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LPDP alumni controversy rekindles debate over return rules

Radhiyya Indra and Gembong Hanung (The Jakarta Post)
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Jakarta
Wed, February 25, 2026 Published on Feb. 24, 2026 Published on 2026-02-24T19:31:08+07:00

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The LPDP has sent thousands of Indonesia’s brightest students each year to leading universities at home and abroad, financing their tuition fees, as well as living costs. The LPDP has sent thousands of Indonesia’s brightest students each year to leading universities at home and abroad, financing their tuition fees, as well as living costs. (Courtesy of/Shutterstock)

A

controversial social media post by a recipient of a state-funded Endowment Fund for Education (LPDP) scholarship about her child’s foreign citizenship has sparked a widespread backlash and drawn government scrutiny, reigniting a debate over the program’s mandatory return-to-Indonesia requirement.

The controversy began after LPDP alumna Dwi Sasetyaningtyas posted a video on Instagram proudly showing her second child’s British passport, which she described as a “strong foreign national passport”.

“I know the world seems unfair, but let me be the one who bears Indonesian citizenship, not my children,” she said last Friday in a now-deleted post, according to kompas.id.

The remark quickly drew criticism, with many questioning the commitment of both her and her husband, Arya Irwantoro, as LPDP alumni bound by the requirement to return to Indonesia after completing studies abroad.

Dwi soon explained that she had completed a five-year return commitment in Indonesia and that her British-born child obtained citizenship due to Arya’s indefinite leave to remain (ILR) status in the United Kingdom.

Nevertheless, allegations against Arya continued to circulate on social media, with users suggesting he may have remained overseas beyond the permitted period. 

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