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View all search resultsThe Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P), the biggest party in the House of Representatives, will lobby other parties against the widely criticized revision to the law governing the Constitutional Court.
The House of Representatives has moved one step closer to revising four laws governing the police, the Indonesian Military (TNI), immigration and the presidential cabinet in the five remaining months of the current lawmakers’ tenure, even as critics protest that the planned changes are not a matter of urgency.
Lawmakers are mulling raising the retirement age for police officers through a revision to the prevailing police law. But experts say there is no urgency for this, saying lawmakers should instead correct underlying problems in the force, such as its lack of accountability.
Following mounting public criticism, the government has opposed a House proposal to revise the Constitutional Court Law with provisions that would require some justices to be evaluated by their appointing instutitions but not others.
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