JakartaPost-Sept 9

Policymakers have agreed to give the President the authority to establish a data protection oversight agency, but many questions remain about the draft privacy bill, with critics believing public institutions found in violation of privacy will still enjoy impunity. House of Representatives Commission I overseeing intelligence and information and the government unanimously endorsed the privacy bill to be passed into law in a plenary session this month before lawmakers go into recess, after finding common ground on the agency’s status late on Wednesday afternoon. They agreed only to determine the roles of the agency in a more general context and that it would answer to the President, but they left its institutional design to the discretion of the President. Commission I deputy chairman Abdul Kharis Almasyhari said lawmakers opposed the agency being put under the Communications and Information Ministry and preferred not to use the word “independent” to describe the agency. “We didn’t want [the agency] to be under the ministry and finally we found common ground.” Communications and Information Minister Johnny G. Plate also declined to use the word “independent” to describe the agency, stressing that it would be part of the executive whose establishment would be in the hands of the President. The draft bill, which contains a total of 76 articles, regulates the general scope of authority of the agency, such as formulating policies on data protection, resolving disputes outside the court system and imposing administrative sanctions and non-judicial fines. The agency is to receive and handle complaints regarding privacy violations, investigate the violations and summon anyone involved in the alleged violations, as well as assisting law enforcement bodies in the investigation of criminal cases related to the illegal use of data. Read more at: https://www.thejakartapost.com/paper/2022/09/08/president-to-control-new-data-protection-agency.html.