JAKARTA
(Reuters)- The multimillion-dollar project in Indonesia's remote West Papua
province had noble ambitions: resettle migrant workers so they can forge a
better life in one of the world's most populous countries.
But after
thousands of dollars in bribes were found stuffed in a fruit box at the
Manpower Ministry, the project has become a symbol of President Susilo Bambang
Yudhoyono's struggle to deliver the "shock therapy" he promised in
2004 to rid Southeast Asia's biggest economy of endemic graft.
It now
threatens to bring down members of his cabinet and could damage his own
Democrat Party.
With a
population of 238 million and swelling investment, Indonesia is set to become
one of the world's biggest economies.
Marble-walled
shopping malls are sprouting from traffic-choked streets, selling Louis Vuitton
and Prada handbags. Growth, projected at about 6.6 percent this year, is among
the best in the G20 club of leading economies.
Yet
corruption remains pervasive, sowing doubt over whether Yudhoyono can make good
on other reforms aimed at sustaining Indonesia as one of the world's hottest
developing markets.
"When
foreign investors see unethical behavior and corruption, they appreciate it
when there's an immediate and clear response," said Shubham Chaudhuri, the
World Bank's senior economist in Jakarta.
In the
capital's gritty streets, graft is a popular subject -- and a growing source of
resentment.
"If
this country wants to move forward, we need an iron-fist leader who is brave
enough to stand up against corruption," said Zulkifli, a 34-year-old
office worker who like many Indonesians uses one name.
In the West
Papua case, the manpower and finance ministries and a powerful parliamentary
budget committee are being investigated over alleged kickbacks from PT Alam
Jaya Papua, which won a tender for the project. Investigators are examining
whether a total 500 billion rupiah ($56 million) in projects is tainted.
The company
has acknowledged giving money to Manpower Ministry officials.
TAKING A
TOLL
The
scandals are taking their toll. Concerns over his handling of corruption is
blamed in part for the 40 point tumble to 51 percent in Yudhoyono's approval
rating since his re-election to a second and final five-year term in 2009, an
Indo Barometer poll showed last month.
Executives
surveyed in the World Economic Forum's Global Competitiveness Report 2011-12
said corruption remained "the most problematic factor for doing
business" in Indonesia despite a half-decade campaign to stamp it out.
Graft
allegations against Indonesian politicians, including those in Yudhoyono's
Democrat Party, have sidelined many of his legislative priorities.
As scandals
grab headlines and lead nightly news broadcasts, speculation is growing of an
imminent cabinet reshuffle in Yudhoyono's coalition before he finishes the
second year of his current term on October 20.
"AMBIGUOUS"
PARLIAMENT
The West
Papua scandal bears striking similarities to other cases tackled by a
six-year-old Corruption Eradication Commission. Known as KPK, it spares few,
targeting judges, millionaires and members of parliament, even a Yudhoyono
inlaw.
An account
manager at an Indonesian company, who declined to be identified because of the
sensitivity of the subject, told Reuters he came to a parliamentary office a
few weeks ago to deliver a bribe hidden in a box of KFC, a practice that he
described as relatively common.
"I
came to parliament to meet a member of a budget team and bring 35 million
rupiah ($3,900) in two boxes of KFC in order to get him to approve one of my
clients," he said.
In 2010
alone, the corruption commission investigated more than 170 cases involving
legislators and officials who siphoned an estimated 2.5 trillion rupiah ($280
million) from state revenue. About 190 billion rupiah ($21 million) was
returned, according to KPK data.
STRONG
OPPOSITION
But its
successes have drawn unrelenting opposition, and it is unclear how far it can
go.
For the
past two weeks, leaders in parliament have sharply criticized the commission
for what they see as an attempt to meddle in the assembly's work. Last week,
lawmakers refused to meet commission investigators, holding up deliberations
over the 2012 budget unless they backed off. The lawmakers finally relented
after a week-long impasse.
The House
of Representatives law commission this week accused the KPK of politicizing
graft cases, neglecting those related to Yudhoyono's party, including dragging
its heels in investigating Democrat Party Treasurer Muhammad Nazaruddin who is
suspected of accepting bribes.
"Parliament
is being ambiguous," said Abdullah Rahman, head of the political
corruption division at Indonesia Corruption Watch, the country's leading
anti-graft organization.
"On
the one hand they say they want to be part of the battle, but when the KPK
requests information, they immediately show strong resistance," he said.
In the West
Papua case, commission officials seized 1.5 billion rupiah ($168,600) in cash
found crammed inside a fruit box at the Manpower Ministry. It had been
delivered to two ministry officials by a businesswoman whose company won the
tender. Investigators describe the money as a "bonus" provided by the
company in return for securing the project.
In recent
days, Finance Minister Agus Martowardojo has been called in as a witness in the
case and speculation is growing Manpower Minister Muhaimin Iskandar, leader of
the National Awakening Party, will lose his job in a cabinet reshuffle,
although he has denied involvement.
"I
never gave an order (to accept bribes)," said Muhaimin.
The finance
minister is adamant he is clean. "If some say the finance minister got
fees from this, I'd like to say...I am not even dreaming about it," he
told reporters on Wednesday.
"MEDIA
SENSATION"
The case is
another test of the commission's graft-busting credentials. Two of its leaders
have been accused of abuse of power. They were later vindicated when wiretaps
played in court proved they were framed by police and corrupt businessmen.
But many
Indonesians felt Yudhoyono was slow to defend the top graft-busters.
A survey by
Indonesia Survey Circle this month showed four out of five of 1,200 people
surveyed did not trust politicians due to corruption. In the past six years,
trust in Indonesia's elected leaders has dropped to 23.4 percent from 44.2
percent.
Graft
watchdog Transparency International's corruption perception index showed no
improvement for Indonesia last year, ranking it 110th overall, the same as
Gabon, Bolivia, Kosovo and Solomon Islands. That compares to Southeast Asian
peers Thailand in 78th place, Malaysia at 56th and Singapore at joint first.
Despite
slower-than-expected reforms, Indonesia is "moving in the right direction
as the business sector continues to be active and the country has shown good
growth," said Andri Manuwoto, a senior analyst at CastleAsia, a consulting
firm guiding outside investors with advice about political risk.
"It's
not going to happen overnight," Manuwoto said. "It may take generations,
but KPK has done impressive work so far."
(Additional
reporting by Rieka Rahadiana, Adriana Nina Kusuma and Janeman Latul; Editing by
Jason Szep and Jonathan Thatcher)
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