KPK to Follow Up FBI's Allegations of Bribery at MAXpower.
Maxpower - Indonesia |
Jakarta. Indonesian anti-graft
agency KPK said it will follow up on initial reports from the United States
Federal Bureau of Investigation that power plant builder MAXpower had allegedly
paid bribes to Indonesian officials to secure government contracts.
"We
will look at the FBI investigation. If we find the alleged flow of cash to
government officials in Indonesia, we will follow up the case," Corruption
Eradication Commission (KPK) deputy chairman Alexander Marwata told reporters
in Jakarta on Monday (03/10).
Alexander's
comment came after reports arose that London-based bank Standard Chartered was
investigated by the US Department of Justice over claims that its Indonesian
power plant builder subsidiary MAXpower had paid bribes to secure contracts in
Indonesia.
The Wall Street Journal
newspaper reported an internal audit of the MAXpower Group had revealed
evidence of possible bribery and US prosecutors were examining whether Standard
Chartered was culpable for not stopping it.
The reports showed indications that MAXpower made inappropriate
payments to Indonesian government officials between 2012 and 2015.
"We definitely will cooperate with the FBI. According to
the UNCAC [United Nations Convention against Corruption], all countries must
cooperate to eradicate corruption," Alexander said.
Alexander pointed out that the KPK already has experiences
handling corruption cases involving multinational companies, including a case
involving Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P) politician Emir Moeis
who was jailed for taking $357,000 in bribes from Alstom Power, an American
subsidiary of its French parent company, and Japan-based Marubeni Corporation.
"We will process this case the same way we brought Emir
Moeis and former Pertamina director Suroso, who also took bribes from
multinational companies, to justice," Alexander said.
Responding to the allegations, MAXpower claimed they gave a
"one-sided and partial view of the operations and events at the firm and
as such do not give a full, or true view.”
Under a deferred prosecution agreement it reached with US
authorities in 2012, Standard Chartered is due to remain under supervision by
an independent monitor until the end of 2017.
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