Monday, January 28, 2008

Suharto

Well, Suharto is gone and this quote caught my fancy (source):

Weep not for Indonesia's former president Suharto who died today at the age of 86. Suharto's iron-fisted rule bought economic growth but also ushered in nepotism and corruption. And Suharto's legacy of corruption and shady business dealings go back a long way. In the 1950s, he was allegedly involved in sugar smuggling which some said cost him command of an army division during a 1959 anticorruption drive. Suharto claims that he bartered sugar for rice to ease a local food shortage and did not benefit personally. Still, he was transferred to a less influential position at the army staff college. It is said Suharto through his rule cultivated a network of wealthy allies, many in the ethnic Chinese business community. He did this through a system of rewards and punishments administered by the state. Suharto's nepotism and corruption was well known. reached epic proportions, culminating in a national car project awarded to Suharto's youngest and most beloved son, Tommy. According to anti-corruption watchdog Transparency International, Suharto and his family may have amassed as much as $35 billion during his reign and the independent organization today still ranks Indonesia as one of Asia's most corrupt countries.

However, it's good to know that the brotherhood of old bastards is still strong because Dr Mahathir Mohamad defended the legacy of one-time Indonesian strongman Suharto and described him as a "great leader and an international statesman" (source). Never mind that Suharto and the CIA played the leading role in the death of hundreds of thousands of Indonesians back in 1965. Maybe he's already met some of them on the other side. I'm sure they'll be pleased to see him.

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