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Defying widespread public criticism, the government refused
to cancel a 57 percent increase in the 2006 budget allocation for the
presidential office amid the country's difficult situation.
"It will not be revised now, but it is possible in June next year,"
Vice President Jusuf Kalla told a news conference at his office here on
Friday.
He defended the government's decision to raise the presidential office
budget by over 57 percent to Rp 1.147 trillion next year.
The move was due to the increase in operational costs for the
presidential office, Kalla argued. "The increase is proper, judging
from the country's size".
The Vice President assured the public that the President may not spend
the whole budget as it would be in the form of allocated programs.
"The President has ordered us to be very efficient," Kalla said.
President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, who is known as a media-savvy
leader, had ordered Minister of Finance Yusuf Anwar to cancel the
increase during a plenary meeting with the House of Representatives to
approve the draft state budget on Friday.
However, the House approved the state budget on Friday without any
significant revisions.
Yusuf said the government would revise the budget allocation for the
presidential office in June next year through the revised state budget.
The President suddenly ordered Cabinet Secretary Sudi Silalahi and
presidential spokesman Andi Mallarangeng, who accompanied him on a
visit to Jambi province on Friday, to go back to Jakarta to brief
journalists about the issue.
Senior government officials have made conflicting statements concerning
the issue.
Andi has said Susilo "was very shocked" after reading news that the
government planned to raise the presidential office's budget from Rp
727 billion to Rp 1.147 trillion.
The President then summoned Yusuf and other related ministers to give
him clearer explanations about the reports.
Jusuf later said that Susilo knew about the planned increase as it was
included in the draft state budget the President had approved in a
Cabinet meeting.
Meanwhile, Anggito Abimanyu, a senior official with the Ministry of
Finance, revealed that the increase was related to the government's
plan to buy a presidential plane next year.
In response, Andi said that Anggito's remark was "only a slip of the
tongue". He refused to elaborate upon the statement.
The news about the government's plan to increase next year's budgets
for the presidential office and the vice presidential office appeared
this week following a tip from a legislator of the Indonesia Democratic
Party for Struggle (PDI-P).
The reports surfaced soon after the House was widely criticized for its
decision to allocate Rp 10 million in monthly operational allowances
for each of its 550 members following fuel price hikes.
The increases in the budget allocations for the House and the President
have sparked public anger as most people are currently facing economic
hardship amid soaring prices of all basic commodities triggered by the
expensive fuel prices.
Critics have said the government lacks a "sense of crisis" by making
such unpopular decisions, while it cut fuel subsidies for the people.
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