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Last updated on May 30, 2012 at 0:10 EDT

Doctors say surgery on Suharto went well

May 19, 2006
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By Achmad Sukarsono

JAKARTA (Reuters) – Former Indonesian President Suharto
successfully underwent stomach surgery on Friday at a hospital
that has treated him for the last two weeks, shortly after the
country’s current leader visited him.

The 84-year-old Suharto, who ruled Indonesia with an iron
fist for 32 years, was admitted to hospital in early May due to
bleeding in his digestive system, which lowered his body’s
oxygen level, including to his brain

Earlier, doctors had said there was some bleeding under his
stomach skin and needed to get the blood out with a small
operation.

Doctors said the 30-minute procedure went well.

“There was no problem. He is in a safe condition. He can
talk but he likes to sleep,” Mardjo Soebiandono, head of the
presidential medical team, told Reuters, adding that the
bleeding under the skin had been stopped.

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono visited the former
strongman ruler before the operation.

Doctors say they continue to consider Suharto’s condition
critical, as they have since his admission.

“This critical phase has been longer than we had expected.
The wish was the critical phase would be over in a week but it
turned out that it is not over until now because it has
implicated other organs,” said Adji Suprajitno, head of the
Pertamina hospital where Suharto is staying.

Suharto has been admitted to hospital a number of times
since he stepped down in 1998 when social and political chaos
engulfed Indonesia. He has suffered several strokes since then
and has had lung and kidney problems.

Indonesia’s attorney-general said last week that his office
had stopped pursuing graft charges against Suharto because of
his poor health. The octogenarian’s illness had prevented his
persecution on charges of graft.

The case has been announced as closed in the past, only to
be opened again when officials in charge have changed. Some in
parliament also dispute whether Yudhoyono can unilaterally drop
it without legislative approval.

Yudhoyono told reporters he visited Suharto as a gesture of
humanity. He gave no new comment on the former president’s
legal status.

Suharto sharply raised incomes in Indonesia at the expense
of political freedom and endemic graft during his years in
power, with critics saying he and members of his family
corruptly amassed up to $45 billion, accusations they deny.

Around 200 protesters held rallies near Suharto’s central
Jakarta home on Friday demanding the government put him on
trial over the graft allegations and make him pay damages.

(additional reporting by Diyan Jari and Telly Nathalia)


Source: reuters