APBN Data: Understanding Indonesia’s Budget Transparency and Accountability
- JAKARTA - Indonesia will likely fund most of it's contributions to the newly formed Peace Council thru the national budget, according to Finance Minister Purbaya Yudhi Sadewa.
- "I think the majority will come from the budget," Sadewa said Wednesday at the Presidential Palace in Jakarta.
- "We haven't discussed that yet, but I anticipate the President will assign me to look into it," he added.
JAKARTA – Indonesia will likely fund most of it’s contributions to the newly formed Peace Council thru the national budget, according to Finance Minister Purbaya Yudhi Sadewa.
“I think the majority will come from the budget,” Sadewa said Wednesday at the Presidential Palace in Jakarta. He cautioned, though, that a final decision hasn’t been made.
“We haven’t discussed that yet, but I anticipate the President will assign me to look into it,” he added.
President Prabowo recently signed the charter for the Peace Council during a visit to Switzerland, officially making Indonesia a member of the international body initiated by former U.S. president Trump. The council’s formation is tied to the 20-Point Roadmap to End the Gaza Conflict and has received backing from the United Nations Security Council through Resolution 2803 (2025).
Related: Hikmahanto and Dino Patti Djalal Criticize the Trump Peace Council
