Defined
broadly as the misuse of power by a public official for private gains,
corruption has characterized every administration ever since this country was
born 71 years ago, despite differing modus operandi and actors.
Simply put, corruption has become
entrenched in our daily lives regardless of the various efforts to combat it.
The failure to eradicate corruption indicates a fundamental problem with the
anticorruption strategy we have implemented.
The easiest way to place blame in our
inability to beat corruption may lie with the lack of political will. It is
true that every administration — Joko “Jokowi” Widodo’s is no exception — the
deficit of political will has contributed to the emergence of bad governance.
It took Jokowi, for instance, almost one
year to resolve the latest standoff between the police and the Corruption
Eradication Commission (KPK). As a result, there has been a significant decline
in the number of cases the KPK has managed to unveil. At the same time, Jokowi
also has missed the opportunity to tackle police corruption as his political
gesture was not in favor of the KPK and the public in general during the
conflict.
However, in order to correctly analyze the
groundwork of our anticorruption campaign we need to elaborate in what way does
political will not exist and is there any country whose political leader does
show ambition in cracking down on corruption. For the latter, we can easily
refer to neighboring Singapore, which since 1985 has always scored high on the
Transparency International’s Corruption Perception Index (CPI). Among Asian
countries, Singapore is always perceived as the least corrupt.
However, in fact, corruption used to
threaten Singapore when under British rule as widespread bribery involved
police officers, custom officials and public servants. Corruption was
practically the way of life of the nation until the People Action Party (PAP)
came to power in 1960 and started to treat corruption as low reward and high
risk (Quah, 2001).
Singapore under the PAP began to treat
corruption eradication as a priority agenda. Of course comparing Singapore with
Indonesia is unfair because Singapore is only a city-state. But the political
will to severely punish corruption and turn this dirty behavior into a
high-risk activity is an excellent example for Indonesian politicians.
Unlike Singapore, Indonesia gives special
treatment to graft convicts. For example, Law and Human Rights Minister Yasonna
Laoly quite recently proposed a revision to the government regulation on the
rights of criminals, including graft convicts. Based on the minister’s draft,
graft convicts have the right to remission and conditional release as long as
they show good behavior. He says reducing prison terms of convicts, including
corruptors, will help solve overcapacity facing our prisons.
The draft, however, will eliminate the
existing condition for remission that currently is given only to corruption
convicts who help law enforcers as justice collaborators. The role of justice
collaborators is crucial as they can lead investigators to the masterminds of
corruption.
The idea to ease procedures of remission
for corrupt public officials without specific conditions has undermined public
expectation for a better anticorruption strategy. It also exacerbates the ugly
fact that judges tend to hand down light, rather than maximum, sentences to
corruption convicts.
A study by Indonesia Corruption Watch
(ICW) earlier this year found that imprisonment for graft convicts averaged
only 2.2 years. With corruption convicts entitled to remission on several
national holidays such as Christmas, Idul Fitri, Independence Day, National
Heroes Day, etc. simply because of “good behavior”, they are able to regain
freedom even faster.
If President Jokowi approves such a draft
it can be said that he simply has no spirit for defeating corruption. Worse
still, it will prove right public suspicion of the President’s incapability of
withstanding short-term political interests that often characterizes public
policy and decision-making processes in this country.
Instead of providing special treatment to
corruption convicts, the government should do what it takes to maximize
deterrence on potential fraudsters by implementing the stolen-asset recovery
policy that has eluded Indonesia. The ICW study revealed that less than half
the total state losses resulting from corruption could be rescued by enforcing
the policy. The amount does not include the budget spent on investigations into
each corruption cases, however.
The KPK is an exception in the fight
against graft as it also enforces the Antimoney Laundering Law to trace as many
assets controlled by a suspect as possible. The KPK’s success in seizing more
than Rp 250 billion (US$19.23 million) worth of assets from graft convict Fuad
Amin, a former Bangkalan regent in East Java, shows its seriousness in tackling
corruption.
It’s better for the government to follow the
lead of utilizing the best practices in eradicating corruption, which is
treating corruption as a high risk, low-reward crime, not the other way around.
The writer Adnan Topan Husodo is the coordinator of Indonesia
Corruption Watch.
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