JAKARTA, (Reuters) – Indonesia’s attorney general’s office has named three palm oil companies as suspects in a corruption investigation, alleging misconduct in obtaining export permits at a time when shipments were being restricted.
The investigation comes after Indonesia’s Supreme Court last month upheld a lower court’s jailing of executives at those companies for manipulating documents or submitting false data to obtain export permits.
Indonesia, which accounts for about 60% of the global palm oil supply, imposed tight export measures last year, including a three-week ban on shipments, to try to secure domestic supply to rein in soaring local cooking oil prices.
Prosecutors said the executives’ actions were on behalf of their companies, Singapore-based Wilmar Group WLIL.SI and Musim Mas Group and Medan-based Permata Hijau Group and an investigation into the firms sought to recover state losses.
“Those three companies must be held responsible,” said Ketut Sumedana, spokesperson for the attorney general’s office said in a statement issued on Thursday.
The companies did not immediately respond to request for comment.
A senior Indonesian trade ministry official has also been jailed in the case for abuse of power.
Last month, Indonesia’s anti-monopoly agency fined seven cooking oil companies for restricting sales during the cooking oil scarcity period.