Inside Lapor, Indonesia’s complaints unit
GovInsider interviewed Gibran Sesunan, Associate Director at Indonesia’s Office of Presidential Staff.

Screenshot of Lapor dashboard for Bandung City. Clockwise from top left: Total number of reports; number of days required to verify reports; number of days required to respond to reports; status of reports dispatched to agencies.[/caption]
How it helps government
The Office of Presidential Staff is using data from Lapor to monitor public services, working with the United Nations’ Pulse Lab Jakarta. The lab is analysing its data with public sentiment on social media to find the strengths and weaknesses of public services, Sesunan said.
But Lapor is not just for citizens - it is also helping agencies communicate better. City officials are using it to send reports to central ministries, for instance.
Some mayors and ministers are even using it to track their officials’ performance. Minister of Law Yasonna Laoly and Bandung City Mayor Ridwan Kamil both monitor Lapor themselves, warning officials when a complaint is not responded to.
Cities which have their own complaints systems, like Jakarta’s Qlue app, can also benefit from the scheme. Last week, Jakarta’s Governor said that residents from neighbouring cities are sending complaints through Qlue, but Jakarta cannot respond to these.
This is where Lapor comes in, Sesunan said: “One of its functions is to become a hub to bridge various complaint handling systems”. The intention is “not to cut the innovation that comes from local governments, like Qlue”, but to help improve them.
Non-government organisations use it to monitor corruption cases reported to the Attorney General, Sesunan said. Lapor’s systems have also been integrated with Kawal Menteri, an initiative by volunteers to track government projects and rate ministerial performance.
The unit publishes its data on data.go.id every six months for anyone to use. This is “not really up to date”, Sesunan admits, but those interested can email the team for the latest data.
The difficult part
The “No Wrong Door” policy will only work if all ministries, provinces and cities buy into the scheme. Which is why Lapor has a place in President Joko Widodo’s office, to get commitment from every agency in the government. All Indonesian ministries are now connected to it.
While it has seen success in the central government, more progress is needed in provinces and cities. Only 6 out of over 500 local governments (provinces, cities and regencies) are using the service: Jakarta, Bandung, Indragiri Hulu, Bojonegoro, Gorontalo and Parigi Moutong, Sesunan said.
Technology and money are the least of the problems here. Lapor runs on a cloud system - officials can access it by just signing up with their email and it requires no additional budget, he explained. “Technically if I have the email addresses of the liaison officers, I can connect all government institutions in Indonesia right now,” he added.
The main reason is a lack of support from senior officials in agencies, he believes. “Not all high level officials give attention to complaint handling mechanisms.” In agencies where a senior official is involved in the project, there is more commitment towards it. “We are worried that when there is no commitment, the public trust in the system will go down,” he added.
[blockquote] “We are worried that when there is no commitment, the public trust in the system will go down.” [/blockquote]
What’s next
Sesunan’s team has another four years to make Lapor a national complaints system. This year they have a target to bring in 30 local governments.
The team is piloting in provinces first to cover ground faster, Sesunan said. The province in turn will invite its cities and regencies to connect.
Sesunan spent the last few weeks visiting provinces and had some success. Six new provinces agreed to come on board - Aceh, West Sumatra, West Java, Yogyakarta, Bali and South Sulawesi.
Just five years ago, Indonesians had no easy way to send feedback to their government. Now from Sumatra to Sulawesi, Lapor is helping answer hundreds of complaints every day. If it can bring in more cities and provinces, it could have a power effect on public services in Indonesia.