Mysterious Witness Comes Forward in Activist’s Assault
Nivell Rayda | July 12, 2010
Tama Satrya Langkun, an investigator for Indonesia Corruption Watch, describing the vicious attack that left him hospitalized. Tama is expected to be released today or on Tuesday. (JG Photo/Afriadi Hikmal) Related articles
Police, Press Council Agree on Press Dispute Procedure 8:43pm Feb 9, 2012
Kenyans Go Online In Battle Against Corruption 9:15pm Feb 7, 2012
Link to Lion Air Won’t Taint Drug Probe, Police Say 5:01pm Feb 7, 2012
Graft, Paybacks and Religion Shake the Maldives 9:31pm Feb 6, 2012
Nanan Defends Clubs, Denies Political Aims 10:57pm Feb 5, 2012
Post a comment
Please login to post comment
Comments
385299Wanted: Scapegoats
Candidates should be gullible,uneducated,financially motivated,excellent shape,preference given to applicants with misdemeanor rap sheets/or military background.
Benefits include full room/board - 3 square meals/day, media exposure, police goodwill,deferred remuneration upon completion of contract (sentence) and lifetime immunity from grateful National Police.
Please send CV's to National Police Chief Gen. Bambang Hendarso Danuri at police headquarters (Jakarta).
Only short-listed applicants will be notified.
A very mysterious story indeed. And I am sure that this Avanza driver is not the one he wants to appear.
First and foremost - nobody here in Indonesia would stop if there is a mugging in progress - especially not with a car, simply due to the fact that the owner is easy identifiable due to its number plates. And who wants to be a potential victim of thugs? And, as an earlier interview with the victim revealed, he mentioned that he took notice of the number plates too (and the driver's face!).
Second comes that VERY ACCIDENTALLY exactly this seemingly random good Samaritan has excellent contacts with the police BUT describes himself as a business man. Also as pointed out, I can't believe that any private person has a lot of knowledge about "business" insider slang, except when he has (or had) a working relationship with the same institution. Also what makes him in my eyes suspicious is his refusal to describe his relationship to the police in closer terms.
As I see it, this Toriq is or was the point-man or controller of some hired thugs, and when the beating was successfully accomplished, he wanted to wipe any suspicion regarding his person off by displaying the position of a helpful passer-by, offering his assistance.
Of course, I am not a criminologist and this all might well be just the fiction of my feverish mind, seeing conspiracies everywhere, although I am indeed sooooo very confident that the police will soon have the truth revealed!
What sticks in my mind is the recent case Antazari, in which also a police man was employed to provide a hit team. Is this all just an accidental coincidence?
Yes, it should be easy for the Police to find the perpetrators. These thugs are controlled by high ranking police officers. The question is: does the Police want to find them?
Many thanks to the Jakarta Globe for brightening up my breakfast with the record of Toriq's statements. I haven't laughed so much over the marmalade for weeks.
Curiouser and curiouser.
About as plausible as a monkeys promise.
- Previous
- 1
- Next
Badly beaten antigraft activist Tama Satrya Langkun on Sunday highlighted inconsistencies in the sudden reappearance of a key witness to his attack.
On Saturday, the witness, Toriq, who has refused to disclose his full name to reporters, visited Tama at Asri Hospital in Duren Tiga, South Jakarta, where the Indonesia Corruption Watch activist is being treated.
“I was shocked to see him come,” Tama told the Jakarta Globe on Sunday. “This is the guy from that night. My heart was racing. I asked myself, ‘What does he want with me?’ ”
At about 3:30 a.m. on Thursday, Tama was savagely attacked by four unknown assailants as he was returning home from watching a World Cup football match at a cafe in Kemang, South Jakarta.
Many observers have speculated the assault was connected to a corruption case allegedly involving senior police officers.
Tama had reported to the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) and the Judicial Mafia Eradication Task Force that a number of police generals had suspiciously large bank accounts.
The activist, recalling the attack, said he was knocked off his motorcycle before being physically assaulted. “I don’t know if it was a car or another motorcycle [that hit me]. I skidded off at least five meters and my right leg was badly injured from the fall,” he said.
As he was trying to pick himself up, a man drove up on a motorcycle, got off and hit him in the back of the head with a plank of wood, knocking him to the ground again. Another man soon joined in and kicked Tama in the abdomen, while the first man tried to pull off Tama’s helmet.
It was at this point that two more men came running toward him, Tama said.
“I thought the other two were trying to help me. But they also beat me with bare fists and blunt objects. At that point I thought to myself … this is the time for me to die,” he said.
During the ordeal, Tama noticed a silver Toyota Avanza van nearby. The driver of the van, Toriq, watched the assault from behind the steering wheel.
“I assumed that the driver was an accomplice of my attackers,” Tama said. “So when he finally got out of his car and tried to help me, I instinctively refused.”
Nearby residents eventually came and offered help. “There was this one guy who looked like a college student and he offered to take me to the hospital on his motorcycle. I went with him instead,” Tama said.
Tama sustained multiple injuries in the attack. His head was cut in three places, with one wound deep enough to reveal his skull. He also suffered severe bruising all over his body.
Police later asked Tama to describe his attackers, but he could only identify Toriq.
“I kept my hands up to protect my face the whole time, so I didn’t get a good look at the men who attacked me,” Tama said. “I made the sketch [of Toriq] because if it turns out that he was not an accomplice after all, at least he is a witness who could possibly identify my attackers.”
The sketch of Toriq was never made public but was distributed to all police stations across the country.
Mysterious Witness
Interviewed by telephone on Sunday, Toriq said he became aware that Tama had identified him after someone from the South Jakarta Police headquarters had contacted him.
“I have many friends on the police force and some of them alerted me,” he told the Globe. “That’s why I went to see Tama, to clarify the matter.”
Toriq denied he had any involvement in the attack and also denied allegations he had been following Tama that morning.
“I tried to help,” he said. “I was the one who stopped a taxi for him. I asked the taxi driver to take him to the nearest hospital.”
But Tama noted that during his visit on Saturday, Toriq used police terminology little known to most laymen, such as “ lakalantas, ” short for kecelakaan lalu lintas (traffic accident).
Toriq also used police terminology in his interview with the Globe. “This is a 1-355 case,” he said, referring to the first paragraph of Article 355 of the Criminal Code, which deals with premeditated assault.
But Toriq said he was not a police officer, describing himself as a civilian who owned a car rental business. “I only know several officers. I am not one of them. I can’t explain to you my relationship with the police,” he said.
“I contacted my [police] friends and offered to help catch the perpetrators. Police quizzed me but not at a police station — they needed me so I determined the time and place. Because they all knew me, they agreed.
“I think about ten officers showed up, we met near the hospital. It was right after my visit to see Tama. I think it lasted around four hours.”
Attempts to contact the South Jakarta Police via telephone and text message to discuss the case were unsuccessful on Sunday.
Tama said there were inconsistencies in Toriq’s version of events, such as his assertion that he waited for five minutes before finally assisting Tama because he was “examining what was going on.”
“If [Toriq] wanted to stay away, why didn’t he just leave in the first place? If he wanted to help, why wait so long?” Tama said.
The Fallout
President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono visited Tama in the hospital on Saturday, urging the activist to continue his fight against corruption.
National Police Chief Gen. Bambang Hendarso Danuri has called on the public not to jump to conclusions and blame the police for the attack.
“I ask for all of you to do us a favor — please don’t accuse us,” Bambang said on Thursday. “Don’t blame the police for these problems. We never asked our members to do it.”
ICW’s deputy chairman, Emerson Yuntho, however, said the burden was now on the police to prove they were not involved in the assault by arresting the perpetrators and the mastermind behind the attack. “We challenge the police to solve the case and also investigate the bank accounts,” he said. “We will not be deterred from fighting corruption.”
Emerson said Tama could be discharged from the hospital today or on Tuesday morning. ICW will also seek protection from the Witness and Victim Protection Agency (LPSK), he said.
ICW last month reported to the KPK there were indications of bribery and illegal gratuities connected to two Bank Central Asia accounts said to belong to a senior officer identified only as BG and another account belonging to BG’s son. The accounts were estimated to contain more than Rp 95 billion ($10.5 million).
Several recent attacks targeting antigraft groups are suspected to be connected to the report.
“But this is the worst incident,” Constitutional Court head Mahfud MD said on Saturday after visiting Tama. “The police have a good record solving difficult cases such as mutilations, baby thefts and others, so it should be easy for them to find the perpetrators.”
- Malaysian Girl Speaks Indonesian After Freak Accident: Report
- Indonesians Buying Up Most Expensive Homes in Singapore
- Indonesia Woman Kills Teenage Brother Over Sock Insult
- Funeral on Friday for Student Killed in Rafting Accident
- Concerned for Orangutans in Indonesia, US Girl Scouts Lobby for Sustainable Palm Oil
- 7 Motorcycle Girls Arrested for Beating Up Their Own on Bali
- Will Lady Gaga Finally Set Foot in Jakarta?
- 5 More Prisoners Found After Jakarta Jail Break
- Opening Eyes to Tolerance Via Film
- Indonesian Operators Ban Access to LGBT Advocacy Web Site
-
8:48pm | Breaking News: Dozens Feared D...
It's amazing there are not a lot more accidents of this severity, given the crazed manner in which many bus drivers 'pilot' their vehicles on th -
7:40pm | Shocking Images Show Animal Cr...
I can definitely tell you that in Islam we do not discriminate animals based on their habit or size. All animals should be loved and not unnecessar -
7:18pm | Malaysian Police Detain Saudi ...
Is that something that interpol do ? Do they have to follow certain guideline on what can be classified as a crime ? -
7:13pm | Shocking Images Show Animal Cr...
Sorry Bawel, my brother... What do you do with Eid Al Adha? Slice (or watch the slicing of) the throat of the goat and let i -
6:48pm | Malaysian Police Detain Saudi ...
vanu - i suspect if the said deity existed he/she would not want his followers to kill people, and yet they do and he/she says nothing... draw your -
6:28pm | Opening Eyes to Tolerance Via ...
agoz - methinks the lady doth protest too much. Suggest you watch 'The Kite Runner' - your type of film buddy. -
6:23pm | Indonesia Partners Catholic Ch...
Church cleric abuse children for decades? It doesn't mean that Catholicism is bad right? Seriously. Or may be the side effect of c -
6:21pm | Concerned for Orangutans in In...
waky - sorry, but what is your argument - that anything can be sacrificed to sustain human existance. If this is what you are saying I totally disa
