http://www.asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=3866&Itemid=202


      Indonesia's Games Mess        
      Written by Our Correspondent 

     
      Tuesday, 18 October 2011  
             
            Will that bird fly?? 
      Southeast Asian Games construction bribery a blot on the country’s 
reputation

      With hardly three weeks to go before the Southeast Asian Games are to 
open in Indonesia, they are turning into the wrong kind of symbol for a country 
supposedly coming into its own as a regional powerhouse. 

      Instead of a source of national pride, the games have become a national 
embarrassment riddled with corruption, delays and mismanagement that has nearly 
wrecked President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono’s Democratic Party and brought down 
a host of other officials and politicians. 

      With nearly 16,000 athletes and official scheduled to arrive on Nov. 11 
from across Southeast Asia, five venues remain to be completed and, officials 
say, may not be done by the time the games open. There are 666 different events 
in 56 sports scheduled for the 11-day games. 

      It now turns out that the Indonesian Navy may have to supply two ships to 
anchor offshore for housing because accommodations in the provincial capital of 
Palembang in Southern Sumatra are about 1,500 beds short. The athletes’ 
village, which has claimed the political careers of several of Yudhoyono’s 
party leaders on bribery charges, will only house 2,000 occupants. Another 
8,000 are expected to stay in other quarters in Palembang, with yet another 
4,500 filling all of the hotel rooms in the city. 

      Trillions of rupiah of taxpayer funds have been poured into building the 
games village and promoting the event. However, the venture began to go sour 
publicly last May when the Democratic Party’s treasurer, Muhammad Nazaruddin, 
hurriedly decamped for Singapore “for medical reasons” a day before he was due 
to be banned from traveling for allegedly accepting US$3 million in bribes on 
tenders for the construction of the village facilities. Nazaruddin was widely 
believed to have been tipped off that he was about to be arrested so as to get 
him out of the country and avoid implicating others, possibly up to include the 
president’s son, Eddie Baskoro Yudhoyono, according to Twitter and Facebook 
messages that suggested his involvement. 

      A flock of officials, including Sports Ministry Secretary Wafid Muharam 
and others, have been arrested for taking bribes. An indictment prepared in 
July by the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) named Mohamad El Idris, 
marketing manager for PT Duta Graha Indah, which had won the contract to build 
the village. Others included Democratic Party members Angelina Sondakh and 
Mirwan Amir, I Wayan Koster of the Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle 
(PDI-P); and South Sumatra Gov. Alex Noerdin. 

      While on the run, Nazaruddin repeatedly denied the corruption charges, 
remaining elusive and resisting blandishments by Yudhoyono and others seeking 
to lure him home to face up to the charges. He continued to issue a blizzard of 
statements from undisclosed locations via BlackBerry and Twitter on corruption 
scandals including allegations that the party chairman, Anas Urbangingrum – 
considered one of Yudhoyono’s reformers - was implicated in the athletes’ 
village bribery scandal and that the party chairman engaged in vote-buying. 

      Nazaruddin also brought the KPK itself, considered the country’s most 
incorruptible institution, under suspicion, saying that Urbaningrum had made a 
deal with Chandra M. Hamzah, the commission’s deputy chairman, to support his 
reelection to the KPK if Hamzah promised to protect party members – including 
Urbangingrum against questioning in the village case. KPK officials immediately 
said they would investigate Hamzah. 

      Nazaruddin was finally cornered in Venezuela and brought back by private 
jet to face questioning. He was said to be afraid to eat for fear he might be 
poisoned. 

      The scandal has spread beyond the Democratic Party, with members of the 
House of Representatives Budget Committee facing questioning as well, including 
Malchias Marcus Mekeng of Golkar, Olly Dondokambey of the Indonesian Democratic 
Party of Struggle and Tamsil Linrung of the Prosperous Justice Party. Mirwan, 
the budget committee deputy chairman, who was named by Nazaruddin as one of 
those who had allegedly assisted in rigging the bid for the contract for PT 
Duta Graha Indah for the village had already been named. 

      Private citizens have been caught up in the scandal as well, with 
stockbroker Mindo Rosalina Manulang being jailed for four years and businessman 
Muhammad El Idris for three and a half. The two were arrested in April after 
delivering Rp3.2 billion ($374,000) in checks to the ministry’s secretary, 
Wafid Muharram, who has been suspended. 

      Yudhoyono in July summoned 5,300 party members to a meeting in Jakarta to 
call for a cleanup of party ranks, saying that the party’s reputation, image 
and dignity had to come before anything else and called for party leaders to 
stop attacking each other. He pledged to lead a drive to get rid of members 
suspected of legal or ethical problems. 

      But given Indonesia’s culture of impunity, that is a big task, and one 
that an increasingly fed-up electorate doesn’t believe will be completed. As an 
indication of Yudhoyono’s failure to convince the electorate of his commitment, 
according to a poll by the Indonesia Survey Circle, only 12 percent of voters 
believe the current crop of politicians are doing a better job than those who 
were running the country under the former strongman Suharto, who was driven 
from office in 1998 after three decades in power. 

      The poll, completed in September among 1,200 respondents in all 33 
Indonesian provinces on how they regard their politicians, found that a 
majority -- 51 percent -- believe politicians are doing a poor or very poor 
job, with 25 percent not bothering to even comment. 

      Yudhoyono responded this week with a cabinet shakeup that analysts 
described as an attempt to improve his government’s waning popularity. He 
appointed the country’s popular investment chief Gita Wirjawan as the new trade 
minister, replacing E Mari Pangestu, The 46-year-old Wirjawan, an investment 
banker before he joined the government, is regarded as a hot political 
prospect. He founded Ancora Capital and was previously vice chairman and head 
of the Indonesia arm of the JP Morgan investment bank. 

      Yudhoyono also picked Dahlan Iskan, the chief executive officer of the 
state utility firm PLN to head the State-Owned Enterprise Ministry, replacing 
Mustafa Aubaka, who suffered a heart attack in August. Both Wirjawan and Iskan 
are regarded as reform-minded professionals. 

      Manpower Minister Muhamin is also expected to be switched or removed 
after thousands of dollars were recently found stuffed in a fruit box in his 
office, thought to be kickbacks from a migrant worker settlement project.
     


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