JAKARTA - Indonesian agencies
linked to the country's energised drive to combat graft cemented a deal to work
closer together on Monday, with one top official saying corruption is a serious
violation of human rights.
Widespread corruption has been cited as one of the elements hurting
Indonesia's struggle to lure foreign businesses to invest in badly needed
infrastructure projects.
President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono rose to power in 2004 with a vow to combat
graft in Indonesia, ranked among the world's most corrupt countries according to
Transparency International.
Since his high-profile anti-graft campaign started, officials ranging from a
former religious affairs minister to the governor of Aceh province have been
jailed on corruption charges.
Helping spearhead the drive has been the anti-corruption commission, KPK,
which has the power to make arrests, take over investigations from the police
and fast-track sensitive cases.
"Corruption is an extraordinary crime. Corruption denigrates the dignity of
the nation, the state and and the government. Corruption disrupts national
stability and hurts development," KPK chief Taufiequrachman Ruki said in a
speech before signing a cooperation pact with the State Audit Agency.
"What is clear is that corruption violates human rights," said the former
police general who has led the KPK since its formation nearly three years ago.
KPK's most high-profile case so far involves a probe into the election
commission, a body comprised largely of respected academics which won praise for
organising the 2004 elections.
The chief election commissioner and several other officials have been sent to
jail over poll-related kickbacks.
However, the case also sparked friction with the State Audit Agency (BPK)
which did not like how KPK used a state auditor to catch an election
commissioner red-handed while he was trying to carry out bribery in a hotel
room.
"Auditors should not be turned into intelligence agents or detectives. If
there is such an overacting state auditor, no auditee will want to be audited,"
said BPK chief Anwar Nasution.
The deal between the two institutions covered information sharing, joint
training and communication enhancement.
Asked about World Bank accusations some Indonesian projects had been marred
by graft, KPK's Ruki told reporters talks between his agency and the global body
were underway behind closed doors.
Last week Indonesia's finance minister urged the World Bank to be more open
with countries about its corruption investigations.
The Bank last month announced it had uncovered corruption involving public
works officials in road projects it funded in eastern Indonesia and cancelled
the portion of the loan associated with the affected
contracts.