Asia Faces Turmoil Over Corruption

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Corruption has emerged as a powerful destabilizer across Asia, igniting protests that speak less of fleeting outrage and more of long-suppressed frustrations. From Jakarta to Manila to Kathmandu, citizens are demanding fairness and accountability. These values transcend politics and go straight to the heart of everyday survival.

INDONESIA: A NATION AT BOILING POINT

In Indonesia, economic hardship has widened the chasm between political elites and ordinary citizens. Rising costs of food, housing, and education already strained households. The final spark came when lawmakers awarded themselves a new monthly housing allowance, which was almost ten times the Jakarta minimum wage.

Protests spread swiftly. By late August, Jakarta was paralyzed by demonstrations that evolved into nationwide riots. The death of Affan Kurniawan, a young motorcycle taxi driver, under a police vehicle became the face of the movement, symbolizing not just outrage against excess but also against state indifference.

Lives were lost, parliament buildings were torched, and billions of rupiah in economic damage was recorded. Jakarta Governor Pramono Anung estimated the damage at Rp 55 billion (about S$4.3 million). For many Indonesians, viral images of ransacked luxury homes were framed not as criminal acts but as symbolic justice. Yet officials were quick to warn that such actions risked undermining the legitimacy of the protests.

PHILIPPINES: FLOODED BY ANGER

In the Philippines, a different storm is brewing and this time, quite literally. Severe flooding in Metro Manila and neighboring provinces has been compounded by revelations of systemic graft in flood-control projects. Billions of Pesos earmarked for disaster resilience vanished into “ghost projects” and favored contractors tied to political families.

The Senate Blue Ribbon Committee hearing on September 1 highlighted alarming irregularities of 6,021 projects valued at over PHP 350 billion (about S$7.9 billion) lacked clear descriptions of the infrastructure they were supposed to deliver. Eventually, reports emerged of anomalies in the PHP 1.9 trillion (about S$42.6 billion) flood-control budget over the past 15 years.

Social media amplified the anger. Ordinary Filipinos began juxtaposing images of luxury lifestyles including private jets, designer bags, and imported cars against families wading through waist-deep floodwaters. Graft is not an abstract issue anymore; it is an everyday injustice.

On September 21, more than 100,000 Filipinos gathered in a peaceful yet powerful demonstration stretching from Luneta Park to the People Power Monument. The movement drew diverse crowds of activists, church leaders, teachers, celebrities, and ordinary citizens. All of whom are calling for stolen money to be returned and accountability enforced. In a rare gesture, DPWH Secretary Manuel Bonoan resigned, paving the way for Vince Dizon to lead a sweeping internal cleanup.

NEPAL: A GENERATION RISES

Nepal became the third South Asian country in three years to see its government collapse under the weight of corruption-fueled unrest. In early September, the government’s decision to ban 26 social media platforms backfired. Instead of silencing dissent, it mobilized it.

With more than 60 percent of Nepalis under 30, the protests became a showcase of Gen Z’s organizational power. Flash mobs, viral hashtags, and decentralized networks turned frustration into an unstoppable wave. The unrest left over 70 dead and forced Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli to resign, leaving former Chief Justice Sushila Karki as interim leader.

Young protesters made their message clear: they demand a transparent, independent government free from entrenched patronage and corruption.

SHARED LESSONS FROM THE REGION

The common thread across Indonesia, Philippines, and Nepal is unmistakable: corruption is not just about numbers on a balance sheet. It erodes trust, hollows out institutions, and fuels the kind of despair that makes people risk everything for change. What Asia’s streets are demanding is not perfection but decency. A politics of humility over arrogance, service over entitlement, and integrity over greed.

For Singapore, these crises are reminders that stability is fragile when fairness is absent. The Lion City (as regional partners) cannot ignore the ripple effects on economies, investments, and shared values of accountability and justice.

Sources: 1,2, & 3

 

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