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Gojek founder Makarim found guilty in Indonesia Chromebooks case
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Gojek founder Makarim found guilty in Indonesia Chromebooks case

Fortune · Jun 30, 2026, 9:53 AM · Also reported by 3 other sources

Former Indonesian Education Minister and Gojek co-founder Nadiem Makarim was found guilty of corruption over a pandemic-era procurement of Chromebooks for schools, a ruling likely to intensify investor concerns about how Southeast Asia’s largest economy distinguishes graft from disputed policy and business decisions. The Central Jakarta District Court on Tuesday sentenced Makarim to 10 years in prison, lower than the 18 years sought by prosecutors. Judges, reading from parts of a more than 1,100-page decision, also ordered him to pay financial penalties of more than 800 billion rupiah ($44.7 million) or face an additional five years in prison. Prosecutors had sought more than 5.7 trillion rupiah. The 41-year-old was charged in relation to a decision to purchase more than a million Chromebooks using Google’s ChromeOS for schools from 2020 to 2022. Prosecutors accused him of overpaying for laptops and software, ignoring internal evaluations, and receiving 809 billion rupiah as an alleged reward linked to the procurement, pointing to Google’s investment in his former company as evidence of conflict. Makarim denied all charges, arguing that the prices paid were below-market, that the internal evaluations were outdated and at odds with the urgent demands of schooling during the Covid-19 pandemic. His lawyers also argued the alleged gains was standard pre-IPO administrative restructuring funds that never flowed to him personally. His defense also argued that prosecutors failed to prove bad intent, personal enrichment or a direct link between the laptop program and Google’s investment in Gojek-related entities. Makarim was greeted ahead of the hearing by dozens of supporters, many of them Gojek drivers wearing the company’s signature green jackets. The Harvard Business School graduate wiped away tears as supporters offered prayers, embraced him and shook his hand. Some sang in Indonesian: “Free Nadiem now.” Inside the courthouse, Makarim, dressed in a batik shirt, sat befo

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