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Indonesia
AsiaSoutheast Asia

Indonesia election 2024: age vote ruling favouring president Jokowi’s son triggers conflict of interest probe

  • The Constitutional Court is probing a suspected conflict of interest in a court ruling clearing the way for the eldest son of President Joko Widodo to run as VP
  • The court’s chief judge, Anwar Usman, is the president’s brother-in-law and uncle to his 36-year-old son, Gibran Rakabuming Raka

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Gibran Rakabuming Raka, the eldest son of Indonesia’s President Joko Widodo who is also the mayor of Surakarta, is seen in his vehicle in Solo, Central Java on October 23, 2023. Indonesia’s defence minister and presidential candidate Prabowo Subianto said on October 22 he has chosen the eldest son of President Joko Widodo to be his running mate in next year’s election. (Photo by ARIP / AFP)
Reuters

Indonesia’s Constitutional Court has set up a panel to investigate a suspected conflict of interest in a court ruling last week clearing the way for a son of President Joko Widodo to run for vice-president in an election next year.

The expected registration of the president’s 36-year-old son, Gibran Rakabuming Raka, as a running mate for the favourite to become the next president has raised worries of a resurgence of patronage politics in a country that emerged from authoritarian rule 25 years ago.

Gibran’s bid to become vice-president was enabled by a Constitutional Court ruling removing a minimum age requirement of 40 for presidential or vice-presidential candidates, on the condition they have been elected to regional posts. Gibran was elected the mayor of Surakarta city in 2020.

Enny Nurbaningsih, a judge and spokesperson for the Constitutional Court, said it had received seven complaints filed by activists and others, of a suspected “ethical violation” in connection with the ruling last week by a nine-judge bench.

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One complainant called for the court’s chief judge, Anwar Usman, who is the president’s brother-in-law and Gibran’s uncle, to step down, she said. She did not elaborate.

“We leave this matter to the council. We will not intervene,” she told a late Monday press conference, referring to an ethics council the court has set up to look into the complaints.

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Anwar, who also attended the press conference, did not comment on the complaints but said he abided by his judicial oath.

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