http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/news/indonesias-house-of-reps-tops-list-of-corrupt-institutions-again/522692

Indonesia's House of Reps Tops List of Corrupt Institutions, Again
Ezra Sihite, Ismira Lutfia & Markus Junianto Sihaloho | June 06, 2012

 Members of the House of Representatives stand to vote during a plenary session 
in Jakarta on April 12. (Antara Photo/Dhoni Setiawan) 



The House of Representatives again topped a list of corrupt institutions in a 
survey conducted by the Soegeng Sarjadi Syndicate (SSS), an independent 
research organization. 

“A total of 62.4 percent, or 1,367 respondents, deemed that the current members 
of the House of Representatives are only looking to make a living,” Muhammad  
Dahlan, one of the coordinators of the SSS survey, said in Jakarta on 
Wednesday. 

Only a few of those surveyed perceived lawmakers in the legislative as 
faithfully representing the majority. “A total of 466 respondents, or 21 
percent, deemed that lawmakers conduct their duties as representatives of the 
people,” Dahlan said.

The survey, conducted in 33 provinces between May 14-24, questioned a total of 
2,192 people, 54 percent of whom were male. Dahlan also said that the House of 
Representatives was seen more as a place for politicians to gather, rather than 
an institution to represent the will and aspirations of the people.

House Deputy speaker Pramono Anung, commenting on the results of the survey, 
said the public feedback should spark a response in the legislative. “Of 
course, this should become a correction for the DPR; whatever the results of 
the survey, it does show that public trust has gone down,” Pramono said. 

He added that such a view was understandable because the legislative has been 
at the core of numerous corruption cases, including the Hambalang stadium case 
and the Southeast Asian games’ Athletes village project. 

“Therefore, there should be an internal improvement, if the DPR is loosing the 
trust of the people,” said Pramono, who is from the opposition Indonesian 
Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P.)

The survey has named the tax office, the police, political parties and the 
Attorney General’s Office as four other most corrupt Indonesian institutions. 
Conversely, five of the “cleanest” institutions out of the 15 surveyed include 
the Regional Representatives Council (DPD), the presidential office, the 
Supreme Court and the Indonesian Military (TNI).

BeritaSatu/JG  

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