Free meals agency raided


Under scrutiny: Students have their meals while seated on the floor in this file photo from Banten. The free meals programme has been closely watched since its January 2025 launch, amid investor concerns over government spending and fiscal discipline. — AP

Investiga­tors from the office of Indonesia’s Attorney General have raided the headquarters of the country’s National Nutrition Agency, officials said, saying the building of the agency spearheading President Prabowo Subianto’s flagship free meals programme was under lockdown.

The programme was a key part of Prabowo’s campaign to win the presidency in 2024, and the ­government has budgeted at least US$15bil for an ambitious bid to provide free meals to 83 million children and pregnant women across the sprawling archipelago.

A spokesman for the Attorney General’s Office (Ago) confirmed the raid but declined to comment on what investigators were probing.

The raid early yesterday came just hours after Prabowo sacked the head of the agency, Dadan Hindayana, which an official said was linked to governance and food quality concerns.

Two sources, requesting ano­ny­mity, said Ago personnel raided the building at 2am local time yesterday in multiple vehicles.

The building remained under lockdown at 11am and employees who were meant to report for duty were not allowed to enter the premises.

Employees sitting outside the building said they were unsure of what was happening.

One said the raid took place on the second floor of the building, where the agency’s top leadership sits.

The free meals programme has come under close scrutiny since its launch in January 2025, with investors chary of Prabowo’s big spending plans and worried that fiscal deficit thresholds could be challenged.

Prabowo has promised to forge ahead with the programme des­pite the concerns.

The decision to remove Dadan followed an evaluation of the agency’s performance, state secre­tariat minister Prasetyo Hadi told reporters late on Tuesday.

Dadan, an entomologist, will be replaced by his deputy, Nanik Sudaryati Deyang, who is a former journalist and was part of Prabowo’s campaigning team in the 2024 election.

“There are issues relating to dis­cipline in implementing governance, including discipline in main­taining food quality standards that should have been esta­blished by the National Nutrition Agency,” Prasetyo said.

The school meals programme has been linked to cases of food poisoning that had affected at least 33,000 children as of April, according to Network for Edu­ca­tion Watch, an NGO. — Reuters

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