Indonesian minister arrested in telecommunications graft case

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JAKARTA (AFP) – Indonesian authorities arrested a senior minister yesterday for his alleged role in a corruption case stemming from a telecommunications project that has cost the country more than half a billion dollars in losses.

Clad in the bright pink vest, Communication and Information Technology Minister Johnny Gerard Plate was questioned for hours at the Attorney General’s Office (AGO) before being bundled into a car and taken to a detention centre in Jakarta.

“Based on today’s investigation, we concluded there has been sufficient evidence that he (Plate) was involved in a base transceiver stations (BTS) corruption case,” said the AGO’s Investigation Director for extraordinary crimes Kuntadi.

The BTS project was led by an agency under the communication ministry, and was aimed at providing 4G Internet access to remote areas across the archipelago.

The AGO did not elaborate on Plate’s role in the case or how much he allegedly profited.

Indonesian Communications and Information Technology Minister Johnny Gerald Plate is escorted by prosecutors in Jakarta. PHOTO: AFP

However, the malfeasance had resulted in overall losses amounting to IDR8.03 trillion (USD540 million), Kuntadi told reporters, citing the ongoing investigation.

The AGO reported that it had found irregularities in the procurement process involving local and foreign companies, previously naming five other suspects in the case, including an executive of a subsidiary of telecoms giant Huawei.

“This is a very strategic case. This is the government’s programme for many people in the outermost territories, in the most remote places, and who therefore badly need (the BTS infrastructure),” AGO spokesman Ketut Sumedana told a press conference.

If found guilty, Plate could face 20 years in prison.

Indonesia has arrested scores of public officials for graft in recent years.

In 2021, a former social affairs minister was jailed for 12 years after being convicted of taking USD1.2 million in bribes linked to food aid for poor families hit by the coronavirus pandemic.