http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/17/world/asia/17indo.html?_r=1&ref=asia

Lawmakers Sow Disillusion in Indonesia
By NORIMITSU ONISHI
Published: October 16, 2010

JAKARTA, Indonesia - Indonesia's House of Representatives barely passed any 
laws in the first year of its current term, placing critical pending 
legislation on matters related to national security, welfare and natural 
resources on the back burner. Still, lawmakers recently managed to squeeze in 
trips to South Africa, Japan and South Korea for what they said were 
fact-finding missions to research a bill on this country's Boy Scouts. 

Even by the powerful body's low standards - it consistently ranks as 
Indonesia's most corrupt institution, and 9 percent of its previous members 
have formally been named as suspects in various cases of graft - the House has 
drawn fierce criticism for its recent behavior. Besides the legislative 
inaction and a growing appetite for junkets, lawmakers have focused their 
efforts on securing a new $180 million building and discretionary "aspiration 
funds," that critics describe as pure money grabs. 

The country's aggressive news media and watchdog groups have highlighted the 
House's excesses, in often mocking tones. But critics say that the state of the 
current crop of 560 legislators - widely described as the least effective since 
the start of political reforms in 1998 - points to deeper problems about the 
health of Indonesian politics: unchecked, deepening corruption that threatens 
to breed disillusion about democracy. 

"The House now has a very serious problem of legitimacy," said Rocky Gerung, a 
political scientist at the University of Indonesia. "People just don't trust it 
anymore. There's no political culture, no ethics. They don't understand the 
basics of democracy. There is only a black market of political transactions." 

Coming out of an authoritarian era in which it served as a rubber stamp for 
Suharto, the longtime military ruler, the House increasingly acquired 
legislative and budgeting powers in the past decade. Today, it shares the 
political stage with President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, who, despite having 
been re-elected in a landslide last year after running on strong anticorruption 
credentials, has been acting indecisively against vested interests. 

Meanwhile, the House continues to be ranked as Indonesia's most corrupt 
institution by Transparency International. According to Indonesia Corruption 
Watch, the country's leading antigraft organization, nearly 50 members of the 
previous House, which served from 2004 to 2009, have been named as suspects in 
cases in which the charges include skimming money from public projects and 
accepting bribes for endorsing the nomination of a candidate for a high-ranking 
position at the Central Bank. Several current members are also under 
investigation. 

Watchdog groups say that current members, who began the second year of their 
five-year terms this month, have spent most of their time on infighting and 
overseas travel, as well as pursuing lucrative projects. 

The seven bills they passed in the current term's first year were related to 
the budget or carried little legislative significance, according to Formappi, a 
private organization that monitors the legislative body. By contrast, in the 
first year of the previous House's term, 14 bills were passed, according to 
Formappi. In Indonesia, the president lacks a veto, which allows the House to 
pass bills on its own. 

"This is the worst House since reformasi," Sebastian Salang, Formappi's 
executive director, said, referring to the reform era starting in 1998. 
"Considering their lack of performance, they are an obstacle to Indonesia's 
democratization." 

House leaders called the criticism unfair and, explaining that first-term 
lawmakers accounted for 70 percent of the body, pledged to do better. 

"This is like a volleyball match: the ball hasn't gone up yet, and the people 
are already smashing it," said Jafar Hafsah, chairman of the Democratic Party 
faction, the Legislature's dominant party. "What we are doing now is passing 
the ball around." 

But the House, critics say, has abused its powers. Two major campaigns - 
seeking approval for the new $180 million building and the "aspiration funds" 
worth $1.65 million for each member - are bald attempts to siphon off money, 
critics say. 

"The House is like a stock exchange," said Uchok Sky Khadafi, an official at 
Fitra, a private organization that monitors government budgets. "Everything has 
its price. And if a project has no value, the members are not interested in 
it." 

An official of Golkar, Mr. Suharto's old party and the strongest supporter of 
the aspiration funds, said that the money was actually meant to reduce 
corruption. 

"In Indonesia, democracy is identical to money politics," said Ade Komarudin, a 
high-ranking Golkar official who has been a lawmaker since 1997, one year 
before the start of the reforms. "If there is no money, people will not vote 
for us." 

The aspiration funds, he said, would spread the money more evenly to all 
members, including "ones who don't have the money or who are stingy." Lawmakers 
would choose the recipients of the funds, ostensibly for projects in their 
districts, but local officials would manage the money. 

Lawmakers will be able to focus on other more important matters "rather than 
engaging in corruption here, corruption everywhere, to serve constituents who 
are asking for money," Mr. Komarudin added. 

Experts said that lawmakers' intensifying search for lucrative projects was 
rooted in a 2009 electoral change that was supposed to increase accountability. 
For the first time, voters directly elected their representatives, who had 
previously been chosen from party lists. The result was that candidates, who 
needed to spend much more money to win support, often borrowed money to finance 
their campaigns. 

Alvin Lie, a lawmaker who served from 1999 to 2009 but lost a bid for a third 
term, said that in 1999 a candidate needed $10,000 to $20,000 to run a 
campaign. In 2009, candidates needed at least $330,000 just "to be considered a 
strong contender," said Mr. Lie, who has started Jurnalparlemen.com, a 
C-Span-like service covering the Indonesian Legislature. 

"I'm very concerned about Indonesian politics," he said, speaking about the 
past decade's efforts to make politics more accountable. "After 10 years, I 
don't think we're going forward. I think we are just stuck here, and, to a 
certain extent, we may be going backward." 


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