as his own, which provided Suharto with a father-figure and a stable home in Wuryantoro. In 1931, he moved to the town of Wonogiri to attend the primary school, living first with Prawirohardjo's son Sulardi, and later with his father's relative Hardjowijono. While living with Hardjowijono, Suharto became acquainted with Darjatmo, a dukun ("shaman") of Javanese mystical arts and faith healing. The experience deeply affected him and later, as president, Suharto surrounded himself with powerful symbolic language.[15] Difficulties in paying the fees for his education in Wonogiri resulted in another move back to his father in Kemusuk, where he continued studying at a lower-fee Schakel Muhammadiyah (middle school) in the city of Yogyakarta until 1938.[26][27] Suharto's upbringing contrasts with that of leading Indonesian nationalists such as Sukarno in that he is believed to have had little interest in anti-colonialism, or political concerns beyond his immediate surroundings. Unlike Sukarno and his circle, Suharto had little or no contact with European colonisers. Consequently, he did not learn to speak Dutch or other European languages in his youth. He learned to speak Dutch after his induction into the Dutch military in 1940.[27]

Military service

[edit]

Japanese occupation period

[edit]

Suharto finished middle school at the age of 18 and took a clerical job at a bank in Wuryantaro. He was forced to resign after a bicycle mishap tore his only working clothes.[28] Following a spell of unemployment, he joined the Royal Netherlands East Indies Army (KNIL) in June 1940 and undertook basic training in Gombong near Yogyakarta. With the Netherlands under German occupation and the Japanese pressing for access to Indonesian oil supplies, the Dutch had opened up the KNIL to large intakes of previously excluded Javanese.[29] Suharto was assigned to Battalion XIII at Rampal, graduated from a short training course at KNIL Kaderschool in Gombong to become a sergeant, and was posted to a KNIL reserve battalion in Cisarua.[30] Following the Dutch surrender to the invading Japanese forces in March 1942, Suharto abandoned his KNIL uniform and went back to Wurjantoro. After months of unemployment, he then became one of the thousands of Indonesians who took the opportunity to join Japanese-organized security forces by joining the Yogyakarta police force.[29]

In October 1943, Suharto was transferred from the police force to the newly formed Japanese-sponsored militia, the Pembela Tanah Air (PETA) in which Indonesians served as officers. In his training to serve with the rank of shodancho (platoon commander) he encountered a localised version of the Japanese bushido, or "way of the warrior", used to indoctrinate troops. This training encouraged an anti-Dutch and pro-nationalist thought, although toward the aims of the Imperial Japanese militarists. The encounter with a nationalistic and militarist ideology is believed to have profoundly influenced Suharto's own way of thinking.[31] Suharto was posted to a PETA coastal defense battalion at Wates, south of Yogyakarta until he was admitted for training for chudancho (company commander) in Bogor from April to August 1944. As company commander, he conducted training for new PETA recruits in Surakarta, Jakarta, and Madiun. The Japanese surrender and Proclamation of Indonesian Independence in August 1945 occurred while Suharto was posted to the remote Brebeg area (on the slopes of Mount Wilis) to train new NCOs to replace those executed by the Japanese in the aftermath of the failed February 1945 PETA Revolt in Blitar, led by Supriyadi.

Indonesian National Revolution

[edit]
Lieutenant Colonel Suharto, c. 1947

Two days after the Japanese surrender in the Pacific, independence leaders Sukarno and Hatta declared Indonesian independence and were appointed president and vice-president respectively of the new Republic. Suharto disbanded his regiment under orders from the Japanese command and returned to Yogyakarta.[32] As republican groups rose to assert Indonesian independence, Suharto joined a new unit of the newly formed Indonesian army. Based on his PETA experience, he was appointed deputy commander, and subsequently, a battalion commander when the republican forces were formally organized in October 1945.[32] Suharto was involved in fighting against Allied troops around Magelang and Semarang and was subsequently appointed the head of a brigade as lieutenant-colonel, having earned respect as a field commander.[33] In the early years of the war, he organized local armed forces into Battalion X of Regiment I; Suharto was promoted to Major and became Battalion X's leader.[34] The arrival of the Allies, under a mandate to return the situation to the status quo ante bellum, quickly led to clashes between Indonesian republicans and Allied forces, i.e. returning Dutch and assisting British forces.[35]

Suharto led his Division X troops to halt an advance by the Dutch T ("Tiger") Brigade on 17 May 1946. It earned him the respect of Lieutenant-Colonel Sunarto Kusumodirjo, who invited him to draft the working guidelines for the Battle Leadership Headquarters (MPP), a body created to organize and unify the command structure of the Indonesian Nationalist forces.[35] The military forces of the still infant Republic of Indonesia were constantly restructuring. By August 1946, Suharto was head of the 22nd Regiment of Division III (the "Diponegoro Division") stationed in Yogyakarta. In late 1946, the Diponegoro Division assumed responsibility for the defence of the west and southwest of Yogyakarta from Dutch forces. Conditions at the time are reported by Dutch sources as miserable; Suharto himself is reported as assisting smuggling syndicates in the transport of opium through the territory he controlled, to generate income. In September 1948, Suharto was dispatched to meet Musso, chairman of the Indonesian Communist Party (PKI) in an unsuccessful attempt at a peaceful reconciliation of the communist uprising in Madiun.[36]

Portrait of Suharto and Siti Hartinah, date unknown

In December 1948, the Dutch launched "Operation Kraai," which resulted in the capture of Sukarno and Hatta and the capital Yogyakarta. Suharto was appointed to lead the Wehrkreise III, consisting of two battalions, which waged guerrilla warfare against the Dutch from the hills south of Yogyakarta.[36] In dawn raids on 1 March 1949, Suharto's forces and local militia recaptured the city, holding it until noon.[37] Suharto's later accounts had him as the lone plotter, although other sources say Sultan Hamengkubuwono IX of Yogyakarta, and the Panglima of the Third Division ordered the attack. However, General Abdul Nasution said that Suharto took great care in preparing the "General Offensive" (Indonesian: Serangan Umum). Civilians sympathetic to the Republican cause within the city had been galvanised by the show of force which proved that the Dutch had failed to win the guerrilla war. Internationally, the United Nations Security Council pressured the Dutch to cease the military offensive and to recommence negotiations, which eventually led to the Dutch withdrawal from the Yogyakarta area in June 1949 and to complete transfer of sovereignty in December 1949. Suharto was responsible for the takeover of Yogyakarta city from the withdrawing Dutch in June 1949.[38]

During the Revolution, Suharto married Siti Hartinah (known as Madam Tien), the daughter of a minor noble in the Mangkunegaran royal house of Solo. The arranged marriage was enduring and supportive, lasting until Tien's death in 1996.[15] The couple had six children: Siti Hardiyanti Rukmana (Tutut, born 1949), Sigit Harjojudanto (born 1951), Bambang Trihatmodjo (born 1953), Siti Hediati Hariyadi (Titiek, born 1959), Hutomo Mandala Putra (Tommy, born 1962), and Siti Hutami Endang Adiningish (Mamiek, born 1964). Within the Javanese upper class, it was considered acceptable for the wife to pursue genteel commerce[clarification needed] to supplement the family budget, allowing her husband to keep his dignity in his official role. The commercial dealings[clarification needed] of Tien, her children and grandchildren became extensive and ultimately undermined Suharto's presidency.[15]

Post-independence career

[edit]
Suharto with his wife and six children, c. 1967

In the years following Indonesian independence, Suharto served in the Indonesian National Army, primarily in Java. In 1950, as a colonel, he led the Garuda Brigade in suppressing the Makassar uprising, a rebellion of former colonial soldiers who supported the Dutch-established State of East Indonesia and its federal entity, the United States of Indonesia.[39] During his year in Makassar, Suharto became acquainted with his neighbours, the Habibie family, whose eldest son BJ Habibie was later Suharto's vice-president, and went on to succeed him as president. In 1951–1952, Suharto led his troops in defeating the Islamic-inspired rebellion of Battalion 426 in the Klaten area of Central Java.[40] Appointed to lead four battalions in early 1953, he organized their participation in battling Darul Islam insurgents in northwestern Central Java and anti-bandit operations in the Mount Merapi area. He also sought to stem leftist sympathies among his troops. His experience in this period left Suharto with a deep distaste for both Islamic and communist radicalism.[41]

Between 1956 and 1959, he served in the important position of commander of Diponegoro Division based in Semarang, responsible for Central Java and Yogyakarta provinces. His relationship with prominent businessmen Liem Sioe Liong and Bob Hasan, which extended throughout his presidency, began in Central Java, where he was involved in a series of "profit-generating" enterprises conducted primarily to keep the poorly funded military unit functioning.[42] Army anti-corruption investigations implicated Suharto in a 1959 smuggling scandal. Relieved of his position, he was transferred to the army's Staff and Command School (Seskoad) in the city of Bandung.[43]

In his office as the head of the Strategic Reserve, c. 1963

While in Bandung, he was promoted to brigadier-general, and in late 1960, promoted to army deputy chief of staff.[15] On 6 March 1961, he was given an additional command, as head of the army's new Strategic Reserve (Korps Tentara I Cadangan Umum AD, later KOSTRAD), a ready-reaction air-mobile force based in Jakarta.[15][44] In January 1962, Suharto was promoted to the rank of major general and appointed to lead Operation Mandala, a joint army-navy-air force command based in Makassar. This formed the military side of the campaign to win western New Guinea from the Dutch, who were preparing it for its own independence, separate from Indonesia.[15] In 1965, Suharto was assigned operational command of Sukarno's Konfrontasi, against the newly formed Malaysia. Fearful that Konfrontasi would leave Java thinly covered by the army, and hand control to the 2 million-strong Indonesian Communist Party (PKI), he authorised a Kostrad intelligence officer, Ali Murtopo, to open secret contacts with the British and Malaysians.[15]

Overthrow of Sukarno

[edit]

Background

[edit]
President Sukarno (with glasses) in Disneyland, c. 1961

Tensions between the military and communists increased in April 1965, when Sukarno endorsed the immediate implementation of the PKI's proposal for a "fifth armed force" consisting of armed peasants and workers. However, this idea was rejected by the army's leadership as being tantamount to the PKI establishing its own armed forces. In May, the "Gilchrist Document" aroused Sukarno's fear of a military plot to overthrow him, a fear which he repeatedly mentioned during the next few months. On his independence day speech in August, Sukarno declared his intention to commit Indonesia to an anti-imperialist alliance with China and other communist countries and warned the army not to interfere.[45][page needed]

While Sukarno devoted his energy for domestic and international politics, the economy of Indonesia deteriorated rapidly with worsening widespread poverty and hunger, while foreign debt obligations became unmanageable and infrastructure crumbled. Sukarno's Guided Democracy stood on fragile grounds due to the inherent conflict between its two underlying support pillars, the military and the communists. The military, nationalists, and the Islamic groups were shocked by the rapid growth of the communist party under Sukarno's protection. They feared the imminent establishment of a communist state in Indonesia. By 1965, the PKI had three million members and was particularly strong in Central Java and Bali. The party had become the most potent political party in Indonesia.

Abortive coup and anti-communist purge

[edit]
Major General Suharto (at right, in the foreground) attending the funeral for the assassinated generals, 5 October 1965

Before dawn on 1 October 1965, six army generals were kidnapped and executed in Jakarta by soldiers from the Presidential Guard, Diponegoro Division, and Brawidjaja Division.[46] Soldiers occupied Merdeka Square including the areas in front of the Presidential Palace, the national radio station, and telecommunications centre. At 7:10 am Untung bin Syamsuri announced on the radio that the "30 September Movement" had forestalled a coup attempt on Sukarno by "CIA-backed power-mad generals", and that it was "an internal army affair". The movement never made any attempt on Suharto's life.[47] Suharto had been in Jakarta army hospital that evening with his three-year-old son Tommy who had a scalding injury. It was here that he was visited by Colonel Abdul Latief, a key member of the Movement and close family friend of Suharto. According to Latief's later testimony, the conspirators assumed Suharto to be a Sukarno-loyalist; hence Latief went to inform him of the impending kidnapping plan to save Sukarno from treacherous generals, upon which Suharto seemed to offer his neutrality.[48]

Upon being told of the killings, Suharto went to Kostrad headquarters just before dawn from where he could see soldiers occupying Merdeka Square. He mobilised Kostrad and RPKAD (now Kopassus) special forces to seize control of the centre of Jakarta, capturing key strategic sites including the radio station without resistance. Suharto announced over the radio at 9:00 pm that six generals had been kidnapped by "counter-revolutionaries" and that the 30 September Movement actually intended to overthrow Sukarno. He said he was in control of the army, and that he would crush the Movement and safeguard Sukarno.[49] Suharto issued an ultimatum to Halim Air Force Base, where the G30S had based themselves and where Sukarno, air force commander Omar Dhani and PKI chairman Dipa Nusantara Aidit had gathered, causing them to disperse before Suhartoist soldiers occupied the airbase on 2 October after short fighting.[50] With the failure of the poorly organized coup,[50] and having secured authority from the president to restore order and security, Suharto's faction was firmly in control of the army by 2 October (he was officially appointed army commander on 14 October). On 5 October, Suharto led a dramatic public ceremony to bury the generals' bodies.

Complicated and partisan theories continue to this day over the identity of the attempted coup's organizers and their aims. The army's version, and subsequently that of the "New Order", was that the PKI was solely responsible. A propaganda campaign by the army and Islamic and Catholic student groups convinced both Indonesian and international audiences that it was a communist coup attempt, and that the killings were cowardly atrocities against Indonesian heroes.[51] The army in alliance with civilian religious groups, and backed by the United States and other Western powers, led a campaign of mass killings to purge Indonesian society, government, and armed forces of the Communist Party of Indonesia and other leftist organizations.[51][52][53][54] The purge spread from Jakarta to much of the rest of the country.[55] The most widely accepted estimates are that at least 500,000 to over 1 million were killed.[56][57][58][59][page needed][60][61] As many as 1.5 million were imprisoned at one stage or another.[62] As a result of the purge, one of Sukarno's three pillars of support, the Indonesian Communist Party, was effectively eliminated by the other two, the military and political Islam.[63] The CIA described the purge as "one of the worst mass murders of the 20th century".[64]

Power struggle

[edit]

Sukarno continued to command loyalty from large sections of the armed forces as well as the general population, and Suharto was careful not to be seen to be seizing power in his own coup. For eighteen months following the quashing of the 30 September Movement, there was a complicated process of political manoeuvres against Sukarno, including student agitation, stacking of parliament, media propaganda and military threats.[65] In January 1966, university students under the banner of KAMI, began demonstrations against the Sukarno government voicing demands for the disbandment of the PKI and control of hyperinflation. The students received support and protection from the army. Street fights broke out between the students and pro-Sukarno loyalists with the pro-Suharto students prevailing due to army protection.[66]

In February 1966, Sukarno promoted Suharto to lieutenant-general (and to full general in July 1966).[67] The killing of a student demonstrator and Sukarno's order for the disbandment of KAMI in February 1966 further galvanised public opinion against the president. On 11 March 1966, the appearance of unidentified troops around Merdeka Palace during a cabinet meeting (which Suharto had not attended) forced Sukarno to flee to Bogor Palace (60 km away) by helicopter. Three pro-Suharto generals, Major General Basuki Rahmat, Brigadier General M. Jusuf, and Brigadier General Amir Machmud went to Bogor to meet Sukarno. There, they persuaded and secured a presidential decree from Sukarno (see Supersemar) that gave Suharto authority to take any action necessary to maintain security.[65] Using the Supersemar letter, Suharto ordered the banning of the PKI the following day and proceeded to purge pro-Sukarno elements from the parliament, the government and military, accusing them of being communist sympathisers.[67]

The army arrested 15 cabinet ministers and forced Sukarno to appoint a new cabinet consisting of Suharto supporters. The army arrested pro-Sukarno and pro-communist members of the MPRS (parliament), and Suharto replaced chiefs of the navy, air force, and the police force with his supporters, who then began an extensive purge within each service.[67] In June 1966, the now-purged parliament passed 24 resolutions including the banning of Marxism–Leninism, ratifying the Supersemar, and stripping Sukarno of his title of President for Life. Crucially, it also resolved that if Sukarno were unable to carry out his duties, the holder of the Supersemar—Suharto—would become acting president. Against the wishes of Sukarno, the government ended the Konfrontasi with Malaysia and rejoined the United Nations[68] (Sukarno had removed Indonesia from the UN in the previous year).[69] Suharto did not seek Sukarno's outright removal at this MPRS session due to the remaining support for the president among some elements of the armed forces.[70] By January 1967, Suharto felt confident that he had removed all significant support for Sukarno within the armed forces. After Sukarno gave his version of events, the MPRS concluded that he had been derelict in his duties and decided to hold another session to impeach him. On 20 February 1967, facing an increasingly untenable situation, Sukarno announced he would resign from the presidency. Later, the MPRS session stripped him of his remaining power on 12 March and named Suharto acting president.[71] Sukarno was placed under house arrest in Bogor Palace; little more was heard from him, and he died in June 1970.[72] On 27 March 1968, the MPRS appointed Suharto for a full five-year term as president.[73]

The "New Order" (1967–1998)

[edit]

Ideology

[edit]
Official portrait, 1968
Official portrait, 1973

Suharto promoted his "New Order", as opposed to Sukarno's "Old Order", as a society based on the Pancasila ideology. After initially being careful not to offend sensitivities of Islamic scholars who feared Pancasila might develop into a quasi-religious cult, Suharto secured a parliamentary resolution in 1983 which obliged all organizations in Indonesia to adhere to Pancasila as a fundamental principle. He also instituted mandatory Pancasila training programs for all Indonesians, from primary school students to office workers. In practice, however, the vagueness of Pancasila was exploited by Suharto's government to justify their actions and to condemn their opponents as "anti-Pancasila".[74] The New Order also implemented the Dwifungsi ("Dual Function") policy which enabled the military to have an active role in all levels of the Indonesian government, economy, and society.

Consolidation of power

[edit]
Suharto taking the presidential oath of office, 27 March 1968

Having been appointed president, Suharto still needed to share power with various elements including Indonesian generals who considered Suharto as mere primus inter pares, and Islamic and student groups who participated in the anti-Communist purge. Suharto, aided by his "Office of Personal Assistants" (Aspri) clique of military officers from his days as commander of Diponegoro Division, particularly Ali Murtopo, began to systematically cement his hold on power by subtly sidelining potential rivals while rewarding loyalists with political position and monetary incentives.[citation needed] Having successfully stood-down MPRS chairman General Abdul Haris Nasution's 1968 attempt to introduce a bill which would have severely curtailed presidential authority, Suharto had him removed from his position as MPRS chairman in 1969 and forced his early retirement from the military in 1972. In 1967, generals Hartono Rekso Dharsono, Kemal Idris, and Sarwo Edhie Wibowo (dubbed "New Order Radicals") opposed Suharto's decision to allow participation of existing political parties in elections in favour of a non-ideological two-party system similar to those found in many Western countries. Suharto sent Dharsono overseas as an ambassador, while Idris and Wibowo were sent to distant North Sumatra and South Sulawesi as regional commanders.[75]

Suharto's previously strong relationship with the student movement soured over the increasing authoritarianism and corruption of his administration. While many original leaders of the 1966 student movement (Angkatan '66) were successfully co-opted into the regime, Suharto was faced with large student demonstrations challenging the legitimacy of 1971 elections ("Golput" movement), the costly construction of the Taman Mini Indonesia Indah theme park (1972), the domination of foreign capitalists (Malari Incident of 1974), and the lack of term limits of Suharto's presidency (1978). The regime responded by imprisoning many student activists (such as future national figures Dorodjatun Kuntjoro-Jakti, Adnan Buyung Nasution, Hariman Siregar, and Syahrir), and even sending troops to occupy the campus of ITB (Bandung Institute of Technology) from January–March 1978. In April 1978, Suharto moved decisively by issuing a decree on "Normalisation of Campus Life" (NKK) which prohibited political activities on-campus not related to academic pursuits.[76][77]

On 15–16 January 1974, Suharto faced a significant challenge when violent riots broke out in Jakarta during a visit by the Japanese prime minister Kakuei Tanaka. Students demonstrating against increasing dominance of Japanese investors were encouraged by General Sumitro, deputy commander of the armed forces. Sumitro was an ambitious general who disliked the strong influence of Suharto's Aspri inner circle. Suharto learned that the riots were engineered by Sumitro to destabilise the government, resulting in Sumitro's dismissal and forced retirement. This incident is referred to as the Malari Incident (Malapetaka Lima Belas Januari / Disaster of 15 January). However, Suharto also disbanded Aspri to appease popular dissent.[78] In 1980, fifty prominent political figures signed the Petition of Fifty, which criticised Suharto's use of Pancasila to silence his critics. Suharto refused to address the petitioners' concerns, and some of them were imprisoned with others having restrictions imposed on their movements.[79]

Domestic policy and political stability

[edit]
Suharto's right-hand man Ali Murtopo, c. 1982

To placate demands from civilian politicians for the holding of elections, as manifested in MPRS resolutions of 1966 and 1967, Suharto government formulated a series of laws regarding elections as well as the structure and duties of parliament which were passed by MPRS in November 1969 after protracted negotiations. The law provided for a parliament (Madjelis Permusjawaratan Rakjat/MPR) with the power to elect presidents, consisting of a house of representatives (Dewan Perwakilan Rakjat/DPR) and regional representatives. 100 of the 460 members of DPR would be directly appointed by the government, while the remaining seats were allocated to political organizations based on results of the general election. This mechanism ensures significant government control over legislative affairs, particularly the appointment of presidents.[80][81]

To participate in the elections, Suharto realised the need to align himself with a political party. After initially considering alignment with Sukarno's old party, the PNI, in 1969 Suharto decided to take over control of an obscure military-run federation of NGOs called Golkar ("Functional Groups") and transform it into his electoral vehicle under the coordination of his right-hand man Ali Murtopo. The first general election was held on 3 July 1971 with ten participants; consisting of Golkar, four Islamic parties, as well as five nationalist and Christian parties. Campaigning on a non-ideological platform of "development", and aided by official government support and subtle intimidation tactics, Golkar managed to secure 62.8% of the popular vote. The March 1973 general session of newly elected MPR promptly appointed Suharto to second-term in office with Sultan Hamengkubuwono IX as vice-president.[82]

"It is not the military strength of the Communists but their fanaticism and ideology which is the principal element of their strength. To consider this, each country in the area needs an ideology of its own with which to counter the Communists. But a national ideology is not enough by itself. The well being of the people must be improved so that it strengthens and supports the national ideology."

— Suharto speaking to President Ford in 1975[83]

On 5 January 1973, to allow better control, the government forced the four Islamic parties to merge into PPP (Partai Persatuan Pembangunan/United Development Party) while the five non-Islamic parties were fused into PDI (Partai Demokrasi Indonesia/Indonesian Democratic Party). The government ensured that these parties never developed effective opposition by controlling their leadership while establishing the "re-call" system to remove any outspoken legislators from their positions. Using this system dubbed "Pancasila Democracy", Suharto was re-elected unopposed by the MPR in 1978, 1983, 1988, 1993, and 1998.[82] Golkar won landslide majorities in the MPR at every election, ensuring that Suharto would be able to pass his agenda with virtually no opposition.

Suharto took great care to make it appear that his regime appeared to observe the tenets of the constitution. On paper, the president was the "mandatory of the MPR," responsible for implementing the "Broad Lines of State Policy" (GBHN) developed by the MPR. Near the end of each of his terms, Suharto delivered "accountability speeches" to the MPR that outlined the achievements of his administration and demonstrated how he had adhered to the GBHN. Additionally, the president had the power to issue regulations in lieu of law, but such regulations had to be approved by the House of People's Representatives (DPR) to remain in effect. In practice, however, Golkar's landslide majorities in the DPR and MPR made such approval a mere formality. Combined with the DPR's infrequent sessions (it usually sat for only one session per year), Suharto was able to effectively rule by decree for most of his tenure.

Suharto also proceeded with various social engineering projects designed to transform Indonesian society into a de-politicised "floating mass" supportive of the national mission of "development", a concept similar to corporatism. The government formed various civil society groups to unite the populace in support of government programs. For instance, the government created the Indonesian Civil Servants Corps (Korps Pegawai Republik Indonesia or KORPRI) in November 1971 as union of civil servants to ensure their loyalty, organized the FBSI (Federasi Buruh Seluruh Indonesia) as the only legal labour union in February 1973, and established the MUI in 1975 to control Islamic clerics.[84]

Internal security and social policy

[edit]
Women soldiers of the Free Aceh Movement, c. 1999
SBKRI from 1973; obverse shows the card-holder, her finger print, and signature

Additionally, Suharto relied on the military to ruthlessly maintain domestic security, organized by the Kopkamtib (Operation Command for the Restoration of Security and Order) and BAKIN (State Intelligence Coordination Agency). To maintain strict control over the country, Suharto expanded the army's territorial system down to village-level, while military officers were appointed as regional heads under the rubric of the Dwifungsi ("Dual Function") of the military. By 1969, 70% of Indonesia's provincial governors and more than half of its district chiefs were active military officers. Suharto authorised Operasi Trisula which destroyed PKI remnants trying to organize a guerrilla base in the Blitar area in 1968 and ordered several military operations that ended the communist PGRS-Paraku insurgency in West Kalimantan (1967–1972). Attacks on oil workers by the first incarnation of Free Aceh Movement separatists under Hasan di Tiro in 1977 led to the dispatch of small special forces detachments who quickly either killed or forced the movement's members to flee abroad.[85] Notably, in March 1981, Suharto authorised a successful special forces mission to end hijacking of a Garuda Indonesia flight by Islamic extremists at Don Mueang International Airport in Bangkok.[86]

In 1968, Suharto commenced the highly successful family-planning program (Keluarga Berentjana/KB) to stem the high population growth rate and hence increasing per-capita income. A lasting legacy from this period is the spelling reform of Indonesian language decreed by Suharto on 17 August 1972.[84] To promote assimilation of the influential Chinese-Indonesians, the Suharto government passed several laws as part of the so-called "Basic Policy for the Solution of Chinese Problem", whereby only one Chinese-language publication (controlled by the Army) was allowed to continue, all Chinese cultural and religious expressions (including the display of Chinese characters) were prohibited from public space, Chinese schools were seized and turned into Indonesian-language public schools, and the ethnic-Chinese were forced to take-up Indonesian-sounding names; creating a systematic cultural genocide. In 1978, the government began requiring a Letter of Proof of Citizenship of the Republic of Indonesia (Indonesian: Surat Bukti Kewarganegaraan Republik Indonesia, or SBKRI). Although the SBKRI was legally required for all citizens of foreign descent, in practice it was generally applied only to Chinese descent. This led to difficulties for Chinese Indonesians when enrolling in state universities, applying to be civil servants, or joining the military or police.[87]

Economic policy

[edit]
Cabinet ministers Ali Wardhana (left) and Widjojo Nitisastro (right), both members of the "Berkeley Mafia."

To stabilise the economy and to ensure long-term support for the New Order, Suharto's administration enlisted a group of mostly US-educated Indonesian economists, dubbed the "Berkeley Mafia", to formulate significant changes in economic policy. By cutting subsidies, decreasing government debt, and reforming the exchange rate mechanism, inflation was lowered from 660% in 1966 to 19% in 1969. The threat of famine was alleviated by the influx of USAID rice aid shipments from 1967 to 1968.[88] With a lack of domestic capital that was required for economic growth, the New Order reversed Sukarno's economic self-sufficiency policies and opened selected economic sectors of the country to foreign investment through the 1967 Foreign Investment Law. Suharto travelled to Western Europe and Japan to promote investment in Indonesia. The first foreign investors to re-enter Indonesia included mining companies Freeport Sulphur Company / International Nickel Company. Following government regulatory frameworks, domestic entrepreneurs (mostly Chinese-Indonesians) emerged in the late 1960s and early 1970s in the import-substitution light-manufacturing sector such as Astra Group and Salim Group.[89]

From 1967, the government secured low-interest foreign aid from ten countries grouped under the Inter-Governmental Group on Indonesia (IGGI) to cover its budget deficit.[90] With the IGGI funds and the later jump in oil export revenue from the 1973 oil crisis, the government invested in infrastructure under a series of five-year plans, dubbed REPELITA (Rencana Pembangunan Lima Tahun) I to VI from 1969 to 1998.[15][89][91] Outside the formal economy, Suharto created a network of charitable organizations ("yayasan") run by the military and his family members, which extracted "donations" from domestic and foreign enterprises in exchange for necessary government support and permits. While some proceeds were used for charitable purposes, much of the money was recycled as a slush fund to reward political allies and to maintain support for the New Order.[15][92] In 1975, the state-owned oil company, Pertamina, defaulted on its foreign loans as a result of mismanagement and corruption under the leadership of Suharto's close ally, Ibnu Sutowo. The government bail-out of the company nearly doubled the national debt.[93][page needed]

Foreign policy

[edit]
Suharto with US president Gerald Ford and secretary of state Henry Kissinger in Jakarta on 6 December 1975
A re-enactment of the Santa Cruz massacre of at least 250 East Timorese pro-independence demonstrators during the Indonesian occupation of East Timor, c. 1998

Upon assuming power, Suharto's government adopted a policy of neutrality in the Cold War but was nevertheless quietly aligned with the Western bloc (including Japan and South Korea) to secure support for Indonesia's economic recovery. Western countries, impressed by Suharto's strong anti-communist credentials, were quick to offer their support. Diplomatic relations with China were suspended in October 1967 due to suspicion of Chinese involvement in the 30 September Movement (diplomatic relations were only restored in 1990). Due to Suharto's destruction of the PKI, the Soviet Union embargoed military sales to Indonesia. However, from 1967 to 1970 foreign minister Adam Malik managed to secure several agreements to restructure massive debts incurred by Sukarno from the Soviet Union and other Eastern European communist states. Regionally, having ended confrontation with Malaysia in August 1966, Indonesia became a founding member of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) in August 1967. This organization is designed to establish a peaceful relationship between Southeast Asian countries free from conflicts such as the ongoing Vietnam War.[15]

In 1974, the neighbouring colony of Portuguese Timor descended into civil war after the withdrawal of Portuguese authority following the Carnation Revolution, whereby the left-wing populist Fretilin (Portuguese: Frente Revolucionária de Timor-Leste Independente) emerged triumphant. With approval from Western countries (including from U.S. president Gerald Ford and Australian prime minister Gough Whitlam during their visits to Indonesia), Suharto decided to intervene. He claimed the move was to prevent the establishment of a communist state. After an unsuccessful attempt of covert support to Timorese groups UDT and APODETI, Suharto authorised a full-scale invasion of the colony on 7 December 1975 followed with its official annexation as Indonesia's 27th province of East Timor in July 1976. The "encirclement and annihilation" campaigns of 1977–1979 broke the back of Fretilin control over the hinterlands, although continuing guerrilla resistance caused the government to maintain a strong military force in the half-island until 1999. An estimated minimum of 90,800 and maximum of 213,600 conflict-related deaths occurred in East Timor during Indonesian rule (1974–1999); namely, 17,600–19,600 killings and 73,200 to 194,000 'excess' deaths from hunger and illness; Indonesian forces were responsible for about 70% of the violent deaths.[94]

Indonesia's invasion and occupation of East Timor during Suharto's presidency resulted in at least 100,000 deaths.[95] To comply with the New York Agreement of 1962 which required a plebiscite on the integration of West Irian into Indonesia before the end of 1969, the Suharto government begin organizing for a so-called "Act of Free Choice" scheduled for July–August 1969. The government sent RPKAD special forces under Sarwo Edhie Wibowo which secured the surrender of several bands of former Dutch-organized militia (Papoea Vrijwilligers Korps / PVK) at large in the jungles since the Indonesian takeover in 1963 while sending Catholic volunteers under Jusuf Wanandi to distribute consumer goods to promote pro-Indonesian sentiments. In March 1969, it was agreed that the plebiscite would be channelled via 1,025 tribal chiefs, citing the logistical challenge and political ignorance of the population. Using the above strategy, the plebiscite produced a unanimous decision for integration with Indonesia, which was duly noted by the United Nations General Assembly in November 1969.[96]

Socio-economic progress

[edit]

Real socio-economic progress sustained support for Suharto's regime across three decades. By 1996, Indonesia's poverty rate has dropped to around 11% compared with 45% in 1970. From 1966 to 1997, Indonesia recorded real GDP growth of 5.03% pa, pushing real GDP per capita upwards from US$806 to US$4,114. In 1966, the manufacturing sector made up less than 10% of GDP (mostly industries related to oil and agriculture). By 1997, manufacturing had risen to 25% of GDP, and 53% of exports consisted of manufactured products. The government invested in massive infrastructure development (notably the launching of a series of Palapa telecommunication satellites); consequently, Indonesian infrastructure in the mid-1990s was considered at par with China. Suharto was keen to capitalize on such achievements to justify his presidency, and the parliament (MPR) on 9 March 1983 granted him the title of "Father of Development".[97]

Suharto government's health-care programs (such as the Puskesmas program) increased life expectancy from 47 years (1966) to 67 years (1997) while cutting infant mortality rate by more than 60%. The government's Inpres program launched in 1973 resulted in primary school enrolment ratio reaching 90% by 1983 while almost eliminating the education gap between boys and girls. Sustained support for agriculture resulted in Indonesia achieving rice self-sufficiency by 1984, an unprecedented achievement which earned Suharto a gold medal from the FAO in November 1985.[98] In the early 1980s, Suharto government responded to the fall in oil exports due to the 1980s oil glut by successfully shifting the basis of the economy to export-oriented labour-intensive manufacturing, made globally competitive by Indonesia's low wages and a series of currency devaluations. Industrialisation was mostly undertaken by Chinese-Indonesian companies which evolved into large conglomerates dominating the nation's economy.[99]

Official portrait, 1978
Official portrait, 1983

The largest of these conglomerates were the Salim Group led by Liem Sioe Liong (Sudono Salim), Sinar Mas Group led by Oei Ek Tjong (Eka Tjipta Widjaja), Astra Group led by Tjia Han Poen (William Soeryadjaya), Lippo Group led by Lie Mo Tie (Mochtar Riady), Barito Pacific Group led by Pang Djun Phen (Prajogo Pangestu), and Nusamba Group led by Bob Hasan. Suharto decided to support the growth of a small number of Chinese-Indonesian conglomerates since they would not pose a political challenge due to their ethnic-minority status, but from his experience, he deemed them to possess the skills and capital needed to create real growth for the country. In exchange for Suharto's patronage, the conglomerates provided vital financing for his "regime maintenance" activities.[99]

In the late 1980s, the Suharto government decided to de-regulate the banking sector to encourage savings and providing a domestic source of financing required for growth. Suharto decreed the "October Package of 1988" (PAKTO 88) which eased requirements for establishing banks and extending credit; resulting in a 50% increase in the number of banks from 1989 to 1991. To promote savings, the government introduced the TABANAS program to the populace. The Jakarta Stock Exchange, re-opened in 1977, recorded a "bull run", due to a spree of domestic IPOs and an influx of foreign funds after the deregulation in 1990. The sudden availability of credit fuelled robust economic growth in the early 1990s, but the weak regulatory environment of the financial sector sowed the seeds of the catastrophic crisis in 1997, which eventually lead to the end of Suharto's presidency.[100]

Growing corruption

[edit]

The growth of the economy coincided with the rapid expansion of corruption, collusion, and nepotism (Korupsi, Kolusi, dan Nepotisme / KKN). In the early 1980s, Suharto's children, particularly Siti Hardiyanti Rukmana ("Tutut"), Hutomo Mandala Putra ("Tommy"), and Bambang Trihatmodjo, had grown into greedy adults. Their companies were given lucrative government contracts and protected from market competition by monopolies. Examples include the toll-expressway market which was monopolised by Tutut, the national car project monopolised by Bambang and Tommy, and even the cinema market, monopolised by 21 Cineplex (owned by Suharto's cousin Sudwikatmono). The family is said to control about 36,000 km2 of real estate in Indonesia, including 100,000 m2 of prime office space in Jakarta and nearly 40% of the land in East Timor. Additionally, Suharto's family members received free shares in 1,251 of Indonesia's most lucrative domestic companies (mostly run by Suharto's ethnic-Chinese cronies), while foreign-owned companies were encouraged to establish "strategic partnerships" with Suharto family companies. Meanwhile, the myriad of yayasans run by the Suharto family grew even larger, levying millions of dollars in "donations" from the public and private sectors each year.[18][101]

In 1997, Forbes magazine listed Suharto as the fourth richest person in the world with an individual net worth of $16 billion, despite drawing an annual salary in his last peak year of only $21,000. The Suharto family owned or controlled 3.6 million hectares of prime Indonesian land, an area comparable to all of Belgium, and directly owned or had controlling equity in at least 564 companies, with no Indonesian economic sector untouched. With $100,000 of seed capital, Tommy Suharto got his start in 1984 at age 22. Within ten weeks his Humpuss Group already had twenty subsidiaries, which soon ballooned to sixty. A year later he acquired Perta Oil Marketing, a subsidiary of the state oil company Pertamina, instantly making him a major crude-oil broker and transporter. Perta generated profits of $1 million per month. Most of Indonesia's toll roads were built and operated by the stateowned firm Jasa Marga, with untold markups and opportunities for skimming and theft for oligarchs as the projects were completed. In 1989, Suharto issued a decree granting his daughter Tutut 75% of profits from all toll roads her group operated jointly with Jasa Marga, driving costs up still further. Bambang positioned his group as a partner of major foreign power companies and forced the state-run power company, PLN, to buy electricity at inflated rates. According to one estimate from the 24 May 1999 cover story in the international issue of Time magazine, the total wealth amassed by the Suharto family over three decades in power was $73.24 billion. Setting aside $9 billion earned from interest on deposits, three-fourths of this wealth was derived from grabbing the country's oil, gas, and mining resources, or muscling in on state corporations and major government contracts. The entrepreneurial value added from these Suharto family companies was, by all accounts, almost zero.[102]

In early 2004, the German anti-corruption NGO Transparency International released a list of what it believed to be the ten most self-enriching leaders in the previous two decades; in order of amount allegedly stolen in USD, the highest-ranking of these was Suharto and his family who are alleged to have embezzled $15 billion – $35 billion.[103]

The 1980s and 1990s

[edit]
Official portrait, 1988
Official portrait, 1993

By the 1980s, Suharto's grip on power was maintained by the emasculation of civil society, engineered elections, and use of the military's coercive powers. Upon his retirement from the military in June 1976, Suharto undertook a re-organization of the armed forces that concentrated power away from commanders to the president. In March 1983, he appointed General Leonardus Benjamin Moerdani as head of the armed forces who adopted a hard-line approach on elements who challenged the administration. As a Roman Catholic, he was not a political threat to Suharto.[104] From 1983 to 1985, army squads killed up to 10,000 suspected criminals in response to a spike in the crime rate (see "Petrus Killings"). Suharto's imposition of Pancasila as the sole ideology caused protests from conservative Islamic groups who considered Islamic law to be above all other conceptions.[105]

The Tanjung Priok massacre saw the army kill up to 100 conservative Muslim protesters in September 1984. A retaliatory series of small bombings, including the bombing of Borobudur, led to arrests of hundreds of conservative Islamic activists, including future parliamentary leader AM Fatwa and Abu Bakar Bashir (later leader of Jemaah Islamiyah). Attacks on police by a resurgent Free Aceh Movement in 1989 led to a military operation which killed 2,000 people and ended the insurgency by 1992. In 1984, the Suharto government sought increased control over the press by issuing a law requiring all media to possess a press operating license (Surat Izin Usaha Penerbitan Pers, SIUPP) which could be revoked at any time by Ministry of Information.[105]

With the end of communism and the Cold War, Suharto's human rights record came under greater international scrutiny, particularly following the 1991 Santa Cruz massacre in East Timor. Suharto was elected as head of the Non-Aligned Movement in 1992, while Indonesia became a founding member of APEC in 1989 and host to the Bogor APEC Summit in 1994.[106] Domestically, the business dealings of Suharto's family created discontent among the military who lost access to power and lucrative rent-seeking opportunities. The March 1988 MPR session, military legislators attempted to pressure Suharto by unsuccessfully seeking to block the nomination of Sudharmono, a Suharto-loyalist, as vice-president. Moerdani's criticism of the Suharto family's corruption saw the president dismiss him from the position of military chief. Suharto proceeded to slowly "de-militarise" his regime; he dissolved the powerful Kopkamtib in September 1988 and ensured key military positions were held by loyalists.[107]

Suharto and his wife in Islamic attire after performing the hajj in 1991

In an attempt to diversify his power base away from the military, Suharto began courting support from Islamic elements. He undertook a much-publicised hajj pilgrimage in 1991, took up the name of Haji Mohammad Suharto, and promoted Islamic values and the careers of Islamic-oriented generals. To win support from the nascent Muslim business community who resented the dominance of Chinese-Indonesian conglomerates, Suharto formed the Indonesian Association of Muslim Intellectuals (ICMI) in November 1990, which was led by his protégé B.J. Habibie, the Minister for Research and Technology since 1978. During this period, race riots against ethnic-Chinese begin to occur quite regularly, beginning with the April 1994 riot in Medan.[108] By the 1990s, Suharto's government came to be dominated by civilian politicians such as Habibie, Harmoko, Ginandjar Kartasasmita, and Akbar Tanjung, who owed their position solely to Suharto. As a sign of Habibie's growing clout, when two prominent Indonesian magazines and a tabloid newspaper reported on criticism over Habibie's purchase of almost the entire fleet of the disbanded East German Navy in 1993 (most of the vessels were of scrap-value), the Ministry of Information ordered the offending publications be closed down on 21 June 1994.[109] In 1993, the Purna Bhakti Pertiwi Museum was opened on the initiative of Tien Suharto. It houses and displays Suharto collections including artworks and souvenirs, received from various world leaders and Indonesian people.

In the 1990s, elements within the growing Indonesian middle class created by Suharto's economic development were becoming restless with his autocracy and the corruption of his children, fuelling demands for "Reformasi" (reform) of the almost 30-year-old New Order government. A significant element of the middle class had no memory of the events leading up to Suharto's rise to power. By 1996, Sukarno's daughter, Megawati Sukarnoputri, chairwoman of the normally compliant PDI, was becoming an opposition figure for this growing discontent. In response, Suharto backed a co-opted faction of PDI led by Suryadi, which ousted Megawati as PDI leader. On 27 July 1996, an attack by soldiers and hired thugs led by Lieutenant-General Sutiyoso on demonstrating Megawati supporters in Jakarta resulted in fatal riots and looting. This incident was followed by the arrest of 200 democracy activists, 23 of whom were kidnapped, and some killed, by army squads led by Suharto's son-in-law, Major-General Prabowo Subianto.[110] In 1995, Suharto released a special 1,54 troy ounce gold coin worth of 850,000 rupiah with his face on one side of the coin in the celebration of 50th anniversary of Indonesian Independence. On 5 October 1997, he awarded himself and generals Sudirman and Abdul Haris Nasution the honorary rank of five-star "Grand General."[111]

Economic crisis and downfall

[edit]

Asian financial crisis

[edit]
Official portrait, 1998

Indonesia was the country hardest hit by the 1997 Asian financial crisis. From mid-1997 there were large capital outflows and against the US dollar. Due to poor bank lending practices, many Indonesian companies borrowed cheaper US dollar loans while their income is mainly in Indonesian rupiah. The weakening rupiah spurred panic buying of US dollar by these companies, causing the Indonesian rupiah to drop in value from a pre-crisis level of Rp. 2,600 to a low point in early 1998 of around Rp. 17,000. Consequently, many companies were bankrupted and the economy shrank by 13.7%, leading to sharp increases in unemployment and poverty across the country.[112]

Efforts by the central bank to defend the rupiah proved futile and only drained the country's dollar reserves. In exchange for US$43 billion in liquidity aid, between October 1997 and the following April, Suharto signed three letters of intent with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for an economic reform process. In January 1998, the government was forced to provide emergency liquidity assistance (BLBI), issue blanket guarantees for bank deposits and set-up the Indonesian Bank Restructuring Agency to take over management of troubled banks to prevent the collapse of the financial system. Among the steps taken on IMF recommendation, the government raised an interest rate up to 70% pa in February 1998, which further worsened the contraction of the economy. In December 1997, Suharto did not attend an ASEAN presidents' summit for the first time, which was later revealed to be due to a minor stroke, creating speculation about his health and the immediate future of his presidency. In mid-December, as the crisis swept through Indonesia and an estimated $150 billion of capital was being withdrawn from the country, he appeared at a press conference to re-assert his authority and to urge people to trust the government and the collapsing rupiah.[113]

However, his attempts to re-instil confidence had little effect. Evidence suggested that his family and associates were being spared the most stringent requirements of the IMF reform process, further undermining confidence in the economy and his leadership.[105] The economic meltdown was accompanied by increasing political tension. Anti-Chinese riots occurred in Situbondo (1996), Tasikmalaya (1996), Banjarmasin (1997), and Makassar (1997); violent ethnic clashes broke out between the Dayak and Madurese settlers in Central Kalimantan in 1997. Golkar won the rigged 1997 election, and in March 1998, Suharto was voted unanimously to another five-year term. He nominated his protégé B. J. Habibie as vice president then stacking the cabinet with his own family and business associates, including his eldest daughter Tutut as Minister of Social Affairs. The appointments and the government's unrealistic 1998 budget created further currency instability,[114] rumours, and panic; which led to a run on stores and pushed up prices.[115] The government increased the fuel prices further by 70% in May 1998, which triggered another wave of riots in Medan.[116]

Fall and resignation

[edit]
Suharto reading his resignation speech at Merdeka Palace on 21 May 1998. His vice president and successor, B. J. Habibie, was standing on his left hand side

With Suharto increasingly seen as the source of the country's mounting economic and political crises, prominent political figures, including Muslim politician Amien Rais, spoke out against his presidency, and in January 1998 university students began organizing nationwide demonstrations.[117] The crisis climaxed while Suharto was on a state visit to Egypt on 12 May 1998, when security forces killed four demonstrators from Jakarta's Trisakti University. Rioting and looting across Jakarta and other cities over the following days destroyed thousands of buildings and killed over 1,000 people. Ethnic Chinese and their businesses were particular targets in the violence. Theories on the origin of the violence include rivalry between military chief General Wiranto and Army Strategic Commander Lt. Gen. Prabowo Subianto, and the suggestion of deliberate provocation by Suharto to divert blame for the crisis to the ethnic-Chinese and discredit the student movement.[118]

On 16 May, tens of thousands of university students demanded Suharto's resignation, and occupied the grounds and roof of the parliament building. Upon Suharto's return to Jakarta, he offered to resign in 2003 and to reshuffle his cabinet. These efforts failed when his political allies deserted him by refusing to join the proposed new cabinet. According to Wiranto, on 18 May, Suharto issued a decree which provided authority to him to take any measures to restore security; however, Wiranto decided not to enforce the decree to prevent conflict with the population.[119] On 21 May 1998, Suharto announced his resignation, upon which vice-president Habibie assumed the presidency in accordance with the constitution.[15][120][121] Documents from the United States Department of State indicate that the Clinton Administration sought to maintain close ties with the Indonesian military in the aftermath of Suharto's fall from power.[122]

Post-presidency

[edit]

Corruption charges

[edit]
Suharto with the US secretary of defense William Cohen in 1998

After resigning from the presidency, Suharto became a recluse in his family's compound in the Menteng area of Jakarta, protected by soldiers and rarely making public appearances. Suharto's family spent much of their time fending off corruption investigations. However, Suharto himself was protected from grave prosecution by politicians who owed their positions to the former president, as indicated in the leaked telephone conversation between President Habibie and attorney-general Andi Muhammad Ghalib in February 1999.[123] In May 1999, Time Asia estimated Suharto's family fortune at US$15 billion in cash, shares, corporate assets, real estate, jewellery and fine art. Suharto sued the magazine seeking more than US$27 billion in damages for libel over the article.[124] On 10 September 2007, Indonesia's Supreme Court awarded Suharto damages against Time Asia magazine, ordering it to pay him one trillion rupiah ($128.59 million). The High Court reversed the judgment of an appellate court and Central Jakarta district court (made in 2000 and 2001).[citation needed]

Suharto was placed highest on Transparency International's list of corrupt leaders with alleged misappropriation of between US$15–35 billion during his 32-year presidency.[18][101] On 29 May 2000, Suharto was placed under house arrest when Indonesian authorities began to investigate the corruption during his presidency. In July 2000, it was announced that he was to be accused of embezzling US$571 million of government donations to one of several foundations under his control and then using the money to finance family investments. However, in September court-appointed doctors announced that he could not stand trial because of his declining health. State prosecutors tried again in 2002, but then doctors cited an unspecified brain disease. On 26 March 2008, a civil court judge acquitted Suharto of corruption but ordered his charitable foundation, Supersemar, to pay US$110 m (£55 m).[125]

In 2002, Suharto's son Tommy Suharto was sentenced to 15 years' jail for ordering the killing of a judge (who had previously convicted him of corruption), illegal weapons possession, and fleeing justice. In 2006, he was paroled on "conditional release".[126] In 2003, Suharto's half-brother Probosutedjo was tried and convicted for corruption and the loss of $10 million from the Indonesian state. He was sentenced to four years in jail. He later won a reduction of his sentence to two years, initiating a probe by the Corruption Eradication Commission into the alleged scandal of the "judicial mafia" which uncovered offers of $600,000 to various judges. Probosutedjo confessed to the scheme in October 2005, leading to the arrest of his lawyers. His full four-year term was reinstated.[127] After a brief standoff at a hospital, in which he was reportedly protected by a group of police officers, he was arrested on 30 November 2005.[128][129] On 9 July 2007, Indonesian prosecutors filed a civil lawsuit against Suharto, to recover state funds ($440 million or £219 million, which allegedly disappeared from a scholarship fund, and a further $1.1 billion in damages).[130]

Illness and death

[edit]

After resigning from the presidency, Suharto was hospitalised repeatedly for stroke, heart, and intestinal problems. His declining health hindered attempts to prosecute him as his lawyers successfully claimed that his condition rendered him unfit for trial. Moreover, there was little support within Indonesia for any attempts to prosecute him. In 2006, Attorney General Abdurrahman announced that a team of twenty doctors would be asked to evaluate Suharto's health and fitness for trial. One physician, Brigadier-General Dr Marjo Subiandono, stated his doubts about by noting that "[Suharto] has two permanent cerebral defects."[131] In a later Financial Times report, Attorney General Abdurrahman discussed the re-examination, and called it part of a "last opportunity" to prosecute Suharto criminally. Attorney General Abdurrahman left open the possibility of filing suit against the Suharto estate.[132]

On 4 January 2008, Suharto was taken to the Pertamina Central Hospital, Jakarta with complications arising from poor health, swelling of limbs and stomach, and partial renal failure.[133] His health fluctuated for several weeks but progressively worsened with anaemia and low blood pressure due to heart and kidney complications, internal bleeding, fluid on his lungs, and blood in his faeces and urine which caused a haemoglobin drop.[134] On 23 January, Suharto's health worsened further, as a sepsis infection spread through his body.[135] His family consented to the removal of life support machines if his condition did not improve, and he died on 27 January at 1:09 pm.[136][137][3]

Minutes after his death, then-Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono held a news conference declaring Suharto as one of Indonesia's "best sons" and invited the country to give the highest respect and honour to the ex-president.[138] Suharto's body was taken from Jakarta to the Astana Giribangun mausoleum complex in Karanganyar Regency, near the Central Java city of Solo. He was buried alongside his late wife in a state military funeral with full honours, with the Kopassus elite forces and KOSTRAD commandos as the honour guard and pallbearers and Commander of Group II Kopassus Surakarta Lt. Colonel Asep Subarkah.[139] In attendance were President Yudhoyono, who presided over the ceremony, as well as the vice-president, government ministers, and armed forces chiefs of staff. Tens of thousands of people lined the streets to see the convoy.[140] Condolences were offered by many regional heads of state. President Yudhoyono that afternoon declared a week of official mourning starting from Suharto's day of death.[141] During this period, all flags of Indonesia were flown at half-mast.

Political rehabilitation

[edit]

On 25 September 2024, in one of its last acts for the 2019–2024 period, the MPR repealed Clause 4 of MPR Resolution No. XI/MPR/1998, which had accused Suharto and his cronies of acts of corruption, collusion, and nepotism (Clause 4 specifically named Suharto). The stated reason for this was because Suharto was never put on trial for these accusations before his death in 2008. This move has reignited debate as to whether Suharto should be awarded the National Hero status.[142]

Honours

[edit]

National honours

[edit]
Suharto in full military uniform with some of his decorations, 1997

As an officer in the Indonesian Army (1940–1974), and then as president of Indonesia (1967–1998), he received several civilian and military Star Decorations from Indonesia, namely:[143]

Foreign honours

[edit]

In addition, he also received several foreign decorations:[143]
 Argentina:

 Austria:

 Belgium:

 Brunei:

 Cambodia:

  • Grand Collar of the National Order of Independence (1968)

 Egypt:

 Ethiopia:

 France:

 Iran:

 Italy:

 Japan:

 Jordan:

 Kuwait:

 Malaysia:

 Mexico:

 Netherlands:

 Pakistan:

 Philippines:

 Qatar:

  • Collar of the Order of the Independence (1977)

 Romania:

 Saudi Arabia:

  • Great Chain of the Badr (1977)

 Singapore:

 South Africa:

 South Korea:

 Spain:

 Syria:

 Thailand:

 Tunisia:

 Ukraine:

 United Arab Emirates :

  • Grand Cordon with Collar of the Order of Unity (1977)

 United Kingdom:

  • Honorary Knight Grand Cross (Military Division) of the Order of the Bath (GCB) (1974)

 Venezuela:

 West Germany:

 Yemen:

  • Grand Cordon with Collar of the Order of the Republic[149]

 Yugoslavia:

Places and statue

[edit]

Suharto's childhood house in Kemusuk is currently a memorial museum, called Memorial Jenderal Besar HM Soeharto. A statue of him stands in front of the museum. It was built by Probosutedjo and was inaugurated in 2013.[150]

FELDA Soeharto, a village in Selangor, is named after him. He visited the village in 1977 as part of a momentous visit to normalize the Indonesia–Malaysia relations.[citation needed]

[edit]

Suharto has been portrayed by five Indonesian actors in several movies.[151]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ On 11 March 1966, Sukarno transferred key presidential powers to Suharto in a vaguely worded letter of authority known as Supersemar and surrendered his powers on 20 February 1967, but he was not formally relieved of his presidential title by the provisional parliament (MPRS) until 12 March 1967.
  2. ^ Also spelt Soeharto
  3. ^ /sˈhɑːrt/ soo-HAR-toh, Indonesian: [suˈharto]

References

[edit]

Citations

[edit]
  1. ^ Romi, J (24 November 2020) [11 May 2020]. Hendra (ed.). "Penasaran Tidak, Berapa Sih Tinggi Badan Semua Presiden Indonesia" [Are You Curious, How Tall Are All the Presidents of Indonesia]. BertuahPos (in Indonesian). Archived from the original on 12 August 2020. Retrieved 6 February 2024.
  2. ^ Mappapa, Pasti Liberti (30 September 2019). "Sekondan Soeharto di Pusaran G30S/PKI". detikNews (in Indonesian). Retrieved 16 June 2023. Latief sendiri mengaku anak buah langsung Soeharto sejak bertugas di Yogyakarta. Nomor Registrasi Pokok (NRP) keduanya berurutan. "NRP saya 10685, sedangkan NRP Pak Harto 10684, jadi saya selalu menempel di belakangnya.
  3. ^ a b Berger, Marilyn (28 January 2008). "Suharto Dies at 86; Indonesian Dictator Brought Order and Bloodshed". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 2 December 2018. Retrieved 23 February 2017.
  4. ^ Gittings, John (28 January 2008). "Obituary: Suharto, former Indonesian dictator: 1921–2008". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 14 December 2018. Retrieved 17 December 2016.
  5. ^ Hutton, Jeffrey (19 May 2018). "Is Indonesia's Reformasi a success, 20 years after Suharto?". South China Morning Post. Archived from the original on 13 April 2022. Retrieved 14 December 2018. ...would topple the dictator Suharto.
  6. ^ Berger, Marilyn (28 January 2008). "Suharto Dies at 86; Indonesian Dictator Brought Order and Bloodshed". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Archived from the original on 2 December 2018.
  7. ^ Wiranto (2011), p. 24.
    Forrester, Geoff; May, R.J. (1998). The Fall of Soeharto. Bathurst, Australia: C. Hurst and Co. ISBN 1-86333-168-9.
  8. ^ Kine, Phelim (2017). "Indonesia Again Silences 1965 Massacre Victims". Human Rights Watch. Over the next few months, at least 500,000 people were killed (the total may be as high as one million). The victims included members of the Communist Party of Indonesia (PKI), ethnic Chinese, trade unionists, teachers, activists, and artists.
  9. ^ Dwipayana & Ramadhan (1989), p. 13.
  10. ^ See the details in Chapter 2, 'Akar saya dari desa' (My village roots), in Dwipayana & Ramadhan (1989), p. 14.
  11. ^ Estimates of government funds misappropriated by the Suharto family range from US$1.5 billion and US$5 billion.(Ignatius, Adi (11 September 2007). "Mulls Indonesia Court Ruling". Time. Archived from the original on 2 February 2008. Retrieved 9 August 2009.).
  12. ^ a b Haskin, Colin (27 January 2008). "Suharto dead at 86". The Globe and Mail. Jakarta. Archived from the original on 3 February 2023. Retrieved 3 February 2023.
  13. ^ Slater, Dan (2009), Mahoney, James; Thelen, Kathleen (eds.), "Altering Authoritarianism: Institutional Complexity and Autocratic Agency in Indonesia", Explaining Institutional Change: Ambiguity, Agency, and Power, Cambridge University Press, pp. 132–167, ISBN 978-0-521-11883-5, archived from the original on 15 June 2018, retrieved 9 June 2022
  14. ^ Miguel, Edward; Paul Gertler; David I. Levine (January 2005). "Does Social Capital Promote Industrialization? Evidence from a Rapid Industrializer". Econometrics Software Laboratory, University of California, Berkeley.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m McDonald, Hamish (28 January 2008). "No End to Ambition". Sydney Morning Herald. Archived from the original on 15 March 2018. Retrieved 31 January 2008.
  16. ^ "Ini 7 Julukan Presiden Indonesia, Dari Soekarno Sampai Jokowi : Okezone Edukasi". 28 November 2022. Archived from the original on 23 April 2023. Retrieved 23 April 2023.
  17. ^ Global Corruption Report 2004: Political Corruption by Transparency International – Issue. Pluto Press. 2004. p. 13. ISBN 0-7453-2231-X. Archived from the original on 12 November 2020. Retrieved 8 May 2020 – via Issuu.com.
  18. ^ a b c "Suharto tops corruption rankings". BBC News. 25 March 2004. Archived from the original on 13 November 2020. Retrieved 4 February 2006.
  19. ^ "Dari 1965 hingga slogan 'piye kabare enak jamanku toh': Suharto dibenci, Suharto dirindukan (In Indonesian)". www.bbc.com. 24 May 2018.
  20. ^ "Revealing the Ultimate 2020 List: The 10 Most Corrupt Politicians in the World – The Sina Times". 3 January 2020. Archived from the original on 3 January 2024. Retrieved 3 January 2024.
  21. ^ "Pro Kontra Soeharto Pahlawan Nasional". Trias Politica (in Indonesian). 26 May 2016. Archived from the original on 23 September 2016. Retrieved 28 July 2016.
  22. ^ Romano, Angela Rose (2003). Politics and the Press in Indonesia. Psychology Press. p. ix. ISBN 0-7007-1745-5.
  23. ^ Tom Lansford. Historical Dictionary of U.S. Diplomacy since the Cold War. Scarecrow Press; 10 September 2007. ISBN 978-0-8108-6432-0. p. 260.
  24. ^ Tempo (Jakarta), 11 November 1974.
  25. ^ a b McDonald (1980), p. 10.
  26. ^ a b McDonald (1980), p. 11.
  27. ^ a b Elson (2001), pp. 1–6.
  28. ^ McDonald (1980), pp. 12–3.
  29. ^ a b McDonald (1980), p. 13.
  30. ^ Elson (2001), p. 8.
  31. ^ Elson (2001), p. 9.
  32. ^ a b McDonald (1980), p. 14.
  33. ^ McDonald (1980), p. 16.
  34. ^ Elson (2001), pp. 14–5.
  35. ^ a b Elson (2001), pp. 15–7.
  36. ^ a b Elson (2001), pp. 20–5, 28–9.
  37. ^ Dwipayana & Ramadhan (1989), pp. 61–2.
  38. ^ Elson (2001), pp. 29–38, 42–4.
  39. ^ McDonald (1980), pp. 24–5.
  40. ^ McDonald (1980), p. 25.
  41. ^ Elson (2001), pp. 52–5.
  42. ^ McDonald (1980), pp. 30–1.
  43. ^ McDonald (1980), pp. 31–2.
  44. ^ "Sejarah: Kostrad". Kostrad (in Indonesian). Archived from the original on 26 July 2018. Retrieved 26 July 2018.
  45. ^ Dake, Antonie (2006). The Sukarno file, 1965–1967 : chronology of a defeat. Yayasan Obor.
  46. ^ Ricklefs (1991), p. 281.
  47. ^ Vickers (2005), p. 156.
  48. ^ Friend (2003), p. 104.
  49. ^ Ricklefs (1991), p. 282.
  50. ^ a b Ricklefs (1991), pp. 281–2.
  51. ^ a b Vickers (2005), p. 157.
  52. ^ Simpson (2010), p. 193.
  53. ^ Robinson (2018), p. 177.
  54. ^ Bevins (2020), p. 157.
  55. ^ Ricklefs (1991), p. 287.
  56. ^ Ricklefs (1991), p. 288.
  57. ^ Friend (2003), p. 113.
  58. ^ Vickers (2005), p. 159.
  59. ^ Robert Cribb (2002). "Unresolved Problems in the Indonesian Killings of 1965–1966". Asian Survey. 42 (4): 550–63. doi:10.1525/as.2002.42.4.550. JSTOR 3038872. S2CID 145646994.
  60. ^ Aarons (2008), p. 80.
  61. ^ Melvin (2018), p. 1.
  62. ^ Vickers (2005), pp. 159–60.
  63. ^ Schwarz (1994), pp. 2, 22.
  64. ^ Aarons (2008), p. 81.
  65. ^ a b Vickers (2005), p. 160.
  66. ^ Ricklefs (1991), pp. 288–90.
  67. ^ a b c Elson (2001), pp. 130–5.
  68. ^ Hughes 2002, pp. 267–270
  69. ^ Hughes 2002, p. 107
  70. ^ Schwarz (1994), p. 25.
  71. ^ McDonald (1980), p. 60.
  72. ^ Schwarz (1994), p. 2.
  73. ^ Ricklefs (1991), p. 295.
  74. ^ Ward, Ken (2010). "2 Soeharto's Javanese Pancasila". In Edward Aspinall; Greg Fealy (eds.). Soeharto's New Order and its Legacy: Essays in honour of Harold Crouch. Canberra AU: The Anu E Press. ISBN 9781921666469. Archived from the original on 14 May 2013. Retrieved 6 December 2013. (Harold Crouch)
  75. ^ Wanandi (2012), pp. 56–9.
  76. ^ Wanandi (2012), pp. 60–8.
  77. ^ Aspinall, Klinken & Feith (1999), p. ii.
  78. ^ "Beban Sejarah Umat Islam Indonesia". Pikiran Rakyat. Archived from the original on 7 May 2005.
  79. ^ Wanandi (2012), pp. 86–8.
  80. ^ Ricklefs (1991), pp. 76–7.
  81. ^ Elson (2001), pp. 184–6.
  82. ^ a b Schwarz (1994), p. 32.
  83. ^ File:Ford, Kissinger, Indonesian President Suharto - July 5, 1975(Gerald Ford Library)(1553151).pdf, p. 2
  84. ^ a b Schwarz (1994), p. 106.
  85. ^ Conboy (2003), pp. 262–5.
  86. ^ Elson (2001), pp. 177–8.
  87. ^ Effendi, Wahyu; Prasetyadji, P. (2008). Tionghoa dalam Cengkeraman SBKRI [The Chinese in the Grip of the SBKRI] (in Indonesian). Jakarta: Visimedia. ISBN 9789791044110.
  88. ^ J. Panglaykim and K.D. Thomas, "The New Order and the Economy," Indonesia, April 1967, p. 73.
  89. ^ a b Robinson (2018), pp. 178–203.
  90. ^ Elson (2001), pp. 170–2.
  91. ^ Sheridan, Greg (28 January 2008). "Farewell to Jakarta's Man of Steel". The Australian. Archived from the original on 25 February 2012. Retrieved 14 April 2010.
  92. ^ Koerner, Brendan (26 March 2004). "How Did Suharto Steal $35 Billion?". Slate. Archived from the original on 7 September 2011. Retrieved 4 February 2006.
  93. ^ Schwarz (1994).
  94. ^ Benetech Human Rights Data Analysis Group (9 February 2006). "The Profile of Human Rights Violations in Timor-Leste, 1974–1999". A Report to the Commission on Reception, Truth and Reconciliation of Timor-Leste. Human Rights Data Analysis Group (HRDAG). Archived from the original on 29 May 2012.
  95. ^ Commission for Reception, Truth and Reconciliation in East Timor Benetech Human Rights Data Analysis Group (9 February 2006). "The Profile of Human Rights Violations in Timor-Leste, 1974–1999". A Report to the Commission on Reception, Truth and Reconciliation of Timor-Leste. Human Rights Data Analysis Group (HRDAG). Archived from the original on 29 May 2012.
  96. ^ Elson (2001), pp. 178–9.
  97. ^ Rock (2003), p. 3.
  98. ^ Rock (2003), p. 4.
  99. ^ a b Rock (2003), p. 17.
  100. ^ "Bank Indonesia" (PDF). Bi.go.id. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 April 2011. Retrieved 28 November 2014.
  101. ^ a b "Global Corruption Report" (PDF). Transparency International. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 July 2007. Retrieved 6 August 2009.
  102. ^ Winters, Jeffrey A. (2011), Oligarchy, Cambridge University Press, pp. 167–169, ISBN 978-0-521-18298-0
  103. ^ "Plundering politicians and bribing multinationals undermine economic development, says TI" (PDF) (Press release). Transparency International. 25 March 2004. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 June 2007. Retrieved 21 December 2016.
  104. ^ Elson (2001), pp. 457–60.
  105. ^ a b c Aspinall, Klinken & Feith (1999), pp. ii–iii.
  106. ^ Elson (2001), pp. 510–1.
  107. ^ Dijk (2001), chapter 5.
  108. ^ Elson (2001), pp. 211–4.
  109. ^ Steele, Janet (2005). Wars Within: The Story of Tempo, an Independent Magazine in Soeharto's Indonesia (First ed.). Equinox Publishing. pp. 234–235. ISBN 9793780088.
  110. ^ Elson (2001), pp. 284–7.
  111. ^ Eklöf, Stefan (1999). Indonesian Politics in Crisis: The Long Fall of Suharto, 1996-1998. NIAS Press. p. 104. ISBN 8787062690.
  112. ^ "Indonesia: Country Brief". Indonesia:Key Development Data & Statistics. The World Bank. September 2006. Archived from the original on 1 November 2012. Retrieved 14 June 2013.
  113. ^ Friend (2003), p. 313.
  114. ^ Friend (2003), p. 314.
  115. ^ Friend (2003), p. 314.
    Aspinall, Klinken & Feith (1999), pp. ii–iii.
  116. ^ Purdey (2006), p. 115.
  117. ^ Elson (2001), p. 267.
  118. ^ Purdey (2006), pp. 148–50.
  119. ^ Wiranto (2011), p. 67-9.
  120. ^ Vickers (2005), pp. 203–7.
  121. ^ Aspinall, Klinken & Feith (1999), pp. iv–vii.
  122. ^ Brad Simpson, ed. (24 July 2018). "US Promoted Close Ties to Indonesian Military as Suharto's Rule Came to an End in Spring 1998". National Security Archive. Archived from the original on 3 August 2018. Retrieved 2 August 2018.
  123. ^ "Rekaman Habibie-Ghalib". Minihub.org. Archived from the original on 16 January 2013. Retrieved 6 December 2013.
  124. ^ "Suharto wins $128m in damages". Herald Sun. 10 September 2007. Archived from the original on 17 October 2007. Retrieved 9 August 2009.
  125. ^ "Suharto charity told to pay $110 m". BBC News. 27 March 2008. Archived from the original on 27 March 2009. Retrieved 6 January 2010.
  126. ^ "Tommy Suharto freed from prison". BBC News. 30 October 2006. Archived from the original on 28 August 2009. Retrieved 9 August 2009.
  127. ^ "Suharto's half-brother fined, jailed for four years". ABC News. AFP. 29 November 2005. Archived from the original on 26 November 2020. Retrieved 15 September 2020.
  128. ^ "Probosutedjo dipenjara". BBC Indonesia. 30 November 2005. Archived from the original on 23 January 2022. Retrieved 15 September 2020.
  129. ^ "Probosutedjo Dijebloskan ke Cipinang". Liputan6.com. 30 November 2005. Archived from the original on 10 October 2021. Retrieved 15 September 2020.
  130. ^ "Civil suit filed against Suharto". BBC News. 9 July 2007. Archived from the original on 13 August 2007. Retrieved 9 July 2007.
  131. ^ "Former Indonesian dictator unfit to stand trial — doctor". Sydney Morning Herald. Associated Press. 23 April 2006. Archived from the original on 3 November 2012. Retrieved 24 April 2006.
  132. ^ Donnan, Shawn (28 April 2006). "Jakarta makes final attempt to pursue Suharto charges". Financial Times. Archived from the original on 21 May 2007.
  133. ^ "Indonesia's ailing Suharto 'getting worse': doctors". The Times. UK. 5 January 2008. Archived from the original on 12 June 2022. Retrieved 9 August 2009.
  134. ^ "Suharto condition 'deteriorating'". BBC News. 8 January 2008. Archived from the original on 9 January 2008. Retrieved 9 August 2009.
  135. ^ Niniek Karmini (23 January 2008). "Suharto's health deteriorates, infection spreads". The Irrawaddy. Archived from the original on 20 March 2021. Retrieved 10 March 2021.
  136. ^ "Indonesia ex-leader Suharto dies". BBC News. 27 January 2008. Archived from the original on 24 March 2009. Retrieved 9 August 2009.
  137. ^ "Suharto has multiple organ failure". Al Jazeera English. 14 January 2008. Archived from the original on 5 November 2021. Retrieved 14 April 2010.
  138. ^ "Soeharto Meninggal, SBY Batalkan Kunjungan Ke Bali". Tempo. 27 January 2008. Archived from the original on 7 August 2016. Retrieved 28 July 2016.
  139. ^ "— Presiden Tiba di Astana Giribangun". Tempointeraktif.com. Archived from the original on 10 August 2009. Retrieved 9 August 2009.
  140. ^ Tedjasukmana, Jason (29 January 2008). "Indonesia Bids Farewell to Suharto". Time. Archived from the original on 25 July 2014. Retrieved 9 August 2009.
  141. ^ "Geoff Thompson, Suharto's body arrives home, ABC News January 27, 2008". Australia: ABC. 27 January 2008. Archived from the original on 13 January 2009. Retrieved 9 August 2009.
  142. ^ Rahmawati, Dwi. "MPR Cabut Nama Soeharto dari Tap MPR 11/1998 soal KKN, Ini Alasannya". detiknews (in Indonesian). Retrieved 25 September 2024.
  143. ^ a b "Soeharto ODM". 10 July 2011.
  144. ^ "Daftar WNI yang Menerima Tanda Kehormatan Republik Indonesia Tahun 1959–sekarang" (PDF). Kementerian Sekretariat Negara Republik Indonesia. 7 January 2020. Archived (PDF) from the original on 29 July 2021. Retrieved 12 August 2021.
  145. ^ a b c d Daftar WNI yang Mendapat Tanda Kehormatan Bintang Mahaputera tahun 1959 s.d. 2003 (PDF). Retrieved 4 October 2021.
  146. ^ Sito web del Quirinale: dettaglio decorato.
  147. ^ "Elenco dei premiati dell'anno 1997". Retrieved 19 September 2019.
  148. ^ "Bollettino Ufficiale di Stato" (PDF).
  149. ^ "Penghargaan – Situs Web Kepustakaan Presiden-Presiden Republik Indonesia". 13 July 2022. Archived from the original on 13 July 2022. Retrieved 13 April 2023.
  150. ^ Prabowo (7 June 2016). "Tempat Kelahiran Soeharto Kini Lebih Hidup". Okezone.com. Retrieved 12 October 2021.
  151. ^ Randy Wirayudha (17 April 2018). "Lima Aktor Pemeran Soeharto". Historia.id (in Indonesian). Retrieved 27 February 2024.

Sources

[edit]

Further reading

[edit]
[edit]
Political offices
Preceded by President of Indonesia
12 March 1967 – 21 May 1998
Succeeded by
Preceded byas Prime Minister of Indonesia Chairman of the Cabinet Presidium
25 July 1966 – 17 October 1967
Office abolished
Preceded by
Sarbini Martodihardjo
Minister of Defense and Security
1966–1971
Succeeded by
Military offices
Preceded by Commander of Kopkamtib
1974–1978
Succeeded by
Preceded byas Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces Commander of the Indonesian Armed Forces
1968–1973
Succeeded by
New command Commander of Kopkamtib
1965–1969
Preceded by Chief of Staff of the Indonesian Army
1965–1968
New command Commander of Kostrad
1961–1965
Succeeded by
Party political offices
New office Chairman of the Central Committee of Golkar
1983–1998
Succeeded by
Diplomatic posts
Preceded by Chairperson of APEC
1994
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chair of the Non-Aligned Movement
1992–1995
Succeeded by
New office Chairperson of ASEAN
1976
Succeeded by