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SBY: 'I Want to End the Fighting' Over Indonesia Antigraft Case

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has signaled that he wants the controversial 
criminal case against two senior officials from the Corruption Eradication 
Commission to be resolved out of court.

While Yudhoyono is not scheduled to announce his position on moves by the 
National Police and Attorney General's Office to put the two anti-corruption 
officials on trial until tonight, he told a gathering of the chief editors of 
75 media organizations on Sunday night that the growing crisis was hurting the 
country.

"An out-of-court settlement is fair, with significant improvements in all law 
enforcement agencies. I want to end the fighting among [the] three law 
enforcement institutions, to eradicate corruption together," Yudhoyono said. "I 
have talked to the AGO and the police about using their right to deponering. 
But I leave it up to them to decide."

"Deponering" is a Dutch legal term that means to discontinue a case in the 
public interest.

Last week, a fact-finding team appointed by the president submitted a 31-page 
report on the case. The team concluded that there was insufficient evidence to 
warrant prosecuting Bibit Samad Rianto and Chandra M Hamzah, the suspended 
deputy chairmen of the anticorruption commission, known as the KPK, for 
extortion and abuse of power.

After receiving the report, Yudhoyono said his cabinet - and the National 
Police and AGO, both of which were pushing for prosecution - would study its 
recommendations and respond today. But he warned the public, outraged by an 
apparent plot by police and prosecutors to frame the KPK officials, that he 
would not overstep his authority and unilaterally order the case to be halted.

"I don't want to weaken an institution, especially the KPK, which has a very 
important role in fighting corruption," he said. "That is why, from the 
beginning, I did not want to enter an area that is not part of the president's 
authority. For me, so that there is certainty, the one who decides what is 
right or wrong is the courts. But if there isn't enough evidence, don't proceed 
to court." 

"I'm trying not to misuse my authority because it would destroy our 
Constitution. The Constitution has already limited the authority of the 
president," he added.

Separately, he said he would support an investigation into the central 
government's Rp 6.7 trillion ($710 million) bailout of PT Bank Century last 
year. 

Justice Minister Patrialis Akbar last week denied rumors that some of the 
bailout funds were diverted to Yudhoyono's re-election campaign. "Open 
everything, because someone said the funds were connected with the legislative 
and presidential elections. Please PPTAK, please BI, open everything," he said, 
referring to the Financial Transaction Reports and Analysis Center and Bank 
Indonesia.

The president said he would also announce his position on the Bank Century case 
tonight, noting that the results of the Supreme Audit Agency's investigation of 
the bailout would be submitted to the House today.

Corruption watchdogs have expressed skepticism that Yudhoyono would order the 
KPK case to be halted. But Hikmahanto Juwana, a fact-finding team member, said 
on Sunday he was confident Yudhoyono would follow the team's recommendations. 
"He must also consider the broader political implications of his actions, and 
not just a narrow legal case."





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