http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/education/indonesias-schools-left-unsafe-as-funds-diverted/551065

Indonesia's Schools Left Unsafe as Funds Diverted
October 19, 2012

 Students peer out of a hole in their classroom in Pariaman, West Sumatra, in 
this 2011 file photo. There are thousands of classrooms across the country 
requiring major repair. (AFP Photo) 

Serang, Banten. “We used to cram 45 to 50 students into each classroom here,” 
says Komarudin, principal of Kasunyatun State Elementary School in the town of 
Serang. 

“But now because three of our rooms can’t be used, we’re having to stagger the 
classes so that some students come in the morning and the others in the 
afternoon.” 

The schoolhouse, like many in small towns across the country, has just seven 
rooms — one for each grade from first to sixth, and a teachers’ room. 

When Komarudin was appointed principal here in 2010, he noticed that the entire 
building was in a state of disrepair and would need to be urgently renovated. 

He applied for funding that year from the Serang Education Office and was 
promised that the municipality would foot the bill for repairs to four of the 
rooms, while the other three would get funding from the central government. 

“But what happened was that only the municipal funding came through,” Komarudin 
says. 

“The three other rooms have been never been renovated because, according to the 
education office, no school is allowed to receive funding from both the local 
education office and the central government. The condition of the three rooms 
now is very worrying.” 

He adds that he keeps applying to the authorities for funding, either to repair 
the rundown classrooms whose crumbling walls and roof he fears could collapse 
at any time, or to build new classrooms. 

Roihah, a teacher, says the threat of a collapse constantly weighs on the 
students and teachers and makes it difficult to focus on lessons. 

“An environment that’s conducive to learning should be comfortable so that the 
students aren’t distracted by other things, but here none of us feels the least 
bit comfortable,” she says. 

She cites one occasion when it began raining hard and the ceiling in her 
classroom began leaking in several spots. That prompted her to evacuate the 
entire class for fear that the ceiling would collapse. 

“The government needs to fix all the classrooms that are in disrepair, 
otherwise there’s bound to be an accident that claims victims,” Roihah says. 
“We just hope that they address our problem immediately so that the students 
can have peace of mind when they’re learning.” 

The funding hitch at Kasunyatun Elementary is one of many that schools across 
the country face when requesting money to fix crumbling classrooms. 

The problem seems to belie the massive allocation that the education sector is 
guaranteed from the state budget. 

By law, at least 20 percent of the budget must go to education, the 
second-highest allotment after that for civil servants’ salaries. In 2011, the 
education budget amounted to Rp 266.9 trillion ($27.8 billion), increasing to 
Rp 310.8 trillion this year. The draft budget for 2013 sets aside a record Rp 
331.8 trillion for education, but in reality only a fraction of that money will 
go toward schools. 

The Education Ministry, which is responsible for the running and maintenance of 
state schools, will get Rp 66 trillion, while the Religious Affairs Ministry, 
which oversees Islamic schools, will get Rp 39 trillion. The rest will be 
shared by 18 other ministries and government institutions for their own 
education and training programs that have nothing to do with primary and 
secondary education. 

In addition to its allocation from the state, more than half of which will go 
toward paying teachers’ salaries, the Education Ministry has another source of 
funding for school building repairs, but one that has drawn criticism from 
legislators. 

In 2010, it created a perpetual endowment, known as the National Education 
Development Fund (DPPN), using funds left over from its budget from the 
previous year. The initial amount was Rp 1 trillion. In 2011, it swelled to Rp 
3.6 trillion, and this year stands at Rp 10.6 trillion. At the start of 2013, 
it is expected to increase by another Rp 5 trillion. 

The fund may only be used for providing postgraduate scholarships to primary 
and secondary school teachers, rebuilding schools in areas hit by natural 
disasters, and funding research on a national scale. 

However, Education Minister Mohammad Nuh says that only the interest generated 
by the fund, and not the principal, may be used. He says the interest currently 
stands at around Rp 300 billion. 

The endowment has come under close scrutiny recently from House of 
Representatives Commission X, which oversees education affairs, which questions 
its legality and the high potential for embezzlement. 

  
SP & JG

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