'Mohamad "Bob" Hasan' (born 1931) is an
Indonesian businessman, former Minister of Trade and Industry, and friend of former
president of Indonesia Suharto. Hasan was convicted of
corruption in 2001 in a widely-publicised trial.
Hasan, who is of
Indonesian Chinese descent and whose birth name is 'The Kian Seng', was born in
Semarang,
Central Java,
Dutch East Indies (now
Indonesia) in February 1931. He changed his name upon becoming a
Muslim. He is a foster son of Gatot Subroto, a general in the
Indonesian Army, who commanded then-Colonel Suharto in the 1950s, and through whom Hasan met Suharto. After Suharto replaced Subroto as commander of the Army's Diponegoro Division, Hasan worked with Suharto to develop a wide range of side businesses, controlled by the military, that provided much of the funding for the Division as well as extra income for its officers.
[1]
After Suharto took the presidency in 1966, he initiated a massive expansion of Indonesian commercial logging, especially in the islands outside of
Java. In the 1970s Hasan served as the required Indonesian "partner" for foreign companies wanting to harvest timber in Indonesia, working most notably with the
United States corporation
Georgia Pacific, and also established a number of joint ventures between his and government-owned companies. In 1981 the government banned the export of unmilled timber, leading to many foreign companies selling their Indonesian operations to domestic owners interested in establishing processing operations; Hasan, already a major shareholder in Georgia Pacific's Indonesia operation, became its sole owner when the company left Indonesia in 1983.
Starting from timber, he expanded his business interests into financial, insurance, automotive, and other industries, primarily through his Kalimanis
holding company.
[2]
Hasan was also Chairman of the Indonesian Wood Panel Association (Apkindo) Under Hasan, Apkindo was given complete control of plywood pricing, marketing, and exports. Apkindo helped Indonesia gain about three-quarters of the worldwide plywood export market by the early 1990s, sometimes using techniques described by observers as "
predatory pricing". Hasan personally profited from his chairmanship both by supporting business he owned, and through control of the fees paid to the organization by other members.
Suharto appointed Hasan Minister of Trade and Industry in 1998, making him the only Indonesian of Chinese descent ever to join Suharto's cabinet. His appointment was criticised by some foreign financial analysts as evidence that Suharto was not interested in substantial fiscal changes after the
Asian financial crisis began in 1997.
[3] As a result of
International Monetary Fund (IMF) requirements during the crisis, Apkindo was closed down in 1998.
[4]
Hasan was frequently the subject of allegations of corruption as a result of his business dealings and control of much of Indonesian industry; after Suharto stepped down in 1998, a series of court judgements found evidence of crimes. He was fined 50 billion
rupiah (
US$7 million) as a result of a lawsuit filed by several youth organisations, alleging that Hasan had ordered the burning of forests in
Sumatra.
In February 2001, a court unanimously convicted him of causing a US$244 million loss to the Indonesian government through a fraudulent forest-mapping project in Java in the early 1990s, leading to imprisonment. He was imprisoned at
Cipinang prison and then at the more secure
Nusa Kambangan, an island off the coast of south-central Java, until his release on
parole in February 2004.
[5] Hasan was the first and among the most prominent of former Suharto associates convicted of fraud and corruption after Suharto resigned in May 1998.
Hasan was a member of the
International Olympic Committee from 1994 to 2004, when the IOC expelled him due to his corruption conviction. The IOC was criticised by the Indonesian government in 2000 after the IOC argued that Hasan should be allowed to attend the
2000 Olympic Games in Sydney, Australia despite his being under arrest at the time.
[6]
References
1. Barr, Christopher M (1998). Bob Hasan, the rise of Apkindo, and the shifting dynamics of control in Indonesia's timber sector. ''Indonesia'' 65:1-36.
2. Saragosa, Manuel (1997). Indonesian tycoon plays influential role. ''Financial Times'' February 13. p 6.
3. Porter, Barry (1998). Suharto cronies dominate new financial team. ''South China Morning Post'' March 15.
4. Cotton, James (1999). The "haze" over Southeast Asia: challenging the ASEAN mode of regional engagement. ''Pacific Affairs'' 72(3):331-351.
5. Donnan, Shawn (2004). Jailed ex-tycoon Hasan is released early in Indonesia. ''Financial Times'' February 23. p 2.
6. Bita, Natasha (2000). IOC tries to get its own out of jail. ''The Australian''. September 13.