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Nomads & Communities
14JUN

Indonesia arrests its own visa-permit minister

4 min read
11:49UTC

Indonesia's KPK detained deputy immigration minister Silmy Karim and 16 others on 2 and 3 June over an alleged scheme charging roughly Rp100 million a week to clear residence permits.

SocietyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Indonesia's real permit risk was discretionary processing, not the published rules, and KPK has now arrested the minister overseeing it.

Indonesia's Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK, Komisi Pemberantasan Korupsi) ran a sting at the West Jakarta Class I immigration office on 2 and 3 June 2026 and detained 17 people: eight immigration officials, nine private visa-agent intermediaries, and the man above them. Silmy Karim, deputy immigration and corrections minister and immigration director general through 2023 and 2024, was named a suspect for allegedly taking around Rp100 million (about US$5,425) a week to clear residence permits that were otherwise deliberately stalled 1. KPK is Indonesia's independent anti-graft body, with its own investigators and the authority to prosecute sitting officials; naming a serving deputy minister is not a fishing move.

The scheme allegedly covered both KITAS (Kartu Izin Tinggal Terbatas, the limited-stay permit every long-stay foreigner must hold) and KITAP (Kartu Izin Tinggal Tetap, the permanent-stay permit retirees and settled remote workers spend years working toward). Karim's declared wealth of Rp234.59 billion (about US$14.4 million) is now under KPK scrutiny 2. State news agency ANTARA carried the figures, so the weekly bribe and the wealth review are KPK allegations relayed by the wire, not a single newsroom's claim 3.

The mechanism is what makes this a nomad story rather than a Jakarta political one. Nine of the 17 arrested are private intermediaries, the agents foreigners actually hand their paperwork and their fees to. The alleged design monetised delay itself: pay beyond the gazetted fee and the file moves; refuse and it sits, indefinitely, with no appeal against a queue. This topic has logged Indonesia as the region's tough revenue-raiser, collecting 155% of its 2025 immigration target alongside 346 April apprehensions , running the 62-detention Dharma Dewata sweep in Bali , and lifting the E33G income floor to US$60,000 while a Bali task force fused tax and immigration data . The alleged extortion window, 2023 to 2024, sits squarely inside Karim's tenure as director general, the same period that produced those enforcement headlines. The tough-enforcer reputation and the alleged graft came out of one office, in one stretch, run by one man.

The practical fallout reaches anyone who used a West Jakarta-area agent in that window. Permits already issued through the alleged channel now carry a question mark, and Indonesia's published 2025 revenue figure loses evidentiary weight until KPK establishes how much of it was extorted rather than collected. A foreigner could clear every income threshold and visa-shop perfectly and still hold a document whose legality now depends on who processed it.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Indonesia has two types of residence permit for foreigners staying long-term: the KITAS, a limited-stay permit for people on work visas or retirement arrangements, and the KITAP, a permanent-stay permit for long-term residents who have spent years in the country. Getting these permits requires an application to a regional immigration office, often through a licensed agent. The KPK, which stands for Komisi Pemberantasan Korupsi (Corruption Eradication Commission), is Indonesia's independent anti-graft body. It ran a sting operation at the immigration office in West Jakarta, catching officials and agents who were allegedly charging foreigners Rp100 million a week, about USD 5,400, over the regular government fee, in exchange for moving applications through faster or ensuring approval. Silmy Karim, who oversaw the entire national immigration system as director general from 2023 to 2024 before becoming a deputy minister, is accused of directing the scheme. His declared personal wealth of Rp234.59 billion is under scrutiny because it is far larger than what his official salary would explain. For foreigners currently holding KITAS or KITAP permits processed through the West Jakarta office, the practical advice from Indonesian immigration lawyers is to keep all official receipts and fee payment records and to wait for further guidance from the Directorate General before taking any action.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The KITAS/KITAP system rests on two structural conditions that make it a rent-creation engine. First, the Immigration Law gives regional-office chiefs discretionary authority over applications without a statutory decision deadline or appeal-right to a national body. A compliant applicant has no legal route to compel a decision within any defined period, which means delay itself carries leverage.

Second, Indonesia's permit-processing infrastructure relies on private visa agents (pidum) as an authorised intermediary layer. Unlike the Philippines or Thailand, where direct-applicant lodgement is the primary channel, Indonesian immigration regulations formally recognise agent submissions, giving the agent-official relationship a quasi-official status that makes payment arrangements harder to characterise as bribery on the face of the transaction.

The third condition runs through Indonesia's budget architecture. The Directorate General of Immigration operates against a non-tax state revenue (PNBP) target, and in 2025 it collected 155% of that target . Officials who can increase throughput in any way, including by creating an informal fast lane that charges above the fee schedule, serve the revenue mandate simultaneously with the corruption.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    KPK investigations into immigration-office corruption typically trigger temporary processing slowdowns as regional-office chiefs impose additional documentation checks to demonstrate procedural compliance; West Jakarta KITAS/KITAP applicants should expect 4-8 week delays beyond the standard processing window.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Precedent

    A conviction of a sitting deputy minister would be the highest-profile KPK outcome since the 2023 prosecution of former Communications Minister Johnny Plate; it would test whether the 2019 revision of Law No.30 leaves KPK with enough prosecutorial authority to deliver a sentence that survives appeal.

    Medium term · Assessed
  • Consequence

    If the structural conditions that generate informal permit pricing, namely the absence of a statutory decision deadline and the authorised pidum intermediary layer, remain unchanged, criminal prosecution will remove individual actors while leaving the market mechanism intact, as the Philippines Bureau of Immigration cases from 2014 to 2020 demonstrated.

    Long term · Assessed
  • Opportunity

    Thailand's 2022 online-portal reform, which collapsed informal permit pricing by removing in-person discretion from the process, is the structural comparator Indonesia has not yet adopted; the political moment of a ministerial arrest gives the Prabowo government a window to propose the same reform without looking reactive to nomad-industry lobbying.

    Medium term · Assessed
First Reported In

Update #6 · Indonesia arrests its visa-permit minister

ANTARA News· 6 Jun 2026
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