JP/5/GRAFT
JP/5/GRAFT
West Java official denies involvement in Rp 100b markup case
Yuli Tri Suwarni
The Jakarta Post/Bandung
A former West Java official denied on Friday that he had been
involved in a markup scam worth Rp 100 billion (US$10.6 million)
last year as has been reported by local antigraft activists.
There were no irregularities in the purchase of heavy
equipment worth Rp 100 billion, said Wahyu Kurnia, the former
chief of the Equipment Bureau in the West Java provincial
administration.
"I have been questioned by the Corruption Eradication
Commission (KPK) and I told them that there were no markups,"
said Wahyu on Friday.
According to Wahyu, the price had been determined by the agent
who had imported the equipment from Japan to West Java province,
and that no markups were involved.
"I don't know why the antigraft activists have a different
story about the price. This needs to be clarified," said Wahyu.
The alleged graft surfaced after the Bandung Institute for
Government Studies (BIGS) reported a number of local government
officials to the KPK on Wednesday for allegedly marking up the
price of the heavy equipment.
Dedi Haryadi, the executive director of BIGS, said that
government officials had bought the heavy equipment, which
included dump trucks, ambulances and fire trucks, for Rp 100
billion last year. The equipment was to have been allocated to 25
regencies and municipalities across West Java province. But, when
BIGS checked the market prices, they found that the total should
have come to only Rp 60 billion.
"We suspect that markups were involved as the difference was
too big," said Haryadi.
As an example, Haryadi said that the administration had set
the price of an ambulance at Rp 400 million. But, when BIGS
checked the market price, it was found that the price should have
been only Rp 300 million.
"This is only one of the 541 items purchased by the Equipment
Bureau. We are demanding a thorough audit," said Haryadi.
Haryadi chose to report the case to the KPK rather than the
police or prosecutor's office as it considered the KPK to be more
credible.
He said that the performance of the police and prosecutors had
been disappointing as they were slow to investigate corruption
cases, as shown by the investigation into corruption worth Rp
33.4 billion allegedly perpetrated by former West Java
councillors. This investigation had been underway for two years
and nothing of note had been achieved to date.
West Java Governor Danny Setiawan said that he was ready to be
questioned in the case. But he believed that his former
subordinates had acted properly.
"The purchases should have been discussed with the public
representatives on the budget committee of the West Java
provincial council, but I believe there is nothing wrong with
them," he said.