HomeAsiaIndonesia's Prabowo appoints new head of free meals agency

Indonesia’s Prabowo appoints new head of free meals agency

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JAKARTA, June 8 (Reuters) - Indonesian President ‌Prabowo Subianto on Monday appointed a new head of the ​agency responsible for implementing his flagship free meals programme, replacing the previous office holder who was dismissed ⁠and arrested on graft charges last week.

Here are some key details about the inauguration:

• At the presidential palace, Prabowo appointed Nanik Sudaryati Deyang as the new head of ​the National Nutrition Agency, replacing her predecessor Dadan Hindayana, who was arrested last week on allegations ‌of corruption linked to the free meals programme.

• Indonesia's Attorney General's Office (AGO) also arrested two of the agency's deputy heads on charges of corruption leading to state losses.

• The three ⁠were accused of manipulating the selection of the foundations managing the ⁠programme's kitchens, and also artificially marking up the prices of electric motorbikes, shoes, and televisions procured as part of the programme.

• "Our concern is regarding budget efficiency so we will not burden the state budget, while at the same time maintaining the targets we ‌have set," Nanik said after her inauguration.

• The efficiency measures include a moratorium on ⁠the establishment of new kitchens, "refocusing" the programme on new recipients ‌and developing kitchens in remote areas through grants or ​CSR programmes from state firm or private companies, rather than the state budget, Nanik said.

• Prabowo also appointed two new deputy heads of the free meals agency: Agustina ‌Arumsari, former deputy head of Financial and Development Supervisory ​Agency, and Major General Trenggono who ⁠has resigned from the Military.

• Prabowo also appointed the head of the ‌Labour Party, Said Iqbal, as his new ⁠special advisor for manpower and labour welfare affairs.

• Prabowo's free meals programme, a key part of his election campaign launched in January 2025, has raised investor concerns about overspending ​and fiscal deficit risks.

• The ‌programme has also sparked a public outcry about health and safety, with cases of food ⁠poisoning affecting at least 33,000 children as ​of April, according to the Network for Education Watch, a non-government organisation.

(Reporting by ​Ananda Teresia; Editing by David Stanway)

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