The Borneo Post

Indonesia watchdog says former CEO of airline Garuda a bribery suspect

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JAKARTA: Indonesia’s anticorrup­tion agency said it was treating the former chief executive of airline PT Garuda Indonesia Tbk as a suspect in a bribery case.

Indonesia’s Corruption Eradicatio­n Commission ( KPK) said in a statement the CEO of Garuda from 2005 to 2014 was suspected of taking bribes related to the purchase of planes and machines from Airbus and Rolls-Royce.

The KPK did not refer to the former CEO by name but, as is its custom, used initials – in this case ‘ESA’.

The CEO of Garuda from 2005 to 2014 was Emirsyah Satar, who is now chairman of Indonesian conglomera­te Lippo Group’s e- commerce platform MatahariMa­ll. com.

In a phone message to Reuters, Satar denied wrongdoing but said that it was the authority of the KPK to name him as a suspect and that he will respect the legal process.

“As far as I know, when I was the CEO of PT Garuda Indonesia, I had never done corrupt activities and I did not receive anything that was related to my position,” Satar said.

MatahariMa­ll said it supported the legal process in Indonesia, but declined further comment.

Rolls-Royce and Airbus did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

The KPK said it found evidence that ‘ESA’ had received 20 billion rupiah ( US$ 1.5 million) of cash and items worth US$ 2 million in Singapore and Indonesia from another suspect.

KPK chairman Agus Rahardjo said at a news briefing its probe was directed against individual­s, and would not affect Garuda’s operations.

Garuda’s vice president for corporate communicat­ion, Benny S. Butarbutar, said the airline would cooperate with the KPK, adding the investigat­ion “has no connection to our corporate activities”.

Garuda shares closed 2.3 percent lower on Thursday, underperfo­rming the broader market which was little changed.

They were down 0.6 per cent on Friday.

Rolls- Royce agreed to pay authoritie­s more than US$ 800 million to resolve charges of bribing officials in six countries in schemes that lasted more than a decade, the US Justice Department and Britain’s Serious Fraud Office (SFO) said in statements on Tuesday.

Britain’s SFO last year launched an investigat­ion into suspected fraud, bribery and corruption in some Airbus aeroplane sales, following discrepanc­ies found during an internal company audit of applicatio­ns for UK government export credits.

Neither the UK authoritie­s nor Airbus has said which airlines’ aircraft are affected by the probe. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Former Chief Executive Officer of Indonesia’s Garuda airline Emirsyah Satar, accompanie­d by airline crew, speaks to reporters during the airline’s initial public listing in Jakarta February 11, 2011. Indonesia’s anti-corruption agency said it was...
Former Chief Executive Officer of Indonesia’s Garuda airline Emirsyah Satar, accompanie­d by airline crew, speaks to reporters during the airline’s initial public listing in Jakarta February 11, 2011. Indonesia’s anti-corruption agency said it was...

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