Rabu, 30 Januari 2008

Rights body to probe Soeharto cases

Amid mounting calls for the government to grant hero status Suharto, the National Human Rights Commission continue to investigate the idea and showed that the late former president's involvement in past atrocities.

The committee's chairman said ifdhal kasim Suharto had died, even though a criminal complaint, he had been suspended, that human rights abuses did not occur during Suharto's tenure and closed.

"We will continue our investigation (on the case) is expected to be completed in early March by" ifdhal Antara said.

"Despite Suharto, who is politically responsible for the case, the death, but you can still find his cronies, organized and executed those who violate them," he said ifdhal.

"We will demand that these people and their probe to be held responsible."

He conducted surveys, the case-by-case five major priorities and cases, political activists arrested, including the 1969 and 1979 Bull interisland mysterious gunfights -- Petrus case known as - in 1981 to 1985.

In other cases, the July 27, 1996 incident in the case of Indonesia in Jakarta supporters struggle Democratic Party (PDI's - P), the 1984 Tanjung priok case of military operations in the region and example ( dom) from the 1970s to the 1990s in Aceh and Papua.

Buru Island incident involved at least 10,000 political prisoners, will be short-lived 5000 Petrus victim of the incident who is a criminal suspect.

Petrus occurred in some rural areas across Java, Sumatra and Kalimantan.

Tanjung priok collision left 24 dead and many others were injured.

DOM is in the incident, thousands of people are kidnapped hundreds of victims and abused.

Ifdhal said the committee will continue the previous survey was based on the Commission's report.

"We will also summon witnesses, including military officials," he said.

Indonesian military chief General (tni) djoko santoso declared, but last week tni willing to cooperate with the committee involved in the violation of human rights officials said on Friday.

"We welcome tni's commitment to cooperate with us, we can not be denied that the relationship that exists between the court session," he said ifdhal.

Suharto, died Sunday at the age of 86, received a state funeral. Proposed faction in the country's Suharto's Golkar Party and the granting of the status of a national hero.

BUDI priyo santoso faction chairman, according to Suharto, one of the nation's "best numbers" Who's devotion to his status deserve.

He said the factional chairman of the Golkar proposal forward kalla Jusuf said the vice president, for feedback from the government.

Presidential spokesman, Andy mallarangeng Jakarta Post, the government is yet to discuss the proposal for the title of hero. Andy said, the government is the problem, please refer to the priority.

"The government's priority is the return of all the things that people have rights," he said.

"But we have not proposed anything to prohibit anybody, this is a democratic country."

Suharto regime of President Sukarno in 1916 founded the national hero's name.

from thejakartapost.com.

Minggu, 27 Januari 2008

Body of former president Soeharto arrives hometown for state funeral

SURAKARTA, Central Java (AP): - The body of former Indonesian president Soeharto arrived in his hometown Monday for a state funeral.

A C-130 Hercules carrying Suharto's body arrived in the city of Surakarta, some 400 kilometers east of the capital, just after 10 a.m., accompanied by two planes used by his family and friends.

"May god bless his soul and forgive his mistakes and sins," House of Representatives Speaker Agung Laksono said when leading a brief ceremony at Soeharto's residence in Jakarta early Monday morning.
freom thejakarapost.com

Soeharto died of multiple-organ failure Sunday, after more than three weeks on life support at the Pertamina Hospital in South Jakarta. He was 86.

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, who has declared a week of national mourning, was to oversee the funeral at Astana Giribangun, the Soeharto family mausoleum near Surakarta.

A string of the country's political elite visited Soeharto's family home Sunday to pay respects and pray over his body, in a sign of his lingering importance.

Many also attended the ceremony Monday morning, when his family turned Soeharto's flag-draped coffin to the military.

Onlookers lined the streets leading to the Halim Perdanakusuma Air Force Base as a motorcade carrying Suharto's body drove by. (**)

Soeharto`s death a great loss to Asean

Jakarta (ANTARA News) - The death of former Indonesian president Soeharto, who is also one of the founders of the Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN) which consists of Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Singapore, Thailand, The Philippines and Vietnam, is a great loss to the regional grouping.

Expressions of loss came among others from Malaysian foreign minister Syed Hamid Albar, as AFP quoted him saying on Sunday.

Soeharto (86) passed away on Sunday (Jan 27) at 13:10 local time after suffering from multiple organ failure at the Pertamina Hospital in South Jakarta.

The Indonesian second president had undergone intensive medical treatment for 24 days since he was admitted to the hospital on Friday, January 4, 2008, for anemia and severe edema.

Expressing his sadness about Soeharto`s death, Albar said the former Indonesian strong man had contributed a great deal to the economic development of Indonesia, and ASEAN in general.

According to him, Malaysia on Monday will send Deputy Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak and former Prime Minister Mahathir Muhammad and Musa Hitam to concey their last respects and condolences on Soeharto`s death.

Recalling Soeharto`s success to help create political stability in the ASEAN region, Albar said that apart from Indonesia, Malaysia and ASEAN also became a grief-stricken region over the second Indonesian president`s death.

Malaysia and Indonesia enjoyed friendly relations after Soeharto and former Foreign Minister Adam Malik put an end to the confrontation between the two neighboring countries.

Singapore`s Prime Minister Lee Shien Loong arrived in Jakarta on Sunday evening to pay his last respects to the former Indonesian president.

Earlier, Sultan Hassanal Bolkiah of Brunei Darussalam, Deputy Prime Minister of Cambodia Sok An, some other former ASEAN leaders such as Mahathir Mohammad and Norodom Raharidh (son of Cambodian King, Prince Norodom Sihanouk) had visited Soeharto while still under treatment at the Pertamina hospital.

Apart from that, Philippine President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo expressed condolences over the death of former Indonesian president Soeharto on Sunday, saying he "will never be forgotten."

Arroyo hailed Soeharto for his leadership in the South-East Asian region and contributions to building peace in the Philippines` troubled southern region of Mindanao.

"For these enduring legacies, President Soeharto will never be forgotten," DPA quoted Arroyo as saying.

"The government of the Philippines and the Filipino people join me in offering deepest sympathies and condolences on the demise of former president Soeharto," she said in a statement.

"As one of the founding fathers of ASEAN, President Soeharto was among those who had the pioneering vision of establishing a more peaceful, progressive and prosperous South-east Asian region founded on mutual respect and understanding," she said.


State funeral

Top state officials and foreign dignitaries are expected to attend the state funeral, including Malaysian Deputy Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak, former prime minister Mahathir Muhammad, former East Timor president Xanana Gusmao, Singaporean Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong and his deputy S Jayakumar, and former Philippine president Fidel Ramos.

In addition, all foreign ambassadors to Indonesia are expected to attend the state funeral at the Astana Giri Bangun graveyard in Karanganyar about 30 km southeast of Solo, Central Java.

On Sunday evening, tens of ranking officials and former officials paid their last respects to Soeharto at his Cendana residence, following the arrivals of President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and Vice President Jusuf Kalla.

Meanwhile, Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda Sunday recalled the former Indonesian President Suharto`s efforts to maintain friendly relations between the two nations, AFP quoted Fukuda as saying on Sunday.

Fukuda sent a message of condolences to current Indonesian president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono after Soeharto died.

"I sincerely pray that former President Soeharto would rest in peace. President Soeharto had long worked to maintain the friendly and goodwill relations between our nation and Indonesia," Fukuda said in the message.

"I represent the Japanese government and the Japanese public to express our condolences to your government and your people," he said to Yudhoyono.

Meanwhile, report said, Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd expressed sorrow at the death of former Indonesian president Soeharto Sunday but described him as a "controversial figure" on human rights and East Timor.

Rudd paid tribute to Soeharto`s role in modernizing Indonesia and his role in helping establish the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and APEC, describing him as an "influential figure in the Australia region and beyond".

"Now the world`s third largest democracy, Indonesia, is a close friend and neighbor with which Australia shares vital political and security interests," he said.

"Indonesia`s success as a modern democracy is a major interest not just to Australia, but to our region and the world," he said.

Report said from Dili, Timor Leste, that General Chairman of the National Council of East Timor Reconstruction Party (CNRT) Xanana Gusmao extended his condolences over the death of Soeharto.

"As a human being, Xanana expressed his deep condolences," Secretary General of CNRT Party Dionisio `Didi` Babo, Soares PhD through a statement directly sent to ANTARA News in Dili, on Sunday afternoon.

In the name of the CNRT party of Timor Leste, his side was reported to share the condolences with the people of Indonesia over the death of the former New Order strongman.

According to him, even though Xanana was once jailed during Soeharto`s regime, he still showed humanistic solidarity by extending his condolences.

Xanana Gusmao was jailed when East Timor was still the 27th province of Indonesia during Soeharto`s rule.

After the independence of East Timor through a referendum, Xanana Gusmao become the first president of Timor Leste.

Recalling his merits to Cambodia, Soeharto who was also dubbed as the smiling general in the country, contributed a very significant meaning for the Cambodian stability following the internal political problems in decades ago.

It seems that the visit of Cambodian leaders to Jakarta to pay their last respects to Soeharto, the country will not forget Indonesia`s role when Jakarta hosted the Jakarta Informal Meetings (JIM) I, II and III which led to Cambodian political stability. (*)

from antara.co.id

Late Suharto remembered as strong leader despite 'less than desirable' human rights record

JAKARTA (AP):sia-Pacific leaders recalled formerIndonesian president Suharto's strengths, praising him after his death Sunday for modernizing his country and for promoting regional unity - despite a "less than desirable" human rights record.

Philippine President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo said Suharto played a critical role in building the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, or ASEAN, the 10-country bloc that has increased the region's influence in global politics.

"As one of the founding fathers of ASEAN, President Suharto was among those who had the pioneering vision of establishing a more peaceful, progressive and prosperous Southeast Asian region founded on respect and understanding," Arroyo said in a statement fromDubai, where she was traveling.

Arroyo also said Suharto helped negotiate a peace pact between the Philippine government and the Moro National Liberation Front, a Muslim rebel group in the Philippines' volatile southern area of Mindanao.

"The Filipino people join me in offering deepest sympathies and condolences on the demise of former President Suharto," Arroyo said.

Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd also said Suharto was influential in ASEAN's successful development, as well as that of the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation forum, or APEC, a major international body that promotes world trade.

Suharto "presided over the government of what is the world's fourth most populous country and its largest Islamic nation," Rudd said in a statement.

"Until the catastrophic Asian financial crisis of 1997, he oversaw a period of significant economic growth and modernization at a time when Indonesia faced fundamental political, social and economic challenges," he said.

Former Australian foreign minister Alexander Downer said that, despite a "less than desirable" human rights record, Suharto had worked to build strong ties between the two nations, which are neighbors.

"He was always very civil in my dealings with him and very responsive to building a relationship between Australia and Indonesia," Downer said.

A procession of regional leaders, including several of Suharto's contemporaries, came to visit him after he was hospitalized on Jan. 4 with multiple organ failure. (***)
from thejakartapost.com

Kalitan mourns Soeharto

JAKARTA (JP): Floral displays have been arriving at theSoeharto's Kalitan home in Surakarta, Central Java, since the former president died Sunday. He was 86.

Soeharto's relatives in Kalitan have prepared a special prayer service to be held this evening.

Metro TV reported from Kalitan that Soeharto's body was not expected to pass through the town on Monday from Jakarta.

His body will be flown from Jakarta to Surakarta and taken directly to the Astana Giri Bangun cemetery in Karanganyar, Central Java, the TV station reported.

from thejakartapost.com

Kamis, 24 Januari 2008

Soeharto coverage comes under fire

The uniformity of media reports on Soeharto's hospitalization and his health condition has raised suspicions that the coverage is aimed at motivating sympathy for the former president.

According to Heru Hendratmoko of the Alliance of Independent Journalists (AJI), there are indications that the former strongman's 32-year legacy of rampant corruption and human rights violations are being glossed over by the constant and comprehensive reports of his deteriorating health, which allegedly have been framed to stir up sympathy.

"There is a massive impunity movement among politicians and legislators who are encouraging the public at large to forgive the wrongdoings of the ailing former president and his cronies, a matter that has yet to receive official scrutiny and undergo any legal process," Heru told a media gathering at the AJI headquarters in Central Jakarta on Wednesday.

News of the retired five-star army general's failing health has filled the daily headlines of many newspapers and television channels since he was admitted at Pertamina Hospital in South Jakarta on Jan. 4 due to a low heart rate and severe edema.

"News reportage on Soeharto's health has monopolized the papers and television, overshadowing other equally, if not more, important issues such as the soybean crisis and floods in Java, which is a worrying trend," Heru added.

Even though such coverage may have been a natural human response, media observer Arya Gunawan said, media workers should remain impartial and be able to differentiate between Soeharto's health and the charges of corruption and human rights violations brought against him.

"Soeharto's health has become the center of a media circus, whereas human interest should have been kept separate from legal matters," Arya said, adding that the biased reporting of Soeharto had shaped the way his teenage son perceived the ailing octogenarian.

"We had heated discussions during which he would be dismissive of Soeharto's bleak record due to his ill-health. It was such hard work talking my son back to his senses," he said.

Heru and Arya had earlier argued that the images of Soeharto's deteriorating physical state broadcasted by television were detrimental in shaping the people's perceptions.

"There is a possibility that major media players have bought into the plot which has generated the support Soeharto now has. A gap exists between significant events and reportage," Arya said, adding that further investigation, particularly in tracing media ownership, could either help confirm or debunk the conspiracy theory.

Veteran journalist and member of the Soetomo Press Institute Atmakusumah Astraatmadja, however, argued that no conspiracy existed.

"I don't agree with the assumption that there is a deliberate framing of Soeharto-related reportage. Nor do I think media reports of his ill health have taken over the headlines. Perhaps readers only read what they want to read," said Atmakusumah, who had also argued that the extent and depth of reporting on Soeharto were healthy manifestations of the freedom of the press.

Soeharto has now been in hospital for 20 days, with his doctors announcing Wednesday that his health had taken another turn for the worse. He is recovering from multiple organ failure and remains in a critical condition. (amr)
from thejakartapost.com

A Trial for Soeharto - and also for the Indonesian public

Will the public prevail?

The longer the public vacillates over putting Soeharto's crimes on trial, the more the public shows its lack of backbone. If people wonder how the public allowed Soeharto to get away with atrocities and corruption during his years in power, the answer can be seen readily how the same public is allowing Soeharto to elude justice again and again. A comment on this website asked how the Indonesian people were so patient in dealing with Soeharto. The simple answer is that there were a lot of impatient people, but many more people who defended him because they enjoyed the benefits of Soeharto's corrupt rule.

The breakdown should be different now. Soeharto has less power, or no power except the power of his money, so there should be less people on his side. Yet every day television shows dozens of public figures coming to pay him a visit at the hospital. But there is an important difference from the time when obsequious figures fawned around him looking for favors. Now at least when he is in the headlines, many voices remind the public of his alleged criminal past.

Aboeprijadi Santoso wrote in his article "Soeharto's 'liminal' problem" in the Jakarta Post of January 13, 2008 ( too bad their URL is shaky):

...Over time, it might be expected that both the hospital-visit ritual by the supporters and the debate over Soeharto's legacy, alleged corruption and crimes among his opponents, may become routine and loses relevance. Wrong. The visit ritual and the debate has only intensified as Soeharto's health has gotten worse. Both sides have to get used to it, and silently expect that his final day will soon come... Since Soeharto's rule is viewed as an antithesis of all virtues of democracy, the homage ritual by his supporters cannot be seen as serving Indonesia's new democracy and its people. Soeharto himself never acted similarly: he only visited Gen. A.H. Nasution's and president Sukarno's families after the two men died... On balance, while the hospital visit ritual by Soeharto loyalists does nothing to educate the nation on democracy, the debate and discourse over Soeharto's legacy are clearly more useful -- certainly as many of his critics would remind the public of him being politically responsible for the 1965 mass killings, East Timor genocide, Aceh bloodbath and massive corruption.

Whether Soeharto will stand trial or not (even in absentia) is as much a question of his personna as well as a test of the public to demand accountability for serious crimes against the people.

from persepektif.net

Jumat, 11 Januari 2008

Suharto Profile


by Dongwook Kim

Indonesia’s President Suharto, who steered the vast Southeast Asian archipelago from chaos in the late 1960s to stability and growing economic confidence, has in the past few months faced a rare challenge to his long rule. The turmoil pitted the security forces of Suharto’s tough New Order against a rising tide of disaffected youth and democratic activists, spurred by dissatisfaction over the slow pace of political change and widening economic inequality.

Suharto claims he alone can hold together this fractious island nation whose people have little in common save their Dutch colonial past. Indonesia is indeed diverse: its people speak 300 languages and dialects; its land spans more than 13,000 islands strewn along the Equator, covering a distance of roughly 3,000 miles; its people practice many religions, with Islam the dominant faith. (Ninety percent of the population is Muslim). In his 1989 autobiography Pak Harto, Suharto portrays himself as the only figure who can deliver prosperity and stave off the twin specters of Communist subversion and Islamic extremism. Without him, he claims, Indonesia could run amok again.

Known as the "Javanese King" to some Indonesians, Suharto was returned unopposed as president for a sixth five-year term in March 1993 by the People’s Consultative Assembly, of which a majority are not elected. But his health has become a key issue in recent years. Rumors that he is ill regularly surface, sending financial markets into a frenzy. Suharto said after his nomination in 1993 he did not want to be president for life. In May, he said he would serve out his current term that ends in 1988 but sidestepped a question about whether he would seek re-election.

But resentment against his rule smoldered this year after the government successfully backed moves to oust the leader of the opposition Indonesian Democratic Party (PDI), Megawati Sukarnoputri, daughter of Indonesia’s founder Sukarno. Riots erupted in Jakarta in July after police evicted Megawati supporters from the PDI headquarters in the city, but the government has since firmly clamped down on dissent. Although, analysts say the riots were the culmination of public anger against socioeconomic inequality even though political turmoil was the probable source. Opponents argue that Suharto’s success in bringing economic wealth has increased the gap between the rich and poor, contributing to much tension underlying the facade of stability. Suharto’s six children, accused of obtaining wealth through their father’s influence, have been the focal point of anger. Close army associates of Suharto are also among the wealthiest people in the country, and critics say that nepotism and cronyism have characterized his rule.

The Colonial Past

The president was the second son among 11 children whose father was a minor official in the village of Kemusu. His parents divorced and Suharto was scuttled among relatives. In late 1942, he signed up for the Indonesian Army which the Japanese created during their occupation. To the young soldier, who failed in his attempt to be a bank clerk during Dutch colonial rule, Tokyo’s propaganda announcing Japan was coming to free Indonesia from its colonial masters offered a way out.

Japanese occupation was indeed Suharto’s rite of passage. the Japanese trained him as a soldier, awakened his nationalism, and instilled a world view: The Japanese vision of Dai Nippon (Greater Japan) was translated by Suharto and his revolutionary generation into Indonesia Raya (Great Indonesia). Discipline, order, ruthlessness, and progress were the attributes Suharto admired in the Japanese and embraced for himself. But the liberators soon became brutal occupiers. By 1945, Suharto was among the troops who rebelled against their Japanese master, and when the war ended and the Dutch returned to reclaim their colony, he fought with Indonesian guerillas against the Dutch. After independence, Suharto stayed in the army, rising steadily in the ranks.

In 1963, as Indonesia edged toward economic and political disaster under Sukarno, Suharto took over command of the strategic reserve forces based in Jakarta. By this time, the military was riddles with factions as Aukarno’s uneasy coalition of the armed forces, the Communist Party, and Islamic parties began to crumble. Sukarno clung to power by aligning himself with the powerful Communist Party, provoking a tense standoff between the Communists and the army.

Tension exploded into violence on October 1, 1965, when a small group of soldiers arrived at the Jakarta homes of seven senior generals. Three generals were killed immediately, one escaped, and the rest were kidnapped. After the botched coup, Suharto, then a senior general, led a counter-coup and then a military takeover. The chaos of the coup attempt was followed by a six-month anti-Communist terror. According to some accounts of that period, at least 500,000 people died. Many were jailed and Indonesia’s Communist Party (PKI) was outlawed.

Shrewd Maneuvering

Over the last 25 years, Suharto has indeed refined repression to a point where few people need disappear and torture need only be applied selectively. Bodies no longer fill rivers as they did in 1965 and 1966, though for a period between 1983 and 1985, hundreds of bodies were discovered in the countryside, and the President explained that those killed were criminals and "the corpses were left lying around as a form of shock therapy." There are far fewer political prisoners now. Human rights groups estimate there are approximately 300 political prisoners today, mostly from separatist outbursts in Irian Jaya, continuing resistance in East Timor and sporadic revivals of Islamic extremism in Sumatra. Pancasila, Suharto’s state ideology, has been effective in silencing Islam as a political force. Once the Communists were eliminated - often with Muslim groups enlisted by the army to carry out the killings - the New Order determined that Islamic fundamentalism or calls for an Islamic state were a threat. Of late, however, there have been signs that Suharto is seeking to curry favor with Islamic groups.

Suharto has refined repression to a point where few people need disappear and torture need only be applied selectively.


Suharto, the master politician, has always made economic development a holy mission. Under the influence of his advisers, including economist Widjoyo Nitisastro, Suharto subscribes to the belief that economic growth begets distribution of wealth - eventually. The paramount goal is growth. When the price of oil, the mainstay of Indonesia’s export earnings, collapsed in the mid-1980s, Widjoyo had convinced Suharto that the economy had to be revamped. The prescription: mimic Asia’s little dragons, such as South Korea and Taiwan, by stressing manufacturing and export-driven growth.

As a result, the economy has taken off. Foreign investment is soaring. The reforms have spawned a fancier range of pet projects - petrochemical plants, telecommunications contracts, toll roads - to dispense as governmental favors.

Suharto brought a large degree of unity to the multi-ethnic nation through shrewd political maneuvering and suppression of internal threats to stability. He has steered Indonesia on a balanced course of economic development, making it self-sufficient in rice and enforcing programs for birth control and poverty eradication. Economic policy has been entrusted largely to U.S. trained technocrats, who have introduced wide-ranging reforms, including opening up the financial sector and forging an industrial base. Run away inflation of the 1960s has been kept to less than 10 percent a year, and OPEC-member Indonesia has never missed repayments on a foreign debt now approaching $100 billion.

But Suharto’s government has violated human rights against domestic political opponents and in East Timor, a former Portuguese colony annexed by Jakarta in 1976 a year after it invaded the territory. He used the army to tame the country’s turbulent political development and sideline opponents. Islam, the country’s dominant religion, has also been kept in check, and Muslim extremists have been dealt with harshly. By the early 1990s, however, Suharto began to make overtures to the Muslim population, such as a highly publicized pilgrimage to Mecca. Such events as the downfall of the Philippines’ Marcos and the prosecution of South Korea’s former president Chun Doo Hwan are likely to remind Suharto that the public will not tolerate repression, even in the face of economic growth. as 1998 approaches, Suharto faces enormous pressure to address the pace of political reform.

http://indonesia-headline.blogspot.com/2008/01/suharto-profile.html

Doctor Perform The Sudden Jumpers, Soeharto Comma

JAKARTA - Team of Presidency Doctor handling health ofis former President Soeharto perform to meet the sudden mass media. Meet this mass media is unconventional
According to information accepted by journalist in RSP Pertamina, team of Presidency doctor will perform to meet the mass media at 20.00 WIB in floor 3 RSP Pertamina, Walke The Kyai Maja, Jakarta, Friday ( 11/1/20008
Meeting this mass media is unconventional. Usually team of presidency doctor perform to meet the mass media every day at 10.00 WIB. During former President Soeharto taken care of, this to newly meet the mass media done/conducted sudden between two lights
Circulate the news, former President Soeharto in a condition comma. But, do not satupun of doctor team contacted will lift ponselnya.

from okezon.com

Good, Lung of Soeharto condition

Jakarta-- Lung Condition ofis former President Soeharto, entering eight day a period of/to its treatment at home Pain Center The Pertamina ( RSPP) Jakarta South arch, Friday ( 11 / 1), reported to by start the goodness
" Result of lung photo (it) is true show the existence of repair, but not yet full is goodness," word of Chief of Team of Presidency Doctor, dr Mardjo Soebandiono, in meeting mass media in RSPP Jakarta, Friday
common/ public Mardjo Memaparkan condition of Soeharto still be conscious weak though, with the body temperature gyrate 36 degree Celcius. While that lung repair is also seen by for example from decreasing it asphyxia symptom
" Problem that happened during the time is asphyxia caused by a dilution heaping in paru. Its cause there is two, excess of dilution and weakness of at heart. this our two Matter is medium handle intensively," word of doctor of expert paru, Hadiyanto
Meanwhile, repair of at lung is also seen from more amount his/its is dilution which can be released last within 24 hours. If Thursday ( 10 / 1) previously doctor team still release 1.500 cc, at this Friday succeed released by 2.200 cc
Others, doctor team is taking heed infection threat of at paru, for example peradangan. " We have done/conducted the prevention therapy, for example by giving antibiotic to prevent to chafe the," word Hadiyanto
Doctor Team to date not yet set mind on to install the CRV, considering condition Package the Harto not yet enabled. " In this time, CRV of non single optimal solution to overcome itshis weak is heart function," word of cardiologist doctor from home Our Expectation Pain is Jakarta, dr Munawar
Doctor Team also not yet decided to conduct action drastic, but berencana remain to improve the generality, improve;repairing dilution balance, obat-obatan, and also usage CCVVHDF which playing important role in treatment, specially to inhale the dilution from body Soeharto.

from solopos.com

Senin, 07 Januari 2008

Tukul to care the disaster victim [in] Jateng

Yogyakarta-- Sense of belonging very strong emotion Tying with the Central Java society ( Jateng), comedian Tukul Arwana during near by berencana give the aid to disaster victim that happened in the provinsi
" I very concerned and follow to feel sorrowful by various disaster in Jateng, like landslide in Karanganyar and also floods in some area. I is thinking to give the correct aid and really good for all victim," he/she said in Yogyakarta, Sunday ( 6 / 1
According to man of birth Semarang, This Jateng, x'self in pursuance of coordination with the management Four Eye to immediately to give the aid to all victim, good to landslide in Karanganyar, Wonogiri and also floods in some area of like Solo and as long as river stream of Bengawan Solo
Source: Among/Between
By: Good Verdy of Hendratmoko.

from solopos.com

Citizen Kalitan pray for Pak Harto

Solo ( Espos)-- Tens of citizen Kalitan, Chief Of Village Penumping, Subdistrict Laweyan, Solo perform a the prayer with for the healing of the former President Soeharto, Sunday ( 6 / 1). Event executed in Mosque of the Al Dawn Kalitan take place the khusyuk
Meanwhile, atmosphere in calm visible Dalem Kalitan. There no any activity in residency almarhumah of Ms. the Tien Soeharto. Nothing;There is no one who stir to bustle around in it, except some one who sweep the dry garbage dedaunan in page;yard
bunged up Door Dalem Kalitan even also. Except door of east side go to the visible backside opened. While atmosphere of Mosque of Al Dawn in Jl Dr Sutomo, Gg II Kalitan RT 01 / RW II, Visible Penumping differ than ordinary day
moment of Adzan Dhuhur fill the air the, mosque paint yellow two floors ivory is which is located in side of that east Dalem Kalitan start visited upon by the citizen. As much 22 boy, eight woman and a number of visible children of khusyuk run the Salat Dhuhur berjamaah, Dusty imam Ustad Burn the
that Day Stillness break the Dusty tatkala Ustad Burn to open the voice. With the slow, he/she say, " This day, after finishing of Salat Dhuhur, we gather in this mosque to pray with for healing of Pak Harto ( former President Soeharto-Red). Let us start the prayer by reading Letter of Al Fatihah
Afterwards, by joining, tens of mosque pilgrim coming from RT 01 and RT 02 / RW II, That Kalitan read the Letter Yasin ofis three of times;rill. One of citizen, Satar Maryati, 68, hoping Soeharto immediately get over the pain which in this time castigate the
" Pak Harto considered to be the citizen from this region. Become if ill now, hopefully quickly heal," say the Satar. Former Vice Chairman of DPR Zaenal Ma'Arif which that day also attend and follow to pray with, expecting tone matter
" I also request so that/ to be Indonesia people forgive the Package Harto. Make what continue the case Package Harto? What is its benefit? Package the Harto have old, what yes at having the heart to? By nurani, if performed a by referendum, 90 of my Indonesia people gratuity guarantee to forgive the Package Harto," explicitly Zaenal which also citizen Kalitan
By: Mastris Radyamas.
from solopos