JakartaPost-Aug 30, 2021

Nearly two decades after the establishment of the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) – a key institution that, to many, symbolizes the spirit of reformasi (reform) that flowered after the downfall of Soeharto – Indonesia appears to be running out of steam in its fight against graft. With the KPK losing its power and riddled by a series of scandals of its own, and with the judiciary being seen as overly lenient toward graft convicts, the nation’s corruption perception index (CPI) score tumbled for the first time in 13 years from 40 in 2019 to 37 last year, dragging the country back to the bottom half of the Transparency International CPI rankings, at 102nd out of 180 nations. In 2019, it stood in 85th place. Vedi Hadiz, a social scientist who has spent decades researching political corruption in the country, said it was time for the progressive elements of Indonesian civil society to rethink their antigraft strategy.

Read more at https://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2021/08/29/indonesias-war-on-graft-is-in-tatters-now-what.html.