TheJakartaPost

Please Update your browser

Your browser is out of date, and may not be compatible with our website. A list of the most popular web browsers can be found below.
Just click on the icons to get to the download page.

Jakarta Post

Government shifts blame over KPK Law revision

 Just say no:  Antigraft activists join Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) interim chairman Taufiequrrachman Ruki and KPK commissioner Zulkarnain in a rally at the antigraft body’s headquarters in South Jakarta on Friday, calling for the House of Representatives to drop its plan to amend the KPK Law, saying it would only weaken the KPK

Ina Parlina, Tama Salim and Fedina S. Sundaryani (The Jakarta Post)
Jakarta
Sat, October 10, 2015

Share This Article

Change Size

Government shifts blame over KPK Law revision Just say no: Antigraft activists join Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) interim chairman Taufiequrrachman Ruki and KPK commissioner Zulkarnain in a rally at the antigraft body’s headquarters in South Jakarta on Friday, calling for the House of Representatives to drop its plan to amend the KPK Law, saying it would only weaken the KPK. (JP/DON) (KPK) interim chairman Taufiequrrachman Ruki and KPK commissioner Zulkarnain in a rally at the antigraft body’s headquarters in South Jakarta on Friday, calling for the House of Representatives to drop its plan to amend the KPK Law, saying it would only weaken the KPK. (JP/DON)

 

Just say no:  Antigraft activists join Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) interim chairman Taufiequrrachman Ruki and KPK commissioner Zulkarnain in a rally at the antigraft body'€™s headquarters in South Jakarta on Friday, calling for the House of Representatives to drop its plan to amend the KPK Law, saying it would only weaken the KPK. (JP/DON)

Following public outcry over a proposed amendment that would weaken the KPK, the government has shifted responsibility for the plan to the House of Representatives.

On Friday, Cabinet Secretary Pramono Anung declined to reveal the government'€™s stance on the proposed amendment of Law No. 20/2002, saying the government would only give its opinion if the House made an official request.

'€œIt is not yet the time for us to disclose our stance since it is still under an internal process [discussion] at the House,'€ Pramono said on Friday.

The State Palace has declined to comment about the House'€™s plan, but maintained that President Joko '€œJokowi'€ Widodo would continue his support of the antigraft body.

In June, Jokowi, through Presidential chief of staff Teten Masduki, then member of the presidential communication team, rejected a House plan to amend the 2002 KPK Law, saying that the government had no intention of undermining the work of the KPK.

The proposed revision would have limited the KPK'€™s power to investigate and prosecute graft cases

However, Law and Human Rights Minister Yasonna H. Laoly denied that the recent draft bill proposed by the House was the same as the one presented earlier this year.

'€œFrom the beginning, it was the House that proposed the general outline, based on our understanding that the House would agree to a KPK Perppu [government regulation in lieu of the law]. Now, everybody thinks that the proposal for the amendment came from us,'€ he said as reported by Antara news agency.

Meanwhile, House lawmakers have continued to play down the amendment plan.

House deputy speaker Agus Hermanto of the Democratic Party claimed the bill was still an unofficial draft and that it had not been officially taken on by the House for deliberation.

He said that the planned revision was still being deliberated by the House Legislation Body (Baleg).

'€œYou should understand that the draft is not the actual bill; it is a draft bill that is currently being proposed as a bill. It still needs to be synchronized at the Baleg and discussed with the government,'€ Agus said, adding that not all factions had agreed to the amendment.

Arsul Sani, a lawmaker from the United Development Party (PPP), said that several House members had proposed the revision be included in the 2015 National Legislation Program (Prolegnas) due to its ambiguous status.

'€œThis is just a continuation of what happened in June between Baleg and the Law and Human Rights Ministry. At the time, the minister agreed that the bill should go in the 2015 Prolegnas. However, Pak Jokowi disagreed. The [bill'€™s] status has been left hanging; it'€™s both in and out,'€ he said.

-------------------

To receive comprehensive and earlier access to The Jakarta Post print edition,  please subscribe to our epaper through iOS' iTunes, Android's Google Play, Blackberry World or Microsoft's Windows Store. Subscription includes free daily editions of The Nation, The Star Malaysia, the Philippine Daily Inquirer and Asia News.

For print subscription, please contact our call center at (+6221) 5360014 or subscription@thejakartapost.com

Your Opinion Matters

Share your experiences, suggestions, and any issues you've encountered on The Jakarta Post. We're here to listen.

Enter at least 30 characters
0 / 30

Thank You

Thank you for sharing your thoughts. We appreciate your feedback.