fredag 6. desember 2019

Garuda sjef får sparken for smugling - Curt Lewis

Indonesia to Fire Garuda CEO After Harley Smuggled on Jet

  • Undeclared classic Harley found in cargo of brand new Airbus
  • Customs also found two high-end Brompton folding bicycles

The chief executive officer of airline PT Garuda Indonesia is getting fired for allegedly ordering a classic Harley-Davidson motorcycle to be smuggled into the country on a brand new Airbus jet.

I Gusti Ngurah Askhara Danadiputra will be dismissed after the airline's audit committee found he had ordered the purchase of the classic Harley Shovelhead, State-Owned Enterprises Minister Erick Thohir said. The Garuda CEO, who is also known as Ari Askhara, gave instructions in 2018 to find the motorcycle and the purchase was made in April 2019 through a transfer via a personal account of Garuda's finance manager in Amsterdam, Thohir said.



"This will not stop there," Thohir told reporters in Jakarta on Thursday. "We will continue to find other individuals who might be related to this case."

The manifest of the ferry flight from Toulouse to Jakarta showed the aircraft had 22 people on board and carried no cargo, Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati said, contradicting a statement Garuda made this week that the goods had been declared to customs.

The smuggling of the goods deprived the state of 532 million rupiah ($38,000) to 1.5 billion rupiah, Indrawati said. Customs officers also found two high-end Brompton folding bikes in the cargo of the aircraft.

Askhara and representatives for state-owned Garuda didn't answer calls seeking comment. Airbus declined to comment.

Past Trouble
The shipping of "goods into Indonesia through illegal means happens often and under various modus operandi and through many channels," Indrawati said. "I have ordered the customs and excise office to step up the supervision."

Askhara took the helm of the loss-making airline in September 2018 and promised a turnaround. Garuda reported a $5 million profit for 2018, but in July this year it revised its accounts to show a $175 million net loss and scrapped a $241.9 million in-flight entertainment deal after Indonesian authorities found irregularities related to the contract.

Still, Garuda's shares have rallied 66% this year and are heading for the biggest annual gain on record. The company reported a net profit of $98.6 million in the third quarter, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

"I am very sad, at the time when we want to improve the image of the state companies and build up their performance, there are people inside who are not ready," Thohir said.

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