http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/IE02Ae05.html

May 2, 2007 


Indonesia seeks lost trillions in Singapore 
By Bill Guerin 

JAKARTA - Indonesia and Singapore last Friday sealed a bilateral extradition 
pact, opening the way for Jakarta to apprehend and try the many wayward 
business people and bankers who allegedly stole untold billions of dollars' 
worth of assets from the country and parked them in Singapore in the wake of 
the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis. 

Successive Indonesian administrations have been stymied in their pursuit of 
footloose white-collar criminals, many of whom Jakarta contends have fled and 
taken refuge in neighboring Singapore. Singapore has long denied the charges 
and refused to sign the extradition treaty unless Indonesia agreed to a 
concomitant defense treaty, which will expand on the previous Military Training 
Area bilateral arrangement that began in 1995 and ran through 2003. 

As part of the deal, Indonesia will provide land, sea and airspace within its 
jurisdiction for Singapore's land-constrained armed forces to conduct training 
exercises. Singapore said that treaty-enhanced defense cooperation, frozen 
since 2003 partly because of the island state's reluctance to sign an 
extradition treaty, will help both countries cope better with disasters and 
security threats. More significantly, perhaps, the deal comes as diplomatic 
ties with Thailand, which has long provided land and space for Singapore to 
conduct military exercises, have come under severe strain. 

The deal represents a diplomatic victory for Indonesian President Susilo 
Bambang Yudhoyono, who had earlier tasked his Attorney General, Abdul Rahman 
Saleh, to take his high-profile war on graft outside Indonesia and pursue known 
fugitives abroad. Saleh has followed through by reopening a stalled 
investigation into crimes linked to the misuse of funds at the Bank Indonesia 
Liquidity Assistance (BLBI), which at the height of the 1997-98 crisis 
disbursed huge amounts of cash to liquidity-starved banks. 

In a report commissioned by the House of Representatives, the Supreme Audit 
Agency found that Rp138 trillion (US$15.2 billion), or nearly 95% of the 
Rp144.5 trillion the BLBI held at the time in funds, had been channeled by 
improper procedures and then misused by the recipient banks, including those 
owned by cronies and relatives of former president Suharto. 

The report said bankers had illegally used the money for currency speculation, 
loans to affiliated business groups, repayment of subordinated loans, and 
personal securities transactions. Many of those banks were later closed down by 
the government, while others were taken over by the Indonesian Bank 
Restructuring Agency. Several of the complicit bankers fled the country and 
allegedly took up residence in Singapore. 

Most wanted list
Indonesian authorities have a list of financial fugitives who they believe fled 
with their ill-gotten gains to Singapore. Near the top of that list is Bambang 
Sutrisno, former vice president of the now-defunct Bank Surya, who was tried in 
absentia and convicted in November 2002 on charges of embezzling Rp1.5 trillion 
in BLBI funds. He and the bank's former president, Andrian Kiki Ariawan, were 
both sentenced to life imprisonment. 

Sudjiono Timan, former president director of state-owned venture-capital 
investment company PT Bahana Pembinaan Usaha Indonesia (BPUI), is also believed 
to be residing in Singapore. He disappeared soon after state prosecutors moved 
to arrest him at his home after handing down a 15-year prison sentence in a 
Rp1.1 trillion corruption case where he allegedly channeled state funds to 
Suharto's cronies. 

Backed by the Finance Ministry and Bank Indonesia, the investment company had 
run up debts of more than $1 billion owed by various corruption-tainted 
tycoons. Apparently among them was Agus Anwar, the former owner of Bank Pelita 
and Bank Isitimarat, who stands accused by state prosecutors of embezzling 
Rp3.2 trillion in state funds, including Rp700 billion from BPUI. He, 
Indonesian prosecutors contend, was granted Singaporean citizenship in late 
2003. 

Not all the fugitive cases are linked to the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis, 
however. Maria Pauline Lumowa, owner of PT Gramarindo Mega Indonesia, is the 
suspected mastermind of a Rp1.7 trillion letters-of-credit scam run through 
state-owned Bank Negara Indonesia between December 2002 and July 2003, 
according to state prosecutors. She fled to Singapore before her trial, they 
say. 

Irawan Salim, former president director of Bank Global, is suspected of 
involvement in the issuance of fictitious loans and bonds worth at least Rp830 
billion. He fled Indonesia in December 2004 just days before the bank was 
closed and, according to various news reports, has been sighted in Singapore. 
Another fugitive, Lidia Mochtar, is wanted over the alleged embezzlement of 
Rp202.8 billion from Bank Tamara and is likewise believed to be living in 
Singapore, according to Indonesian prosecutors. 

All told, white-collar Indonesian fugitives have allegedly spirited billions of 
dollars' worth of assets out of the country. Indonesia's Financial Transactions 
Report and Analysis Center last year cited reports from the country's embassy 
in Singapore that at least 200 debtors who owe money to the state had been 
sighted in the island state since Suharto's 1998 downfall. 

Some of Indonesia's best-known tycoons, who at least so far are not linked to 
any criminal investigations, owe massive amounts of money to Indonesian 
financial institutions but continue to live the high life in Singapore, 
prosecutors say. Vast amounts of legitimate funds were also parked in 
Singaporean banks by Indonesian business people who fled the violence against 
the country's ethnic-Chinese minority in May 1998. 

Mushrooming millionaires 
Yudhoyono's government has since launched a charm offensive to try to woo the 
money back to what his officials pitch as a more politically and economically 
stable Indonesia. According to a statement issued last October by US investment 
bank Merrill Lynch, Indonesians based in Singapore own assets worth $87 billion 
- or an aggregate wealth equivalent to some Rp850 trillion - or, in comparative 
terms, Rp200 trillion more than the Rp650 trillion annual national budget spent 
by the government for Indonesia's 228 million population. 

Singapore's US-dollar-denominated millionaire population is growing faster than 
anywhere else in the world, with about 55,000 of them in a population of about 
4.5 million. About one-third of Singapore's known millionaires are Indonesian 
nationals, many of whom reportedly have recently been granted Singaporean 
citizenship. Singapore allows permanent-residency status to Indonesians - and 
any other foreigners - who deposit the equivalent of Rp45 billion in a 
Singaporean bank. 

Those hefty cash inflows, which have given the island state's financial 
services sector a big lift, had to Jakarta's mind made Singaporean officials 
reluctant to agree to the proposed extradition treaty. In a tit-for-tat 
response, Indonesia this year slapped a ban on exports of sand to Singapore - 
which the island state uses in reclamation and construction projects - for its 
perceived foot-dragging on the extradition issue. 

"Singapore often says there's so much corruption in Indonesia," said Indonesian 
vice president Jusuf Kalla in a February interview. "But when we want to work 
together on combating corruption, they don't want to." 

Some in Singapore, on the other hand, wonder whether extradited 
Chinese-Indonesians would receive a fair trial from the country's notoriously 
pliable judiciary. They note that corruption charges still must be proved and 
any case will have to be legally airtight to secure an extradition order in 
Singapore, which can only be approved by a magistrate there and only if the 
request complies with every detail of Singapore's Extradition Act. 

For Yudhoyono, the extradition treaty has significant political implications. 
As a new general-election season approaches, failure to net at least some of 
the most wanted BLBI suspects would represent a significant setback for his 
government's high-profile anti-graft drive - which is viewed by many 
Indonesians as one of the strongest points of his three-year-old presidency. 

Yet it's not clear that the extradition treaty with Singapore will be the 
silver bullet his administration desires. Nobody will be extradited until the 
extradition and accompanying bilateral defense agreements have been ratified by 
Indonesia's House of Representatives. Several opposition legislators have 
slammed the defense treaty in broadcast and print media interviews, saying 
Indonesia had "given away too much" in defense concessions for what could prove 
to be a toothless extradition treaty. 

Indeed, even if the treaty passes Parliament, it may prove more symbolic than 
substantive in retrieving lost trillions of rupiah-denominated state funds. 
Political analysts note that those on the lam in Singapore still have plenty of 
time to weigh their options and consider taking their ill-gotten gains to a 
third welcoming country. Singapore's founding father and mentor minister Lee 
Kuan Yew has already insinuated as much. "It's laughable. Do you believe that 
any Indonesian who was likely to be extradited would be here at all?" he was 
last week reported as saying. 

Bill Guerin, a Jakarta correspondent for Asia Times Online since 2000, has been 
in Indonesia for more than 20 years, mostly in journalism and editorial 
positions. He specializes in Indonesian political, business and economic 
analysis, and hosts a weekly television political talk show, Face to Face, 
broadcast on two Indonesia-based satellite channels. He can be reached at 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] . 

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