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Nurdin Halid, a businessman and a well-known Golkar Party
politician, escaped imprisonment for a second time after a court here
on Thursday exonerated him of all corruption charges.
Prosecutors indicted Nurdin, chairman of the Confederation of Primary
Cooperatives Association (Inkud), of graft for the illegal importation
of some 70,000 tons of sugar from Thailand, valued at Rp 3.41 billion
(some US$350,000)
But the North Jakarta district court ruled that the indictment against
Nurdin was legally flawed and unacceptable, thus the prosecutors'
request for him to be jailed for 10 years and fined Rp 200 million was
deemed invalid.
Disappointed, the Attorney General's Office said it would appeal the
verdict.
"The 19 witnesses testified that they were never questioned about the
case and their signatures on Nurdin's dossiers were copied from the
dossiers of another case by Abdul Waris Halid," presiding judge
Humuntal Pane said.
Abdul Haris is Nurdin's brother who was acquitted by the same court
some time ago in the same case.
Pane also said that the evidence brought to the trial -- Rp 173 billion
in cash from the auction of 70,000 tons of the imported sugar that was
seized in Abdul's case -- was invalid.
"There's a contradiction here because basically no evidence was ever
submitted," he was quoted as saying by Antara.
In response, prosecutor Susanto said he had not been aware of the
originality of the witnesses' signatures in Nurdin's dossiers, which he
said were drawn by investigators at the National Police's fraud squad.
Nurdin's lawyer Ida Farida Sulistyani said she would report the
investigators to the police internal affairs division.
Nurdin, a former Golkar legislator from Makassar, South Sulawesi, the
hometown of Vice President Jusuf Kalla who also leads the party, said
he accepted the court's decision.
However, Nurdin said he would press charges against people whom he
believed had tried to make a legal case against him, including former
trade and industry minister Rini MS Suwandi.
It was the second time Nurdin has managed to escape jail after he was
acquitted in June by the South Jakarta district court for allegedly
misusing distribution funds for cooking oil from the State Logistics
Agency (Bulog) worth Rp 169 billion.
Deputy Attorney General for special crimes Hendarman Supandji said he
found the North Jakarta court and its decision to be "peculiar".
"The court found that it was not feasible for the case to be tried, so
Nurdin was acquitted. But if that's the case, the judges should have
ruled on it well before (Thursday's decision)," he said.
Hendarman said the court should have determined whether the case was
feasible for trial directly after Nurdin delivered his defense pleas,
instead of waiting until all of the trial process had been completed.
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