Gatot Taroenamihardja

Mr. Gatot Taroenamihardja was Indonesia's first attorney general.

Biography

Taroenamihardja became Indonesia's first attorney general after Indonesia's independence in 1945.[1] President Sukarno established him as the attorney general on 19 August 1945, two days after independence.[2] Before his resignation on 24 October of the same year, Taroenamiharja released on declaration and one announcement, both on 1 October.[2] The declaration, pronounced together with Minister of Justice Soepomo and Minister of Home Affairs Wiranata Koesoema, outlined the function of the attorney general's office, while the instruction, directed at the Indonesian National Police, ordered them to take extra measures to ensure the safety of the republic from Dutch troops during the Indonesian National Revolution.[2]

He became attorney general again on 1 April 1959, during a period of turmoil; the government was facing an uprising from Darul Islam, as well as struggling with the integration of Indonesian New Guinea.[1] Taroenamihardja was attorney general for a period of four months and 21 days, resigning on 22 September 1959;[3] he was replaced by Goenawan.[4] He later joined the Ministry of Justice.[5]

gollark: Maybe the design was bad or maybe people messed up the execution. But a good design factors in some degree of problems in the execution side.
gollark: The existence of working ways to modify them as needed isn't guaranteed.
gollark: Yes. It's still a bad fire extinguisher regardless of how good the designers thought/claimed they were being.
gollark: Systems have no intentions. People in them might, and the designers probably did, and the designers also likely claimed some intention, and people also probably ascribe some to them. But that doesn't mean that the system itself "wants" to do any of those.
gollark: I think you could reasonably argue that it's better to respect institutions than ignore them because it's better for social cohesion/stability, but I don't agree that you should respect them because they're meant to be fair and because you can always get them to fix problems you experience if this isn't actually true.

References

Footnotes
Bibliography
  • Bahari, Adib (2011). Pendekar Hukum Indonesia [Indonesian Legal Giants] (in Indonesian). Yogyakarta: Pustaka Yustisis. ISBN 978-979-3411-04-0.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • "1. Mr. Gatot Taroenamihardja (12 Agustus 1945 - 22 Oktober 1945)" [1. Mr. Gatot Taroenamihardja (12 August 1945 - 22 October 1945)]. Attorney General's Office of Indonesia. Archived from the original on 2011-11-30. Retrieved 2011-11-30.
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