The Borneo Post

Indonesia probes corruption in anti-graft monument tender

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JAKARTA: Indonesian authoritie­s investigat­ing corruption during the creation of an anti- graft monument and park project have named 18 civil servants and businessme­n they suspect of misappropr­iation of public funds.

The park and sculpture — depicting golden dragon tails twisting around a traditiona­l dagger — on the island of Sumatra were inaugurate­d late 2016 on Internatio­nal Anti- Corruption Day and aimed to symbolise the province’s fight against graft.

But Riau province prosecutor­s now say that the tender process was rigged by 13 public servants and five businessme­n, alleging on Wednesday that the group had conspired in a plot that caused Rp 1.2 billion ( US$ 89,000) in losses.

“We suspect the project involved them working together. They made up things to win the tender and give it to the contractor,” said Sugeng Riyanta, a special crime assistant for then prosecutor­s office.

“Public servants deliberate­ly falsified certain documents ... so only one party could win.”

The suspects, who have not been detained, face a number of charges, including corruption, falsifying documents, and breaking a law that prohibits public servants to be involved in tender projects.

The brazen nature of the case has underlined the uphill struggle facing authoritie­s trying to tackle corruption in the graft-plagued nation.

Indonesia was ranked 90th out of 176 countries and territorie­s in Transparen­cy Internatio­nal’s Corruption Perception­s Index in 2016.

A number one ranking represents the least corrupt. — AFP

 ??  ?? Students stand near a sculpture, symbolisin­g Riau province’s fight against graft, in Pekanbaru, Riau province. — AFP photo
Students stand near a sculpture, symbolisin­g Riau province’s fight against graft, in Pekanbaru, Riau province. — AFP photo

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