[list_indonesia] [ppiindia] Aceh aid a test for corruption capers

  • From: "Ambon" <sea@xxxxxxxxxx>
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  • Date: Mon, 28 Mar 2005 23:15:00 +0200

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http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/GC29Ae04.html
Mar 29, 2005 
   
Aceh aid a test for corruption capers
By Bill Guerin 

JAKARTA - Indonesia, ranked among the world's most corrupt countries, is ready 
to start rebuilding its tsunami-devastated northernmost province of Aceh. 

The National Planning Agency (Bappenas) released its reconstruction master plan 
over the weekend. Set out in 12 published volumes, the plan covers four main 
areas - restoring livelihoods, restoring the economy, restoring infrastructure 
and last, but hardly least, restoring local government. 

With more than US$4.4 billion already pledged from abroad, not including 
private and corporate donations, to pay for the mammoth reconstruction task, 
concerns are mounting that some of the donations will end up in the wrong 
pockets, particularly after the imminent departure of several foreign groups. 

Implementation of the plan - to be tasked to a new Aceh Rehabilitation and 
Reconstruction Management Board appointed by a presidential decree and ensuring 
full accountability for each dollar spent under intense domestic and 
international scrutiny - will test to the full President Susilo Bambang 
Yudhoyono's commitment and ability to fight corruption. 

Only days after the disaster struck last December, Speaker of the People's 
Consultative Assembly Hidayat Nurwahid warned the government that it must 
ensure that aid did not end up in the hands of corrupt officials with a 
propensity to "fish for great catches in murky waters". 

Former US presidents Bill Clinton and George H W Bush also raised the 
corruption issue in a February meeting with Yudhoyono, who assured them that 
Indonesia would channel aid funds in a transparent, effective way. 

Not just Indonesia
The Massachusetts-based Kurtzman Group has studied corruption in several 
countries and pointed out that Indonesia is not alone. India, where hundreds of 
villages were destroyed and thousands of people killed by the tsunami, ranks 
42nd in its study of 48 countries. India has extremely high levels of 
corruption, serious problems with regard to transparency, and inadequate 
financial regulation, the group said. It does not overstate the case to add 
that some Indian officials have been siphoning off aid money for decades. 

Malaysia, ranked No 22, and Thailand, at No 23, scored much better in the study 
than Indonesia and India, but both are far from corruption-free. Getting things 
done in these two countries often requires "facilitation payments", or bribes, 
said Kurtzman. And once those bribes are requested, there is very little that 
can be done to stop them. 

United Nations deputy special envoy Erskine Bowles warned that problems should 
be expected as the recovery period begins. "Any time you have a disaster 
affecting this many people you would have some isolated incidents of money not 
ending up where it was intended to," he said in Aceh on Friday. 

Obstacle course
Though graft is somewhat of an industry in Indonesia, where many officials view 
public office as a vehicle for private gain, would-be corruptors appear to face 
a much more serious obstacle course than normal in trying to misappropriate 
funds intended for reconstruction. 

The Supreme Audit Agency (BPK) is working with international groups to 
supervise and monitor aid flows, US accountants Ernst & Young have been 
retained by the Indonesian government to audit foreign aid, and the 
Anti-Corruption Commission (KPK) is to monitor reconstruction to ensure that 
funds are not misused. 

KPK chairman Taufiqqurochman Ruki said all projects in the government's 
blueprint must undergo formal tender procedures and warned that KPK will expose 
any irregularities that inflict losses on the state. "We demand accountability 
and transparency, including from the foreign donors that are helping the 
Indonesian government, so the public will know how much [aid money] has been 
gathered and how the funds are being used," he said. 

More than 115 legislative council members have been implicated in corruption 
cases in 16 provinces - Aceh, North and South Sumatra, West Sumatra, Jambi, 
Bengkulu, Riau, Jakarta, Central Java, South Sulawesi, Bali, East Nusa 
Tenggara, South, Central and East Kalimantan, and Papua. Aceh has long been 
seen as one of Indonesia's most corrupt provinces. The ongoing operation to 
quell the separatist Free Aceh Movement, or GAM, had in essence left local 
authority in the hands of the military (TNI), an institution that has been 
blamed for much of the endemic corruption in Aceh. 

In 2003, Rp4.06 trillion ($429.5 million) was allocated to military operations 
in that province - about three times the annual provincial budget. However, a 
state-appointed auditor later found that some $291 million had gone missing. 

KPK was established in the same year, and, unlike previous anti-graft bodies, 
was given the power to prosecute. Its first big hit came with the arrest of 
Aceh Governor Abdullah Puteh, who is currently under detention and awaiting 
trial at the Anti-Corruption Court. Puteh is accused of "self-enrichment" over 
the purchase of a Russian helicopter in 2002. 

Ruki has warned that mismanagement and further corruption could boost support 
for GAM. "I hope that projects will proceed well and correctly, so as to be 
able to turn off or completely curb the Acehnese people's separatism." 

All displaced civilians and civil servants in Aceh must be registered to 
prevent any parties from exaggerating their losses in an effort to gain more 
funds, he added. 

Global graft watchdog lends a helping hand
Berlin-based Transparency International (TI), a global corruption watchdog, in 
a statement titled "Corruption Issues in the Tsunami Relief Effort and 
Post-Tsunami Reconstruction", asked rhetorically: Should the fact that 
Indonesia is perceived to be the fifth-most corrupt country (according to its 
rank in TI's own Corruption Perceptions Index), be just cause to prohibit aid, 
or certain types of aid, to the country after the tsunami tragedy? 

According to TI, the answer is no. The new government should not be condemned 
because of high corruption levels in the past, it said, and argued that what is 
most important are the policies of the current government, in particular, the 
level of political will to practice good governance and introduce 
anti-corruption reforms. 

TI worked with Bappenas on the master plan. The group's deputy executive 
director in Indonesia, Leonard Simanjuntak, said TI has already found "some 
irregularities, such as in the construction of barracks, some mark-ups on the 
prices and numbers ... coming from some of the government institutions". 

He warned of the tendency for certain officials to claim that, as this is an 
emergency and the situation is not normal, some precautionary procedures can be 
put aside. As a result, government agencies might have become careless about 
normal accounting procedures, making it easier for irregularities to occur, 
Simanjuntak said. 

Knowing this, he argued that TI cooperation with Bappenas should continue. "We 
also try to influence them, so we're involved in the working groups on 
transparency and accountability and try to produce mechanisms and procedures 
for accountability and transparency, including auditing procedures, supervision 
procedures," Simanjuntak explained. 

Post tsunami shock and awe
President Yudhoyono, who was elected on an anti-corruption mandate, launched a 
major anti-graft drive in December, urging government officials to avoid family 
businesses and ensure transparency in all state affairs. On the same day, the 
KPK signed an agreement with the country's 33 provincial governors under which 
they pledged to report their wealth and support the commission's efforts to 
curb corrupt practices. 

"The level of corruption in our country is very alarming, and I urge every 
state official to lead by example in fighting corruption," Yudhoyono said. 

Even if the pre-aid-fund-flow optimism and downplaying of the likelihood of 
serious graft occurring were to be misplaced, and foreign aid money is abused, 
there is still a potential upside available for Yudhoyono should he decide on a 
full shock-and-awe attack on the culprits, regardless of favor and political 
standing. 

There could be very positive spinoffs for a country that has seen five leaders 
since 1998. Yudhoyono is the first leader to come to power with a pro-business 
agenda, though the president has said it will be impossible to eradicate 
corruption, collusion and nepotism if people in the government and the business 
community continue with "the old ways of doing business". 

Conversely, if corruptors are quickly arrested and put on trial, that could 
signal meaningful progress on stamping out bureaucratic corruption and other 
hindrances to badly needed foreign investment. Indonesia could then truly claim 
to be open for business. 

But perhaps it's best to refer to what UN envoy Bowles said when summing up the 
positive aspects of the first three months of the relief effort: "Yes, there 
have been glitches; yes, there have been mistakes; yes, we have taken two steps 
back, four steps forward - that is going to happen in a disaster of this 
magnitude. But we have accomplished a great deal." 
Bill Guerin, a Jakarta correspondent for Asia Times Online since 2000, has 
worked in Indonesia for 19 years in journalism and editorial positions. He has 
been published by the BBC on East Timor and specializes in business/economic 
and political analysis in Indonesia. 


(Copyright 2005 Asia Times Online Ltd. All rights reserved. Please contact us 
for information on sales, syndication and republishing.)



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