[Kabar-indonesia] Experts criticize KPK's antigraft court

Joyo at aol.com Joyo at aol.com
Thu Oct 12 02:40:32 MDT 2006


The Jakarta Post
Thursday, October 12, 2006

Experts criticize antigraft court 

Ary Hermawan, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta

The Constitutional Court on Wednesday heard testimony from two legal experts 
who criticized the 2002 law establishing the Corruption Eradication Commission 
(KPK).

Muzakkir of Indonesian Islamic University in Yogyakarta and Khoirul Huda of 
Jakarta's Muhammadiyah University were called to testify by corruption convicts 
Nazaruddin Syamsuddin and Mulyana Wira Kusumah. 

Former General Elections Commission chairman Nazaruddin and ex-member Mulyana 
have asked the Constitutional Court to review the law on the KPK after being 
convicted by the Anti-Corruption Court of graft. 

The petitioners claim the KPK law violates their right to equal treatment, 
which is guaranteed by the Constitution. 

They are challenging the establishment of the Anti-Corruption Court through 
the law, and the law's authorization of the graft commission to conduct 
wiretaps of graft suspects. 

Muzakkir testified Wednesday that the establishment of the Anti-Corruption 
Court through the KPK law violated the Constitution. He said the functions and 
powers of the court were confusing because it had been set up as an auxiliary 
body to the KPK. 

"The focus of the court is confusing because it tries cases not according to 
their type, but based on the institution dealing with the cases," he told the 
panel of eight judges. 

Muzakkir cited the examples of special courts like the juvenile court or 
human rights court, which were established by special law and tried only certain 
types of cases. 

He said the presence of the Anti-Corruption Court had caused "legal 
uncertainty", because graft suspects could be tried either by this special court or in 
a regular district court. 

The legal expert questioned who and how it was decided a graft suspect would 
stand trial at the Anti-Corruption Court, because the KPK law did not specify 
which cases must be investigated by the graft body and which by the Attorney 
General's Office (AGO). 

"It is simply by chance whether a suspect is investigated by the KPK or the 
AGO," he said. "The problem is that the legal rights entitled to corruption 
suspects investigated by the KPK and those by the AGO are different." 

Muzakkir also said the KPK's lack of authority to halt an investigation 
because of insufficient evidence could lead to violations of a suspect's 
constitutional rights. 

Article 40 of the law on the graft commission states that it does not have 
the power to make a decision on halting an investigation. 

Khoirul Huda, in his testimony, questioned the KPK's legal right to use 
wiretaps to gather information on suspects. 

The authority to perform a wiretap should only be given to investigators and 
not to an institution like the KPK, he said. 

He said bugging ran counter to the principle of privacy, and that the 
government should therefore limit who was authorized to order wiretaps. 

KPK members and officials from the Justice and Human Rights Ministry -- both 
representing the government in the proceedings -- were at odds over the 
reasons for allowing the graft body to bug suspects. 

Testifying at a previous session, KPK members said wiretaps were necessary to 
collect preliminary evidence, while the ministry officials said in 
Wednesday's hearing that bugging was allowed only after the KPK had obtained preliminary 
evidence. 

Presiding judge Harjono ordered the government representatives to summarize 
their conflicting testimony in a written statement. 

The hearing was then adjourned with no date set for the next session. 

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Joyo Indonesia News Service
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