Skip to main content

Gayus Tambunan - The Prisoner who thrill Indonesia law

THE appearance of Indonesia's most notorious corrupt tax official, Gayus Tambunan, in an ill-fitting wig at a Bali tennis tournament has illustrated, in absurd relief, the entrenched culture of graft in the country.

Mr Gayus is a mid-level tax official who, despite a modest monthly salary of $1400, amassed a $3.2 million fortune.

He came to national fame when he was mysteriously acquitted of corruption charges in March. It later emerged that he had paid the judges, prosecutors and police huge sums to get the charge reduced to a minor embezzlement offence, which was then dismissed.

Mr Gayus was promptly arrested, along with, curiously, the man who alerted the public to the affair, senior police officer Susno Duadji. Mr Susno was pinged for another alleged corrupt deal involving a fish farm, although it was widely viewed as payback for his whistleblowing.
But, not deterred with twice being caught making corrupt payments, or the fact he is one of the most high-profile prisoners in Indonesia, Mr Gayus confessed on Monday that he had paid more than $40,000 to be allowed to walk out of prison, reportedly on 68 occasions.

It was an admission that was slow in coming, prompted when a man resembling Mr Gayus in a wig and glasses was photographed by the Jakarta Globe newspaper at the Tournament of Champions tennis tournament in Bali almost two weeks ago.

Suggestions it was Mr Gayus were dismissed by the police as ''totally groundless'' . On Monday, Mr Gayus came clean, breaking down in tears before a panel of judges at his reconvened court case.

''To put an end to this polemic, I admit that the man in Bali was me,'' he said. ''I have been so stressed since being detained and I thought I would take a little vacation because I also saw that several other high-profile detainees were allowed to leave.''

The trip to Bali included a three-night stay at the luxury Westin Hotel in Nusa Dua for My Gayus, his wife and seven-year-old son.

The confession prompted Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono to demand a full briefing on the case yesterday, saying that it was ''tainting'' the country's reputation.

His officials are promising a full and transparent investigation and prosecution of the guards. But anti-corruption activists say they have heard it all before.

''It's just the tip of the iceberg,'' said Donal Fariz from Indonesian Corruption Watch, adding that most of the large companies, senior police and prosecutors identified by Mr Gayus as bribing him have not been prosecuted.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Greenpeace boycott Palm oil products Duta Palma

Environmental organization Greenpeace India has demanded that all Indian palm oil importers and corporate consumers immediately stop palm oil sourcing from Indonesian companies like Duta Palma who make palm oil by destroying forests and tiger habitat in Indonesia. An investigative report issued by Greenpeace Indonesia released on Thursday links India's growing palm oil imports and corporate apathy to Duta Palma's destruction of hundreds of acres of Indonesian rainforests and tiger habitat in complete disregard of Indonesian government&# 39;s moratorium on such activities in the rainforest. Big Indian corporates like Ruchi Soya, Adani -Wilmar, Godrej Industries, Parle, Britannia are among many who use Indonesian palm oil in their products on a large scale.  "Duta Palma's dirty oil could well be entering into their supply chains. Yet, so far, no Indian company has taken any visible steps to clean up their supply chain, to delink their brands from the ...

Blasphemy in the name of religion

The Asian Legal Resource Centre (ALRC) wishes to bring the attention of the Human Rights Council (HRC) to violations of the right to the freedom of expression and opinion that are being engendered through the use of Indonesia’s legal provisions prohibiting blasphemy. Religious blasphemy is prohibited in Indonesia under Law No. 1/PNPS/1965, with such provisions also being later adopted within the Penal Code (KUHP) under Article 156a. Paragraph (a) of this article uses vague language, which opens the door to abusive uses of this provision, to prohibit any acts and expression of views considered to be blasphemous, and carries a maximum punishment of five years imprisonment. A similar maximum punishment is also carried by paragraph (b) of the article, which prohibits any acts and expression of views calling for others to embrace atheism. Alexander Aan is an atheist currently undergoing a trial at the Muaro Sijunjung District Court, West Sumatra. According to his lawyers from ...

Debate Islam in Indonesia

http://www.thejakar taglobe.com/ opinion/interloc utors-of- indonesian- islam/560447 Interlocutors of Indonesian Islam Ahmad Najib Burhani | December 08, 2012 A few months ago, the Japanese anthropologist Mitsuo Nakamura told me that studying Nahdlatul Ulama as an organization was beyond the imagination of any American scholar from the 1950s to the ’70s. But he is not the only academic to have noticed this. George McT. Kahin of Cornell University stated the same thing. Even NU-expert Martin van Bruinessen was not expecting to study NU as his primary focus when he came to Indonesia for the first time in the 1980s.   During the early decades of Indonesian independence, NU was relatively unorganized and its management was largely based on the authority of religious teachers ( kyai ). Of course there were a number of scholars who studied NU-affiliated religious schools ( pesantren ) and its kyai, but not NU as an organization.   Even though NU was one of the ...