Attorney General's Office Hands Over Rp1.02 Trillion in Recovered Assets to State
- 16 Jun 2026 16:25 WIB
- Voice of Indonesia
RRI.CO.ID, Jakarta - Indonesia's Attorney General's Office (AGO), through its Asset Recovery Agency (BPA), has handed over Non-Tax State Revenue (PNBP) totalling Rp1.029 trillion to the Ministry of Finance from recovered state assets. It includes assets linked to the corruption case of Edi Tansil.
The symbolic handover was conducted by Attorney General ST Burhanuddin to Finance Minister Purbaya Yudhi Sadewa during the BPA Fair 2026 event at the Asset Recovery Agency headquarters in South Jakarta on Monday.
According to an official statement from the Ministry of Finance issued on Monday, 15 June 2026, the state revenue was generated through various asset recovery efforts undertaken by the Attorney General's Office, including proceeds from asset auctions at BPA Fair 2026, asset tracing of land and buildings, and the recovery of assets from corruption cases.
Of the total PNBP transferred, Rp978.1 billion came from BPA Fair 2026 asset auctions, Rp30.9 billion from the tracing of land and building assets, and Rp51.6 billion from assets recovered from convicted corruption offender Edi Tansil. In addition, Rp19.1 billion in auction proceeds was distributed to victims.
Finance Minister Purbaya Yudhi Sadewa, expressed appreciation to the Attorney General's Office, particularly the Asset Recovery Agency, for its success in returning assets belonging to the state.
According to him, the achievement demonstrates that law enforcement is not solely focused on punishing perpetrators of criminal acts, but also seeks to recover state losses by optimizing asset recovery efforts.
"Asset recovery is an important part of safeguarding state finances. Every asset successfully returned contributes additional state revenue that can ultimately be used to support development financing and public services," he said.
The Minister also highlighted the successful recovery of assets related to the Edi Tansil corruption case, which has remained unresolved for decades. He said the achievement proves that the state's rights over assets derived from criminal acts do not expire with time.
"The Edi Tansil case reminds us that state losses must not become a thing of the past without resolution. Whoever causes losses to the state will be pursued, no matter how long it takes. Time may pass, but the state's rights do not expire," he said.
Furthermore, Purbaya emphasized that the successful asset recovery was the result of strong inter-agency cooperation in safeguarding and protecting state finances. The Ministry of Finance remains committed to managing all state revenues, including those derived from asset recovery, in an orderly, transparent, and accountable manner to strengthen the country's fiscal capacity in supporting national development and improving public welfare.
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