Speaker of Indonesia’s Parliament on Tuesday denied
allegations that he helped cause big losses to the state in connection with the
issuance of electronic national identity cards.
Mr Setya Novanto, chairman of Indonesia’s second-biggest
political party, Golkar, made the denial to reporters after a meeting with
leaders of the House of Representatives.
The speaker said he read media reports saying he was named
by the independent Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) as a suspect in the
alleged state loss of at least 2.3 trillion rupiah (S$236.59 million) from the
identity card programme.
Late on Monday, KPK Chairman Agus Rahardjo told reporters
that a legislator with the initials “SN” was suspected to have abused his
authority to benefit himself or others while the electronic identity card,
known as e-KTP, was put in place in 2011 and 2012.
The KPK always refers to suspects by their initials and
never confirms their full names. After Mr Rahardjo’s statement, many Indonesian
media named Mr Setya as the suspect the agency is investigating.
On Tuesday, Mr Setya told reporters he would obey the legal
process, but said he was “shocked” by the allegations and denied any
wrongdoing.
“Whatever I’m accused of is not true,” he said. “If they say
that I received funds, I’ve never done that. The sum of that money is
incredibly huge. How was it transferred, how was it received?”
The KPK has been investigating allegations that sums ranging
from US$5,000 to US$5.5 million – money generated by marking up the costs of
the e-KTP procurement – were divided up in a room in Parliament.
In March, two public servants on trial for corruption linked
to the e-KTP case named at least 37 people, including Mr Setya, who they said
had benefited.
The KPK’s large-scale investigation, which also implicates
members of President Joko Widodo’s own ruling party, PDI-P, shows the
independence of the anti-graft agency, political analysts say.
Despite repeated efforts by politicians to undermine it, the
KPK has remained independent and highly popular with the Indonesian public.
It is also seen as crucial for Mr Joko’s drive to battle
graft in the country that ranked 90th out of 176 in Transparency
International’s Corruption Perceptions index last year.
The decision to designate Mr Setya, whose Golkar party is
part of Mr Joko’s coalition, as a suspect is “a very positive sign”, said Mr
Keith Loveard, a Jakarta-based analyst at Concord Consulting.
“This most certainly demonstrates how tough the KPK is,” Mr
Loveard said, adding that Mr Joko is unlikely to get in the way of the KPK’s
investigation in the e-KTP case.
“While all the parties are virtually implicated, including
the PDI-P, public support for the KPK remains extremely high. So for him to
attempt to slow the process or to create obstacles would be very damaging to his
popularity,” Mr Loveard added.
In late 2015, the Parliament’s ethics committee launched a
probe into allegations by a Freeport Indonesia executive that Mr Setya had
tried to extort US$1.8 billion worth of shares from the local unit of the US
mining company.
Mr Setya denied the allegations but stepped down
temporarily. He was reappointed as speaker a year later after he was cleared by
the Parliament’s ethics panel. (StraitsTimes)
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