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The operation to arrest the regent of Ogan Ilir, Ahmad Wazir Nofiadi Maward, was planned as secretly as possible," said an unnamed National Narcotics Agency (BNN) officer who participated in the raid on Nofiadi's house last week. "Only the central office knew about it. "We were afraid it might leak out if other people were involved."
The police officer said Nofiadi, 28, became a person of interest three months ago when the South Sumatra BNN received a report alleging he was abusing sabu-sabu (crystal methamphetamine) regularly. The report was passed on to the central BNN office in Cawang, East Jakarta, which took charge of the case.
Soldiers in Jakarta raided the Kostrad (Army Strategic Reserves Command) housing compound in Tanah Kusir two weeks ago, moving in on men of their own. "We received intelligence that a drug ring was operating there," said Kostrad Information chief Lt. Col. Heru on Thursday last week. The afternoon raid involved Kostrad Intel Assault Battalion and the Army Military Police. The At-Taqwa Mosque, located about 300 meters away from the five targeted houses, served as the mission command center.
Those targeted in the raid included Second Sgt. Zakaria, Chief Sgt. Karyawan, Sgt. Maj. Ersing and Sgt. Maj. Suryadi, as well as a civilian named Yayat. Karyawan, Ersing, Suryadi and Yayat are next-door neighbors, while Zakaria lives across the street.At 2:00pm sharp, the command moved in. The troops met no resistance. "I was at home and didn't hear a thing," said Khatmi, Yayat's closest neighbor. Soon afterward, Zakaria and the others were taken to Kostrad adjunct general headquarters. According to Heru, the soldiers were to be handed over to military police and the lone civilian to either the police or the National Narcotics Agency (BNN).
Edwin Hidayat Abdullah's appearance at the AGO complex last Monday lasted only about 10 minutes. "I wasn't questioned, so I'm going home right away," said the deputy of energy, logistics, area and tourism of the state-owned enterprises (SOE) ministry last Thursday.
Edwin was summoned in connection with an agreement struck between Hotel Indonesia Natouran SOEand Grand Indonesia, a subsidiary of the Djarum Group, over a decade ago. The district attorney asked Edwin to bring along the contract documents.
Three-years of determined effort on the part of the Indonesian Judges' Discussion Forum is starting to bear fruit two weeks ago, the Expert Council at the House of Representatives (DPR) delivered a bill on the Office of Judges to the DPR's Legal Affairs Commission.
Chairman of the Judges' Discussion Forum, Djuyamto, described the inclusion of the draft in the 2016 National Legislation Program (Prolegnas) as a new stage in the struggle for expanding welfare and stability for judges. "So far there has been some disparity," Djuyamto said on Wednesday last week. In 2012, Djuyamto and peers initiated a special rule on the office of judges.
A series of WhatsApp text messages from an unknown number surprised Yulianto early last January when they popped up on his iPhone. Yulianto, who is chief of the Attorney-General Office (AGO)'s corruption investigation subdirectorate, considered the messages a thinly veiled threat: There was no identity listed, only a profile photo of the political party, Persatuan Indonesia (Perindo).
After he received a third message from the same number exhorting him to 'have nothing to do' with the Mobile-8 case he was investigating, as it was the responsibility of the board of directors, Yulianto became convinced the sender was Perindo's chairman Hary Tanoesoedibjo. "The clues are clear. He had claimed he was above the board of directors," Yulianto said last Tuesday.
The meeting between the governance commission (Commission II) of the House of Representatives (DPR) and the Ombudsman selection committee on Thursday two weeks ago was unusually lively. Selection committee chair Agus Dwiyanto counted that at least 30 of the 44 Commission II members were present in the last meeting. "They appeared enthusiastic and critical," said Agus last Thursday.
On that particular day, certain members of Commission II lobbed ostensibly accusatory questions. They hinted that two members of the selection committee, Zumrotin K. Susilo and Anis Hidayah, had violated the code of ethics. The Senayan politicians accused the two individuals of conspiring to smoothen the passage of the candidates from non-governmental organization (NGO) activist circles.
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