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Jakarta Politician Backs Possible Suspension of Vice President, Finance 
Minister 

By TOM WRIGHT 
JAKARTA -- Aburizal Bakrie, a leading Indonesian politician, said the nation's 
vice president and finance minister should be suspended from duty if needed to 
give them time to participate in a special inquiry into a $700 million bank 
bailout last year.

"If (the suspension) is needed, then why not," Mr. Bakrie, chairman of the 
Golkar Party, which is leading the investigation, told state news agency Antara.

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Reuters 
Indonesian Vice President Boediono (pictured) and Finance Minister Sri Mulyani 
Indrawati deny any wrongdoing in the bailout of Bank Century, but say they are 
willing to cooperate with the investigation.

He questioned whether the officials would have sufficient time to answer the 
questions of the special parliamentary committee while performing their jobs, 
Antara said. A spokesman for Mr. Bakrie confirmed the comments. The 
investigation began Dec. 1 and is expected to last two months.

Vice President Boediono and Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati have been 
the subjects in recent weeks of a parliamentary investigation into the bailout 
of Bank Century in November 2008. Ms. Sri Mulyani oversaw the bailout as 
finance minister; Mr. Boediono was head of the central bank at the time.

Backers of the probe, led by the Golkar Party, say the bailout was done without 
legal authority. Ms. Sri Mulyani and Mr. Boediono say the bailout was legal and 
necessary to stop a run on other banks at the time of global financial 
weakness. Both deny any wrongdoing but say they are willing to cooperate with 
the investigation.

Fighting Corruption in Indonesia
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Baso Ballang/Associated Press 
Scores of students, including this one, armed with rocks and wooden planks 
clashed with anti-riot police and vandalized commercial buildings at a rally in 
Makassar, the South Sulawesi provincial capital, 1,000 miles northeast of 
Jakarta.

  a.. More photos and interactive graphics 

A spokesman for Mr. Boediono, who was elected as President Susilo Bambang 
Yudhoyono's running mate earlier this year, said Mr. Boediono had no intention 
of stepping down as there was no evidence of wrongdoing in the bailout.

"We are concerned that any monetary and economic policy decision-making is now 
being used by the opposition to make baseless accusations of corrupt actions," 
said the spokesman, Yopie Hidayat. Ms. Sri Mulyani has also said she has no 
intention of stepping aside.

Other senior government officials involved in the bailout say the probe was 
legal and needed to restore confidence among depositors.

This was the first time Mr. Bakrie, one of the nation's most powerful 
politicians and wealthiest businessmen, has suggested the pair may need to step 
down during the probe, although other Golkar Party members have been calling 
for their suspension.

Mr. Bakrie's comments came after Ms. Sri Mulyani said in an interview with The 
Wall Street Journal that Mr. Bakrie and the Golkar Party are using the probe to 
try to unseat her because they don't agree with reforms she has pushed through 
aimed at rooting out corruption.

A Golkar Party leader behind the probe said Ms. Sri Mulyani wasn't being 
targeted.

Ms. Sri Mulyani also said relations between herself and Mr. Bakrie have 
deteriorated in recent years. Mr. Bakrie denied there are any tensions between 
them.

Write to Tom Wright at tom.wri...@wsj.com 


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