.An Indonesian governor surrenders a guitar given to him as a gift by US rock band Metallica
Indonesia and Nigeria may not be peers on the scale of economic development, but they have a problem of endemic corruption in common.
Transparency International in its last corruption rating ranked Indonesia 118th in the world. Nigeria is a little down the ladder at 139th.
Like Nigeria, Indonesia has an anti-graft agency, battling hard to stem the epidemic. And there are some Indonesian public figures who try to stay above the mud, like the governor of Indonesia’s capital of Jakarta, who just returned a gift of guitar, given to him by a US rock band, for evaluation whether he can keep it or whether the state should have it. Nigeria is yet to introduce this defining culture between graft and gift. Read the story out of Jakarta for some lesson… and your comments
“The heavy metal-loving governor of Indonesian capital Jakarta has surrendered a guitar that was a gift from US band Metallica to anti-corruption authorities, an official said Tuesday.
A beaming Joko Widodo appeared on TV last week strumming the maroon bass guitar gifted to him by Metallica’s Robert Trujillo, which was autographed and bore the words “Giving Back!.. Keep Playin’ That Cool Funky Bass!”.
But the powerful Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) said that Widodo, widely considered clean in a notoriously graft-ridden country, had now handed the gift to them.
“We will check if there is any conflict of interest or if there was an exchange of favours,” commission spokesman Johan Budi told AFP
“The screening process takes up to 30 days, and after that we will decide whether to return the guitar to him or confiscate it.”
During the TV appearance Widodo, an anti-establishment figure who was elected in September, said he was a huge fan of Metallica, whose hits include “Enter Sandman” and “Nothing Else Matters”.
He also listed Led Zeppelin, Deep Purple and Napalm Death as among his favourite bands.
His spokesman Eko Hariadi said the guitar was the first gift Widodo had received since becoming governor, he had handed it over voluntarily to be checked and there was no conflict of interest.
“The governor loves rock music. So he was certainly happy to receive it, it’s like getting a tennis racket from Boris Becker,” the spokesman told AFP, referring to the German tennis great.
“To him, it was a souvenir and there was no exchange for favours.”
Corruption remains rampant in Indonesia, particularly among public servants, and the country last year slid to 118th of 176 countries in Transparency International’s annual graft index.
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