Indonesian top judge held for bribery
5 October AFP
A top Indonesian judge, arrested this week for allegedly accepting
bribes worth more than $300,000, could face drugs charges after
investigators found illicit substances in his office, an official said.
The detention of constitutional court chief judge Akil Mochtar
followed the arrest of the country's top energy regulator in August and
a string of corruption cases linked to President Susilo Bambang
Yudhoyono's ruling Democratic Party.
"During the search of Akil's office, investigators found items
suspected to be illegal drugs," Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK)
spokesman Johan Budi said at a press conference.
An unnamed source at the KPK said investigators found marijuana, but
the amount was unclear.
The Jakarta Globe newspaper said Saturday that the judge slapped a
local journalist in the face after he was asked whether he would be
ready to have his fingers cut off over his bribery case.
The reporter's question related to Mochtar's previous statement that
those accused of corruption should have their fingers cut off.
Mochtar has been suspected of receiving bribes in two disputed
district elections on Borneo and Java islands, the agency's spokesman
said previously.
The KPK has been granted extraordinary powers to investigate the rich
and powerful in Indonesia, which is ranked 118th out of 176 countries
and territories in Transparency International's Corruption Perceptions
Index.
A number one ranking means the least corrupt.
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