http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/KK26Ae02.html

Nov 26, 2009

>From stability to chaos in Indonesia
By Patrick Guntensperger 


JAKARTA - Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono delivered earlier this 
week an eagerly awaited announcement on the scandal involving the Attorney 
General's Office (AGO) and National Police's alleged efforts to undermine the 
quasi-independent and widely respected Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK), 
which in recent years has convicted top-level officials from both institutions. 

But Yudhoyono's vague pronouncement on November 23 failed to clear the air and 
left unanswered questions about his own possible involvement in the alleged 
plot. Re-elected in July with an overwhelming democratic mandate, Yudhoyono has 
more recently experienced a reversal of political fortunes as his 
corruption-busting credentials have come into doubt and protesters in cities 
across the country have taken to the streets calling for his resignation. 

The political stability Yudhoyono previously represented to both domestic and 
foreign investors has in recent weeks suddenly come undone, with the specter of 
possible impeachment proceedings against Yudhoyono and doubts about his freshly 
elected government's survival. How he handles the allegations and street 
protests will put his commitment to democratic processes and reform to a stiff 
test in the weeks and months ahead, political analysts say. 

The first hints of potential foul play among Yudhoyono's top ranks emerged with 
his previous administration's bailout of the mid-sized PT Bank Century. 
Allegations that part of the rescue funds were diverted to his re-election 
campaign coffers have been officially and consistently denied, but not yet 
disproved through a truly independent investigation. On Monday, the Supreme 
Audit Agency released a report indicating massive financial irregularities in 
the US$717 million bailout scheme. 

Street protesters have called for the KPK to investigate the bailout scandal 
and more immediately for Yudhoyono, Vice President Boediono and Finance 
Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati to resign over the allegations of wrongdoing. 
The KPK scandal appears to involve a wider conspiracy at the highest levels of 
the judicial and law-enforcement agencies, both of which answer ultimately to 
Yudhoyono. Whether it was targeted to suppress a possible KPK investigation 
into the circumstances surrounding the Bank Century bailout is still unclear. 

The case against the KPK spiraled from the arrest this May of Antasari Azhar, 
then the acting chair of the KPK, for his alleged involvement in contracting 
the murder of a businessman involved in a love triangle with a young female 
golf caddy. While in custody, Antasari made and later withdrew allegations of 
bribery, influence peddling, and extortion within the KPK, a quasi-independent 
institution that hitherto had a rare reputation in Indonesia's corrupt official 
context for integrity and independence. 

Charges were later filed against two KPK deputy chairmen, Bibit Samad Rianto 
and Chandra M Hamzah, for extorting money from Angodo, the brother of a suspect 
in a case they were considering. However, secret tapes of conversations between 
Angodo and senior police and AGO officials appeared to reveal a conspiracy to 
frame the two senior KPK officials. 

The tapes were leaked to the press and later played in nationally televised 
court proceedings. They included references to Yudhoyono, suggesting that he 
was aware of and even possibly supported the alleged frame-up. Street protests 
erupted over the tapes' revelations, leading to calls for Yudhoyono's 
resignation and Bibit's and Chandra's release from detention. 

In response, Yudhoyono formed an ad hoc fact-finding team, known as the Team of 
Eight, comprised of lawyers and high-profile anti-corruption advocates to look 
into the scandal and produce a report of their recommendations. The team found 
there was no legitimate case against Bibit or Chandra and recommended that the 
investigations and case building against them be immediately halted. It also 
recommended a thorough restructuring of the police and AGO. 

Yudhoyono made his announcement on the team's findings on Monday and 
disappointed those who hoped for clear and decisive executive action. While 
suggesting that the case against Bibit and Chandra should not be taken to 
court, he was unclear as to whether the case ought to be dropped and the 
investigations halted. His recommendation was based on what he referred to as 
"growing public distrust" of the police and AGO. 

Going beyond the Team of Eight's recommendations, he added, "Immediate efforts 
to correct and improve the three institutions are necessary," suggesting that 
fault could yet be found with the KPK, which since its establishment has 
produced a 100% conviction rate and jailed a number of former top officials. He 
added he "did not want disharmony between the KPK, the police and AGO to be 
permanent". 

Chandra and Bibit had indicated their desire to see the case brought to trial 
so that they could be publicly vindicated of the charges that include abuse of 
power, bribery and extortion. The defendants' lawyers said after Monday's 
announcement that they were not clear about the president's intentions and 
Chandra expressed his confusion to the press, "What does he mean? Maybe we 
should wait two or three days to see the clearer picture." 

Yudhoyono's vague comments underscore his well-known tendency to appease 
competing camps and maintain a veneer of stability. But the "disharmony" he 
alluded to is likely to persist as long as the KPK, tasked with uprooting 
corruption, and the police and AGO, often rated as among the most corrupt 
institutions in one of the most corrupt countries in the world, remain natural 
enemies. 

Analysts see little prospect of detente as long as the KPK continues to exist 
and the current top level staffs of the police and AGO remain in place. By 
likening the squabble to a family affair that could be solved through polite 
talks, Yudhoyono has raised questions about his leadership and democratic 
commitment and resurrected complaints often heard during the authoritarian 
Suharto era about state-protected impunity for wayward top-level officials. 

Many commentators have taken the view that Yudhoyono has squandered a golden 
opportunity to tackle with force the endemic corruption in Indonesia that 
threatens democratic progress and weighs against investor sentiment. Public 
outrage over the case has given him the mandate to take radical steps in 
cleaning up the police and Attorney General's Office. But his lack of action is 
giving wider currency to perceptions that Yudhoyono is not only indecisive, but 
potentially complicit in abuse of power and corruption. 

Patrick Guntensperger is a Jakarta-based journalist and teacher of journalism. 
His blog can be found at
 http://pagun-view.blogspot.com
 

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