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SBY to Build Trust With Tougher Legal Watchdogs
Bhimanto Suwastoyo | September 09, 2010

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono gave a speech at a media conference in the State Palace on Wednesday, vowing to give the official watchdogs for the police and the prosecutors’ office more teeth. (JG Photo/Yudhi Sukma Wijaya) President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono gave a speech at a media conference in the State Palace on Wednesday, vowing to give the official watchdogs for the police and the prosecutors’ office more teeth. (JG Photo/Yudhi Sukma Wijaya)
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ozzo
9:27pm Sep 10, 2010

He's a member of NATO. No Action (Sweet) Talk Only.


Valkyrie
5:31pm Sep 9, 2010

yogiwp: Could be. Perhaps he might have exhibited that current issues are miniscule or maybe GA only waited a few moments for his son?


peterR
2:52pm Sep 9, 2010

While the President does nothing except blow hot air over events like the firebombing of magazines and vicious assaults on those who investigate corruption amongst the police elite, what teeth can any overseer have. Basically, if you create problems for big nobs in the police, they, the police, have made it very clear you can get dead.

And as Hopeful says, he's just released his corrupt relative, and God knows how many corrupt mates.

Sorry don't buy your concern and don't suppose any Indonesian with half a brain will either. You've just let the people down too many times already. Its simple, nobody believes you.


yogiwp
1:28pm Sep 9, 2010

he was saying in the photo above: "Mine is about this big!"


Hopeful
8:31am Sep 9, 2010

Sounds okay, like other committee or commission but will any meanginful change happen or is it just another create something to make it look like I am actually doing something and then business as usual and my son' father-inlaw gets early release for stealing 11 million, or was he ever really in jail?


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Jakarta. In response to mounting public condemnation of law enforcement, President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono on Wednesday vowed to give the official watchdogs for the police and the prosecutors’ office more teeth.

“I have decided to revitalize the two commissions formed by the president, the National Police Commission (Kompolnas) and the Prosecutors’ Commission,” Yudhoyono said after a fast-breaking event at the State Palace.

The two commissions, formed in 2005, are independent bodies under the president and are tasked with boosting each agency’s performance.

They make policy recommendations and also forward complaints and suggestions on the two institutions from the public.

“I want these two commissions to become really effective in making sure that what is being done by the police and the prosecutor’s office is solid,” he added.

However, he gave few details on how he would achieve this, but said that one plan was to provide financing independent from the commissions’ main institutions.

Yudhoyono said that while “unnecessary collisions” between the commissions with the two law enforcement institutions was not desirable, “there needs to be effective action.”

The police and the prosecutor’s office have come under increased flak from the public in the wake of several recent scandals, including corruption, case engineering and case-brokering allegations levelled against members of their ranks.

Yudhoyono also reacted to complaints that the government’s commitment to eradicate corruption had wavered.

“I want to make clear, that whatever the news or rumors that are circulating about corruption eradication, for me, for the government, and for the nation, we remain consistent in eradicating corruption,” he said.

One important tool in the toolbox to weed out endemic corruption, he said, was the Corruption Eradication Commission, better known as the KPK. 

The president said the House of Representatives would pick one of the two names forwarded to it to be the new antigraft leader, but the government would consult lawmakers on whether it would be “best for the KPK and for us all” for the new chief’s tenure to be a single year or a four-year term.

He also addressed six other topics that he said were current public concern including: the need for an efficient and modern defense force; the choice of new leaders for the military, the police, the Attorney General’s Office and the antigraft body.

The case of an air force colonel who is facing sanctions for being critical of the president in the Indonesian language daily Kompas; whether to move the administrative capital out of Jakarta; stabilizing the prices of staple goods; and the recent eruption of Mount Sinabung were also topics that the president raised. 

Yudhoyono said he will ask the House of Representatives to provide an “adequate budget” to build and maintain an “essential [military] force” and added that such an allotment “should not disturb other budget priorities.”

Saying that Jakarta, as the capital and also the country’s trade and business center, was no longer adequate, Yudhoyono said  a decision should be made whether to retain the city as the capital or move the seat of the government elsewhere.

“It is true that Jakarta, as a capital, is no longer ideal,” the president said. Yudhoyono said that with the city no longer able to sustain its rapidly growing population, a new solution was urgently needed.”

“We have to make strategic decisions, and this should not take too long,” he said.




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