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Indonesian govt detains three judges over bribery

Published on April 14, 2025 at 10:13 AM

Indonesia’s Attorney General’s Office (AGO) has detained three judges suspected of accepting bribes during a high-profile case involving illegal exports of palm oil.

AGO’s Director of Investigations, Abdul Qohar, made this known on Monday, according to the Jakarta Globe newspaper.

The judges, Agam Syarif Baharuddin, Ali Muhtarom and Djuyamto, were detained late Sunday on suspicion of accepting bribes in exchange for the acquittal of companies Wilmar Group, Permata Hijau Group, and Musim Mas Group.

In March, the suspects ruled that the companies had been exporting crude palm oil without government permits, but decided that their actions did not fall under the country’s criminal laws, the newspaper reported.

According to Qohar, after questioning seven witnesses, investigators gathered sufficient evidence to name the three judges as suspects.

“They are fully aware that the payments were intended to secure a favourable ruling.

“In 2024, the judges first received 4.5 billion Indonesian rupiah (268,111 dollars) through former South Jakarta District Court Chief Muhammad Arif Nuryanta, and then another 18 billion Indonesian rupiah in a second transaction.

“After the detention of the judges, the total number of suspects in the case reached seven.”;

Meanwhile, on Sunday, prosecutors identified South Jakarta District Court clerk Wahyu Gunawan, defence attorneys Marcella Santoso and Ariyanto, as well as Nuryanta, as suspects in the investigation.

Wilmar Group, Permata Hijau Group, and Musim Mas Group have been accused of violating a temporary ban on the export of crude palm oil.

The ban on Indonesia’s export of crude palm oil was introduced by former President Joko Widodo in 2022 due to a nationwide shortage of cooking oil.

The government had then said that the country lost 10.9 million dollars as a result of the illegal exports, as it had to subsidise cooking oil prices in the domestic market to compensate for the crisis.

Five people, including well-known market analyst Lin Che Wei and a high-ranking official from the Trade Ministry, were sentenced to between one and three years in prison in January 2023 as part of the illegal exports case.

Other convicted defendants include former Director-General of International Trade at the Trade Ministry, Indrasari Wisnu Wardhana, and business executives Master Parulian Tumanggor, Stanley MA, and Pierre Togar Sitanggang, NAN reports.

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