Credit where credit is due


The President’s chief of household Ahmad Rusdi is to be congratulated for commencing a speedy investigation into a Jakarta Post article of Jan 17 claiming that a Presidential staff had approached the Shangri-la Hotel Manager in mactan, the Philippines, to increase hotel bills during the president’s visit to Cebu last week.

His reply in a letter to the editor to the Post today certainly decisively puts to rest any suspicion that the President’s household staff was up to no good. Ahmad wrote about how serious they took such allegations, how they set up an investigation and cross-checked with the hotel’s mangement. Good for him. The Post, which often includes the editor’s response to such letters, is curiously quiet. Hmm…

One response to “Credit where credit is due”

  1. Allow us to offer a different point of view:
    by saying that things are under ‘serious investigation’ or ‘rigorous scrutiny’ or being ‘studied carefully by an inter-epartmental committee’ or ‘being examined by an independent inquiry’ can also be used to buy time.
    Sooner rather than later the story dies down, gone from the front page and we conveniently forget.
    As one politician we know put it:
    “if it is not in the paper, it didn’t happen…”

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