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Hasyim Widhiarto , The Jakarta Post , Jakarta | Thu, 11/05/2009 3:41 PM | Jakarta

Most famous caddy: Rani Juliani, key witness in high-profile trial involving former Corruption Eradication Commission chairman Antasari Azhar, finally shows up to give her first testimony to a court hearing in South Jakarta on Thursday. Antara/Prasetyo UtomoMost famous caddy: Rani Juliani, key witness in high-profile trial involving former Corruption Eradication Commission chairman Antasari Azhar, finally shows up to give her first testimony to a court hearing in South Jakarta on Thursday. Antara/Prasetyo Utomo

Rhani Juliani, the key witness in high-profile trial involving former anti-graft body leader Antasari Azhar, finally showed up to give her first testimony to a hearing Thursday.

Wearing a black blazer and trouser, Rhani, 22, arrived at 2 p.m. at the South Jakarta District Court under tight security from dozens of police officers, preventing journalists getting too close to her.

She was directed to the court's main courtroom to appear at a scheduled closed hearing.

Presiding judge Herri Swantoro, at a previous hearing, had ordered that Rhani's testimony would be heard in a closed courtroom upon consideration that they would be cross-checking facts on the alleged sexual affair between the defendant and the witness.





Rhani's most-awaited testimony will prove whether the alleged revenge motive behind Nasruddin murder is true or not.

Antasari, former chairman of the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK), is currently on trial for allegedly masterminding the murder of Nasruddin Zulkarnaen, a director of state pharmaceutical company PT Putra Rajawali Banjaran.

Nasruddin, to whom Rhani was married, was killed in a drive-by shooting near Modernland golf course in Tangerang in March this year.

Rhani used to work as a golf caddy at Modernland, usually caddying for the golf course's prominent members, including Antasari and Nasruddin.

In their indictment, the prosecutors had recounted details of a sexual affair between Nasruddin's third wife Rhani Juliani and Antasari. Nasruddin had caught the pair in flagrante delicto in a room at the Grand Mahakam Hotel in South Jakarta in May last year and had later hounded Antasari's family over the affair.

The prosecutors believed that this had triggered Antasari to have Nasruddin killed.







Pandaya , The Jakarta Post , Jakarta | Thu, 11/05/2009 9:54 AM | Headlines

Still on the defensive from heavy attacks over the bizarre arrest of two Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) deputies, the Yudhoyono administration is bracing itself for yet another front.

The budding challenge is a threat from an alliance of legislators, mostly those from political parties which refused to join Yudhoyono’s grand coalition government, to hold an inquiry into the Rp 6.7 trillion (US$699 million) in taxpayers’ money used to bail out Bank Century.

In the forefront are legislators from the Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P), who have formed their own investigative team and put the planned inquiry on its first-100-day list of priority programs.

On the bandwagon are House legislators from smaller opposition parties, the Great Indonesia Movement Party (Gerindra), the People’s Conscience Party (Hanura) and quite a number of lawmakers from the Golkar Party, which is part of Yudhoyono’s coalition.

The PDI-P party has claimed that, as of last week, 200 legislators from various political parties in the House have signed up for the inquiry — way higher than the 25 petitioners the law requires for such a motion.

The inquiry, if it does materialize, would force the government to disclose the mystery surrounding the bailout that could provide strong ammunition to take the scandal to justice but is not likely to lead to the President’s impeachment.

The government’s rescue of the crumbling private bank has erupted into a political scandal due to the bailout fund’s exponential upward revision, from the initially estimated Rp 1.7 trillion the House approved, to a whopping Rp 6.7 trillion.

You may wonder what you can spend if you wake up and find Rp 6.7 trillion transferred to your bank account — it is a lot, really. By comparison, the government spent “only” Rp 100 billion in emergency funds for victims of the recent devastating earthquake in West Sumatra.

Bank Indonesia and Finance Ministry officials made quite a scene when they openly blamed each other for the outrage. Many people have demanded the authorities look into the possibility of a conspiracy between the owners and corrupt officials to defraud the bank.

The government insists that Bank Century’s survival needed emergency measures and closure would have only triggered a catastrophic domino effect in the country’s banking system. But this explanation raises more questions than answers.

Critics have been questioning if the small bank really deserved the suspiciously gargantuan sum of money that could have been put into more urgent and productive areas, with Indonesia reeling from the global financial crisis.

The massive bailout has given rise to rumors the government had refused to shut down the ailing bank instead because many relatives and financier cronies of top government officials would have lost their huge deposits there.

Under the Indonesian banking laws, the state can only provide Rp 2 billion as a maximum guarantee.

Also under public scrutiny is whether Bank Indonesia, as the controller, effectively monitored the bailout. Appropriate assessments could have either saved the bank or at least minimized the funds that the state had made available to make it healthy.







The bailout saga has been investigated by the Supreme Audit Agency (BPK) over the past several months. It submitted its interim report to the House of Representatives on Sept. 28 and promised to complete the audit by the end of the year.

From the provisional report, House legislators said they had found criminal evidence surrounding the disputed bailout, such as funds being illegally funneled, inconsistency of statistical data and apparent slackness of supervision by BI.

Advocates of the inquiry have been split over when they should summon the President (or his representatives) to answer lawmakers’ questions on the bailout, which could hamper Yudhoyono’s effort to achieve his own first-100-day targets.

Some opt to wait until the BPK completes its report but the PDI-P insists the inquiry should start as soon as possible.

With 200 lawmakers already signing up, as the PDI-P claims, let’s not be dazzled by the statistics.

Over the past five years, House legislators have attempted numerous such enquiries and pro-government legislators would shoot all of them down.

Now that the 560-member House is dominated by Yudhoyono’s Democratic Party which coalesces with an army of Islamic parties and the Golkar Party, the situation may stay the same. The inquiry motion was tumultuous, as it began as if the country was bracing for a revolution, but after the House politicians assembled for a decision, nothing happened.

This time, the move is sure adding to the pressure for the Yudho-yono regime to honor its promise to fight crippling corruption and will become a test case for the new legislators to prove their commitment to defending the public interest.









The Jakarta Post , Jakarta | Thu, 11/05/2009 11:21 AM | Special Report

Cabinet whisper: State Secretary Sudi Silalahi (center) whispers to National Police chief Gen. Bambang Hendarso Danuri (left) and Attorney General Hendarman Supandji before a Cabinet meeting on Thursday. After the meeting, Bambang Hendarso and Hendarman announced that National Police detective chief Susno Duadjo and Deputy Attorney General Abdul Hakim Ritonga had tendered their resignations. Antara/Widodo S. JusufCabinet whisper: State Secretary Sudi Silalahi (center) whispers to National Police chief Gen. Bambang Hendarso Danuri (left) and Attorney General Hendarman Supandji before a Cabinet meeting on Thursday. After the meeting, Bambang Hendarso and Hendarman announced that National Police detective chief Susno Duadjo and Deputy Attorney General Abdul Hakim Ritonga had tendered their resignations. Antara/Widodo S. Jusuf

Having come under public scrutiny for his alleged role in a plot to frame two Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) leaders, Deputy Attorney General Abdul Hakim Ritonga and National Police Detective Chief Comr. Gen. Susno Duadji have tendered their resignation.

Attorney General Hendarman Supandji and National Police chief Gen. Bambang Hendarso Danuri confirmed their subordinates' resignation on Thursday.





“Yesterday he told me that he wanted to resign. He planned to submit the [resignation] letter today,” Hendarman told reporters at before attending a Cabinet meeting at the State Palace in Jakarta.

“He told me that if he is considered a burden for the [Attorney General's Office] institution, then he opts to resign,” Hendarman said.

Hendarman also said that he would assign one Assistant Attorney General to temporarily take Ritonga's seat.

Bambang also said similar things, saying that Susno had tendered his resignation to allow the fact finding team work freely and investigate the alleged criminalization of Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) deputy chairmen.

Ritonga and Susno's names were mentioned in a recorded telephone conversation with Anggodo Widjojo – a brother of graft suspect Anggoro Widjojo – on the plot to frame KPK deputy chiefs Bibit Samad Rianto and Chandra M. Hamzah in criminal cases.

KPK deputies Chandra Hamzah and Bibit Samad Rianto have been named suspects in bribery and power abuse cases in relation to Anggoro.


source: http://thejakartapost.com





Magnitude-6.4 quake rattles Jakarta

The Jakarta Post , Jakarta | Fri, 10/16/2009 5:42 PM | National

Aftershock: Workers gather at the open space outside a high rise building on Jl. Thamrin, Central Jakarta, on Friday after a 6.4-magnitude earthquake jolted the western tip of Java. Antara/Andika Wahyu

Aftershock: Workers gather at the open space outside a high rise building on Jl. Thamrin, Central Jakarta, on Friday after a 6.4-magnitude earthquake jolted the western tip of Java. Antara/Andika Wahyu







An earthquake measuring 6.4 on the Richter scale was felt in Jakarta at about 5 p.m. on Friday. This was the second strong temblor in as many months to be felt in the capital.

According to data from the Meteorology, Climatology and Geophysics Agency, the epicenter of the quake was in the Sunda Strait, about 42 kilometers northwest of Ujung Kulon in Banten province, around 185 kilometers southwest of Jakarta, at a depth of 55 kilometers beneath the ocean floor.

The tremor was also felt in Tanjung Karang in Lampung, and in Bandung.

No immediate tsunami warnings were issued following the quake.

The earthquake stirred a panic among people working in Jakarta’s high-rise buildings, who scrambled for fire stairs seeking safety.

Jakarta was also shaken by a magnitude-7.3 quake on Sept. 2, which devastated areas on West Java’s southern coast.



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