Gratuities

To prevent the acceptance, request, offering, and giving of gratuities by all personnel of PT PLN Indonesia Power—where such actions may be or are reasonably considered as bribery—PLN Indonesia Power has established the Gratuities Guidelines.

These guidelines were ratified through Board of Directors Regulation No. 0089.P/DIR/2023 concerning the Gratuities Guidelines of PT PLN Indonesia Power.

STOP ILLEGAL GRATUITIES

REJECT
REJECT

Illegal Gratuities with conflict of interest

RETURN
RETURN

Illegal Gratuities with conflict of interest

TYPES OF GRATUITIES

Legal Gratuities

Legal gratuities are gifts or tokens of appreciation that do not violate laws or ethical standards. These are typically:

  • Given without connection to any specific official act.

  • Permitted under ethics rules, such as small tokens or ceremonial gifts.

  • Not intended to influence or reward official duties

Illegal Gratuities

Illegal gratuities is a gift or payment given to a public official because of an official act they performed or will perform, without requiring a quid pro quo (i.e., a direct exchange).

  • Given after or in anticipation of an official act.
  • No need to prove corrupt intent or a specific agreement.
  • Still considered a crime because it can influence or reward official behavior

GRATUITIES REPORT SCHEME

Employees are required to report the receipt or rejection of any gratuity within a maximum of 10 (ten) calendar days through the COS Application
The UPG Administrator shall verify the completeness and accuracy of the submitted documents within the COS Application
The UPG Administrator shall submit the verification results and supporting documents to the UPG Supervisor for review and approval
Upon approval, the UPG Administrator shall submit the report to the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) via the KPK GOL Application within a maximum of 30 (thirty) working days
The KPK will follow up on the report and issue an official decree regarding the gratuity, which will be communicated to both the UPG and the Reporting Party