×
Advertisement


Asia

Indonesia parliament amends law to allow police to serve in civilian government

The amendments come a year after parliament revised the country’s military law, which allocated more civilian posts to soldiers.

Indonesia parliament amends law to allow police to serve in civilian government

Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto gestures as he walks at the parliament building to deliver his speech on economic policies and the 2027 fiscal plan in Jakarta, Indonesia, May 20, 2026. (Photo: Reuters/Willy Kurniawan)

10 Jun 2026 11:19AM
(Updated: 10 Jun 2026 11:44AM)

JAKARTA: The Indonesian parliament passed revisions to the country’s national police law on Tuesday (Jun 9), allowing serving police officers to accept posts in the civilian government.

The amendments came a year after parliament revised the country’s military law, which allocated more civilian posts to soldiers.

Since taking office in 2024, Indonesian President Prabowo Subianto has expanded the military’s role in civil affairs, using it to help develop his ambitious free meals and food self-sufficiency programmes, in which the police have also been involved.

The former special forces commander has appointed senior police and military officers to his administration.

CNA Games

Show More


Show Less

On Jun 2, Prabowo sacked the head of the billion-dollar free meals scheme, which has been blighted by corruption claims and reports of mass food poisonings which affected at least 33,000 children as of April. He was arrested by Indonesian authorities a day later.

The former head is Dadan Hindayana, an entomologist who led the National Nutrition Agency overseeing the free meals scheme since its inception in August 2024. Dadan was sacked along with two deputies on Jun 2, while all three were taken into custody in Jakarta on Jun 3.

Under the new law, passed unanimously by a plenary session of parliament, serving police officers do not have to resign before they are appointed to other state institutions or ministries outside the National Police, including civilian posts, as long as the positions are related to the tasks and functions of the police, according to a copy of the bill seen by Reuters.

The positions are those related to public security and order, law enforcement, protection, care and services to the public in ministries or state agencies, it said.

Active police officers may also fill posts outside its organisation based on requests from the president, ministries or state agencies, as long as their expertise is needed, according to the bill.

Sarifuddin Sudding, a member of the parliamentary committee involved in deliberations over the bill, told Reuters that police officers do not have to resign because their expertise is needed by the administration.

“A more responsive and adaptable legal framework is urgent to ensure that National Police can perform their duties effectively,” law minister Supratman Andi Agtas said in the plenary session.

The revisions also extend the mandatory retirement age for police officers, including the national chief, by one year.

“The government seems to replicate what they have done with military law,” said Haeril Halim from Amnesty International Indonesia, adding that it was “a sign of authoritarianism where defence and security forces are used to back those in power.”

This law also contradicts last year’s constitutional court ruling that obliged police officers to resign if they take on positions outside the force.

Placing active police officers in ministries and state agencies is unconstitutional and will harm the professionalism of the police and disrupt career paths and the merit system for civil servants, Muhammad Isnur from Indonesia’s Legal Aid Foundation said.

Source: Reuters/st(ao)

Advertisement

Also worth reading

Advertisement

Related Posts

Iran war live: Tehran says US must ensure Israel ends attacks on Lebanon

Iranian deputy foreign minister says Iran ‘ready to move forward’ on diplomacy with US, but war must end on all fronts.

Read out all

In pictures: Thai Princess Bajrakitiyabha dies at age 47

Thailand's royal household has announced the death of Princess Bajrakitiyabha, the eldest daughter of King Vajiralongkorn, at the age of 47. She...

Read out all

The unknown man in my mother’s coffin: A year after Air India crash, families still waiting for answers

Miten Patel remembers the day hospital staff in Ahmedabad drew two vials of his blood to help identify his parents. He had...

Read out all

Japan raises interest rate to highest for 31 years

Japan's central bank has increased its main interest rate to a new 31-year high after a surge in global energy prices. On...

Read out all

A year on, six questions still haunt the Air India crash investigation

A year after Air India Flight 171 to London crashed into a medical college campus moments after take-off from the western Indian...

Read out all

Delhi’s temperature showed 43.5C. Why did it feel hotter?

For several weeks now, the Indian capital, Delhi, has been battling a severe heatwave, with temperatures routinely rising above 40C. The real...

Read out all