The Star Malaysia

Mission to safeguard democracy

Largest party in parliament eyes probe into alleged election irregulari­ties

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the biggest party in indonesia’s parliament is seeking a legislativ­e investigat­ion into alleged violations around this month’s presidenti­al election and plans also to file a case with a top court, a senior party official said.

the indonesian Democratic party of struggle (pdip) backed Ganjar pranowo for the presidency, who finished a distant third behind Defence Minister prabowo subianto, the clear winner of the Feb 14 election according to unofficial vote tallies and an ongoing preliminar­y count by the poll body.

“We found there was abuse of power, ranging from legal aspects to the use of state facilities,” pdip secretary General hasto Kristiyant­o said, without providing specifics or evidence to support the allegation.

the presidenti­al palace did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment on the allegation­s or the planned investigat­ion.

Despite various accusation­s by parties, none have provided specifics or details of the scale of the alleged violations.

though the Constituti­onal Court typically handles election disputes, indonesia’s parliament has the power to investigat­e government policy or implementa­tion of certain regulation­s and can examine the conduct of public officials, including the president.

hasto said pdip and other backers of Ganjar would file a case over alleged electoral irregulari­ties with the Constituti­onal Court, but gave no timeframe. he said the investigat­ion aimed to safeguard democracy.

“if we did not do this comprehens­ive correction, then what’s the point of having an election in the future?” he said, adding pdip did not intend to impeach president Joko Widodo, better known as Jokowi.

parliament reconvenes next month and for a probe to be launched, it must be approved by more than half of legislator­s present at a plenary session.

prabowo looks to have swept the Feb 14 election in his third attempt at the presidency, with almost 60% of the votes tallied, boosted by the tacit backing of Jokowi, who has faced mounting allegation­s of ethical breaches and meddling, which his allies deny.

prabowo also ran on a ticket with Jokowi’s son, owing to a last-minute decision by the Constituti­onal Court, headed by the president’s brother-in-law, to change election eligibilit­y rules.

pdip’s plan is backed by another pro-ganjar party and has the support also of three parties that endorsed second-placed finisher, Anies Baswedan. if combined, those constitute a majority, with 314 of 575 seats.

in a report on indonesia’s election last week, poll monitor the Asian network for Free elections noted widespread concerns about the independen­ce of the election commission and mobilisati­on and misuse of state resources to sway voter preference­s, adding “it would be of a disservice to the electoral stakeholde­rs” if those were to go unaddresse­d.

hermawi taslim, a top official of nasdem, which backed Anies, said his party supported pdip’s plan.

“the probe is needed so the upcoming government is legitimate,” he added. — Reuters

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