– Ramon Magsaysay Award Foundation
The Malaysian Insider
September 04, 2013
The Malaysian Insider
September 04, 2013
Corruption
is a social cancer. It undermines development, erodes public trust in
government, weakens the state, and infects the morals of society. It is an
urgent concern, particularly in developing nations that can ill afford its
cost. One such nation is Indonesia, for many years ranked among “the most
corrupt countries in the world.” Today, however, Indonesia has embarked on one
of the world’s most admired campaigns against corruption.
Rampant
and systemic corruption has long been a festering issue in Indonesia. Since the
1950s, the Indonesian government formed different anti-corruption bodies, but
these were mostly short-lived showcase pieces, sabotaged by the lack of serious
political will.
Then,
amid the collapse of the thirty-two year Soeharto regime, Indonesians decided
they had had enough, and resolved to take the problem by the horns. With the
initiative of civil society and pressure from international organizations, the
Indonesian government passed a law in 2002 creating Komisi Pemberantasan
Korupsi (KPK), or the Corruption Eradication Commission.
An
independent government body, KPK is enabled by a strongly-crafted law premised
on the conviction that corruption is an extraordinary problem that needs to be
tackled by extraordinary means.
Thus
KPK has a far-reaching mandate, exercising exceptional powers that range from
investigation and prosecution to prevention and the coordination of agencies
authorized to combat corruption. It can conduct searches and seizures, freeze
assets, impose travel bans, compel cooperation from government agencies, and
even intercept communications without prior judicial approval. Its powers are
such that a civic leader remarked, upon the law’s passage, that politicians
were “inviting a tiger into their house.”
But
KPK’s powers are not just prosecutorial; they are preventive as well. It
carries out audits on officials, undertakes public awareness campaigns, and
studies government management systems to reduce the potential for corruption.
Collectively
governed by five commissioners and with selected non-government representation,
KPK has undergone a process of institutional strengthening that has produced a
highly professional workforce, capacitated with cutting-edge technologies, and
governed by a strong internal code of ethics.
Its
accomplishments have been impressive. From 2003 to 2012, KPK has handled 332
high-profile cases involving top government officials; of these, 169 cases have
been processed in court, and KPK has chalked up an amazing one-hundred per cent
conviction rate.
From
2004 to 2010, KPK has returned to the state treasury recovered assets worth
Rp.805.6 billion, or more than US$80 million. Less spectacular but exceedingly
important are KPK’s preventive programmes.
It
has undertaken civil service reforms for greater accountability and
transparency, tightening rules on wealth reporting by public officials, closing
opportunities for corruption through changes in management and operational
systems, and setting up “integrity zones” in the bureaucracy as a way of
monitoring and grading government agencies.
For
the Indonesian public, anti-corruption education has been introduced at all
educational levels, and innovative campaigns have been undertaken, such as the
“honesty shops” — where customers pay for what they get by simply depositing
the appropriate amount in a box.
KPK
has had its crises, including harassment and intimidation, interagency feuds,
slashed budgets—and it is subject to the higher powers of the president and the
parliament. But KPK has also built up a formidable base of public support.
When
it locked horns with the national police, thousands staged public
demonstrations supporting KPK. When the parliament refused to allocate money
for a much-needed KPK building, Indonesian citizens voluntarily donated money
for the building construction.
Now
on its tenth year, KPK has become a symbol of reform and hope for Indonesians,
and is hailed as one of the few effective anti-corruption agencies in the
world.
In
electing Komisi Pemberantasan Korupsi to receive the 2013 Ramon Magsaysay
Award, the board of trustees recognises its fiercely independent and successful
campaign against corruption in Indonesia, combining the uncompromising
prosecution of erring powerful officials with farsighted reforms in governance
systems, and the educative promotion of vigilance, honesty and active
citizenship among all Indonesians. – www.rmaf.org.ph – September
4, 2013.
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