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Suharto dead. Doctors expect full recovery.
2008-01-27
Indonesian ex-leader Suharto, 86, has died after suffering multiple organ failure for the second time this month.

He died at 1310 (0610 GMT) after slipping into a coma, doctors said.

During his 32-years in power, the economy thrived, but thousands were killed in the provinces of Papua and Aceh and in East Timor invaded in 1975. Suharto left office in 1998 amid mass protests over corruption and the human rights abuses, but did not stand trial on health grounds. No-one has been punished for the killings.

"Indonesia's second President Haji Muhammad Suharto has passed away at about 1310," senior police officer Major Dicky Sondani told reporters at the Pertamina Hospital in Jakarta. All six of his children were at the hospital. Soldiers and police had to force back crowds of Suharto supporters to allow the ambulance with his body to leave the hospital on his way to his home in central Jakarta, before it is taken to Solo in central Java for the funeral.

The government has announced a week of national mourning. President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono led a televised prayer. "I invite all the people of Indonesia to pray that may the deceased's good deeds and dedication to the nation be accepted by Allah the almighty," he said. "Mr Suharto has done a great service to the nation."

Suharto was rushed to hospital on 4 January suffering from various heart, lung and kidney problems. He had been living quietly in Jakarta since being overthrown during the 1997-1998 Asian financial crisis. He had been in and out of the hospital several times. Although he was accused of embezzling huge sums from state funds during his three decades in power, his lawyers always successfully pleaded that his failing health meant he should not stand trial.

Suharto's rule was marked by rapid economic growth and political stability. Some Indonesians fondly call him the "father of development". But many often found it difficult to pin down what they felt about the man who had towered over their lives for so long, says the BBC's Jonathan Head. They certainly feared him, our correspondent says. After all, the bloodshed which accompanied his rise to power, after a mysterious coup attempt in 1965 which he blamed on Indonesia's then-powerful Communist Party, was on a scale matched only in Cambodia in this region, he says.

Within the space of a few months at least half a million people were slaughtered in anti-communist pogroms that, at the very least, Suharto and the military tacitly encouraged says our correspondent. The trauma of that period scars Indonesia to this day, and was a key tool in Suharto's armoury. After his death was announced, Suharto's eldest daughter, Siti Hariyanti Rukmana, told reporters: "We ask that if he had any faults, please forgive them... may he be absolved of all his mistakes."
Posted by:john frum

#5  Morgue?

Suharto's body was taken by ambulance from the hospital to his house in Jakarta's leafy Menteng district
Posted by: john frum   2008-01-27 14:43  

#4  Has anyone checked on the body lately? Has the body been moved to the morgue yet?

It's my understanding that they start to move again anywhere from an hour after death onwards. Just look at Fidel.

Posted by: FOTSGreg   2008-01-27 12:06  

#3  Our top story tonight! Our top story tonight!

President Haji Muhammad Suharto is holding on in his valiant fight to remain dead. President Haji Muhammad Suharto is holding on in his valiant fight to remain dead.
Posted by: Eric Jablow   2008-01-27 11:12  

#2  Never buy the cheap jumper cables.
Posted by: Thomas Woof   2008-01-27 10:08  

#1  "At last! You had me waiting, human. And now, old man, I get to eat your soul."
Posted by: anonymous5089   2008-01-27 07:15  

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