Paper Title
NOTARIAL SECRECY : Study of Legal Certainty in the Notarial Law and Money Laundering Prevention and Eradication Law in Indonesia

Abstract
The notary obligation in keeping secrets is affirmed in Article 4 and Article 16 of Law Number 30 of 2004 concerning Notary Public in conjunction with Law Number 2 of 2014 concerning Amendments to Law Number 30 of 2004 concerning Notary Public (hereinafter this article will be referred to as the Notarial Law) Article 4 of the Notarial Law states that before carrying out his position, the Notary is obliged to make oaths / promises according to his religion before the Minister or appointed official, whose editorial includes swearing / promising to keep the contents of the deed and information confidential obtained in the implementation of his position. This is followed up on Article 16 Paragraph (1) letter f of the Notarial Law which states that in carrying out his position, the Notary is required to keep everything confidential about the deed he made and all information obtained for making the deed in accordance with the oath / promise of office. But on the other hand, the certainty in keeping the notarial secrecy becomes a problem when the notary has an obligation to submit reports on suspicious financial transactions based on Article 17 Paragraph (2) of Law Number 8 of 2010 concerning Prevention and Eradication of Money Laundering Criminal Acts (hereinafter in writing this will be referred to as the Money Laundering Prevention and Eradication Law which is enforced by the implementing regulations. This writing will use the normative juridical approach method by using secondary data in analyzing the problem. Disharmonization of this law if analyzed based on the principle of lexspecialis derogate legigenerali and the principle of lex posterior derogratlegi priori, then the notary is obliged to do the obligation as a Reporting Party mandated by the Law on Prevention and Eradication of Money Laundering. In principle, the involvement of a notary as a Reporting Party can be interpreted as a form of legal protection against notary so that he is not involved in money laundering transactions. Keywords - Notary, Notarial Secrecy, Legal Certainty