{
    "success": true,
    "data": {
        "id": 17717,
        "msgid": "a-nightmare-in-paradise",
        "date": "2015-07-12 00:00:00",
        "title": "A nightmare in paradise",
        "author": "",
        "source": "Sydney Morning Herald",
        "tags": null,
        "topic": null,
        "summary": "Many Australians, thinking they had circumvented Indonesia's ban on foreigners owning freehold land, have signed illegal nominee deals. The story sounds Kafkaesque. Susi Johnston has lost everything; her beloved husband, their $3 million Bali home, the peaceful retirement she had planned. Johnston, and her late husband, Bruno Piazza, had poured their dreams and life savings into a spectacular modernist villa near the coastal village of Canggu\u200b, a hub for artists and expats.",
        "content": "<p>Many Australians, thinking they had circumvented Indonesia&apos;s ban on foreigners owning freehold land, have signed illegal nominee<br>\ndeals.<\/p>\n<p>The story sounds Kafkaesque. Susi Johnston has lost everything; her beloved husband, their $3 million Bali home, the peaceful<br>\nretirement she had planned.<\/p>\n<p>Johnston, and her late husband, Bruno Piazza, had poured their dreams and life savings into a spectacular modernist villa near<br>\nthe coastal village of Canggu\u200b, a hub for artists and expats. But Johnston discovered, shortly after Piazza&apos;s death from cancer,<br>\nthat their land &quot;ownership&quot; had been documented illegally.<\/p>\n<p>She says gangsters attacked her home, she faced two deportation attempts and drugs were planted in her car leading to her arrest<br>\nand detention.<\/p>\n<p>As court after court found against her, following what Johnston describes as &quot;highly suspicious judicial irregularities&quot;, she<br>\nrealised this was not a battle she was ever going to win.<br>\nAdvertisement<\/p>\n<p>&quot;The mafia is going to take over my house. This has cost me my entire life savings. I&apos;m still suffering post-traumatic stress<br>\ndisorder. I can&apos;t sleep, I have panic attacks, I can&apos;t concentrate.&quot;<\/p>\n<p>Johnston&apos;s nightmare in paradise \u2013 which has spooked expats across Bali \u2013 provides a textbook example of what can go horribly<br>\nwrong when foreigners try to own a home in Indonesia.<br>\nSusi Johnston has fought her case all the way to the Indonesian Supreme Court and lost.<\/p>\n<p>Susi Johnston has fought her case all the way to the Indonesian Supreme Court and lost. Photo: Fairfax<\/p>\n<p>At its 2013 regional conference, the Australian Property Institute described Bali as &quot;Perth&apos;s northernmost suburb&quot;. The Island<br>\nof Gods, with its emerald rice paddies, coconut-fringed beaches and tropical climate, has long been a magnet for everyone from<br>\nsurfers to FIFO (Fly-In Fly-Out) miners to retirees.<\/p>\n<p>&quot;In recent years there has been significant growth in the number of Australians buying and building homes in Bali,&quot; the<br>\ninstitute said in its conference press release. But there is a hitch.<\/p>\n<p>Under Indonesia&apos;s strict foreign investment laws \u2013 a backlash against centuries of Dutch rule \u2013 foreigners are prohibited from<br>\nowning freehold land. There are legitimate ways to lease land for up to 30 years, with options to extend.<\/p>\n<p>However, Australians are used to owning land, making leaseholds unattractive to many investors. So to circumvent the law, many<br>\nforeigners are advised to put the name of an Indonesian nominee on the freehold land title. They then sign an agreement with the<br>\nnominee which states the foreigner paid for the property, and the nominee therefore grants them all rights over it.<\/p>\n<p>This was the structure of ownership recommended to Johnston&apos;s late husband by lawyers and a notary when he sold his house in<br>\nBrussels in 1999 and bought land in Canggu. Piazza was not a &quot;wheeler and dealer&quot;, Johnston stresses. &quot;You can&apos;t blame people<br>\nwho were fooled, and are still being fooled, that there are ways to validate nominee agreements and associated mortgages. Not a<br>\nsingle one of these papers has any legal legitimacy.&quot;<\/p>\n<p>More than 10,000 properties are understood to be held in Bali using nominee arrangements. Authorities turned a blind eye after<br>\nthe Bali bombings, when the island was desperate for investment.<\/p>\n<p>But although common, the nominee process is against the spirit of the law, which is designed to keep Indonesia for Indonesians.<br>\nIt is also fraught with risk. The Indonesian nominee is the legal owner if the relationship sours or the nominee dies and their<br>\nfamily does not honour the agreement.<\/p>\n<p>Australian writer Phil Jarratt\u200b, the author of Bali: Heaven and Hell, says the so-called &quot;nominee ownership crisis&quot; gripping<br>\nBali is nothing new. He had a 25-year leasehold that was ripped up on a &quot;dodgy technicality&quot; a few years into it in the early<br>\n1990s.<\/p>\n<p>&quot;Then and now, if you think you hold land in Bali (or anywhere in Indonesia) through a local nominee, you&apos;d better make sure you<br>\nstay on the right side of the local, because you can&apos;t win in court,&quot; Jarratt writes in swellnet. &quot;In recent years ageing Baby<br>\nBoomer hippies and surfers have been thrown onto the streets as their nominees die and the next generation claims the property<br>\nor demands double the money.&quot;<\/p>\n<p>Preadi Ekarto, the deputy chairman of Real Estate Indonesia, says expatriates are usually law-abiding people. &quot;They bought<br>\nproperty with legal papers because they use the service of a notary and lawyers.&quot;<\/p>\n<p>But Preadi says the nominee process is &quot;improper&quot; because it means foreigners do not pay luxury tax and allows them to &quot;own&quot;<br>\nproperty for a long time. &quot;The law says foreigners&apos; right to land use is limited to 70 years.&quot;<\/p>\n<p>Agus Sekarmadji, a law expert from Airlangga University in Surabaya, describes the nominee process as &quot;very regrettable&quot;. &quot;We<br>\ncannot always blame foreigners, in this case quite often it is the Indonesians who persuade foreigners. It&apos;s absolutely illegal<br>\nbut it&apos;s easy to find it around us. That&apos;s a fact of life.&quot;<\/p>\n<p>Johnston was in Europe settling Piazza&apos;s estate, when unbeknown to her, the nominee took her to court. Johnston says her nominee<br>\nwas seriously in debt with criminals, and the mafia decided to use her home as a way to get their money back.<\/p>\n<p>&quot;She (the nominee) said she was the owner of the land. She claimed she was Bruno&apos;s lover and common law wife and I murdered<br>\nhim.&quot; When Johnston returned to Bali, still grieving Piazza&apos;s loss, she learned the Denpasar District Court had already ruled<br>\nthe nominee owned her land.<\/p>\n<p>&quot;The documents said I must leave immediately or pay $1000 a day for each day I didn&apos;t leave, and pay damages of $1.8 million.&quot;<br>\nBut Johnston refused to budge. &quot;There are hundreds of cases like this right now but I&apos;m the only one who stood up because I<br>\ndidn&apos;t have anywhere else to go. I would be a 55-year-old widow, now unemployable, with no home and no money and no job. Where<br>\ndo I go?&quot;<\/p>\n<p>But Johnston&apos;s stubbornness has taken its toll. She says gangsters attacked her property, changing locks and climbing over her<br>\nwalls while she barricaded herself in her home office.<\/p>\n<p>&quot;The third time they came was really horrific; guys vaulted the walls, took everything out of my house and threw it into a<br>\ntruck. They drilled through the bathroom door while I was on the toilet. They took everything, including antiques. It was insane<br>\n\u2013 I was shown guns and machetes.&quot;<\/p>\n<p>Johnston wants her experience to be a cautionary tale. She organised a &quot;Land Law Learning Day&quot; in April with law professors,<br>\nlitigators, notaries and business advisers. About 250 expats attended. Many were already alarmed by media reports a month<br>\nearlier that Ferry Mursyidan Baldan, the Agrarian Minister under the new nationalist Joko government, had announced an audit of<br>\nforeign land ownership<\/p>\n<p>&quot;Foreigners must not be in possession of even an inch of land in Indonesia. It is a constitutional issue,&quot; Ferry was quoted in<br>\nKompas.com in March. He said foreigners had been found to own land, particularly in tourist areas such as Bali and Lombok.<br>\n&quot;We&apos;ll convert the title, if he has a wife then it will be on his wife&apos;s (ownership) but if not it will be taken by the state,&quot;<br>\nFerry said at the time.<\/p>\n<p>Ferry tells Fairfax Media he does not want to create anxiety. &quot;We&apos;ll do it slowly \u2026 what we want to achieve is to put things in<br>\norder.&quot;<\/p>\n<p>Foreign owners will be contacted and their papers checked. &quot;We will make sure that nothing is done in violation of the law. What<br>\nis important to note is that it will not disturb their businesses. So those who own cafes or gallery or whatever, the business<br>\nwill go as usual,&quot; he says<\/p>\n<p>The government will check if foreigners have residency permits. &quot;First of all, they have to have a stay permit before owning a<br>\nproperty.&quot; Secondly, Ferry says, foreigners need property only for the duration of their lives. &quot;Only living people need<br>\nproperty, dead people need cemetery, correct? &quot; he says.<\/p>\n<p>&quot;That&apos;s the logic and it is the philosophy we use in discussing this issue.&quot; He says if a foreigner dies their heir can take<br>\nover the leasehold, provided they too have an Indonesian residency permit.<\/p>\n<p>Ferry may not want to create anxiety, but off the record, real estate agents say foreign villa owners are panicking and trying<br>\nto sell. &quot;It&apos;s starting to come to a head,&quot; says Andrew Gage, the owner and operator of Echo Beach Resort in Canggu. &quot;It could<br>\ncreate a property glut where people are desperate to get rid of properties.&quot;<\/p>\n<p>Gage, an Australian who has lived in Indonesia for a long time, understands the need for a crackdown. He says foreign ownership<br>\nof villas has driven up the price to the extent the Balinese can&apos;t afford to buy land on their own island.<\/p>\n<p>Expats seldom become involved in village life, pay tax or contribute to the economy beyond employing a small number of local<br>\nstaff. &quot;It&apos;s hard to feel upset about the nominee (crisis),&quot; Gage says. &quot;I&apos;ve been here for 20 years and I&apos;ve known it&apos;s never<br>\nbeen legal since the beginning. Whatever way you want to to cut it, anyone who has gone into it knowingly, understands that<br>\ntomorrow the property could be in the hands of the nominee. A lot of people have made a lot of money over a long period of time.&quot;<\/p>\n<p>Investors can convert their titles to leasehold or set up the property as a tax-paying business. &quot;Then you are paying local<br>\nauthorities so everyone starts to become a bit happier,&quot; Gage says.<\/p>\n<p>World-renowned tropical garden designer Made Wijaya, who arrived in Bali from Sydney in 1973, often bemoans the &quot;villarisation&quot;<br>\nof Bali in his satirical e-zine Stranger in Paradise.<\/p>\n<p>&quot;After the Bali bomb, Bali became bargain basement Bali for all the carpetbaggers from Noosa,&quot; Wijaya says. &quot;There is too much<br>\ndevelopment, it&apos;s out of control.&quot;<\/p>\n<p>Wijaya would like to see regulation of &quot;free-range villa building&quot;. He says developers should follow zoning laws and not build<br>\nin rice fields, which ruins the environment and attracts thieves, or flout local laws by building on the beach or river banks.<br>\nLawyers who recommended the nominee process were leading people down the garden path, Wijaya says. &quot;I think, if anything, the<br>\ngovernment needs to crack down a bit. The villa people need to get legitimate and pay taxes.&quot;<\/p>\n<p>Meanwhile, cautioning people about the dark side of nominee ownership has become Johnston&apos;s raison d&apos;etre. She has fought until<br>\nthe bitter end: &quot;I have lost all the way to the Supreme Court. Foreigners should be spooked. No nominee arrangement is valid.&quot;<\/p>\n<p>For more than two years Johnston also pushed for a criminal trial against the nominee and her thugs who smashed up her home.<br>\nEven the Human Rights Commission got involved.<\/p>\n<p>&quot;In court, all of them were found innocent, despite the evidence,&quot; Johnston says. &quot;Sadly this is the reality of Indonesia. I<br>\nthink there are masses more people who could fall into the same trap and probably will.&quot;<\/p>\n<p>Now Johnston has nothing left to do but wait for the inevitable. &quot;I am still at home, just waiting to be put in a cell at Polda<br>\n(Bali police headquarters), then they take over the house and everything in it. I&apos;ve no idea what to do next.&quot;<\/p>\n<p>With Karuni Rompies<\/p>",
        "url": "https:\/\/jawawa.id\/newsitem\/a-nightmare-in-paradise",
        "image": "bali-nominee-landownership.jpg"
    },
    "sponsor": "Okusi Associates",
    "sponsor_url": "https:\/\/okusiassociates.com"
}