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.
