Jakarta Globe, Nurdin Hasan, November 22, 2013
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| An Acehnese woman (R) rides on the back of a motorcycle on April 12, 2013 in Lhokseumawe city in Aceh, the only province to implement Islamic sharia law in Indonesia. (AFP Photo/Romeo Gacad) |
Banda Aceh.
Detectives with the Banda Aceh Police have arrested and detained the head of
the province’s shariah police on suspicion of embezzlement, an officer said on
Friday.
Sr. Comr.
Moffan Mudji Kafanti, who heads the Banda Aceh Police, told the Jakarta Globe
that Khalidin Lhoong, chief of the shariah police, was officially detained late
on Thursday afternoon and be questioned on Friday. He is being accused of
misappropriating part of the wages for contract-based personnel of the shariah
police.
“He is
being detained on suspicion of having embezzled part of the salary — around Rp
650,000 [$56] — for each of his 1,000 underlings. The total sum he embezzled
reached Rp 650 million,” Moffan said.
He said
that the suspect attempted to return the money he embezzled once police began
probing the case.
“Witnesses
said the suspect had enjoyed the money he cut from the salaries,” Moffan said.
“But after the police started to investigate him, he quickly returned the
money.”
The
witnesses said that the reason Khalidin had given for cutting the salaries was
allegedly to pay for sports uniforms, urine tests and machines to print and
laminate member cards.
Moffan said
that police had actually planned to arrest Khalidin in September, but because
he was due to go on the hajj, the police waited until one week after he
returned from Mecca, Saudi Arabia.
He said
that another suspect in the same case, identified as Teuku Armansyah, who heads
the administrative bureau for the Aceh Shariah Police, was also arrested.
The two
could face at least five years in jail for violating the nation’s
Anti-Corruption Law.
Moffan also
said that police had completed the dossiers for each of the two suspects, and
that they will soon submit them to the prosecutor’s office for the indictment
preparation.
Khalidin
told journalists at the city police headquarters that he was innocent, claiming
that the salary cut was agreed upon by the concerned personnel.
He also
maintained that none of the money from the cuts went into his own pockets.
However,
Moffan, remained adamant that the police would pursue the charges against
Khalidin.
“He is free
to comment, but from the information from the treasurer of the Aceh Shariah
Police, it is clear that he did enjoy the money,” he said. “But when the police
began investigating him, he quickly returned the money.”
Under a
special autonomy granted to Aceh following an agreement in the 2005 peace pact
that ended decades of separatist conflict in the province, the region was
granted the authority to enforce partial shariah law. The judiciary and the
education system are subject to elements of Islamic law, as are social mores.

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