Current:Home > MarketsCourt panel removes Indonesia’s chief justice for ethical breach that benefited president’s son -TrueNorth Capital Hub
Court panel removes Indonesia’s chief justice for ethical breach that benefited president’s son
Charles Langston View
Date:2025-04-10 07:21:50
JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) — The chief justice of Indonesia’s top court was dismissed from the post after an ethics council found him guilty Tuesday of making last-minute changes to election candidacy requirements.
Constitutional Court Chief Justice Anwar Usman committed the ethical violation that cleared the way for President Joko Widodo’s eldest son to run for vice president next year, Jimly Asshiddiqie, the chief of the court’s Honorary Council, known also as the ethics council, said in the majority decision.
Usman “was proven to have committed a serious violation of the code of ethics and behavior of constitutional justices” by violating the principles of impartiality, integrity, competence, equality, independence, appropriateness and decency, Asshiddiqie said.
The ruling came less than a month after the Constitutional Court, in a 5-4 decision, carved out an exception to the minimum age requirement of 40 for presidential and vice presidential candidates, allowing the president’s son, Gibran Rakabuming Raka, 36, to seek the post.
Various organizations and rights activists challenged the court’s Oct. 16 decision. A majority reported Usman for alleged ethics breaches on the grounds that he should have recused himself from hearing candidacy petitions to avoid conflicts of interest since Raka is his nephew by marriage.
The three-judge ethics panel removed Usman as chief justice but allowed him to remain on the court under certain conditions. The panel banned him from being involved when the court adjudicates election disputes next year.
It ordered the vice chief justice to lead the selection of the court’s new leadership within 48 hours and prohibited Usman’s nomination for chief justice during the remainder of his current term, which ends in 2028. He can be reappointed after 2028 as he is not over 70 years old.
In a dissenting opinion, a member of the panel, Bintan R. Saragih, argued for Usman’s dishonorable and permanent dismissal, not just as chief, the toughest possible penalty.
“The only sanction for serious violations is dishonorable dismissal and there are no other sanctions as regulated in the current law on the Constitutional Court,” Saragih said.
Most of the complaints filed asked to have the ruling at issue thrown out. Council Chief Asshiddiqie maintained the panel did not have authority to overturn the court.
Usman did recuse himself from ruling on three unsuccessful petitions seeking to alter the candidacy age requirement but then participated in considering a subsequent petition to allow people who had served as regional leaders to seek higher office before they turned 40. He voted with the majority of the nine-judge Constitutional Court panel in favor of creating the exception.
The decision helped Raka, whom Indonesians refer to by his first name, because he is major of Surakata, a city in Central Java province. About a week later, leading presidential hopeful Prabowo Subianto, a former special forces general who currently serves as Indonesia’s defense minister, picked Raka as his running mate.
Critics called the Constitutional Court’s ruling nepotistic, and analysts warned it could undermine the democratic process. In response to the public challenges, the court established the three-member ethics council, made up of a court justice, an academic and a public figure, to investigate the nine justices, particularly the ones who voted in favor of amending the age limit.
Dewa Gede Palguna, a constitutional law expert who served two terms as Constitutional Court justice, said the panel’s sanctions on Usman would not affect the ruling but might help restore public trust in the court.
“The Constitutional Court ruling is final and absolutely valid,” Palguna said in an interview with Kompas TV, an Indonesian television network.
The court is expected to issue its rulings Wednesday on several pending cases seeking to tighten the age exception by only allowing under age 40 candidates only for those who has served two terms in office as provincial governors to run in the presidential contest.
The General Election Commission is set to close the registration period for a political party or a coalition to replace their candidates for president or vice president at midnight Wednesday.
Indonesia, the world’s third-largest democracy, is set to hold both legislative and presidential elections in February 2024.
___
Associated Press writer Edna Tarigan in Jakarta, Indonesia, contributed to this report.
veryGood! (9573)
Related
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- Jim Harbaugh sign-stealing suspension: Why Michigan coach is back for Big Ten championship
- Federal judge tosses lawsuit alleging environmental racism in St. James Parish
- Why Kirby Smart thinks Georgia should still be selected for College Football Playoff
- Trump issues order to ban transgender troops from serving openly in the military
- Stephen Colbert suffers ruptured appendix; Late Show episodes canceled as he recovers
- Down goes No. 1: Northwestern upsets top-ranked Purdue once again
- It's been a brutal year for homebuyers. Here's what experts predict for 2024, from mortgage rates to prices.
- Bill Belichick's salary at North Carolina: School releases football coach's contract details
- The 10 best quarterbacks in college football's transfer portal
Ranking
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- 1 person is dead and 11 missing after a landslide and flash floods hit Indonesia’s Sumatra island
- Sister Wives' Janelle Brown Shares the One Thing She’d Change About Her Marriage to Kody
- Wisconsin never trails in impressive victory defeat of No. 3 Marquette
- Small twin
- How S Club Is Honoring Late Member Paul Cattermole on Tour
- Exclusive: MLB execs Billy Bean, Catalina Villegas – who fight for inclusion – now battle cancer
- Weeks later, Coast Guard is still unsure of what caused oil spill in Gulf of Mexico
Recommendation
Small twin
1 person is dead and 11 missing after a landslide and flash floods hit Indonesia’s Sumatra island
Review: The long Kiss goodbye ends at New York’s Madison Square Garden, but Kiss avatars loom
In Dubai, Harris deals with 2 issues important to young voters: climate and Gaza
NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
Barbie doll honoring Cherokee Nation leader is met with mixed emotions
Federal judge tosses lawsuit alleging environmental racism in St. James Parish
Indigenous Leaders Urge COP28 Negotiators to Focus on Preventing Loss and Damage and Drastically Reducing Emissions