Bribery among law enforcers
Bribery among law enforcers
From Media Indonesia
Media Indonesia of April 26, 2002, reported that the Honorary
Council for the Indonesian Lawyers Working Committee (KKAI) would
examine Elza Syarief on bribery charges. This plan should be
given a thumbs-up by the country's people as KKAI has been
proactive in responding to issues now widely spread within the
community.
People will surely wait for the result of Elza's examination
by lawyers with a level of integrity equal to that of Bang
Buyung. Such a bribery case once happened to a senior lawyer,
Syarief Siregar, in Medan. He bribed a ball player and held a
hunger strike when detained by the police. The district court
only gave him a light sentence as the bribery he had committed
was beyond his practice. In the case of Elza, she allegedly
resorted to bribery while carrying out her profession.
Talking about bribery in the four law-enforcing circles of
judges, public prosecutors, police and lawyers in this country is
the same as discussing breakfast and dinner. It means that
bribery has become daily talk in the community. However, law
upholds credible proof or evidence. It takes a long time to prove
that bribery has taken place. And, the people who know best about
this case are those who commit it.
The country does not possess a law on lawyers yet. This
explains why today the lawyers' code of conduct is the reference.
Yet, the morality of the perpetrators is still a big question.
The late lawyer Rusdi Nurima once said that if he wanted to play
with money among law enforcers, he would surely win all cases he
handled. In other words, let a court ruling/verdict run as the
prevailing law dictates.
It was the late Napoleon Bonaparte that had modified the Code
de Ethique, Code de Penal and the Code de Commerce. Perhaps,
given the increased violations of the code of conduct of lawyers
in this country, he would be depressed and shake his head up
there in heaven.
TOM MUSTAFA SIREGAR
Jakarta