HomeAsiaIndonesia to 'refocus' free meal budget on more remote areas, official says

Indonesia to ‘refocus’ free meal budget on more remote areas, official says

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JAKARTA, June 4 (Reuters) - The Indonesian ‌agency overseeing President Prabowo Subianto's flagship free meals programme will "refocus" ​its budget by cutting back on new kitchens and targeting recipients in more remote areas, its new ⁠chief said on Thursday. 

Nanik Sudaryati Deyang, the new chief of the National Nutrition Agency, was speaking a day after her predecessor was arrested on corruption charges relating to ​the way the scheme was run. 

The details are as follows:

• Nanik said the new budget priorities came ‌after the Southeast Asian country slashed the allocation for the programme this year to 268 trillion rupiah ($14.87 billion) from the initial 335 trillion rupiah.

• Nanik's predecessor, Dadan Hindayana, was ⁠arrested for alleged corruption offences, including marking up procurement prices. Dadan was ⁠sacked by Prabowo on Tuesday.

• The ambitious free meals programme was a key part of Prabowo's campaign to win the presidency in 2024, with the government budgeting at least $15 billion to provide free meals to 83 million children and pregnant women across the ‌sprawling archipelago.

• Nanik said her agency was not focused on hitting the 83 million ⁠target for 2026 but on making sure existing kitchens ‌are up to code and healthy.

• She said on ​her watch, the agency would also focus on prioritising recipients living in remote areas.

• To ease the pressures on the state budget, the agency is considering other sources ‌of funding for the programme, including grants or CSR programmes ​from private companies, she said.

• The ⁠agency would also determine which areas have sufficient kitchens and limit ‌new applications, she said. There are over 27,000 ⁠kitchens operational across the archipelago.

• The free meals programme has come under intense scrutiny since its launch in January 2025, with investors wary of Prabowo's big spending plans and ​worried that fiscal deficit thresholds ‌could be challenged.

• The programme has been linked to cases of food poisoning that had ⁠affected at least 33,000 children as of ​April, according to Network for Education Watch, a non-governmental organisation.

($1 = 18,020 rupiah)

(Reporting by ​Stanley Widianto; Editing by David Stanway)

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