The Manila Times
Friday, January 28, 2005  
Critics fear massive theft of international aid to Indonesia 


JAKARTA: International financial institutions paid about US$35 million in the 
late 1980s to build the highway that meanders from Jakarta's international 
airport to the city, crossing picturesque rice paddies and fishponds. 

But the 1.2-meter-thick layer of crushed stone that was supposed to keep the 
pavement above flood level was never laid and the project became known as the 
"highway heist"-a glaring reminder of the corruption here that donors must 
overcome in aiding areas shattered by the December 26 earthquake and tsunami. 

With hundreds of millions of dollars pledged as relief aid, many fear that 
corrupt officials in Indonesia will devour a portion of the humanitarian funds. 

Thousands of relief workers-from the US Navy and Marines to UN agencies and 
private organizations-rushed to deliver food and water and establish temporary 
shelters for hundreds of thousands of survivors on the battered coasts of 
Sumatra Island. As the mission becomes one of rebuilding rather than emergency 
aid, observers said the conditions for corruption are rife. 

"Based on our past experience in other disasters in Indonesia, corruption is 
highest in the reconstruction and rehabilitation phase, rather than during the 
emergency response," said Luky Djani, from the independent watchdog Indonesia 
Corruption Watch. "We want to focus our monitoring efforts on reconstruction 
and rehabilitation because in these two stages corruption will be rampant." 

Indonesia's media have taken the lead in warning of the potential pitfalls. 

"It is well known that the government's credibility is very low in preventing 
and eradicating corruption," an editorial in The Jakarta Post said. "This has 
raised doubts as to whether the government will be able to handle public money 
from all over the world in a transparent manner." 

Newly elected President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has moved quickly to preempt 
the potential crisis by appointing international accounting agency Ernst & 
Young to track the relief funds. He also has pledged to work with donor 
countries to ensure that aid for tsunami victims is not stolen by corrupt 
officials. 

"There will be no corruption," said Alwi Shihab, the senior welfare minister 
who is in charge of the relief effort. To bolster the promise, he said the 
government would publish a monthly list of all aid "contributions and where it 
is going to avoid any suspicion." 

The government has estimated that rebuilding efforts in the most devastated 
area, Aceh province, will cost at least US$4 billion over the next five years. 
The earthquake and wave flattened wide swaths of Indonesia's Sumatra Island, 
killing tens of thousands and sweeping whole villages into the sea. Some towns 
will have to be rebuilt from scratch. 

Yudhoyono's administration has said that most foreign governments that have 
pledged aid are insisting that they be allowed to manage the funds. 

The Cabinet was drawing up plans for the use of aid in the reconstruction and 
rehabilitation phases that would guarantee the donations are channeled to 
tsunami victims, said Sri Mulyani Indrawati, minister for national development 
planning. 

This would include the creation of a new management structure, where donors 
could track the progress of projects they are financing and the way their money 
is being used. 

Staffan Synnerstrom, a senior official of the Asian Development Bank, insisted 
that outside lenders were determined "to make arrangements that would minimize 
this risk." 

However, administrators who have seen corruption in the past warn that the new 
safeguards don't go far enough. Kwik Gian Gie, economic minister in the former 
administration of President Megawati Sukarnoputri, predicted that on building 
or infrastructure projects, it was "safe to assume a 40-percent markup." 

Indonesia is listed as one of the world's most corrupt nations by Transparency 
International in its latest Corruption Perceptions Index. Since his 
inauguration three months ago, Yudhoyono has publicly lamented that corruption 
has become "systemic" in the country. 

Many Indonesians feel the corruption and its resulting abuse of power threatens 
the survival of the country's fledgling democracy and could usher in another 
period of military rule.  

Critics warn that as efforts to rebuild the shattered infrastructure get under 
way, it will be difficult to keep contractors with ties to the army brass and 
top bureaucrats from padding their bids or claiming to have performed 
nonexistent tasks.
--AP


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