Indonesian-language text on the video repeats the claim, saying that “Singapore is handing over a trillion rupiah” ($64 billion) of Indonesia’s “state assets stolen by corruption suspects”.
“I really got goosebumps, Mr Jokowi is the best and great,” the text also says, praising the president for his “courage to stand up against foreign countries to defend his people”.
Jokowi, who first took office as president in October 2014, has enjoyed consistently high approval ratings — despite accusations that he had used state resources to tilt the vote for presidential candidate Defence Minister Prabowo Subianto, who chose Jokowi’s eldest son, Gibran Rakabuming Raka, as his running mate in the February 2024 election.
As Jokowi entered the final year of presidency, his approval rating reached 80.8 percent in January 2024 but was slightly down to 76.6 percent the following month amid rising rice prices (archived links here and here).
The same video has been watched more than 917,600 times after it was shared alongside a similar claim on TikTok here and here, as well as on Instagram in late February and early 2024.
A longer clip has circulated since at least 2022, racking up a million views. The five-minute video shows not only Jokowi and Lee, as well as Ghufron, but also other Indonesian top officials: then chief security minister Mahfud MD and Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati.
However, the video has been shared in a false context.
First clip
A keyword search on Google found that the first part of the false video was posted by the official YouTube account of Indonesia’s Presidential Secretariat on January 25, 2022 (archived link).
The video is titled: “The Meeting of President Joko Widodo and Singapore PM Lee Hsien Loong, at Bintan Regency on 25 January 2022”.
During the bilateral meeting on the Indonesian resort island of Bintan, the two leaders signed a number of agreements, including extradition of fugitives, airspace management and defence cooperation, according to press statements from the Singaporean and Indonesian governments (archived links here and here).
There is no mention about the return of corruption suspects’ assets in the Presidential Secretariat’s video and the governments’ statements.
Below is a screenshot comparison of the video in the false post (left) and the original video from Indonesia’s Presidential Secretariat (right):