Pacific Media Watch
INDONESIA:
Koran Tempo countersues businessman


Title -- 4139 INDONESIA: Koran Tempo countersues businessman
Date -- 10 August 2003
Byline -- None
Origin -- Pacific Media Watch
Source -- Jakarta Post, via fbp@igc.org 8/8/3
Copyright -- JP
Status -- Unabridged


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KORAN TEMPO COUNTERSUES SINIVASAN

JAKARTA (JP/Pacific Media Watch): Koran Tempo daily newspaper countersued on Monday businessman Marimutu Sinivasan, who is probably still mourning the recent death of his brother, for interfering with press freedom, and demanded compensation of US$ 100 million, The Jakarta Post reports.

"Sinivasan has interfered with press freedom and the independence to present information based on the facts," Koran Tempo's lawyer Atmajaya Salim told the South Jakarta District Court.

Atmajaya said Sinivasan, who owns the country's largest textile producer PT Texmaco Jaya Group, did not resolve his dispute through proper procedures, such as by sending a letter of denial or complaining to the press council, as stated in the press law.

Besides demanding compensation, the newspaper asked Sinivasan to make a public apology through newspapers and the electronic media.

Sinivasan had earlier sued Koran Tempo for libel due to the newspaper's reports on Texmaco and demanded compensation of $51 million.

Atmajaya said the newspaper's reports had no relation to Texmaco's business performance, which has been on the decline since the economic crisis in 1997.

"The Indonesian Bank Restructuring Agency recorded that Texmaco's losses in the past three years were caused by poor management," the lawyer said.

Besides suing Koran Tempo, Sinivasan also sued Kompas at the Central Jakarta District Court for similar reasons and demanded compensation of $151 million.

Kompas has also countersued Sinivasan and demanded $150 million in damages.

On Tuesday, Sinivasan's brother, businessman Marimutu Sinivasan, died after apparently committing suicide by jumping out of a window of his suite on the 56th floor of Aston Hotel in South Jakarta.
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PACIFIC MEDIA WATCH is an independent, non-profit, non-government organisation comprising journalists, lawyers, editors and other media workers, dedicated to examining issues of ethics, accountability, censorship, media freedom and media ownership in the Pacific region. Launched in October 1996, it has links with the Journalism Program at the University of the South Pacific, Bushfire Media based in Sydney, Journalism Studies at the University of PNG (UPNG), the Australian Centre for Independent Journalism (ACIJ), Auckland University of Technology in New Zealand, and Community Communications Online (c2o).

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Sunday, 10 August 2003

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