The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Suspected of graft, parliament speaker under guard in hospital

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JAKARTA: Indonesian anti-graft investigat­ors have put the speaker of parliament, who they have identified as a suspect in a US$170 million corruption case, under armed guard in hospital after he was involved in a car accident, his lawyer said yesterday.

Officers from the Corruption Eradicatio­n Commission (KPK) tried to arrest Setya Novanto, the chairman of Golkar, Indonesia’s second-largest party and partner in the ruling coalition, at his house in Jakarta.

But the investigat­ors, watched by television cameras, failed to find him, sparking speculatio­n that he had gone into hiding.

The KPK is investigat­ing state losses amounting to about US$170 million linked to a national electronic identity card scheme after allegation­s that sums ranging from US$5,000 to US$5.5 million – generated by marking up procuremen­t costs – were divided up among politician­s in parliament.

Novanto was named a suspect in the case again last week after he had used a controvers­ial legal manoeuvre, a pre-trial motion, to get earlier charges dropped last month. He has denied wrongdoing but has repeatedly missed summonses from the KPK for questionin­g in recent months, saying he was ill and needed to undergo heart surgery.

Reports emerged that Novanto was involved in a car accident while on his way to turn himself in at KPK headquarte­rs.

Novanto’s lawyer, Fredrich Yunadi, said a journalist was driving the vehicle and interviewi­ng his client at the time of the accident.

“(The driver) was looking back and looking to the side, so he wasn’t concentrat­ing on what was in front of him,” Yunadi said.

Novanto was now ‘very ill’ with head and hand injuries, Yunadi said.

“He can’t even get up yet. He can’t talk yet, it’s just his eyes – when he opens his eyes the ceiling swirls in circles.”

The lawyer said armed KPK officers were guarding Novanto and had ignored requests to leave. Novanto was taken to a second hospital yesterday for a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan, media reported.

Novanto gained a measure of internatio­nal fame in 2015 when then US presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump hailed the Indonesian politician as a ‘great man’ during a news conference.

“Do they like me in Indonesia?” Trump asked after introducin­g Novanto to reporters at Trump Tower. “Yes, highly,” Novanto replied.

Indonesian newspapers splashed pictures across their front pages of a black sport utility vehicle that Novanto was said to have been travelling in. It was resting against an electricit­y pole, and appeared to have suffered only minor damage to the front fender.

Febri Diansyah, a KPK spokesman, said the crash happened shortly after the agency had asked the national police chief and Interpol to place Novanto on a wanted list.

The KPK would liaise with doctors to see if Novanto was ‘fit to stand trial’ and would continue its investigat­ion, Febri told Inews TV. Yunadi has said a request for another pre-trial motion had been filed on behalf of his client. — Reuters

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 ??  ?? Fredrich, the lawyer for Novanto, shows a picture of Novanto being treated in a hospital following a car accident in Jakarta, Indonesia. — Reuters photo
Fredrich, the lawyer for Novanto, shows a picture of Novanto being treated in a hospital following a car accident in Jakarta, Indonesia. — Reuters photo

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