From an opinion piece in the Jakarta daily Kompas titled ‘The House of Representatives and Eradicating Corruption’.
Drunken Republic Cartoons
September 2010
August 2010
Kid: Mr, don’t worry about the wealth report... there’s a special going on letters certifying good behaviour... and remissions!
Document on scale reads ‘Wealth Report’
Anti-graft activists say that whether it’s because of negligence or a malicious intent to hide something, it is unacceptable that more than 100 lawmakers have still not submitted their personal wealth reports to the Corruption Eradication Commission. The reports were due in December last year.
Traffic cop: Mooooney... a play on the words duit (money) and peluit (whistle)
Man: Those kind of whistle-blowers, they’ve been around for ages Mr!
As the country gears up to commemorate its 65th anniversary tomorrow, many Indonesian’s are still waiting for the fruits of independence.
Despite making remarkable strides since the overthrow of the Suharto dictatorship 12 years ago, critics say that widespread corruption, poor law enforcement, a culture of impunity for rights abuses and the growing use of draconian libel laws to muzzle critics is undermining the gains won by the 1998 reformasi movement.
While the political elite sell off the country’s enormous natural wealth and divide the spoils among themselves, more than half of Indonesia’s 240 million people live on less than US$2 a day, 25% of children under five are malnourished, only 48% of the rural poor have access to clean water and only 55% of poor children complete junior high schoo
Politician: Remember... during the holy fasting month we should control our passion and lust.
Man: Including the lust for corruption?
Politician: Let me get back to you on that one...
Home to almost 10 million people, 8 million motorcycles and 3 million cars, Jakarta is the only mega-city in the world without a mass rapid transport system, and it is now commonplace for people to spend four or more hours commuting to and from work each day.
Kid: So what’s crooked, you or the building?
Legislator: The camera.
July 2010
Driver: Before ‘time was money’, now time is always traffic Mr...
From an opinion piece in the Jakarta daily Kompas by Kontras coordinator Usman Hamid titled “The Attorney General and Justice for the Victims”.
Man: The Bank Century case, this case that case, case XYZ, to the piggy bank case, they will all be fully investigated! Full, full, fully!
Kid: Will!
1st Man: By 2050 many of our islands will be under water.
2nd Man: What’s important is they’re safe till 2014, right?
Politicians: My job is to make policy, my job is to procure canisters... my job is this, my job is that...
Man holding gas canister: My job... is to accept my fate...
Man: The rice-reform order (era) huh? – report nasi (difficulties buying rice), a play on the word reform[n]asi (political reform).
Signs read: Going up. Going up.
Kid: So where’s your commitment to the ideal of serving the people’s interests?
Lawmaker: In spite of not turning up for work, falling asleep during hearings, using my position to earn extra on the side, throwing bribes around... nevertheless I do represent the prosperity of the ordinary people...
Man: Going sightseeing Mr?
Legislator: It’s a working visit don’t you know!