New York, October 1, 2003The Committee to Protect Journalists
(CPJ) condemns the court ordered seizure of the home of Goenawan Mohamad,
the co-founder and senior editor of Tempo magazine, and the offices
of Koran Tempo, Tempo's sister publication. Mohamad, a 1998
CPJ International Press Freedom Award recipient, and several of his colleagues,
are being sued for libel by businessman Tomy Winata.
On September 29, bailiffs from the East Jakarta District Court delivered
the preventative seizure order to Mohamad's house. The order states that
Mohamad, who was not home at the time, is permitted to continue living
in the residence, but that he is prohibited from selling the property
until a verdict is delivered in the libel case. Today, a similar court
order was delivered to the offices of Koran Tempo.
According to sources at Tempo, Winata, who requested
the court order, filed defamation charges against Mohamad after he made
a statement in March calling Winata a "thug." The statement was quoted
in the March 12 edition of Koran Tempo. Winata has also filed criminal
and civil charges against several other Tempo journalists following
a Tempo article citing allegations that Winata may have stood to
profit from a fire at a textile market in February, and that he may have
been responsible for it.
According to Indonesian law, judges have the right to order the seizure
of collateral pending a verdict in civil cases. However, Tempo's
lawyer Todung Mulya Lubis has said that the seizure of Mohamad's home
and the Koran Tempo offices are "out of proportion" with the legal
case, and that such orders have only been used in business disputes, not
libel cases. Lubis plans to appeal the order.
In a related case, the Jakarta chapter of the Alliance for Independent
Journalists (AJI) filed a suit that accuses the police of negligence for
failing to stop an angry mob from attacking Tempo journalists and
the magazine's offices on March 8, 2003. The mob was protesting the articles
linking Winata to the textile market fire. The case is currently being
tried in the Central Jakarta District Court, and a verdict is expected
on October 6.
For more information about Winata's legal case against Tempo magazine,
please see CPJ's letter
of April 10 and the alert of September
19.

|