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BEFORE and after the recent legislative elections and just ahead of the presidential polls, Muhammad Yusuf's workload doubled dramatically. This is because the data he must scrutinize at the Financial Transactions Reporting and Analysis Center (PPATK), where he is chairman, has also increased incrementally. The PPATK has found more suspicious financial and cash transactions based on reports from banks and finance companies. "The number has gone up by 20 to 25 percent compared to previous years," said Yusuf.
Interestingly, according to Yusuf, those suspicious transactions are not linked only to bank accounts of political parties and politicians, but across the board. He hopes the authorities will track down those transactions, and determine whether they are illegal or not. The PPATK itself finds it easy to monitor the flow of cash because it currently uses the Integrated Financial Services Information System. He only needs to ask data from banks and the Financial Services Authority (FSA) to get what he needs. The data comprises a name, the account number and the place of birth. Today, some 102 million account holders are registered. Law enforcers today can get details of a bank account in less than 10 minutes.
CONSTITUTIONAL Court Chief Justice Hamdan Zoelva turned red and his voice rose one decibel higher as he presided over the lawsuit submitted by the Jambi-based National Democrat Party. Two of the three witnesses had given conflicting information. When they were questioned further, they had no valid data. "It was very clear they were making it all up," Hamdan told Tempo.
The inaccurate testimony, according to Hamdan, was one among many problems in the court proceedings looking into disputes arising out of the recent legislative election. Some 700 cases submitted by political parties and legislative candidates were pending, with only three weeks to go before the deadline on June 30. "This week we will evaluate the cases so that a week before the deadline, all is in place."
JUST when he thought he had reached retirement age from his job as a diplomat, Makarim Wibisono was given a new task by the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC). It asked him to be a special rapporteur on human rights issues in Palestine. He is the first Indonesian diplomat to be given that mandate.
Makarim is no stranger to challenging missions. He was chairman of the UN Human Rights Commission, before it became a council in 2007. His predecessor as special rapporteur for Palestine is Richard Falk from the United States, who resigned six years after he took up the assignment.
APPOINTED by President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono as Indonesia's chief economist two weeks ago, businessman Chairul Tanjung lost no time in getting started. After all, a host of problems awaited him, like stabilizing food prices, with the holy month of Ramadan fast approaching. Then there's the unfinished business of contract renegotiations with mining giants Freeport and Newmont, and more importantly deciding the fate of the Sunda Strait Bridge mega-project which the President had approved, amid clamorous protests.
Tanjung, a former chairman of the National Economic Committee, said he would only spend Monday to Wednesday in his Jakarta office, while the rest of the week would be spent in traveling to the provinces. "I will use a private plane at my own cost to facilitate mobility. I have asked the attorney general and he gave me the green light. But just to be sure, I also checked with the KPK," he explained. Tanjung feels that resolving the many issues in the regions can accelerate the engine of growth.
He admitted that President Yudhoyono had twice offered him a ministerial job since 2004, but which he refused both times because he still wanted to manage his business. This time, he could not refuse him. "I want to help the nation, the government and the people," said Tanjung, who claimed he will not change his leadership style. "I will bring to the government the management methods of running a corporation."
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