play Live Sign upShow navigation menuplay Live Click here to searchsearchSign upEconomy|CorruptionGojek co-founder Nadiem Makarim sentenced to 10 years for corruptionIndonesia court finds former education minister guilty of abuse of authority and of causing state losses.
xwhatsapp-strokecopylinkgoogleAdd Al Jazeera on GoogleinfoNadiem Makarim, Indonesia's former education minister and co-founder of ride-hailing firm Gojek, gestures on the day of the verdict in his corruption case at the Central Jakarta District Court on June 30, 2026 [Ajeng Dinar Ulfiana/Reuters]By AFP and ReutersPublished On 30 Jun 202630 Jun 2026A court in Indonesia has sentenced former Education Minister Nadiem Makarim, co-founder of the Gojek app, to 10 years in prison on corruption charges.
Judges at the Jakarta anti-corruption court on Tuesday found Makarim guilty of corruption related to the procurement of Chromebook laptops for schools during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Chief Judge Purwanto Abdullah, presiding over the ruling at Indonesia’s Corruption Court in Jakarta, said a panel of judges had found Makarim guilty of abuse of authority and of causing state losses. He was found not guilty of directly seeking to enrich himself.
The court said the case caused state losses of approximately $120m. It also ordered Makarim to pay a fine of Rp1 billion ($55,850) and Rp809 billion (more than $45m) in restitution, or face additional prison time.
The verdict marks a sharp fall for the Ivy League-educated entrepreneur once seen as a symbol of Indonesia’s startup sector.
Makarim, 41, co-founded Gojek in 2010, growing it from a call centre with 20 motorcycle drivers into a major ride-hailing and delivery platform.
He became one of Indonesia’s youngest cabinet ministers in 2019 and served as education minister until 2024.
Prosecutors said his decision to purchase Chromebook laptops, which run Google’s ChromeOS, was linked to the US tech giant’s investment in Gojek.
Makarim has consistently denied wrongdoing and vowed to appeal.
“The judges couldn’t even look me in the eye,” he said, adding he could not pay the amount ordered under the ruling.
The former minister has said the procurement saved money and called the case an “investigative error”.
In his defence this month, he said: “Experts and factual witnesses have stated: there is no element of state loss, no element of violation of the law, no element of self-enrichment, enrichment of another person or company, and no malicious intent or bad intentions.”
Prosecutors had sought an 18-year prison sentence and Rp5.68 trillion (about $313m) in restitution. Google was not charged and has denied any wrongdoing.
GoTo Group, formed after Gojek merged with Tokopedia in 2021, said Makarim had not had a decision-making role since resigning in 2019.
Makarim, whose lawyer father once served on the ethics committee of Indonesia’s anti-corruption body, said he joined the government to encourage professionals to enter public service.