Jakarta Globe, Ezra Sihite, Novianti Setuningsih & Erwin Sihombing, May 21, 2015
Jakarta. President Joko Widodo announced nine new members of the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) selection committee on Thursday, all of whom are women.
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| The Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) headquarters in South Jakarta. (BeritaSatu Photo) |
Jakarta. President Joko Widodo announced nine new members of the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) selection committee on Thursday, all of whom are women.
“In the past
few weeks I have been working hard to form a selection committee for the
anti-graft agency [KPK]. Its members have to be competent and possess
integrity; they must possess skills and knowledge in a wide range of areas,”
Joko said on Thursday.
The president
appointed economic analyst, Destry Damayanti, and state administrative legal
expert, Enny Nurbayaningsih, as the committee’s head and deputy head
respectively.
Other
members of the team include Harkristuti Haskrisnowo, a criminal law and human
rights expert; Betty Alisjabana, a technology, information and management
analyst; Yenti Garnasih, a money laundering and criminal law expert; noted
psychologist Supri Wimbarti; Natalia Subagio, the chairwoman of Transparency
International Indonesia; as well as Diani Sadiawati, the director of legal
human rights at the National Development Planning Agency (Bappenas) and Meuthia
Ganie-Rochman, an expert on corruption sociology and social capital.
Joko’s
decision to form an all-female selection committee has been welcomed by female
activists.
“No one can
doubt their [professional] backgrounds; we have a psychologist, an
anti-corruption expert, legal experts. They are all great women,” said Ani
Soetjipto, a University of Indonesia political lecturer.
The new
panel is completely different to potential candidates tipped in the media prior
to the announcement — all of whom were males and most of whom were former
members of the Independent Consultative Team.
The team
was formed by Joko earlier this year to advise him on the then-growing conflict
between the KPK and the police, which was sparked after National Police chief
candidate, Comr. Gen. Budi Gunawan, was named as a bribery suspect by the KPK.
State
Secretary Pratikno said the president chose the selection committee on his own,
from 40 candidates proposed to him.
“He read
their profiles. It was a long process, taking place for the past couple of
weeks, before he finally decided on those names,” Pratikno said, adding it was
only a coincidence that the new selectors happened to all be female.
KPK Deputy
Chief Johan Budi applauded the president’s choice, saying not only were the
members known for their professional integrity, they were also free from
political affiliations.
“I see the
selected committee as having no affiliation or relation to any political
parties,” Johan said. “There will be a lot of political interests and people
who will try to interfere in the selection of KPK leaders.
“Therefore
we need a selection committee that is credible, capable and free from political
interests.”
Chudry
Sitompul, a criminology professor at University of Indonesia, echoed Johan’s
remarks.
“I think
all the nine names presented by President Jokowi are mostly new people. They
are not yet contaminated by particular interests,” he said, referring to the
president with his popular nickname.
Hifdzil
Amil, a researcher at Gadjah Mada University’s anti-graft study center, said he
could not be sure if the president had made the right choice.
“I know
several names,” he said, adding the public in general were not familiar with
the other names.

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