Camelia Pasandaran & Arientha Primanita
Jakarta city administration employees at work on Thursday after returning from the week-long Idul Fitri holidays. (Photo: Safir Makki, JG)
Out to Lunch: Indonesian Government Employees Stay Away for ‘First Day Back’
Spot checks during the first post-holiday workday revealed shameful
numbers of bureaucratic desks around West Java and Jakarta were —
not-so-surprisingly — vacant.
The district head of Garut in
West Java, Aceng Fikri, said a total of 6,000 district officials, about
30 percent of the staff, failed to report for work.
“The
national holiday from September 18 to 23 has ended. All employees
should be back to work again,” Antara quoted him as saying.
In
one telling example, hundreds of officials from Garut’s Secretariat
Office who dutifully showed up on Thursday found themselves barred from
their offices. The person entrusted the keys to the building could not
be found — and was suspected to be taking “extra” holiday time.
Garut
regional secretary Iman Alirahman told state news agency Antara that he
blamed ignorance and a lack of discipline for the oversight. The
homeless employees reportedly made the best of it, swapping holiday
stories and photos outside the office.
In the provincial
capital Bandung, about one in 10 local bureaucrats “played hookey.” In
Bogor, just south of Jakarta, about half of the local government
workforce failed to show up.
According to news Web site Tempo
Interactive, the governor of Bogor, Rahmat Yasin, who conducted a
surprise inspection, promised to give the absent officials a warning.
In the Indramayu district of West Java, Kompas.com reported that a staggering 80 percent of local officials were absent.
Ahmad Juniadi, a local government spokesman, said civil servants should set a good example of a strong work ethic.
“This is embarrassing,” he told Kompas.com.
Dede
Yusuf, deputy governor of West Java, recently declared that employees
found to be absent from work after the holiday would be fired.
Snap
inspections by Jakarta Governor Fauzi Bowo revealed the city’ civil
servants were slow to get back to the grind. The Regional Planning
Board and the Jakarta Human Resources Agency passed muster, but the
Public Works Agency on Jalan Taman Jati Baru in Central Jakarta failed
to impress.
Agency secretary Kukuh Hadi said out of 367
employees, 327 showed up. Of the missing, 17 were absent without leave,
20 had taken official leave and three had been granted special
permission, he said.
But 32 staff members had signed the
morning work register and the end-of-work register at the beginning of
the day, checking in and out at the same time, a clear violation of
city rules. “We will reprimand employees who put multiple signatures on
the attendance list. They will also get sanctions from the governor,”
he said. Fauzi said scheduled pay increases for absent officials should
be delayed and that they should be demoted for one year.
“We
will not tolerate undisciplined employees. Sanctions will be imposed on
all delinquent civil servants regardless of their office and rank.”
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