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8MAY

Graft case leaves permit office headless

3 min read
10:02UTC

Indonesia's KPK extended dismissed deputy immigration minister Silmy Karim's detention by 40 days on 22 June, leaving two of the three senior residence-permit posts empty or under investigation.

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Key takeaway

Indonesia's permit directorate is headless for 346,000-plus residents, with no published guidance on processing continuity.

Indonesia's anti-corruption Commission, the KPK (Komisi Pemberantasan Korupsi), extended the pre-trial detention of dismissed deputy immigration minister Silmy Karim by 40 days on Monday 22 June, pushing his custody through late July as investigators trace assets and electronic evidence 1. President Prabowo dismissed Karim on 4 June and has named no replacement, leaving daily ministry duties handled in the interim 2. The original arrest of Karim and 16 others was reported last update ; the new beat is operational, not the graft narrative.

The Acting Director General of Immigration is also among the 18 people held in connection with the alleged residence-permit extortion scheme, which means two of the three senior posts in the Directorate of Residence Permits are empty or under investigation. The permit machinery sits without a settled head while it processes KITAS (limited-stay residence permits) and KITAP (permanent-stay permits) for more than 346,000 foreign residents. No guidance on processing continuity has been published, a silence that echoes the directorate's habit of withholding operational detail while it markets premium visa products , .

The scheme allegedly ran from 2022 to 2026, charging roughly Rp100 million a week to clear applications, which makes provenance the sharper worry over delay. A foreigner whose KITAS was processed through an allegedly compromised West Jakarta channel cannot be sure the permit was issued cleanly. With the leadership that would normally adjudicate such questions itself under arrest, no one is positioned to rule on it. Jakarta could argue continuity holds because the rules are unchanged and routine processing continues below the leadership tier. No official has yet said who signs off when a contested file reaches the top.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Indonesia has two main types of residence permit for foreigners. KITAS is a limited-stay permit, valid for one to two years. KITAP is a permanent-stay permit for longer-term residents. Both are issued and managed by the Directorate General of Immigration (Ditjen Imigrasi). In June 2026, Indonesia's anti-corruption agency KPK (Komisi Pemberantasan Korupsi) ran a sting operation and arrested 17 people, including the deputy minister who ran immigration and the acting director-general of the directorate. The allegation is that officials and private visa agents charged foreigners roughly Rp100 million (about USD 5,400) per week to fast-track or approve permits. On 22 June, KPK extended the deputy minister's detention by 40 days. Two of the three most senior posts in the directorate are now held by people under investigation or arrest. President Prabowo has not named a replacement. The directorate keeps processing routine permits below the leadership tier, but no official guidance has been published on what happens to contested cases or applications that were already in the pipeline.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Indonesia's immigration directorate has since at least 2022 operated a dual revenue model: formal state revenue from permit fees (Rp10.4 trillion collected in 2025, 155% of target) and an informal payment infrastructure where expedited processing was available for a fee through intermediaries.

KPK's investigation of the West Jakarta Class I office exposed the informal layer, but the structural incentive, an under-resourced directorate processing high volumes with significant discretionary authority at the counter level, predates the current administration.

President Prabowo's decision not to name a replacement deputy minister as of 23 June follows a pattern in Indonesian cabinet management: acting appointments are preferred when the investigation may implicate a wider network, to avoid appointing a successor who could be compromised by proximity to the same networks. The resulting leadership vacuum at the top of the permit apparatus is an intentional political choice rather than administrative failure.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    Foreign residents whose KITAS or KITAP applications were processed through the West Jakarta channel between 2022 and 2026 face an unresolved permit-provenance question. Indonesia's immigration law contains no revalidation mechanism; the government has not issued a position paper on permit status.

    Short term · Reported
  • Consequence

    With no named deputy minister and the acting Director General under arrest, contested permit decisions cannot escalate to ministerial level. Applicants whose files require director-general or deputy-minister sign-off will face indefinite delays until replacements are confirmed.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Risk

    KPK investigations in Indonesia typically widen: the original 17 arrestees in June included nine private visa-agent intermediaries. A second wave of arrests implicating further regional offices would further extend the leadership vacuum and potentially freeze permit processing in additional cities.

    Medium term · Suggested
  • Precedent

    Indonesia's permit apparatus has historically operated as a discretionary revenue system rather than a rules-based processing function. The KPK investigation may produce structural reforms, including a centralised permit-processing system that removes counter-level discretion, which would reshape the application experience for future nomad visa (E33G) applicants.

    Long term · Suggested
First Reported In

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CNN Indonesia· 23 Jun 2026
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This Event
Graft case leaves permit office headless
More than 346,000 foreign residents depend on a directorate whose adjudicating leadership is itself under arrest, with no continuity guidance published.
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