Last week, President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono tried to reiterate his supposed commitment to fighting corruption when he signed off on new punishments for graft convicts. The so-called impoverishment program would impose substantial fines upon offenders, aiming to ensure that they and their families can't enjoy even a single rupiah of any ill-gotten wealth.
It sounds all well and good, but at this point the president's move seems more like a last-ditch, cosmetic effort to prevent his own popularity, and that of his beleaguered Democratic Party, from tanking further.
If the public had any doubts about widespread corruption among the Democrats and the party's general lack of commitment to cleaning up the nation's politics, following due process and helping the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) do its job, those doubts must have evaporated with graft suspect Angelina Sondakh's recent appearance at the House of Representatives.
Despite previous assurances by the Democratic Party politician and her superiors that she would stand aside while investigations were under way, Angelina has done anything but. Most disturbingly, she had the gall to sit in on a legislative session.
In a speech on Feb. 5, after Angelina was named a suspect, Yudhoyono said all party members who had been named suspects by the KPK must step down.
The next day, party official Didi Irawadi Syamsudin promised that the Democrats would "soon" issue the decree suspending Angelina, saying, "While the investigation is under way, we will suspend her from all posts. It's just a matter of administrative process before we do so officially."
Angelina did lose her position as deputy secretary general of the party. Yet on Feb. 14, she remained seated in the legislature. Adding insult to injury, she was moved from her position on House Commission X on youth and sports affairs to Commission III on legal affairs.
Such a thoughtless move, presented to the public as nothing more than a regular rotation, was not surprisingly met with an uproar. KPK head Abraham Samad said he would not attend any Commission III meetings if Angelina was present. Yudhoyono predictably blew his top and berated party chairman Anas Urbaningrum and House faction leader Jafar Hafsah for such a politically incompetent act.
The party later backtracked, with Saan Mustopa, the secretary of the Democrats in the House, claiming the transfer was only "planned" even though in several interviews Jafar had used the word "already." Angelina ended up on Commission VIII, which deals with religious affairs.
Of course, as usual, there was no discussion at all on either the president's order that KPK suspects resign or Didi's promise that Angelina would soon be suspended from all her posts.
No doubt we will be told the paperwork hasn't been processed, that it's only the labyrinths of committees and bureaucratic processes and signatures to be got that is holding this up. Hence Angelina's right to attend legislative sessions at the House, even as she is questioned in court for graft.
Even Angelina seems to think things have returned to normal. Although she should step down immediately and await the court's pleasure, she called a press conference to ask reporters to respect her silence on the matters before the court.
She has already been advised both judicially and publicly to tell the truth and to understand the seriousness of perjury. She has also given her word that she would accept a suspension. Instead, she not only turned up at the House for business as usual but she also asked the press to get off her back.
Angelina may have gained a temporary immunity from justice, bestowed upon her by those who have not processed her suspension papers or were impressed by her performance in front of the camera. But the steady hands of time are ticking away, and like her namesake in Gilbert and Sullivan's classic comic opera "Trial by Jury," Angelina definitely and unmistakably will soon hear those fateful words breaking the silence she craves: "Angelina, come thou into court."
There, the former maxim of the law, "qui tacet consentire videtur" ("he who keeps silent is taken to consent") – or, in other words, those who keep silent cannot be found guilty – no longer applies.
Yet Angelina does not appear to understand the gravity of her situation. And she is not alone in this. Recently, House Speaker Marzuki Alie went on the record as saying, "I think there is something wrong with the way we work."
We presume the irony of his statement was lost on him. But it's not lost on the public, which is fed up with the stonewalling and obfuscation of politicians and their faceless advisers who treat the citizens of Indonesia with patronizing condescension. It simply won't do. The electorate is becoming more and more politically astute, informed and outraged.
The way things were done in the past had one intention only – leaving people with a sense of soothed feelings and a curious sense of being unable to recall exactly what explanation was given. To politicians wedded to the past and its mentalities – whatever their age – that attitude will prove their ruin, especially when the public no longer trusts the "bapaks" after so many public relations blunders, lies and court sentences.
Angelina can expect to be given every benefit of law and justice; this is her right. In the meantime, however, she must do everything in her power to cooperate transparently with the processes in motion and in a spirit of justice rather than playing fast and loose with the letter of the law, which has somehow allowed her to sit in the House at the same time she is under serious investigation for robbing the constituents it is her job and duty to serve.
Angelina should stand aside and the president and his party should ensure that she does. If not, the developing sense of contempt for the ruling Democratic Party will only become more entrenched.
For the integrity of the country's political system, not to mention the survival of whatever credibility it still holds, the Democratic Party must see to it that corruption does not go unpunished.
[Yohanes Sulaiman is a lecturer at the Indonesian Defense University (Unhan). Phillip Turnbull is a theology teacher based in Jakarta.]