Updated
Updated · Bloomberg · Jun 9
Indonesia Parliament Passes Law Letting Police Hold Civilian Posts in 4th-Most-Populous Nation
Updated
Updated · Bloomberg · Jun 9

Indonesia Parliament Passes Law Letting Police Hold Civilian Posts in 4th-Most-Populous Nation

2 articles · Updated · Bloomberg · Jun 9

Summary

  • Tuesday’s plenary session approved a legal revision allowing Indonesian police officers to take civilian or non-police government jobs.
  • The law permits those appointments when posts are unrelated to policing, requested by a ministry or agency, or assigned by the president.
  • Indonesia’s government is effectively codifying a practice already in use, expanding the formal role of security officials inside civilian administration.
  • The change could deepen police influence across government in the world’s fourth-most-populous country.

Insights

Is Indonesia's new law a cure for bureaucratic weakness or a Trojan horse for military control over the state?
As activists are attacked and dissent silenced, who will hold Indonesia's newly empowered security state accountable?