JAKARTA, (Reuters) – Indonesia’s police this week named the chief of the country’s anti-corruption agency, Firli Bahuri, as a suspect for alleged extortion or receiving kickbacks, another setback in the once-prized government institution.
Firli, a former police inspector general, is a suspect in alleged extortion of money from Syahrul Yasin Limpo, the ex-agriculture minister who was arrested after being named a suspect in a corruption case last month, authorities have said.
Ade Safri Simanjuntak, a Jakarta police official, told reporters late on Wednesday that there has been “sufficient evidence to name … the KPK chief as a suspect in a corruption case in the form of extortion.”
He said a state official extorted money at the agriculture ministry from 2020-2023.
Authorities had confiscated exchange transaction documents from Singapore and U.S. dollars worth 7.4 billion rupiah ($477,730) from raids at two locations, Ade added.
Firli did not immediately respond to a request for comment. He has not been arrested.
He said in a press conference on Monday prior to being a named a suspect that he has “never extorted anyone, and I’ve never been involved in a bribery…with anyone.”
The Corruption Eradication Commission, known by its Indonesian initials, KPK, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
President Joko Widodo said on Thursday “to respect the process of law” when asked about Firli being named a suspect.
Firli was named the KPK chief in 2019, around the same time critics said changes to the law governing the agency had weakened it, triggering a series of “save the KPK” protests.
KPK has prosecuted hundreds of politicians, officials, and businessmen since its formation in 2002, becoming one of the country’s most respected agencies.