Deputy Governor of Central Java, Taj Yasin Maimoen, said that the state administrator's wealth report (LHKPN) was the beginning of preventing corruption.

"That was the beginning to avoid corruption because their wealth was recorded, what they had was recorded so that when they took office it would definitely be caught rising or decreasing (richness), so the openness of the employees," said Maimoen in Semarang, Wednesday, October 26, as reported by Antara. He emphasized that the regional head and state civil apparatus (ASN) must really maintain integrity at work, and the slogan Tetep Mboten Corruption Mboten Ngapusi must be implemented in real terms.

Not only that, to prevent corruption, the Central Java Provincial Government together with the Central Java Inspectorate collaborated to implement an early warning system through increasing the role of the government's internal supervisory apparatus (APIP).

The Deputy Governor hoped that APIP would be able to provide assistance to government employees to mitigate corruption so that potential errors in a work could be mapped and prevented.

"And this is what we emphasize this time, we will start raising our level again that we hope that with this regional surveillance title it is true to give an early warning before they make a mistake," he said.

On this occasion, the Deputy Governor appreciated the LHKPN's achievements based on the Central Java Provincial Inspectorate report which had reached 100 percent or as many as 2,283 state officials in Central Java had reported their respective assets.

In addition, the Central Java Provincial Government's State Civil Apparatus Wealth Report (LHKASN) also reached 100 percent.

According to him, this is a shared commitment that the government is open to the public and assesses that LHKPN and LHKASN are controls that can be accessed by the public.

Acting Inspector of Central Java, Dhoni Widianto, added that the APIP inspectorate must be able to make early prevention efforts and be in line with APIP's active role in realizing government governance related to anti-corruption.

To prevent corruption, he said, the Central Java Inspectorate conducted socialization and assistance to prevent corruption and it was hoped that regional apparatus organizations (OPD) could mitigate risks together with the inspectorate.

"For example, there is a budget of billions, every activity program activity must be able to identify risks, risk analysis, risk mitigation. There we do continuous assistance. Our planning is accompanied, when we need consultation we are ready, then to go to risk mitigation," he said.

Until October 2022, the Central Java Provincial Inspectorate has examined 64 cases, of which around 40 cases have been resolved and the most public complaints have been included in the village financial assistance sector, and village funds.


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