Over One Trillion Rupiah in Non-Tax State Revenue Fills Indonesia's State Funds
- 16 Jun 2026 15:02 WIB
- Voice of Indonesia
Key Points
- The Ministry of Finance received over Rp1 trillion in Non-Tax State Revenue (PNBP) from assets recovered by the Attorney General's Office, which includes money from auctions and long-standing corruption cases like Edi Tansil's.
- The recovered money will be put back into the state treasury to help fund national development and support public services for the community.
RRI.CO.ID, Jakarta – Indonesian Minister of Finance Purbaya Yudhi Sadewa symbolically received Non-Tax State Revenue (PNBP) amounting to Rp1,029,874,376,628, derived from the recovery of state assets by the Asset Recovery Agency (BPA) of the Indonesian Attorney General’s Office. The handover was conducted by the Attorney General of Indonesia, ST Burhanuddin, during the BPA Fair 2026 event at the Asset Recovery Agency of the Attorney General’s Office in Jakarta on Monday, June 15, 2026.
The PNBP received consists of proceeds from the BPA Fair 2026 auction amounting to Rp978.1 billion, proceeds from the tracing of land and building assets valued at Rp30.9 billion, and proceeds from the tracing of assets belonging to Edi Tansil, a convicted corruption offender, in the form of cash amounting to Rp51.6 billion. Additionally, auction proceeds totaling Rp19.1 billion were handed over to the victims.
The Minister of Finance expressed appreciation to the Attorney General’s Office for successfully recovering assets that are the rightful property of the state. According to him, this success reflects that law enforcement is not only focused on punishing perpetrators of criminal acts but also on ensuring the recovery of state losses through the optimization of asset recovery.
“Asset recovery is a crucial part of efforts to safeguard the state’s finances. Every asset successfully recovered becomes additional state revenue that can ultimately be used to support development funding and public services,” he said.
The Minister of Finance also highlighted the success of asset recovery in the Edi Tansil corruption case, which has been ongoing for decades. According to him, this achievement demonstrates that the state’s claim to assets derived from criminal acts does not lapse over time.
He stated, “The Edi Tansil case serves as a reminder that state losses must not be left unresolved in the past. Whoever causes harm to the state will be pursued no matter how long it takes. Time may pass, but the state’s rights must not be lost.”
Furthermore, Purbaya emphasized that the success of asset recovery is the result of strong synergy among government agencies in safeguarding and preserving state finances. Moving forward, the Ministry of Finance will continue to strengthen its collaboration with the Asset Recovery Agency of the Attorney General’s Office and all stakeholders to optimize asset recovery and the preservation of state finances.
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