Nov 24, 2009
JAKARTA – INDONESIAN anti-graft activists called for protests on Tuesday over what they see as the president’s ham-fisted efforts to whitewash a major corruption scandal involving top police and prosecutors.
President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono stunned activists late on Monday when he delivered a rambling, barely coherent reply to advice from his own fact-finding team to punish senior law enforcers and reform the rotten judiciary.
The liberal ex-general has been under intense pressure to sack his police chief and attorney general and order them to drop allegedly bogus criminal cases against two senior investigators from the country’s corruption watchdog. In a nationally televised speech, Dr Yudhoyono again pledged to reform the justice system but insisted he could not interfere in criminal cases, even though he admitted the public had lost trust in the police and the courts.
‘I’m not allowed to, and will not, enter this area because stopping investigations is the domain of the investigating body, the police, and ending prosecutions is the domain of prosecutors,’ he said. But because of the public distrust in the legal system and the threat the scandal posed to ‘social unity’, he said the ‘better option and solution… is for the police and prosecutors not to bring this case to court’.
His fact-finding team had recommended disciplinary action against law enforcers implicated in the conspiracy and the withdrawal of all criminal allegations against the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) deputies.
Dr Yudhoyono’s comments bewildered anti-corruption activists who had been hoping he would seize his mandate, renewed in a landslide election in July, to genuinely crack down on rampant corruption.
source: straitstimes (singapore)



Leave a comment
Comments feed for this article