Taken from: http://www.solopos.com/2009/channel/nasional/60-anggota-dpr-tak-miliki-npwp-5619 

Jakarta-member House of Representatives had just sworn in Thursday (1 / 10) found the majority do not have the number of taxpayers subject (NPWP). About 60 percent of the total number of members of the House of Representatives 2009-2014 period have not registered themselves as tax payers. 

According to Director of Counseling Services and Public Relations Directorate General of Taxes Surjoputro Djoko Slamet, these board members do not have NPWP because previous General Elections Commission (KPU) was not set as a condition of ownership NPWP become members of the House. 

That all members of the new Parliament could meet its obligations as a taxpayer, the Directorate General of Taxes has opened two postal services in the environmental tax parliament with tax cars around since yesterday and today, Friday (2 / 10). 


Undang-Undang

Posted by Me.! | 5:37 AM | 0 comments »

Undang-Undang or simply meaning that Laws can only be established by the People's Representative Council or DPR. The executive branch (the President) can propose a bill (Indonesian: Rancangan Undang-Undang or RUU) to DPR. During the process of establishing a bill into a law, DPR will create a small task group to discuss the bill with the corresponding ministries. When a joined agreement has been reached, then the President shall endorse a bill into law. However, even if the President refuses to endorse a bill that has reached joined agreement, the bill is automatically in thirty days enacted as law and be promulgated as such. When an agreement cannot be reached to enact a bill into law, the bill cannot be proposed again during the current term of the legislative members.

1945 Constitution

Posted by Me.! | 5:35 AM | 0 comments »

The 1945 Constitution is the highest legal authority in Indonesia, of which executive, legislative and judicial branches of government must defer to it. The constitution was written in July and August 1945, when Indonesia was emerging from Japanese control at the end of World War II. It was abrogated by the Federal Constitution of 1949 and the Provisional Constitution of 1950, but restored after the President Sukarno's decree on July 5, 1959. During the 32 years of Suharto's administration, the constitution had never been amended. Suharto refused to countenance any changes to the constitution and the People's Consultative Assembly passed a law in 1985 requiring national referendum for the constitution amendments.