Elusive Indonesia politician hospitalised as graft charges loom
By afp
November 18, 2017
JAKARTA: The speaker of Indonesia´s parliament, implicated in a $170 million corruption case, was in hospital on Friday after a bizarre drama in which he claimed to have been injured in a car crash shortly after a failed raid on his palatial estate.
The story has dominated headlines and news broadcasts this week in the graft-riddled southeast Asian nation, where images showed a grim-faced Setya Novanto laying in a Jakarta hospital bed with medical tubes in his nose.
Critics lashed out at Novanto, accusing him of trying to dodge anti-corruption officials who want to question him in one of Indonesia´s worst graft scandals. "These kinds of actions will make people question everything -- how can a leader have such little dignity?" said Jusuf Kalla, the country´s vice president and a member of Golkar, Indonesia´s second-biggest political party, which is headed by Novanto.
"Leaders have to obey the law and be trusted by people. If they run away like this, how can they be trusted?" On Wednesday night, officials from the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) raided Novanto´s multi-million-dollar estate in a ritzy part of the capital, known for its extreme gap between rich and poor.
But Novanto was nowhere to be found, sparking a frantic city-wide search amid fears he had left the country. The 62-year-old politician was put on Indonesia´s most-wanted list before he reappeared in hospital Thursday following what he claimed was a car crash, though he showed no sign of serious injuries.
Authorities want to question him over allegations he and other politicians siphoned millions of dollars in public funds linked to a state project that issued new ID cards to Indonesia´s 255 million residents.
The allegations earlier this year caused widespread shock even by the standards of one of the world´s most corrupt countries. Novanto´s lawyer insisted on Friday his client was not trying to dodge questions, saying he was "very, very weak" and feared he would be treated unfairly by the powerful anti-corruption body. "He doesn´t want to be persecuted," Fredrich Yunadi told AFP. "He has a right to be treated according to the law."
The story has dominated headlines and news broadcasts this week in the graft-riddled southeast Asian nation, where images showed a grim-faced Setya Novanto laying in a Jakarta hospital bed with medical tubes in his nose.
Critics lashed out at Novanto, accusing him of trying to dodge anti-corruption officials who want to question him in one of Indonesia´s worst graft scandals. "These kinds of actions will make people question everything -- how can a leader have such little dignity?" said Jusuf Kalla, the country´s vice president and a member of Golkar, Indonesia´s second-biggest political party, which is headed by Novanto.
"Leaders have to obey the law and be trusted by people. If they run away like this, how can they be trusted?" On Wednesday night, officials from the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) raided Novanto´s multi-million-dollar estate in a ritzy part of the capital, known for its extreme gap between rich and poor.
But Novanto was nowhere to be found, sparking a frantic city-wide search amid fears he had left the country. The 62-year-old politician was put on Indonesia´s most-wanted list before he reappeared in hospital Thursday following what he claimed was a car crash, though he showed no sign of serious injuries.
Authorities want to question him over allegations he and other politicians siphoned millions of dollars in public funds linked to a state project that issued new ID cards to Indonesia´s 255 million residents.
The allegations earlier this year caused widespread shock even by the standards of one of the world´s most corrupt countries. Novanto´s lawyer insisted on Friday his client was not trying to dodge questions, saying he was "very, very weak" and feared he would be treated unfairly by the powerful anti-corruption body. "He doesn´t want to be persecuted," Fredrich Yunadi told AFP. "He has a right to be treated according to the law."
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