President Prabowo Subianto dismissed deputy immigration minister Silmy Karim on Thursday 4 June, eight days after the anti-corruption Commission KPK (Komisi Pemberantasan Korupsi, Indonesia's anti-graft agency) arrested him 1. The KPK alleges a permit-extortion scheme that ran from 2022 to 2026 and pulled Rp 145.5 billion, about USD 7.8 million, from foreign nationals through a West Jakarta immigration office. No successor has been named as of Sunday 14 June; minister Agus Andrianto is covering daily operations.
The nomad-relevant point is a leadership vacuum at the top of the permit apparatus during peak season, when Indonesia runs immigration as both a revenue engine and an enforcement signal . The South China Morning Post reports the scandal threatens the drive to attract talent through the E33G nomad visa and the stalled Second Home premium scheme 2. For a KITAS holder (Indonesia's limited-stay residence permit) needing a renewal in the next few weeks, the practical risk is slower decisions and more cautious officials, with no deputy minister to clear an escalation.
The competing read points the other way. Removing the official who allegedly ran the bribery scheme could strengthen the system over time rather than weaken it, and a permit office under anti-graft scrutiny may process by the book where it once processed by the bribe. Both readings can hold at once: the short-run disruption is real for anyone with a file open this quarter, while the medium-run effect on a discretion-heavy office is genuinely open. The point of failure is the discretionary layer beneath the published rule, the part a remote worker cannot see from the visa brochure, and that layer is now both leaderless and watched.
