The trial on the criminalization case against Ms. Fatia Maulidiyanti (Coordinator of KontraS) and Mr. Haris Azhar (Founder of Lokataru) entered the stage of examining the reporting witness, namely Mr. Luhut Binsar Panjaitan. At this trial, it became increasingly clear that the Public Prosecutor (JPU) no longer represented the interests of the State but behaved like the attorney for Mr. Luhut Binsar Panjaitan (LBP). The most striking thing is that the prosecutor asked questions that were not in the Police Investigation Report (BAP) and the indictment, namely about the relationship and conversation between Luhut and Haris Azhar.



 Jakarta (Indonesia), 26 April 2011 - Parallel to the 7th International Association of Prosecutors Asia Pacific and Middle East Regional Conference and High level Prosecutors Meeting held in Jakarta, Indonesia from 16 to 18 March 2011, the Attorney General's Office of the Republic of Indonesia, the International Association of Prosecutors, the United States Department of Justice/ Office of Overseas Prosecutorial Development, Assistance and Training and UNODC organized a public prosecutors training conference from 16 to 18 March 2011.


The conference programme included panels on securing appropriate resources, distance learning, peer trainers, interactive learning, introducing new legislation, partnership with judicial or police training centers, regional training efforts, international partners, trial advocacy, internships, curriculum and lesson planning development and a field trip to the training center of the Indonesian Attorney General's Office in south Jakarta.


The response from participants of the conference was unanimously appreciative of the opportunity to share their experiences with fellow prosecutor services from around the world. Participants expressed that they saw the workshop as valuable source of information and best practice to apply to their own work. For some, it was the first international conference specially designed for prosecutors that they had ever attended in their careers, remarking that there needed to be more of this kind if the quality of prosecutor services is to be enhanced on a global scale.


UNODC believes that strong professional training centers are a driver for reform and development within the prosecution service. Training centers set the tone for new prosecutors, introduce legal changes to prosecutors, and sharpen prosecutorial skills. However, training centers around the world do not receive adequate funding and other forms of institutional support. Often, their curriculum and teaching methods are out of date and not relevant for the needs of professional prosecutors. Many centers rely upon academic lectures by retired prosecutors rather than interactive practical training led by respected peers. Some prosecution services even lack their own training facility. A recent survey of public prosecution training centers sent to International Association of Prosecutor's members indicate that there is great variation in the role and resources available to training centers.


Five participants were briefly interviewed during the conference for an insight into prosecutors' services in their country, and where weaknesses lie. Of the five interviewees, all except Pakistan gave positive reviews of the prosecutor training services in their country. Pakistan presently lacks a designated prosecutor training institution, and therefore outlined a number of issues associated with this in the interview. For the remaining four participants, a national institution for training legal professions exists in their respective counties.


For China, Albania and Indonesia, attendance to the institution is legally required to become a prosecutor. In the USA, attendance is not a legal prerequisite for the individual for employment, but training is a legal requirement placed upon the service that the individual works for. Therefore, once in employment, the individual will attend ongoing training of some nature. In Pakistan, the concept of specialised prosecutors in court is a new concept, therefore, training is not yet available, nor is it particularly encouraged as there is a degree of resentment by the majority of legal personnel, who wish to return to the old model of having the police act as prosecutors in addition to their own roles in court cases. Prosecutors in Pakistan face a difficult challenge of establishing themselves as credible and necessary legal personnel for the nation's legal infrastructure.


The interviewees noted that continuing education is mandatory of existing prosecutors, and fellow legal personnel. Although a number expressed that the resources and training institutions available to conduct continuing education was limited. China PDR appeared to be an exception to this, having a dedicated college for prosecutors, and an addition of 17 branches of the college available around the country where training is promoted and available even at grass-roots level.


On the final day of the Conference, four concrete recommendations and findings were developed through a joint discussion, based upon inputs from the different delegations:


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Under the 2004 Public Prosecution Service Act (Undang-Undang Nomor 16 Tahun 2004 tentang Kejaksaan Republik Indonesia) Article 30, the prosecutors of the Service are vested with law enforcement authority in:[1][6]

The Legal Explorers Program trains a new generation of prosecutors, defense lawyers, judges, police officers and other criminal justice professionals. The program is designed to educate high school students about the legal system and various careers within law and law enforcement.

In their indictment, prosecutors said the couple plotted the murder because von Wiese-Mack did not endorse their relationship, and that Mack once suggested that Schaefer hire someone to kill her mother for $50,000 before their visit to Bali.

Today, the public prosecutor indicted two prominent Indonesian human rights defenders, Fatia Maulidiyanti and Haris Azhar, for defamation. The prosecutor demanded that Fatia should be imprisoned for three years and six months, and Haris for four years. They were deemed guilty after being sued by the Coordinating Minister for Maritime Affairs and Investment, Luhut Binsar Pandjaitan.

Study Program of Master in Accounting (MAKSI) Faculty of Economics and Business UGM held a Public Lecture on Forensic Auditing on Friday, 31 March 2023. The public lecture entitled "The Ins and Outs of Investigating Indonesian Fraud Cases - The Role of the Prosecutor's Office in Recovering State Losses in Corruption Crimes" was held via Zoom Meeting and broadcast directly via the Master of Accounting FEB UGM Youtube channel. The resource person for this public lecture was Abvianto Syaifullah, S.H., M.H., the Investigating Attorney at the Republic of Indonesia's Attorney General's Office. He explained his presentation regarding the role of the prosecutor's office in law enforcement, especially corruption in the context of returning state assets.

Procedures for handling corruption cases at the Attorney General's Office of the Republic of Indonesia usually start with reports of complaints by the public. Furthermore, an investigation will be held to ascertain whether there are irregularities in an incident reported. If unlawful acts are found, the report will go up to the investigation stage to collect evidence that will lead to the determination of the suspect. Then, the file will be submitted to the court for trial. The final stage is the execution of the sentence by the public prosecutor based on the execution order. "The procedure for handling corruption cases at the Attorney General's Office is not much different from that of the police and the KPK," he explained.

The Corruption Perceptions Index score fell from 38 in 2018 to 34 in 2022. In terms of ranking, it decreased from 89th in 2018 to 110th out of 180 countries in 2022. Apart from this, in the Corruption Eradication Annual Report in 2022, Indonesia Corruption Watch (ICW) stated that the performance of the prosecutor's office in recovering state losses was quite good. The Attorney General's Office of the Republic of Indonesia has succeeded in handling 405 of 597 corruption cases in 2022, with a state loss of 39.207 trillion out of a total of 42.747 trillion. In general, the Attorney General's Office, the Police, and the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) have experienced an increase in the number of cases handled in 2022. The prosecutor's rank is the highest, from 371 cases in 2021 to 405 cases in 2022.

Abvi revealed several obstacles in dealing with corruption, such as resistance from third parties to the prosecutor in trying to confiscate and confiscate assets, the difficulty of obtaining permission to conduct searches from the court, and the increasingly creative acts of corruption at this time. In addition, corruption suspects and convicts generally do not admit their actions in court, so handling cases is quite tiring and requires the assistance of many experts. Therefore, there is a need for collaboration between the police and the prosecutor's office to exchange information about handling corruption.

BALI, Indonesia (AP) -- Indonesian prosecutors on Tuesday sought jail sentences of 18 years for an American man and 15 years for his girlfriend if they are found guilty of murdering the woman's mother while vacationing on the resort island of Bali last year.

The prosecutors told the court that Tommy Schaefer and Heather Mack, who appeared in court with their 2-week-old daughter, were guilty of premeditated murder. The panel of judges could ignore the sentencing request and decide to impose the maximum, death by a firing squad, if it convicts them.

"The defendant has committed sadistic acts to her own mother," chief prosecutor Eddy Arta Wijaya told the court at Mack's trial. "However, we've decided to be lenient because she repeatedly expressed remorse and has a newborn baby." 17dc91bb1f

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