JakartaPost-Apr 21, 2021

Trade Minister Muhammad Lutfi has vowed to support and cooperate with the Attorney General’s Office (AGO) in an investigation into alleged corruption that involves a senior ministry official and is believed to have led to a scarcity of cooking oil and subsequent high prices on the local market. The AGO has named and detained four suspects in the case, including the Trade Ministry’s foreign trade director general, Indrasari Wisnu Wardhana, who had allegedly issued export permits illegally for several palm oil producers. The companies did not qualify for export permits because they had failed to fulfill their domestic market obligation (DMO), which requires CPO producers to sell a certain portion of their planned exports at home no more than Rp 9,300 (64 US cents) per kilogram. “We found strong indications that corrupt practices had caused the [cooking oil] scarcity,” Attorney General Sanitiar Burhanuddin told a press conference earlier on Tuesday. “The scarcity is ironic because Indonesia is the largest CPO [crude palm oil] producer in the world.” Indonesia is also the largest CPO exporter, yet the country has struggled to overcome a cooking oil shortage in many regions this year. Read more at:  https://www.thejakartapost.com/indonesia/2022/04/21/illegal-issuance-of-export-licenses-triggered-cooking-oil-crisis-ago.html.