Curang....., tetapi tetap tidak masuk jurang........, malah mimpi dapat 
72...........





From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
Sunny
Sent: dinsdag 29 april 2014 13:30
To: Undisclosed-Recipient:;
Subject: [inti-net] Indonesian Politics Remain Graft Ridden








res : Dulu ada semboyan “Sekali merdeka tetap merdeka”, rupanya  pekikan 
semboyan ini sudah usang dan tidak laku, maka oleh sebab itu pada umum orang  
segan pekik merdeka! Apalagi kalau pekik “Bebas”! Kalau mulai pidato sekarang, 
dibilang ”Asalamalaikum”.  Berkenaan dengan perubahan tsb maka agaknya sudah 
waktu untuk pekikan: “sekali curang tetap curang” diresmikan sebagai pekikan 
wajib nasional. Jadi kalau Anda berorasi di depan umum, apalagi pidato Pemilu,  
supaya tidak keliru, pekiklah:  “sekali curang tetap curang!” hehehehe





http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/news/politics/indonesian-politics-remain-graft-ridden/







Indonesian Politics Remain Graft Ridden




By Kennial Caroline Laia on 10:00 am Apr 29, 2014


Category Commentary, Corruption, Opinion, Politics


Tags: Analysis, graft, Indonesia politics



 andi mallaranggeng <http://img.thejakartaglobe.com/2013/10/andi-1-1024x672.jpg>


Former Youth and Sports Minister Andi Mallarangeng outside the Corruption 
Eradication Commission headquarters in Jakarta on July 19, 2013. (JG 
Photo/Yudhi Sukma Wijaya)


Jakarta. Sixteen years ago, Indonesians of all stripes took to the streets to 
demand the ousting of former President Suharto, the dictator who had ruled the 
country for more than 30 years.


The cry of Reformasi echoed across the archipelago as young and old took to the 
streets in the hope of effecting some real change to their lives and the 
country.


Call it naive, and with hindsight no doubt some will, but there was a real hope 
a new government could bring change.


But while the dictator was replaced by a democratic government and Indonesians 
can now vote directly for a president, the rampant corruption that blighted the 
Suharto years remains.


Government positions, be they lowly district officials to ministers responsible 
for massive budgets and national development, are seen as an easy way to 
feather one’s nest at the expense of others.


Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono will step down in July after serving an unbroken 10 
years as a democratically elected president. In itself, that is progress and 
something to remember.


However, the era will also be remembered for the dozens of officials who have 
been caught with their hands in the nation’s cookie jar.


The Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK )has named several top politicians 
as suspects in graft cases. And as you go down the greasy pole of Indonesian 
politics, more and more have been called to give their evidence or explain 
their wealth.


Trillions of rupiah have been lost, money that could have been used to build 
new roads, improve the schools or provide better health care to the regions 
where people lack the cash to visit a doctor in Singapore or Malaysia.


Political Hall of Shame


Andi Mallarangeng, the former minister of sports and youth affairs for 
instance, earned the dubious honor of being the first active minister to be 
locked up after he was detained by the KPK over his alleged involvement in the 
graft-tainted Hambalang sports center construction project.


Last week, the KPK named Hadi Poernomo, former Finance Ministry director 
general of taxation, as a suspect in a tax case involving Bank Central Asia, 
only a day after he stepped down from his position as the head of the Supreme 
Audit Agency (BPK).


The KPK claims he illegally overturned a decision made by a subordinate who had 
rejected BCA’s appeal against a Rp 375 billion ($32.6 million) tax bill.


The chairman of the nation’s anti-graft agency said that top officials were 
susceptible to corruption but he assured them the KPK was on their case.


Highlighted graft cases


The KPK has recently named the director of the Home Affairs Ministry, 
Sugiharto, as a suspect in the e-KTP procurement project. KPK spokesman Johan 
Budi this month also stated that the minister, Gamawan Fauzi, would be summoned 
as a witness if needed for questioning.


The KPK also says that former Health Minister Siti Fadillah Supari was involved 
in a scheme to mark up the price of crucial medical equipment during the height 
of Indonesia’s bird flu epidemic in 2006-07.


As for former Forestry Minister M.S. Kaban, the KPK has filed for a travel ban 
on him as the commission regards his risk of flight to be high.


He is allegedly involved in the Integrated Radio Communication System (SKRT) 
graft case which also involved the owner of Masaro Radiokom, Anggoro Widjojo, 
who allegedly bribed a number of officials to soothe the SKRT’s budget proposal 
in 2007. In the case, the KPK had summoned M.S. Kaban as a witness.


Another minister involved in a graft case is Suswono, from the Islamic 
Prosperous Justice Party (PKS) who was named in an indictment against graft 
suspect Anggoro Widjojo.


In their indictment, prosecutors from the KPK alleged that Suswono, who back 
then served on the legislative oversight committee on forestry and agriculture, 
took a Rp 50 million bribe to approve the procurement of the equipment.


Then we have Minister of Energy and Mineral Resources Jero Wacik, who was 
questioned as a witness in the KPK investigation into graft at oil and gas 
regulator SKKMigas.


The case, in which the disgraced head of SKKMigas Rudi Rubiandini was named a 
suspect, has been described as one of the biggest corruption cases in history.


Tempting position


Zainal Arifin Mochtar from Gadjah Mada University’s Anti-Corruption Study 
Center (Pukat UGM) said a ministerial office is prone to graft due to the 
absence of strong regulations to limit their authority in carrying out 
government affairs.


“There is no law which stipulates the parameters of ministers’ or other top 
officials’ authority,” he said.


“This loophole then becomes a free-for-all with politicians and their officials 
basically able to do what they want. They can make up their own rules for their 
department, they can delegate tasks as they see fit and they can sign contracts 
with whoever takes their fancy,” he said.


“In addition, the lack of transparency and accountability makes it easier for 
top officials to act with impunity,” he said.


Zainal added that the ministers who come from a party — as opposed to 
technocrats brought in from elsewhere — were especially liable to graft as 
they, in effect, served two masters; their party and their department.


Decisions that should be taken in the public interest have thus been hijacked 
by both partisan influences and sheer greed.


“Many top officials are political officials closely linked to the upper 
echelons of a political party. It is very difficult for them to act rationally 
or to divide their official responsibilities from their responsibility to the 
political party machinery,” he said.


Priority list


Ade Irawan, a researcher with Indonesia Corruption Watch, said that besides 
investigating corruption cases among government officials, the KPK should 
prioritize ministers from the parties in its investigations.


“Within the government, the top officials have direct access to planning and 
executing the budget and this is where their commitment to the voter becomes 
blurred,” he said.


“It is important to investigate the officials, because they often abuse their 
power for political interest,” he said.



Ade added that before the law, no matter how high the position of the person, 
if they commit acts in violation of the law and disrupting the country’s 
interest, they should be immediately brought before the courts.


“Before the law, all the citizens are equal. There is no discrimination. If you 
are proved to be committing crimes you have to face the law,” he said.


Political talks


Political analyst Arbi Sanit from the University of Indonesia said a position 
as minister would be always be open to political meddling all the while 
coalitions were needed to form a government.


“Small parties have inordinate power beyond their actual votes when it comes to 
forming a government and can make, and get away with, outlandish demands,” he 
said. “The president then feels beholden to his coalition partners who have 
allowed him to take the top job so we often see incompetent ministers who have 
only got their jobs because of the political horse-trading that comes with 
coalition forming.”


Ideally, says Yunarto Wijaya, the executive director of consultancy Charta 
Politika, ministers should not come from parties but should be appointed based 
on their competence, ability and experience.









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