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Singapore High Court Upholds Bail Denial for Indonesian Businessman Paulus Tannos in High-Profile Extradition Battle

Published on: 03 October 2025

Singapore High Court Upholds Bail Denial for Indonesian Businessman Paulus Tannos in High-Profile Extradition Battle

SINGAPORE — The High Court has upheld the decision made by the State Courts to refuse bail to an Indonesian businessman allegedly involved in a high-profile corruption case in his country.

Paulus Tannos, 70, was arrested in Singapore on Jan 17 after being on Indonesia's fugitive list since October 2021.

Tannos was said to be implicated in a major graft scandal involving the Indonesian government's electronic ID card or e-KTP project, which allegedly caused state losses of about 2.3 trillion rupiah (S$178 million).

In a hearing on Oct 2 presided by Chief Justice Sundaresh Menon, Tannos had his appeal for bail denied.

The defence, led by Suang Wijaya of law firm Eugene Thuraisingam, argued that Tannos had medical conditions which justified him being allowed bail.

These conditions included chest discomfort, the narrowing of heart valves and diabetes.

CJ Menon said if bail were to be granted to Tannos, this would mean other accused individuals under the Extradition Act can seek this exception and be released from bail due to some minor illness, only to have the bail revoked a few days later after having recovered from it.

He said Tannos' medical conditions have a degree of stability.

CJ Menon added: "This leads me to the conclusion that (Tannos) does not suffer from any illness that cannot be managed by the Singapore Prison Service safely."

The State, which was represented by Deputy Solicitor-General Vincent Leow, had argued that Tannos, who had several passports, was a flight risk.

CJ Menon agreed that Tannos' multiple passports, including a diplomatic Guinea-Bissau passport under a different name, added to flight risk concerns.

Tannos, who is believed to have been living in Singapore since 2017, faces one charge of corruption under Indonesian law with a maximum sentence of life imprisonment.

He appeared in court in a purple jacket labelled "prisoner", keeping his head down during proceedings while occasionally glancing at his family members in the public gallery.

While Wijaya argued that his client should be given the opportunity to have his medical conditions examined by a private practitioner, Deputy Solicitor-General Leow said Tannos had not seen his doctor in the two years before his arrest in January and had travelled at least three times in late 2024.

Leow also quoted a doctor on Tannos' heart disease being stable and the prison conditions not having an adverse effect on his cardiac health as long as he took medications regularly.

Leow said: "What we have is a man who was able to travel actively a year ago and is now saying that his medical condition is so serious that it cannot be addressed by prison doctors despite evidence showing that his condition has remained stable."

Indonesia put in a formal extradition request on Feb 24, after Tannos' arrest in Singapore, the first such request since a treaty between both countries came into force in March 2024.

It grants extradition for offences including corruption, money laundering and bribery, and can be retrospectively applied to crimes committed up to 18 years ago.

Despite previously indicating his willingness to be extradited to Indonesia in a letter to President Prabowo Subianto in April, Tannos changed his mind and has repeatedly not agreed to be extradited to Indonesia.

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This article was first published in The Straits Times. Permission required for reproduction.

[SRC] https://www.asiaone.com/singapore/chief-justice-upholds-decision-deny-bail-indonesian-fugitive-fighting-extradition

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