http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/world/bailout-vote-crisis-for-susilo-bambang-yudhoyono/story-e6frg6so-1225837122900


Bailout vote crisis for Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono 
Stephen Fitzpatrick 
From: The Australian 
March 05, 2010 12:00AM 

INDONESIAN politics was in uproar yesterday after a parliamentary vote on the 
controversial Bank Century bailout revealed almost all support had ebbed from 
President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono's ruling coalition. 

After a marathon sitting, the house declared by 325 votes to 212 on Wednesday 
night that last year's 6.7 trillion rupiah (about $800 million) bailout was 
illegal. Dr Yudhoyono's Democrat Party and the uninfluential National Mandate 
Party of former "reformasi" hero Amien Rais had been the only ones pushing a 
resolution backing the bank rescue deal.

However, despite wild fisticuffs on the floor of the house preceding the 
decision, and a sense of gloom pervading analysts' views of it yesterday, there 
were also warnings that the development was "entirely meaningless".

"This has no legal import whatsoever, and is simply an argument that the people 
in the (parliament) are having with themselves," said Australian academic and 
Indonesia law specialist Tim Lindsey. "(The process) is not affecting (Dr 
Yudhoyono's) popularity at all."

The President was due to address the nation late last night with an assessment 
of the resolution, which came after almost four months of parliamentary 
hearings into the rescue.

Dr Yudhoyono is unlikely to take any significant action against those coalition 
members who sided against his Democrats, as voting on the floor of the 
Indonesian parliament is not restricted along party lines. And any formal split 
in the ruling coalition would be largely symbolic, as voting on significant 
future legislation would come down to individual members' preferences.

The vote could signal a turning point in Dr Yudhoyono's ability to dictate 
government on his own terms, with a largely technocratic cabinet not overly 
restricted by coalition member demands.

The long-running Bank Century probe had turned its spotlight squarely on 
Vice-President Boediono, who was Reserve Bank governor when the bailout 
decision was taken, and on Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati.

Although the bank was a second-string financial institution, its failure could 
have sent the system into freefall, they and others told the inquiry.

There is a distant possibility the vote could now prompt criminal 
investigations against these two, although the Corruption Eradication 
Commission -- the body which would prosecute such a matter -- has given no 
indication that it plans to focus on them.

There are also calls for Dr Indrawati to be stood aside, and for Professor 
Boediono to be impeached. However, the latter course is extremely unlikely, as 
it would have to be endorsed by the Constitutional Court.

Professor Lindsey warned that sacrificing Professor Boediono or Dr Indrawati 
would be "catastrophic", leading to a sharp decline in foreign investor 
confidence and indicating Dr Yudhoyono was in thrall to coalition demands

Related Coverage
  a.. Indonesia coalition rocked by split The Australian, 1 day ago
  b.. Anti-corruption protests turn violent Adelaide Now, 9 Dec 2009
  c.. SBY faces grilling on graft allegations The Australian, 23 Nov 2009
  d.. Bank rescue taints SBY's re-election campaign The Australian, 20 Nov 2009
  e.. Indonesia's gecko-gate The Australian, 19 Nov 2009




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