Saturday, January 29, 2011

Schools to keep SBY books, says education agency

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Thu, 01/27/2011 12:52 PM | National

Tegal Education, Youth and Sports Affairs Agency in Central Java says it won't withdraw the books on President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono that it distributed to schools in the regency.

The books met the government's standards, Agency acting chief Edy Pramono said Thursday during a meeting with Tegal Education Council and Tegal Council's Commission IV, as quoted by kompas.com.

There were no specifications on the sorts of books that could be procured using the special funds allocated to junior high schools (DAK), Edy said.

He said the books, featuring a personal profile and thoughts of President Yudhoyono, had passed the Education Ministry's Center for Curriculum and Books selection process, so they were deemed fit for distribution in schools.

"Those books are good as a school reference,” Edy said.

Serang villagers protest against Chinese cemetery plan

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Thu, 01/27/2011 11:32 AM | Archipelago

Hundreds of residents of Balekambang village, Banten, have staged a demonstration to protest against a plan to build a Chinese cemetery in the area.  

The coordinator of the demonstration, Sulton Aziz from the Residents’ Anti-Chinese Cemetery Solidarity Group, said the plan had gone against existing procedures and regulations, Antara reported Thursday.

The developer had not secured any building permit or a permit from local residents to build the cemetery, he added.

During the protest, which lasted two hours on Wednesday, residents carried banners calling for all residents the arear to oppose the plan.

A Buddhist foundation, Yayasan Timur Raya, plans to build the cemetery on a 500 hectare plot of land near the village. So far it has acquired only 20 hectares for the cemetery.  

Aziz said some villagers had agreed to sell their land because they were told it would be used for a cattle farm.  

Li Na beats Wozniacki, reaches Australian Open final

The Associated Press, Melbourne | Thu, 01/27/2011 12:49 PM | Sports

Li Na became the first Chinese player to reach a Grand Slam singles final, recovering from a set and a break down and saving a match point before beating No. 1 Caroline Wozniacki 3-6, 7-5, 6-3 Thursday in the Australian Open semifinals.

Wozniacki, playing at a major for he first time with the top ranking, had match point at 5-4 and 40-30 in the second set before Li rallied. An hour and six minutes later, she served out on her first match point.

Li, who lost to Serena Williams in two tiebreak sets in the semifinals here last year, will meet either Kim Clijsters or No. 2 Vra Zvonareva in the final.

Li beat Clijsters in the final of the leadup event at Sydney earlier this month, becoming the first Chinese woman to win a WTA premier event. It was just another first for Li, who was the first Chinese player to win a tour-level titl and the first to enter the top 10.

She is also the first Asian player to reach at Grand Slam final.

"I'm so happy I can be the first Chinese player to come to a final - I always do the first one!" she said in a lighthearted interview after the match in which she joked about losing sleep on the evef the match because her coach-husband Shan Jiang was snoring.

Asked what motivated her comeback, she deadpanned: "Prize money."

Li looked down and out after the first set, when she made 17 unforced errors and struggled for consistency. She finished with 51 unforced errors, but that was a reflection of her pushing Wozniacki to the extremes.

Wozniacki could have ended the match in 1 hour, 29 minutes, but Li hit a forehand down the line to save match point. It sparked a revival. She broke Wozniacki in that game to get the sets back on serve and then broke her Danish rival again.

They traded breaks twice in the third set before Li finished it off.

Tanker truck overturns causing traffic congestion

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Thu, 01/27/2011 11:00 AM | Jakarta

A tanker truck rolled onto its side on the TB Simatupang toll road in South Jakarta on Thursday morning, causing traffic delays, police say.

The accident, which occurred at 7 a.m. caused traffic congestion along the toll road heading from Kampung Rambutan to Pondok Indah, a police officer at the Jakarta Police Traffic Management Center said Thursday, as reported by kompas.com.

Traffic police officers and employees of toll road operator PT Jasa Marga were on the scene, working to ease traffic and remove the truck.

No casualties were reported.

President’s salary insufficient: Kalla

Erwida Maulia, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Thu, 01/27/2011 2:31 PM | Headlines

Former vice president Jusuf Kalla has thrown his support behind the recent government plan to increase the salary of President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, saying it was barely enough to support a figure at the President's level living in Jakarta.

Kalla said he had received around Rp 40 million (US$4,440) per month while serving as the vice president, about Rp 20 million less than the salary of the President, and that was not enough to support his family expenses for which he had to use extra income from his businesses in his hometown, Makassar.

“It is not enough. That’s why I had some money transferred to me from Makassar every month," Kalla said, adding that It would have been impossible to support his family without additional income.

"There are kids, and sometimes we want to go out eating or somewhere ... to be honest, the salary is definitely not enough for living in Jakarta as a president and vice president,” Kalla said Thursday after attending a discussion at the House of Representatives in Jakarta.

Kalla said the President had access to tactical funds worth Rp 2 billion a month aside from his salary.

“But he cannot use it all, or bring it home for personal needs,” Kalla said.

Japan's export growth accelerates for second month

The Associated Press, Tokyo | Thu, 01/27/2011 11:39 AM | Business

Japan's export growth accelerated for the second straight month in December, indicating a revival of overseas demand critical to the country's recovery.

Exports from the world's third-largest economy rose 13 percent from a year earlier on greater shipments of machinery and motor vehicles, the finance ministry said Thursday. North American demand was especially strong, reflecting an improving U.S. economy.

The latest result beat market expectations and is an improvement from the 9.1 percent year-on-year growth recorded in November.

Exports have been a key driver of Japan's economy, which has relied on the rest of the world to offset lackluster demand at home. A steady slowdown in export growth between February and October last year, as well as a strong yen, had triggered concerns that the economy was faltering.

Economists are more optimistic about 2011. A strengthening global economy usually translates to more orders for Japanese goods.

"As the yen appreciation trend seems to have run out of gas, we think exports should sustain growth on the strength of the U.S. economy," said Yuriko Tanaka, an economist at Goldman Sachs in Tokyo, in a note to clients.

On Tuesday, the central bank upgraded its economic outlook for the fiscal year ending March 31. It now expects real gross domestic product to expand 3.3 percent, up from 2.1 percent forecast in October.

While the Bank of Japan maintained its assessment that the country's recovery "seems to be pausing" and that exports were "somewhat weak," it predicted that the economy will gradually find its footing again.

Imports rose 10.6 percent in December. That resulted in a 34 percent bigger trade surplus of 727.7 billion yen ($8.8 billion).

Exports to China, Japan's biggest trading partner, rose 20.1 percent in December from a year earlier, according to the finance ministry report. Shipments to the U.S. climbed 16.5 percent, while those to the European Union rose 9.7 percent.

For the 2010 calendar year, Japan's exports rose 24.4 percent, marking the first annual expansion in three years. Shipments to China hit a record high of 13.09 trillion yen ($160 billion), accounting for more than 19 percent of Japan's exports.

Friday, January 28, 2011

Tunisia issues intl warrant for ousted president

The Associated Press | Thu, 01/27/2011 10:38 AM | Headlines

Tunisia's government issued an international arrest warrant Wednesday for ousted President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali and six relatives, accusing him of taking money out of the North African nation illegally.

Ben Ali, who fled to Saudi Arabia after being driven from power this month by violent protests, was also being charged with illegally acquiring real estate and other assets abroad, Justice Minister Lazhar Karoui Chebbi said.

Interpol said its Tunis bureau issued a global alert seeking the arrest of Ben Ali and six family members, without specifying who. Chebbi said Ben Ali's wife, Leila, was among those wanted by Tunisian authorities.

As Chebbi spoke, Tunisian police fired tear gas at hundreds of protesters who have been pressuring the interim government to get rid of old guard ministers who served under Ben Ali. The clashes broke out in front of the prime minister's office in Tunis, the capital. Some demonstrators responded by throwing stones at police.

Several injured protesters were carted away from the melee. Others tried to smash the windows of a police van, leaving the ground covered in blood. There was no immediate word on casualties.

Ben Ali, his wife and their clan have been widely accused of abusing their power to enrich themselves. In France, where family members are believed to have assets ranging from apartments to racehorses, Paris prosecutors have opened a preliminary investigation into their holdings.

French media have reported that Leila left the country with millions in gold, but Tunisia's new central bank governor, Mustapha Kamel Nabli, says no gold was taken from the bank's vaults during the final days of Ben Ali's regime.

The former president fled Jan. 14 after 23 years in power, pushed out by weeks of protests driven by anger over joblessness, repression and corruption. His swift departure was followed by riots, looting and unrest.

On Wednesday, the justice minister highlighted the scope of that unrest: Some 11,029 prisoners - about a third of the country's prison population - were able to escape amid the chaos, he said. Of those, 1,532 prisoners are back behind bars and 74 other prisoners died in fires that broke out.

The top U.S. diplomat for the Middle East, Jeffrey Feltman, wrapped up a three-day visit in Tunis on Wednesday, rejecting speculation that the United States was involved in Ben Ali's removal.

"This is a revolution by Tunisians for Tunisians, and the United States was not involved," Feltman told reporters, crediting the interim government for greater openness and steps toward political reform.

The state news agency TAP, citing a government spokesman late Wednesday, said officials planned to announce changes to the lineup of ministers on Thursday.

The caretaker government includes some former opposition leaders, but many top posts - including prime minister and the ministers of defense, foreign affairs and the interior - were retained by Ben Ali cronies. Demonstrators want those old-guard lawmakers out.

The interim government also eased back on its nightly curfew, now setting it at 10 p.m. to 4 a.m., TAP reported.

Tunisia's so-called "Jasmine Revolution" has sparked scattered protests and civil disobedience in the Middle East and North Africa.

In Cairo, anti-government activists pelted police with firebombs and rocks in a second day of clashes Wednesday to demand an end to President Hosni Mubarak's nearly 30 years in power. Police responded with tear gas, beatings and live ammunition.

Yudhoyono arrives in Switzerland for WEF

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Thu, 01/27/2011 11:05 AM | Headlines

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and his entourage arrived at Zurich International Airport in Switzerland at 9.30 p.m. on Wednesday (local time). 

The presidential aircraft, Garuda Indonesia Airbus 330-300, landed safely after flying for nine hours from Palam Military Airport in New Delhi.

The Yudhoyono spent the night in Zurich before heading to Davos, a three-hour drive from Zurich, to attend the World Economic Forum (WEF), tempointeraktif.com reported Thursday.

The President is scheduled to present a keynote speech and attend a questions-and-answers session with WEF chairman Klaus Schwab.

This will be Yudhoyono's first attendance at the forum.

Indonesia will host the WEF for East Asia from July 12 to 13.

In Davos, Yudhoyono will also deliver a speech on energy before executives of global energy companies.

Along with Mexican President Felipe Calderun, Finnish President Tarja Halonen and South African President Jacob G Zuma, Yudhoyono will act as a panelist in the sustainable development session.

He is also scheduled to attend a session meeting on economic growth and world trade revitalization, to be attended by British Prime Minister David Cameron, German Counselor Angela Merkel and WTO Director Pascal Lamy.

On the sidelines of the forum, Yudhoyono will have bilateral meetings with a number of heads of state, including Columbia President Juan Manuel Santos, French President Nicolas Sarkozy and President of the Switzerland Confederation Micheline Clamy Rey.

Yudhyono is also scheduled to meet with UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon, former US president Bill Clinton, and former British prime minister Tony Blair

Blok M to introduce electronic parking ticket system

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Thu, 01/27/2011 11:42 AM | Jakarta

After years of paying twice for parking, vendors and customers of Blok M square and Melawai will only have to pay once using a new a electronic parking ticket system, due to be introduced in February.

Under this system, customers will only be charged on leaving Blok M square and Melawai parking areas, Jakarta Transportation Agency chief Udar Pristono said Thursday as quoted by kompas.com.

“There will be one ticket with a bar code displaying how long a vehicle has been in the car park,” Udar said.

Nine killed in Pantura collision

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Thu, 01/27/2011 12:55 PM | Archipelago

Nine people died instantly when a van carrying workers from Tegal collided with a cargo truck on the Northern Java coastal highway in Carubah village, near Cirebon, West Java, in the wee hours of Thursday morning.

The remains of the victims were taken to nearby Arjawinangun hospital.

The collision occurred when van driver Ruslan, 49, lost control of the vehicle because of a flat tire. The van veered over into the oncoming lane, where it was hit head-on by a cargo truck.

Medco allocates $500m for capital expenditure

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Wed, 01/26/2011 1:45 PM | Business

Energy firm PT Medco Energi International (MEDC) has allocated US$500 million for capital expenditure in oil, gas and power plant projects in 2011.

MEDC vice president for investor relations Nusky Suyono said the company will borrow money from banks to supply 70 percent of the capital expenditure and use its own funds to cover the rest.

“We will spend $254 million for oil and gas exploration,” Nusky said Wednesday, as quoted by kontan.co.id.

Thursday, January 27, 2011

Bank Mandiri set rights issue price at Rp 5,000 a share

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Wed, 01/26/2011 11:24 AM | Headlines

State-owned bank Bank Mandiri has set the price for its right issue at Rp 5,000 (55 US Cents) per share, the Indonesia Stock Exchange (IDX) says.

Bank Mandiri will offer 2.33 billion new shares next month via the right issue, a bourse spokesperson said Wednesday, as quoted by kontan.co.id.

3,850 tons of Vietnamese rice arrives in Lombok

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Wed, 01/26/2011 1:54 PM | Archipelago

A total of 3,850 tons of rice from Vietnam arrived in West Lombok, West Nusa Tenggara, on Wednesday, the local Logistic Agency (Bulog) says.

The delivery was part of the 10,000 tons of low-quality rice that will be imported by the government this year to boost local stocks, tempointeraktif.com reports.

Bulog West Nusa Tenggara public relations officer Mahmud Zainal said the government had imported the rice in anticipating rice shortages resulting from bad weather conditions, as had occurred last year in the province, one of Indonesia’s main rice producers after Java.

Earlier, Bulog regional division chief Djibran AM Asran had said this year the provincial agency would purchase 180,000 tons of rice as part of the national procurement of 3.5 million tons. Bulog was expected to buy rice from local farmers starting from the end February.

Nur Mahmudi begins second term as Depok mayor

Hasyim Widhiarto, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Wed, 01/26/2011 2:29 PM | Jakarta

Nur Mahmudi Ismail and Idris Abdul Shomad were inaugurated Wednesday as mayor and deputy mayor of Depok, West Java, for the 2011-2016 period.

The pair were inaugurated by West Java Governor Ahmad Heryawan at the Depok council building.

This is Nur Mahmudi’s second term as a Depok mayor, after taking the post with Yuyun Wirasaputra as deputy mayor.

Depok Police chief Sr.Com. Fery Abraham said 400 police officers had been deployed to secure the event, anticipating potential conflicts with supporters of competing candidates in the recent mayoral election.

SBY attends India's National Day

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Wed, 01/26/2011 1:53 PM | National

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono on Wednesday attended an official ceremony in New Delhi to celebrate the 61st Republic Day of India.

Yudhoyono was welcomed by Indian President Pratibha Patil, the Indian prime Minister and other dignitaries, kompas.com reported Wednesday.

The celebration marks the adoption of the Constitution of India to replace the Government of India Act 1935, on Jan. 26, 1950. A grand parade through New Delhi is the largest event of the Republic Day celebrations.

Yudhoyono is not the first Indonesian president to become a guest of honor at the Republic Day celebrations. On Jan. 26, 1950, Indonesia’s first president Sukarno attended the celebrations as well.

After attending the Republic Day celebrations, Yudhoyono and First Lady Ani Yudhoyono are scheduled to attend a gathering with members of the Indonesian community in India.

At 5 p.m. local time on Wednesday, Yudhoyono and his entourage will leave India for Switzerland, for another state visit.

Ayin may not be released on Jan. 27

Ina Parlina, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Wed, 01/26/2011 2:26 PM | National

Former “luxury cell” occupant, businesswoman Artalyta “Ayin” Suryani can not be released on parole on Jan. 27 until she is issued with an official letter of approval, Correctional Facility Director General Untung Sugiono said.

“No decision has been made. The official approval has not been issued yet,” Untung said Wednesday.

Untung added, however, that if the letter was ready by tomorrow then Artalyta could be released as planned.

Earlier, a correctional observation team comprising officials from the Law and Human Rights Ministry and representatives from Tangerang Women's Penitentiary, the local prosecutor’s office and the National Police, which finished their inquiry two days ago, concluded that Artalyta had met both substantial and administrative requirements to be released on parole.

Previously, Law and Human Rights Minister Patrialis Akbar had said Artalyta was scheduled to be released on parole on Jan. 27.

In 2008, Artalyta was found guilty of corruption and sentenced to five years in prison.

In 2010, the Supreme Court cut her jail sentence by six months, just three months after the Judicial Corruption Taskforce found she had bribed prison guards to transfer her into a luxury cell.

After authorities learned of this violation, Artalyta was denied a sentence remission.

Garuda set to announce IPO share price

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Wed, 01/26/2011 10:50 AM | Business

National flag carrier Garuda Indonesia says it will announce the price of its shares for its initial public offering (IPO) on Wednesday.

“We have reached a decision on the price, but based on ruling we will only announce this on Wednesday afternoon after reporting the share price to the Capital Market and Financial Institution Supervisory Agency (Bapepam-LK),” Garuda finance director Elisa Lumbantoruan said Tuesday as quoted by tribunnews.com.

Garuda management met with members of the State Enterprises Ministry, an underwriter and international selling agent on Tuesday to decide on the price.

Garuda has planned to offer 9,362,429,500 shares, or 36.48 percent of its total stock, to the public via an IPO and expects to raise $350 million from them.

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

China ups minimum wages, as inflation persists

The Associated Press, Beijing | Wed, 01/26/2011 11:31 AM | Business

Many Chinese cities are raising minimum wages for workers, fanning inflationary pressures while also seeking to soothe frustrations over price hikes.

The double-digit increases in major manufacturing centers like Guangdong, and the cities of Shanghai, Tianjin and Beijing follow wage hikes last year that have further raised labor costs, accelerating a shift by makers of inexpensive goods to lower cost places like Vietnam and Indonesia.

Shortages of workers in some areas and strikes and other protests by disgruntled young workers have also prompted authorities to push minimum wages higher, with most localities expected to follow suit.

A report released last week by the American Chamber of Commerce in Shanghai said that 85 of the companies responding believed that rising costs are hurting China's competitiveness compared with other developing countries.

China retains massive advantages such as the standard of its infrastructure and its own huge market, which increasingly is the focus of foreign companies manufacturing there. But surging costs for labor, land, energy and materials have prompted many making low-cost items such as toys, shoes and clothing to move some production to other parts of the developing world.

Tianjin's labor bureau, in a statement seen Wednesday on its website, said it is preparing to raise the city's minimum monthly wage to 1,070 yuan ($160) from the current 920 yuan ($140).

Shanghai's mayor, Han Zheng, confirmed last week that the city was preparing for an April 1 increase in the city's minimum wage, by more than 10 percent over the current monthly 1,120 yuan ($170).

Han described this as an effective way to ensure a "rational income distribution."

"It is our responsibility to raise wages in Shanghai because people living on those wages are having a really hard time," he told reporters during an annual news conference. "It is important for every worker to share the fruits of progress and harmonious labor relations are conducive to healthy businesses," he said.

Beijing has announced its minimum wage will rise by 20.8 percent this year. Jiangsu, an affluent region adjacent to Shanghai, is hiking its minimum monthly pay by 15 percent and Guangdong, by about 19 percent in March to 1,300 yuan (about $200) - the country's highest.

Mindful of past links between surging inflation and political unrest, the authorities have sought to reassure consumers that they have prices under control.

China's inflation rate was at 4.6 percent in December, down from a 28-month high of 5.1 percent the month before but well above the government's target of 3 percent. Annual inflation in 2010 was 3.3 percent, and many economists are warning that price hikes may persist in coming months, especially if recent bad weather keeps food prices above normal.

Asked if rising costs might discourage companies from investing in places like Shanghai, Han said he believed companies focus more on the local investment environment and their own business strategies than on labor costs.

"If the companies cannot afford such increases it means their business model is not suitable for the development pattern in Shanghai," he said.

Gas cylinder explodes in S. Sumatra, fire destroys house

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Wed, 01/26/2011 11:03 AM | Archipelago

A liquid petroleum gas (LPG) gas cylinder exploded, causing a fire that razed a stilt house in Pagar Alam, South Sumatra.

The 3-kg cylinder exploded on Tuesday and immediately set fire to the 6x9-meter house, but causing no casualties, kompas.com reports.

The incident occurred when the owner was out working, neighborhood unit chief Sogeng said

91 boat people stranded in Kupang

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Wed, 01/26/2011 10:26 AM | Archipelago

At least 91 boat people of Middle Eastern origins on their way to Australia in search of political asylum were stranded on Tuesday in Naikliu village in Timor, East Nusa Tenggara.

The group were stranded after their boat was struck by high seas, and are now being detained at North Amfoang Police station.

East Nusa Tenggara Immigration Office chief Rindang Napitupulu confirmed that the group had been detained.

“Yes, those illegal immigrants were stranded in Amfoang since Tuesday evening,” Rindang said Wednesday as quoted by tempointeraktif.com.

Most of the group were from Afganistan (68), while others were from Iraq (14), Pakistan (6) and Iran (3). The group comprised 75 men, seven women and five crew members.

Rindang said police and the immigration office had yet to move the group to Kupang, because the road connecting Amfoang to Kupang was impassable in the current weather conditions.

GM Indonesia set to sell 6,000 vehicles this year

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Mon, 01/24/2011 11:49 AM | Business

General Motors Autoworld Indonesia (GMAI), the sole distributor of Chevrolet, is targeting to sell 6,000 automobiles this year, a company spokesman says.

Sales of Chevrolet Captiva automobiles are expected to account for 70 percents of this target, GMAI marketing manager and spokeswoman Debora Amelia Santosa said at the launch of the Captiva SS in Lippo Karawaci Circuit, Tangerang, as quoted by kompas.com.

Last year saw retail sales of 4,354 Chevrolet Captiva, Spark and Cruze automobiles, as well as Lova and Kalos, which are used for taxis. This figure is around 0.58 percent of the total number of vehicles sold nationwide last year, which reached more than 745,000.

President Yudhoyono to sign 32 MoUs during India visit

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Mon, 01/24/2011 10:09 AM | Business

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono will work on developing stronger cooperation with India in politics, the economy, education, culture and technology during his three-day visit beginning today, an official said on Monday.

India invited Yudhoyono as a chief guest to Indian Republic Day on Jan.26, Presidential special staff for international affairs Teuku Faizasyah said in Jakarta on Monday, as reported by kompas.com.

Yudhoyono and Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh are expected to witness the signing of 17 government-to-government Memorandums of Understanding and 15 government-to-business MoUs. About 500 businessmen from both countries are also expected to attend the event.

The President is also scheduled to meet several high-ranking Indian officials including Indian Vice President Mohammad Hamid Ansari, Indian opposition party chairwoman Srimathi Sushma Swaraj, and Indian Coalition Party chairwoman Srimathi Sonia Gandhi.

GM to export $900 million in autos, parts to China

The Associated Press | Mon, 01/24/2011 11:23 AM | Business

General Motors Co. says it plans to export $900 million in vehicles and parts to China under a two-year agreement signed with its flagship joint venture, Shanghai GM.

The agreement was among various trade and investment deals signed in connection with Chinese President Hu Jintao's state visit to the United States, the company said in a release Sunday.

Vehicle exports will be worth $500 million and components worth $400 million under the agreement. The amount of GM's current exports, excluding the deal, was not immediately available.

"We are committed to working with both countries to promote bilateral trade," Kevin Wale, president and managing director of the GM China Group.

China overtook the U.S. to become the world's biggest auto market, by sales of new vehicles, in 2009. Last year, passenger car sales rose by a third to 13.7 million vehicles, while total vehicle sales topped 18 million.

GM's strong growth in China and other fast growing emerging markets has proven a lifeline in tough times, helping to offset lagging growth in the U.S. and Europe.

Shanghai GM sold 1.03 million vehicles in China last year, as the country's leading passenger car maker. Overall, GM and its joint ventures sold 2.35 million vehicles in China in 2010, up nearly 29 percent from a year earlier.

During the summit between Hu and President Barack Obama, China announced $45 billion in contracts and said it would increase its investments in the U.S. by several billion dollars - deals that Obama said will support 235,000 American jobs.

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Housewives account for most HIV/AIDS cases in Papua: Govt

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Mon, 01/24/2011 11:33 AM | Archipelago

Most of the people reporting HIV/AIDS infections in Papua last year were housewives, accounting for 164 individuals, the government says.

Most of these women had contracted HIV from their husbands, Jayapura AIDS Commission secretary Purnomo said Monday in Sentani as reported by kompas.com reported.

“Their husbands were unfaithful,” he said

Official records show there were 609 people living with HIV/AIDS in Papua last year, comprising 242 men and 367 women.

Up to 164 of the women were housewives, and 102 were sex workers. Of the total, 37 were civil servants, 67 were employees of private companies, 41 were high school and college students and 61 were farmers or blue collar or informal workers.

Twelve of the women were under four years old and 44 were between 15 and 19 years of age, while most (285 of them) were in their 20s; 198 were in their 30s and 55 were in their 40s.

Most HIV/AIDS cases were found in the Sentani district, 126 in East Sentani, 26 in Kauran, 20 in Nimboran and 25 in West Sentani.

Four children had contracted HIV from their mothers, seven from blood transfusions and the rest from sexual intercourse.

Air Force to get bird’s-eye view of ‘UFO’ trails

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Mon, 01/24/2011 11:37 AM | Archipelago

Indonesian Air Force chief Marshall Imam Sufaat on Monday instructed his staff to use a helicopter to take aerial photographs of crop circles discovered on Sunday in Krasakan hamlet, Sleman, with residents alleging them to be traces of a UFO.

“If we examine the photographs, we will possibility see if the patterns were in fact created with powers beyond human knowledge,” Imam said as quoted by tempointeraktif.com, on the sidelines of the Air Force commander meeting in Yogyakarta.

Imam, however, declined to comment further on the geometric pattern.

The crop circles are in a paddy field and resemble a geometric artwork, while the other parts of the field remain untouched.

The patterns were first reported by a farmer, Tukiman, on Sunday at 6 a.m.

The pattern has already drawn hordes of locals and people from outside Yogyakarta, causing traffic jams in the vicinity.

Crop circles found in Yogya rice field

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Mon, 01/24/2011 9:55 AM | Archipelago

UFO trace?: A large circle and geometric pattern were created by a UFO have been found in a rice field in Krasakan hamlet in Sleman, Yogyakarta, local residents say.(Tribun Jogja)UFO trace?:A large circle and geometric pattern local residents say were created by a UFO have been found in a rice field in Krasakan hamlet in Sleman, Yogyakarta..(Tribun Jogja)

A large circle and geometric pattern local residents say were created by a UFO have been found in a rice field in Krasakan hamlet in Sleman, Yogyakarta.

The pattern includes a triangle and two smaller circles in the middle of the large circle, which has a diameter of between 25 and 30 meters, tempointeraktif.com reported Monday.

“The circles were there since yesterday morning. I think they were left by an alien space ship, like one I saw in TV,” Krasakan resident Cahyo Utomo said Monday.

“It is impossible that this was were made by the wind or any animal,” he added.

The circles and triangle in the rice paddy next to a residential area look resemble a geometric artwork, while the other parts of the field remain intact.

The crop circles were first reported by a farmer, Tukiman, on Sunday at 6 a.m.

Sleman Police chief Adj.Sr.Com. Iwan Ramaini said he was not sure if the circles were created by a UFO or if it was a natural phenomenon. A police investigation is underway.

Merapi eruptions cost Indonesia Rp 7.1t

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Mon, 01/24/2011 9:24 AM | Headlines

According to the National Disaster Mitigation Agency (BNPB), Indonesia suffered Rp 7.1 trillion (approximately US$781 million) in financial losses caused by the Mount Merapi eruptions last year affecting Central Java and Yogyakarta.

The losses were not only in the form of destroyed property, but also in the form of potential income losses, such as a decline in hotel occupancy rates and flights arriving at Yogyakarta’s Adisucipto Airport.

“The calculation of the losses was based on various aspects, not only how many hectares need to be compensated. That would be misleading,” Syamsul said, after a visit to victims of lahar floods in Jumoyo village in the Central Java town of Magelang.

“We’ve totaled them up and the financial losses reached Rp 7.1 trillion, but we haven’t calculated losses caused by the impacts of lahar floods because disaster relief efforts there are still ongoing.”

He added that the government would cover all financial losses.

Discounted executive train tickets offered

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Mon, 01/24/2011 10:14 AM | National

State railway company PT KAI on Monday began selling discounted executive-class tickets to various destinations across Indonesia, a spokesman says.

The tickets are only for passengers traveling on weekdays, from Monday to Thursday, PT KAI Greater Jakarta spokesman Mateta Rizaulhaq said Monday in Jakarta, as reported by tempointeraktif.com.

Four discounted tickets will be available for each car. Thus, a train with 10 cars, for example, will offer 40 discounted tickets.

With the discount, a ticket on the Argo Muria from Jakarta to Semarang costs Rp 50,000, compared to the normal executive ticket price of Rp 220,000. A Jakarta to Surabaya executive ticket on the Argo Anggrek, which normally costs around Rp 300,000, will be available for Rp 100,000.

No. 4 Soderling upset in 4th round by Dolgopolov

The Jakarta Post, Melbourne | Mon, 01/24/2011 10:53 AM | Sports

French Open finalist Robin Soderling's eight-match streak came to a sudden halt in an upset 1-6, 6-3, 6-1, 4-6, 6-2 fourth-round loss to Alexandr Dolgopolov at the Australian Open on Monday.

Soderling won the lead-up tournament at Brisbane without losing a set and hadn't conceded a set at Melbourne Park before he confronted the 22-year-old Ukrainian, who has reached the quarterfinals in his first trip to the Australian Open.

Dolgopolov's backhand crosscourt to bring up his first match point was typical of the 50 winners he hit against a stunned Soderling, the highest of the seeded players knocked out of the men's draw.

Soderling saved three match points, but his run came to an end with another unforced error, his 51st.

Monday, January 24, 2011

Indonesia AirAsia formulating IPO plans

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Mon, 01/24/2011 11:30 AM | Business

Indonesia AirAsia (IAA) president commissioner Sendjaja Widjaja on Sunday said the company would continue with plans to go public, to inject fresh capital needed to fuel IAA's fleet expansion plans.

"IAA shareholders are currently working on plans for the IPO [initial public offering], and we hope we will be ready to offer our shares publicly by the second semester of 2011", Widjaja said as quoted by kompas.com.

"The capitals we hope to gain from this will be used to cover our operational costs and to purchase two new Airbus A320 aircraft, but this plan is still a draft plan that has not been finalized, as there have been talks about purchasing five aircraft instead of just two — in order to comply with Indonesian Aviation Regulation No.1, 2009," Widjaja said.

The regulation requires operators to own a minimum of five aircraft in 2012. IAA currently operates 11 Airbus A320-200 and four Boeing 737-300, but all of these aircraft are leased.

"We are still deciding which underwriter company to use. The selection process has been going since December 2010, and we aim to have chosen an underwriter by February 2011. We want a large, international and committed company to do this job as they will determine the value of the shares and amount [of shares] we can offer,” Widjaja said.

For it to continue operating in Indonesia, Indonesia AirAsia will need to raise US$ 424.5 million (Rp 3,843 trillion) to purchase five aircraft.

Facebook raises $1B more from non US investors

The Associated Press, New York | Sat, 01/22/2011 6:50 AM | Business

Facebook said Friday it has raised $1 billion from non-U.S. investors, which combined with an infusion from Goldman Sachs and Russia's Digital Sky Technologies in December, brings the haul from its latest round of funding to $1.5 billion.

The investments value the social networking site at $50 billion, more than the current market values of Yahoo Inc. or eBay Inc., but below those of Amazon.com Inc. and Google Inc.

Facebook did not say Friday how it plans to spend the $1.5 billion. The company, which is based in Palo Alto, California, had the option to raise up to $1.5 billion from non-U.S. investors through Goldman, but limited the offering to $1 billion.

Spokesman Jonny Thaw declined to comment further on the decision to limit the offering, which was oversubscribed - meaning more people wanted in than got in. Earlier this week, Goldman said it was barring U.S. investors from taking part in the Facebook offering, citing widespread media coverage that could have violated securities guidelines that govern private placements.

The investments are in Facebook's Class A shares. The company's Class B shares, held by executives and early employees hold 10 times the voting power of the Class A stock.

Facebook created its dual-class stock structure in 2009 to give CEO Mark Zuckerberg and other executives control over the company. Google has a similar structure. As anticipated, Facebook also said it will start filing public financial reports by April 30, 2012.

While that doesn't technically mean an initial public stock offering, that is the most likely outcome because Facebook will have to make many of the same disclosures of a publicly traded company anyway.

The specific date for filing financial reports comes because the company expects to have more than 500 shareholders by the end of April this year. Once that happens, the Securities and Exchange Commission requires it to disclose its financial results and other details on a quarterly basis so that its investors are adequately informed. That requirement kicks in 120 days after the first fiscal year in which a company exceeds the 500 shareholder threshold.

Since Facebook's fiscal year ends Dec. 31, the latest possible date would be April 30, 2012. It was the 500-shareholder rule that prompted Google Inc. to go public in the summer of 2004.

If Facebook follows a similar timeline, its IPO could come during the summer of 2012.

American 'keeper Friedel declared bankrupt

The Associated Press, London | Sat, 01/22/2011 7:02 AM | Sports

American goalkeeper Brad Friedel has reportedly been declared bankrupt in England over debts relating to a football academy back home.

The Daily Mirror says the ruling against the Aston Villa 'keeper was made in a Macclesfield county court on Thursday.

Friedel reportedly owes the backers of the Premier Soccer Academies in Lorain, Ohio, about five million pounds ($8 million).

U.S. media reported in July 2009 that Premier Soccer Academies was being sued in the Lorain County Common Pleas Court over unpaid loans of $7.6 million.

The Daily Mirror says repossession proceedings began last month on a house in Ohio belonging to Friedel.

Sidoarjo Police arrest 46 illegal immigrants from Iran and Afghanistan

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Sat, 01/22/2011 9:34 AM | Archipelago

The Sidoarjo Police detained 46 illegal immigrants from Iran and Afganistan on Friday night, allegedly on their way to Australia.

According to police, those immigrants were arrested at Tambakoso village, Waru, Sidoarjo, East Java, based on information from local villagers.

“We were observing the location from Friday afternoon,” Sidoarjo Police chief Sr. Comr M. Iqbal said on Saturday as quoted by kompas.com news portal.

The Sidoarjo Police had received intelligence on people smuggling in the area from the Jakarta Police.

“Based on the data, the immigrants are from Afghanistan and Iran,” Iqbal said, adding that the illegal immigrants would be taken to Pasuruan Immigration Detention.

US hands over stolen Degas painting to France

The Associated Press, Washington | Sat, 01/22/2011 8:43 AM | World

The United States has returned to French authorities an Edgar Degas painting that was stolen 37 years ago.

On Friday, the painting was handed over to the acting French ambassador to the United States, Francois Rivasseau.

It was rediscovered recently before it was due to be auctioned in New York City. Court papers said the seller did not know it was stolen.

Authorities said Degas painted "Laundry Woman with Toothache," in the early 1870s. A collector donated it to the French government and it was registered with the Louvre Museum.

In 1961, the Louvre lent the painting to the Malraux Museum in Le Havre, Normandy. In late 1973, a still-unknown thief pulled it off the museum wall and slipped away.

Sotheby's had given the small oil portrait of a young woman holding her jaw an estimated value of $350,000 to $450,000.

Earlier this year, Sotheby's featured the painting in the catalog for a sale of impressionist art. A Malraux employee spotted the listing and notified Sotheby's, which immediately pulled it from the auction.

Stenciled on the back of the canvas but hidden by the frame was "RF 1953-8" - shorthand for it being the eighth work of art acquired by the French Republic in 1953.

Sotheby's officials said that before the auction, Sotheby's had checked to see if the piece was listed on the London-based Art Loss Register - which tracks stolen, looted or missing art - and similar databases. But they said they did not find it listed.

Sunday, January 23, 2011

Malaysia holds 7 Somali pirates after saving ship

The Associated Press, Kuala Lumpur | Sat, 01/22/2011 9:38 AM | World

Malaysia's leadersays the country's navy is holding at least seven Somali pirates after thwarting an attempt to hijack a chemical tanker in the Gulf of Aden.

The Royal Malaysian Navy says its commandos injured three pirates in a gunbattle and rescued 23 crew members of the Malaysian-owned MT Bunga Laurel late Thursday.

The navy said in a statement that the rescue was carried out within less than two hours after pirates stormed the vessel with pistols and assault rifles. Crew members had locked themselves in a safe room and activated a distress call.

Prime Minister Najib Razak told a news conference late Friday that autorities are considering whether the pirates should be brought to Malaysia to face trial for the hijack attempt.

AGO denies that Gayus demand was weak

Mariel Grazella, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Sat, 01/22/2011 8:39 AM | National

The Attorney General's Office denies that the conviction it demanded judges hand down to tax graft convict Gayus H. Tambunan was weak.

"I don't understand why some say that the conviction demand was poor," Attorney General Basrief Arief said.

He added that all four articles that the prosecutors had accused Gayus of violating were proven in court.

"Gayus was proven guilty by the judges on all four accounts," he said.

He added that he appreciated the judges' decision but would push forward for an appeal.

Although judges found Gayus guilty on four accounts by prosecutors, judges convicted Gayus to seven out of the 20 years' imprisonment demanded by prosecutors.

Gayus court statement to corner Judicial Task Force: Prosecutor

Mariel Grazella, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Sat, 01/22/2011 8:46 AM | Headlines

Vice-Attorney General Darmono says that statements made by tax graft convict Gayus H. Tambunan were aimed to corner the Judicial Mafia Taskforce.

"I observe that there have been efforts in that direction," he said on Friday.

He added that the AGO had clarified to President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono allegations made by Gayus.

Gayus claimed that law enforcers were reluctant to legally process prosecutor Cirus Sinaga out of fear that Cirus would reveal "the truth" behind the case of convicted former Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) chairman Antasari Azhar.

"We have said that what Gayus delivered in court is all untrue," he added. "We have delivered the facts and evidence [related to the allegations]."

'Baby Doc' says quake brought him back to Haiti

The Associated Press, Port-Au-Prince | Sat, 01/22/2011 6:56 AM | World

Former Haitian dictator Jean-Claude Duvalier says it was the devastating earthquake that brought him back to Haiti.

Duvalier says he wants to help with the reconstruction from a quake that destroyed much of the capital. He made a brief speech Friday at a rented guest house. It was his most extensive public statement since his surprise return to the country where he faces a potential trial for corruption and human rights violations.

Duvalier said he feels "profound sadness" for anyone who believes they were harmed by his regime.

He did not say how long he intends to stay in Haiti.

The former dictator known as "Baby Doc" was deposed nearly 25 years ago in a popular uprising.

VP to visit Bangka Island

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Sat, 01/22/2011 8:51 AM | National

Vice President Boediono and his wife Herawati Boediono are scheduled to visit Bangka Island on Saturday. 

Before heading to Bangka Island, the Vice President will meet student and teacher representatives from Palembang, South Sumatra, as part of his visit to the province. 

Boediono, along with Public Works Minister Joko Kirmanto, Home Minister Gamawan Fawzi, Agriculture Minister Suswono and National Education Minister M. Nuh, will return to Jakarta at 11 p.m.

Deponeering postponed: AGO

Mariel Grazella, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Sat, 01/22/2011 8:56 AM | National

The Attorney General's Office has not yet signed the formal letter on the decision to halt the legal process on Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) deputies.

The AGO had announced that it had decided to halt the legal process on deputies Bibit Samad Rianto and Chandra M. Hamzah for the public good.

The legal process is known as deponeering.
According to Attorney General Basrief Arief, the AGO received the draft of the letter by noon yesterday.

However, there are certain parts of the letter, such as the wording of sentences, that must be "perfected", he said.

"I'll probably sign it on Monday," he added.

The presence of the draft at the AGO, he said, meant that the House of  Representatives had supported the AGO's deponeering decision.

The KPK duties have been accused by a corruption convict of abuse of power and extortion.

Saturday, January 22, 2011

ICW to report education agency, high schools to police

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Fri, 01/21/2011 3:43 PM | Jakarta

Indonesia Corruption Watch (ICW) says it will report Jakarta Education Agency chief Taufik Yudi Mulyanto, and principals of five state junior high schools to the police on Monday for their reluctance to reveal information regarding education funds.

ICW senior researcher Febri Hendri on Friday said the agency and schools had refused to show receipts for the funds they received from the central government under the School Operations Aid (BOS) and Education Operational Aid (BOP) programs, tempointeraktif.com reported.

Febri said that on Nov.15, 2010, the Central Information Commission had issued a ruling ordering the parties to provide copies of the receipts to ICW.

The agency and the schools, SMPN 190, SMPN 95, SMPN 84, SMPN 67 and SMPN 28, had not appealed the decision, he said.

Earlier on Friday, Febri visited the agency to ask for the documents, classified as public documents, but his efforts were in vain.

Febri said the agency and five schools had violated 2008 Law on Public Information.

150 low-cost apartment tenants default on loans: Govt

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Fri, 01/21/2011 3:41 PM | Jakarta

About 150 tenants of a low-cost apartment building complex in West Cakung, East Jakarta, have failed to pay their installments for several months, Jakarta Housing Agency says.

Some of the residents had not paid their monthly installments, of between Rp 300,000 (US$ 32) and Rp 500,000, for 15 months, Agency chief Agus Subandono said Friday as quoted by beritajakarta.com.

The agency sent warning letters to the residents on Friday, but had not received a positive response, Agus said.

Having received threats from the agency that they may face eviction, a meeting was organized involving local district and subdistrict chiefs and the tenants finally agreed to pay their arrears in installments.

Agus said that many of the residents had started to make the payments.

“Hopefully they will continue to fulfill their obligations so we can cover our losses,” he said.

The apartment building complex comprises 40 blocks with 100 units each.

PLN asks govt to revise power rates regulation

Rangga D. Fadillah, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Fri, 01/21/2011 3:03 PM | Business

State electricity company PT PLN has recommended the government revise the 2010 ministerial decree on basic electricity rates, if the cap on increases to power rates for industries is to remain in place.

PLN business and risk management director Murtaqi Syamsudin said Friday that as an executor of government policies his company needed a clear legal basis to avoid problems that appeared to be caused by the excesses of government policies.

"The government and House of Representatives may make political decisions, but for us the most important thing is that they materialize their decisions into clear legal instructions," he told reporters in a discussion in Jakarta.

The electricity rates for industries have recently been in legal limbo since PLN announced it would lift a cap on power rate increases in early January.

Through a ministerial regulation, the Energy and Mineral Resources Ministry introduced new power rates in mid 2010. Business owners slammed the change, as calculations showed they would experience increases in power costs of between 20 and 30 percent.

As a compromise, the government and House agreed to cap the tariff increases at 18 percent, as of July 2010.

50,000 Balinese suffering from cataracts: Health official

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Fri, 01/21/2011 2:57 PM | Archipelago

About 50,000 people in Bali are suffering from cataracts and the number is expected to increase by 0.1 percent annually, a physician says.

Many people suffer from the disease not only because of old age, but also because of poor nutrition, unfavorable weather, diabetes and excessive exposure to sunlight, Indera Hospital chief Dr. Pande Sri Joni said Friday in Denpasar after receiving Australian Ambassador to Indonesia Greg Moriarty.

Moriarty visited the hospital in relation to health donations from the Australian government amounting to Aus$3 million, Antara reported Friday.

Joni said cataract patients could get their sight back through operations, adding that despite efforts by the government to prevent the illness, the number of cataract patients continued to increase.

“Every day [we] perform 10 operations. Each year we treat 1,000 patients and the number will increase to 2,000,” he said.

The hospital has five ophthalmologists who perform the eye surgery and also a mobile unit that can travel to villages throughout Bali upon requests from regional administrations.

Fire razes five houses in Bandung

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Fri, 01/21/2011 3:37 PM | Archipelago

Five houses in the densely populated Sumadinata lane off Jl. Pasundan, Bandung, were razed by fire on Friday at lunchtime.

"It happened at around 12:15 while people were at their Friday prayers," said Mohammad Hadi, a resident whose house was destroyed in the blaze.

The fire, Hadi said, had started when from a candle set some curtains on fire at an elderly woman’s house. The fire spread and soon razed the building, belonging to Ibu Esih.

"I don’t know what the candle was for. When I saw it, it was already a large fire and we immediately called the fire brigade," Hadi said as quoted by tempointeraktif.com.

No one was hurt in the incident, as all residents had left their homes as soon as Hadi noticed the fire.

Bandung Fire Brigade chief Yedi Z deployed six fire trucks to the scene.

"The residents assisted us to put out the fire. If we hadn't acted as quickly as we did, the fire would have spread to more houses as this is a dense settlement,” Yadi said at the scene.

50,000 Balinese suffering from cataracts: Health official

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Fri, 01/21/2011 2:57 PM | Archipelago

About 50,000 people in Bali are suffering from cataracts and the number is expected to increase by 0.1 percent annually, a physician says.

Many people suffer from the disease not only because of old age, but also because of poor nutrition, unfavorable weather, diabetes and excessive exposure to sunlight, Indera Hospital chief Dr. Pande Sri Joni said Friday in Denpasar after receiving Australian Ambassador to Indonesia Greg Moriarty.

Moriarty visited the hospital in relation to health donations from the Australian government amounting to Aus$3 million, Antara reported Friday.

Joni said cataract patients could get their sight back through operations, adding that despite efforts by the government to prevent the illness, the number of cataract patients continued to increase.

“Every day [we] perform 10 operations. Each year we treat 1,000 patients and the number will increase to 2,000,” he said.

The hospital has five ophthalmologists who perform the eye surgery and also a mobile unit that can travel to villages throughout Bali upon requests from regional administrations.

Friday, January 21, 2011

President tells military to lift its game

Nani Afrida, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Fri, 01/21/2011 3:12 PM | National

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono (SBY) said Friday that Indonesian soldiers must obey the rules and military discipline.

“I instruct the Indonesian Military Commander to impose serious sanctions on soldiers who break the rules and disciplines,” Yudhoyono said at a meeting with the Indonesian Military chiefs in Jakarta.

He said that he was concerned about the violations committed by soldiers, including the torture of civilians in Papua.

The violations and misdemeanors, even though they seemed small in scale, had tarnished the image of Indonesia among the international community.

“The United Nations, Europe and the United States were concerned about those incidents,” he said.

“The most important thing is to resolve the incident transparently and accountably.”

To prevent similar incidents from occurring in future, Yudhoyono called on military chiefs to provide troops with training before deploying them to conflict areas.

During the meeting, which was attended by 135 military commanders, Yudhoyono ordered the military chiefs to pay more attention to law enforcement and human rights, peacekeeping and the fight against terrorism.

RI govt set to evacuate Indonesians from Tunisia

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Fri, 01/21/2011 3:00 PM | World

The Indonesian government announced Friday plans to evacuate 120 Indonesian from of Tunisia amid political turmoil in the country.

"We will inform them of the evacuation process. They will be brought back soon,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Michael Tene said as quoted by tempointeraktif.com.

Michael said 120 Indonesians were currently in Tunisia: 37 at the Indonesian Ambassador’s residence, 22 at the Indonesian Embassy office, and 17 at residences of Indonesian diplomats. The 43 others had opted to remain in their own homes, he said.

“There is also one who is now now being treated in a hospital," Michael said.

Demonstrations in Tunisia have been going on for a month. At least 78 people have been killed during the crisis. Ben Ali, the former president, was forced to flee after he was accused of corruption.Tunisia Prime Minister Mohamed Ghannouchi took over the presidential position for interim governance pending an election.

RI govt set to evacuate Indonesians from Tunisia

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Fri, 01/21/2011 3:00 PM | World

The Indonesian government announced Friday plans to evacuate 120 Indonesian from of Tunisia amid political turmoil in the country.

"We will inform them of the evacuation process. They will be brought back soon,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Michael Tene said as quoted by tempointeraktif.com.

Michael said 120 Indonesians were currently in Tunisia: 37 at the Indonesian Ambassador’s residence, 22 at the Indonesian Embassy office, and 17 at residences of Indonesian diplomats. The 43 others had opted to remain in their own homes, he said.

“There is also one who is now now being treated in a hospital," Michael said.

Demonstrations in Tunisia have been going on for a month. At least 78 people have been killed during the crisis. Ben Ali, the former president, was forced to flee after he was accused of corruption.Tunisia Prime Minister Mohamed Ghannouchi took over the presidential position for interim governance pending an election.

SBY promises to improve soldiers’ welfare

Nani Afrida, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Fri, 01/21/2011 3:14 PM | National

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono (SBY) on Friday said the government was committed to improving the welfare of the Indonesian military and police.

“We are committed to increasing the remuneration of our military personnel and police every year, so that they can fare better in their work," Yudhoyono said in a meeting with military chiefs in Jakarta.

He said the government was working on a scheme to allow officers to have houses.

“I realize there continue to be housing problems for military personnel," Yudhoyono said, adding that his government would keep its promise.

“It has been six or seven years. The government has increased the salary for its President. But, I promise [to increase salaries of military personnel too]," he said.

During the meeting, attended by 135 top-notch military commanders and 156 high-ranking police officers, the President called on both institutions to pay attention to law enforcement and human rights protection, as well as peacekeeping and fighting terrorism.

Ministry investigating possible outbreak of legionella bacteria in Bali

The Jakarta Post | Wed, 01/19/2011 9:52 PM | Archipelago

The Health Ministry is investigating a possible outbreak of legionella, a strain of bacteria that can cause Legionaries disease, in Bali, an official says.

“A team just arrived from Bali this morning and will check the samples in our laboratory in Yogyakarta. The results might be available a week from now,” Director General for Disease Control and Environmental Health Tjandra Yoga Aditama said Wednesday  as quoted by Tribunnews.com.

The Health Agency has disinfected two locations that may have been exposed to the bacteria, he said.

Legionella bacteria can cause Legionellosis, which can refer to two syndromes: Legionnaires disease, which often manifests as severe pneumonia, and Pontiac fever, according to the website eMedicine.

Tjandra said that the Australian Health Ministry had contacted its Indonesian counterpart to discuss the possibility of an outbreak.

The Sydney Morning Herald reported that there have been 10 confirmed Australian cases of Legionnaires' Disease connected with the central Kuta area in Bali since August 2010

Thursday, January 20, 2011

British lawmakers told off for tweeting in Commons

The Associated Press, London | Thu, 01/20/2011 12:30 PM | World

No tweeting in the House, please.

The deputy speaker of Britain's House of Commons has asked lawmakers not to use Twitter while sitting in the chamber. Lindsay Hoyle intervened after Kevin Brennan, a Labour lawmaker, noted midway through a debate on education that two other lawmakers there were tweeting about the debate on Twitter.

Brennan complained the lawmakers should have voiced their arguments in Parliament so other lawmakers could have a chance to rebut them, instead of making comments online.

Hoyle warned Wednesday that lawmakers should not use Twitter to update followers while they sit in the Commons.

VP holds impromptu meeting on Gayus case.

The Jakarta Post | Wed, 01/19/2011 9:39 PM | National

Vice President Boediono held a coordination meeting to discuss Gayus H. Tambunan, just a few hours after the former low-level tax official was sentenced to seven years’ imprisonment for graft.
The meeting at the Vice Presidential Office in Jakarta was attended by Coordinating Minister for Political, Legal and Security Affairs Djoko Suyanto, National Police chief Gen. Timur Pradopo and Attorney General Basrief Arief, as reported by tempointeraktif.com online news portal.

“The Vice President has become the national coordinator, as per the President’s instructions. Of course, he will often meet with law enforcement chiefs….I think this is just a preliminary meeting,” Boediono’s spokesman, Yopie Hidayat, said.

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono issued 12 orders for handling the Gayus case earlier this week, one of which named Boediono point person for implementing Yudhoyono’s orders.

Other orders require performance evaluations and audited financial reports for all institutions connected to Gayus’ case and sanctioning officers found guilty wrongdoing in the case’s many investigations.

PLN price hike pushes water rates up.

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Wed, 01/19/2011 7:11 PM | Business

State-owned power firm PLN's decision to substitute LNG with crude oil to fuel Indonesia's power plants is forcing tap water operators to increase tap water rates by 30 percent, as operational costs have forced PLN to slash the operators' electricity cap allowance by 18 percent.

The chairman of Indonesian Tap Water Operators Association, Syaiful, said that the price hike was inevitable as PDAM used 60 percent of its electrical cap allowance for industrial processes.

"If the cap is reduced, it logically follows that our operational costs will increase", Syaiful was quoted as saying by metrotvnews.com.

In response to the planned increase of water rates, Public Works Deputy Minister Hermanto Dardak stated that in accordance with the Millennium Development Program 2015, the government would commit to the building of more than 8 million water installations that would reach areas that

currently had no access to clean water within the next 4 years.

Oil company BP sees CO2 emissions rising to 2030

The Associated Press, London | Wed, 01/19/2011 9:05 PM | World

Oil company BP predicts that carbon emissions will continue rising for the next two decades although the rate of growth is expected to moderate.

BP's report on the world energy outlook, released Wednesday, also said oil consumption will continue to grow because of demand from newly industrialized countries, including China.

The report predicted that emissions would increase by 1.2 percent a year until 2030, lower than the 1.9 percent rate of the previous 20 years. It said that emissions from the OECD countries - the industrialized West - were expected to decline, but not enough to offset rising demand elsewhere.

BP believes oil will be the slowest growing fuel in years ahead, with faster increases in consumption of natural gas and biofuels.

Taskforce played a role in determining Gayus' "light" sentence: Legislator

The Jakarta Post | Wed, 01/19/2011 9:20 PM | National

A legislator from the Golkar Party says that the Judicial Mafia Taskforce may have played a role in determining former tax officer Gayus H. Tambunan’s sentence, which he deems as being too light.

“Gayus’ confessions after the trial that explained how the taskforce promised he would undergo legal processes ‘safely and comfortably’ obviously shows the taskforce engages in ‘special treatment’,” Bambang Soesatyo said in a text message. “Therefore, it is not impossible that the taskforce had a hand in the light verdict,”

He said that if the taskforce was proven to have conducted such legal interventions, then it should be disbanded.

The legislator from Commission III overseeing legal affairs said that the seven-year sentence handed to Gayus for committing graft was, “Very disappointing…how can someone guilty of tax mafia only be sentenced to seven years in jail while the prosecutors demanded 20 years.”

Gayus mentioned in a press conference held after his trial that the Judicial Mafia Taskforce's  head, Denny Indrayana, lured him to return to Indonesia when the two met in Singapore in March last year, by assuring Gayus that he would be “safe and comfortable” during the legal process.

Tunisia probes foreign assets of deposed leader

Hadeel Al-Shalchi, The Associated Press, Tunis, Tunisia | Wed, 01/19/2011 9:10 PM | World

A Tunisian prosecutor opened an investigation Wednesday into the overseas assets of the ousted president and his deeply resented family, as Tunisian authorities worked to restore order amid street protests against remnants of the former regime.

The move came as hundreds of protesters led a peaceful - if noisy - rally in central Tunis, demanding that former allies of deposed President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali stop clinging to power.

Ben Ali fled to Saudi Arabia on Friday after 23 years in power, and a caretaker government run by his longtime prime minister is now struggling to calm tensions. The fragile state of the government highlights Tunisians' questions about who is in control of this moderate Muslim nation on the Mediterranean Sea, popular among European tourists and seen as an ally in the West's fight against terrorism.

The official TAP news agency says the prosecutor's office moved to investigate bank accounts, real estate and other assets held by Ben Ali, his wife Leila Trabelsi and other relatives. His relatives - especially his wife's family - were seen as corrupt and dominated many businesses in the nation.

Meanwhile, the Swiss president said Wednesday that her country's federal council agreed to freeze any assets in Switzerland belonging to Ben Ali, to help work up a possible criminal case over alleged stolen funds.

In Berlin, a German official said the European Union was working on a joint position or concrete proposals on Tunisia, which could include a decision on how to handle Ben Ali's assets in Europe.

Tunisia's interim government, already hobbled by defections, was expected to hold its first Cabinet meeting Wednesday afternoon. It also eased back the hours of a curfew initiated in the final days of Ben Ali's rule - ended after a deadly revolt swept up the streets nationwide.

TAP said that "in the wake of an improvement in the security situation in the country," a new curfew would take effect from 8 p.m. to 5 a.m. - from 6 p.m. to 5 a.m. previously.

At the Tunis protest Wednesday, protesters sang nationalist songs and held up signs with "RCD Out!" - referring to Ben Ali's former ruling party - as they rallied on central Avenue Bourguiba. White-and-blue police vans lined the route.

"We want the old government out - and we want them away from anything that has to do with the government," said Hafed al Maki, 50, who works at the country's largest insurance company. He said he and colleagues staged a strike and overthrew their manager Tuesday.

He said he would not wait for the 60-day time limit for new presidential elections "because that is enough time for the old cronies to set their roots in and start their old ways again, thieving and taking our resources. No way that's happening again."

Some protesters carried a coffin-like black box with the letters RCD painted in white, and banged the side of the coffin as they walked up and down. Others chanted, or sang.

The atmosphere was boisterous but not as combative as other protests in recent days - or as in the deadly protests leading up to Ben Ali's downfall, in which police fired at protesters hurling stones and setting buildings ablaze.

The interim government under Prime Minister Mohamed Ghannouchi was already weakened after four ministers resigned Tuesday - within 24 hours after being appointed to the unprecedented multiparty Cabinet.

An airport official said the Tunisian foreign minister, Kamal Merjan, left the Egyptian resort town of Sharm el-Sheik on Wednesday before the start of an Arab League summit, without giving any reason.

The unrest has also rattled Tunisia's economy, which has seen impressive growth in recent years. Moody's Investor Service downgraded Tunisia's government bond ratings Wednesday, citing "significant uncertainties" surrounding Tunisia's economic and political future.

Moody's cut the rating by one notch, to "Baa3" from "Baa2," and also downgraded its outlook to negative from stable. Th new rating is one notch above "junk bond" status.

Labor unions, students and members of the Ennahdha Islamist party - which Ben Ali banned in 1992 and cracked down upon for years - have been among those protesting since his ouster.

A new unity government announced Monday was mostly made up of old gard politicians. A day later, at least four opposition ministers quit, aligning themselves with demonstrators who insist democratic change is impossible with former Ben Ali supporters still in power.

Ghannouchi and interim president Fouad Mebazaa, the former speaker of the lower house of parliament, quit the ruling RCD party Tuesday in an attempt to distance themselves from Ben Ali. The party itself kicked out Ben Ali, its founder, national TV reported.

The protests began in December, after an educated but unemployed 26-year-old man set himself on fire when police confiscated the fruit and vegetables he was selling without a permit. The move hit a nerve among frustrated jobless youths and prompted protests around the nation. Officials say 78 protesters and civilians died in the protests that swpt Ben Ali from power - many killed by police bullets.

Ben Ali was often criticized for a heavy-handed repression against his opponents, curbing civil liberties and running a police state - though he was praised for developing tourism and allying with the U.S. against terrorism.

Bowing to protesters' emands in recent days, Ghannouchi has pledged to free political prisoners, lift restrictions on the Tunisian League for the Defense of Human Rights and create state panels to investigate bribery and abuses during the upheaval.

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Leprosy patients stage rally as city pulls the plug on assistance

Andi Hajramurni, The Jakarta Post, Makassar, South Sulawesi | Wed, 01/19/2011 8:11 PM | Archipelago

Around 100 leprosy patients and recovered leprosy patients staged a protest at the South Sulawesi Regional Council (DPRD) and Social Services Agency about the sudden discontinuation of their monthly logistical aid.

The protesters came with cars and public transport, accompanied by the head of their community unit, Mustari Lotong.

The leprosy patients reside in the Makassar Leprosy Complex, with the total population estimated to be more than 400 people, excluding their family members.

The logistical support the patients received consisted of 15 kilograms of rice, and a food allowance of Rp 50.000 a month per person. These aids have been allocated by the South Sulawesi administration since 1991.

One of the protesters, Jamalludin Sarro, 37, said that the aid was usually distributed at the start of the month – even if it was distributed late it wouldn’t usually go past the 10th day of every month.

However, this month, the aid is still yet to be seen.

“We’ve always received the aid, and even when it’s late we usually receive it by the 10th of every month. But now it’s the 19th and we haven’t received any aid at all. We need to eat”, said Jamaludin, who happens to be one of the managers of the Leprosy Association (PERMATA), an NGO that specializes in educating the community about leprosy as well as providing counseling for leprosy patients to enable them to lead independent lives.

Jamaludin added, this logistical aid happened to be the primary food source for leprosy patients and recovered patients as they cannot fully integrate into the mainstream workforce because of their physical conditions. That is why the unusual delay of the aid is extremely distressing for them.

“Leprosy patients and recovered leprosy patients cannot lead normal lives as the community is not willing to accept them. Without the aid of the government, how are they supposed to survive? They couldn’t find proper paying jobs, and most of them have no other choice than to become beggars”, said Jamaludin.

An official from the South Sulawesi Social Services Agency, Syakhruddin, who spoke with the delegation from the protesters, stated that the logistical aid would still be distributed. The reason for the unusual delay was that the allocation had not yet been cleared.

“The South Sulawesi administration did not waive the aid. This year they allocated Rp 600 million from the city budget (APBD) to be spent on logistical aid for leprosy patients, and the responsibility to manage this fund was given to the Social Services Agency. However, we still have not received the funds. This is why we have not distributed the aid to the patients,” added Syakhruddin.

After hearing the explanation, the crowd dispersed without any incident. However, they hoped that the funds would clear soon so the aid could be distributed among the patients.

Obama hosts Hu as world powers seek common ground

Matthew Pennington, The Associated Press, Washington | Wed, 01/19/2011 8:01 PM | World

President Barack Obama is lavishing the grandest of White House welcomes on Chinese President Hu Jintao as the leaders of the two powers look for common ground on economic and security issues without alienating their domestic audiences.

With many Americans blaming China at least in part for the high U.S. unemployment rate, both presidents will be looking to build trust in a relationship grounded in mutual interest but troubled by intractable disputes.

Hu's visit follows an up and down two years in which an assertive China initially cold-shouldered the U.S. on climate change, did little to reel in its unpredictable ally North Korea and responded limply to U.S. pleas to mitigate trade imbalances. For its part, the U.S. riled China with arms sales to Taiwan and by inviting Tibet's spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, to the White House.

Both sides are now setting a more positive tone.

Hu was welcomed on arrival Tuesday at Andrews Air Force Base by Vice President Joe Biden and then attended the first of two dinners Obama is hosting for him during his four-day U.S. stay.

Obama was joined at Tuesday night's private dinner, in the Old Family Dining Room in the White House residence, by national security adviser Tom Donilon and Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton. Hu brought along two top Chinese officials. Underscoring the desire for candor, the White House said there were no official note-takers at the dinner and offered no readout of the discussions.

The private dinner preceded a pomp-filled welcoming ceremony on Wednesday and illustrated Obama's careful mix of warmth and firmness for the leader of a nation that is at once the largest U.S. competitor and most important potential partner.

After talks Wednesday morning, the two leaders will hold a joint news conference at the White House - just four questions allowed, two from U.S. journalists and two from Chinese reporters. They are expected to announce an agreement to establish a jointly financed nuclear security center in China.

A full state dinner at the White House in the evening will be the ceremonial highlight.

Clinton told CBS television Wednesday morning that she has high expectations for this week's talks, and said that the meeting between Obama and Hu is a "continuation of two years of the Obama administration's efforts to build a positive, cooperative and comprehensive relationship" with China.

She told CBS that while Washington "must always stand for our values," the U.S. government shouldn't let differences over human rights issues get in the way of doing constructive business with Beijing on problems such as North Korea, global warming and trade.

Obama plans to host a meeting Wednesday afternoon for Hu and U.S. and Chinese business leaders to promote increased U.S. exports to China and greater Chinese investment in the United States. Among those scheduled to attend are CEOs Steve Ballmer of Microsoft, Lloyd Blankfein of Goldman Sachs, Jeff Immelt of General Electric, Greg Brown of Motorola, Jim McNerney of Boeing and nine other U.S. executives.

U.S. companies have been longtime critics of Chinese policies that kept its currency low relative to the dollar. A low-priced yuan makes Chinese products cheaper in the U.S. and U.S. products more expensive in China.

While the agenda is packed with weighty issues, expectations remain modest.

"Overcoming the sense of mistrust is probably the most important thing," said Charles Freeman, a China expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a Washington-based think tank.

Hu's visit comes as the political trajectory has shifted for both nations.

China's success in weathering the global economic crisis coincided with an increasing confidence - critics would say brashness - on the world stage and worries among its neighbors in Asia over its growing military clout. Ultimately, that distrust has benefited the U.S., as nations such as Japan, South Korea and even Vietnam have looked to cement stronger ties with the U.S. as a regional power.

The U.S. economy has shown signs of recovery and Obama also has rebounded from his own political problems, notably the loss of one chamber of Congress to the Republican Party in the November elections at the midpoint of his term. A nuclear arms reduction treaty he orchestrated with Russia was approved, and he has been lauded for a touchstone speech in the aftermath of the shooting massacre in Arizona that left six dead and 13 wounded, including a U.S. congresswoman. His previously stellar poll ratings have begun to recover after months in the doldrums.

That shift in fortunes is unlikely to translate into major concessions from Hu, but Obama may encounter a more amenable Chinese leader, who will be looking to burnish China's image in the U.S. and his own standing before he steps down in 2012.

Stiff and media-averse, Hu, 67, has been in power since 2002. While lacking the charisma of predecessors Jiang Zemin and Deng Xiaoping, he has presided over a remarkable rise in China's economy.

China now holds the world's largest foreign currency reserves at $2.85 trillion and a major chunk of U.S. government debt. Economists predict it could become the world's largest economy, eclipsing the U.S., within 20 years if not sooner.

But perceived diplomatic missteps and reports that Hu was unaware when he met this month with Defense Secretary Robert Gates about a test flight of China's new stealth fighter have raised questions over his control of the military.

The grandeur of a White House state dinner - the first for a Chinese leader in 13 years - could go some way toward reasserting Hu's stature in status-conscious China, where ceremony often has greater resonance than in the West.

But Hu, who will later lead a business delegation to Chicago, faces an uphill task in showing Americans that China's rise can benefit the U.S. - beyond plugging the federal deficit with low-interest loans and offering cheaper goods to consumers.

In a starkly partisan U.S. political atmosphere, slamming China for unfair trade practices is one thing that both Republicans and Democrats can agree upon. This week, lawmakers from both parties announced plans for legislation to punish China for what they say is an undervalued currency that boosts its exports at the expense of U.S. manufacturers.

The Obama administration remains leery of steps that would infuriate China, favoring persuasion instead.

Last week, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said that if Beijing wants more investment opportunities in the U.S. and access to high technology products, it also must allow a more level playing field for U.S. companies in China.

Washington will further seek common ground on North Korea amid recent signs that China has increased pressure on Pyongyang to moderate its behavior and return to negotiations after two military strikes against South Korea risked setting off a conflict on the Korean peninsula.

Shared interests, however, are unlikely to stretch to the arena of human rights - often a fly in the ointment of U.S.-China relations.

Obama's state dinner for Hu, only the third of his presidency, comes just a month after Liu Xiaobo, a Chinese lecturer jailed for calling for reform of the one-party system, was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize but barred from attending the ceremony in Oslo, Norway.

Secretary of State Clinton last week appealed for China to tolerate dissent and assume the responsibilities of a world power in the 21st century. Her call for Liu's release is likely to fall on deaf ears.

Indonesian ex-cop given 10 years on terror charges

NiniekKarmini, The Associated Press, Depok, West Java | Wed, 01/19/2011 7:32 PM | National

A former Indonesian policeman was sentenced Wednesday to 10 years in prison for supplying weapons to a terrorist cell allegedly plotting a series of attacks on foreigners.

Sofyan Tsauri, 34, was arrested after security forces raided a militant training camp in the westernmost province of Aceh one year ago.

Judge Dwiarso Santiarto told a district court on the outskirts of the capital that Tsauri was guilty of selling dozens of assault rifles, revolvers and other weapons to the previously unknown terrorist cell called "Al Qaida in Aceh."

The militant group was allegedly plotting Mumbai-style gun attacks on Western hotels and embassies in Jakarta.

It also allegedly wanted to assassinate President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and attack security forces to punish the state for lending support to the U.S.-led anti-terrorism fight.

Tsauri, fired from the police force in 2009 on charges of desertion, bought the weapons from two officers who were working at a police warehouse, the judge said.

The two were given jail time in separate trials last week.

Indonesia, a predominantly Muslim nation of 240 million, has battled extremists since 2002, when members of the al-Qaida-linked network Jemaah Islamiyah bombed two nightclubs on the resort island of Bali, killing 202 people, most of them foreign tourists.

Since then, members of an offshoot of the group have continued to carry out near-annual strikes on various targets, including a Western embassy, beach-side restaurants and upscale hotels, killing more than 60.

Tsauri is one of more than 100 alleged members of the Aceh terrorist cell to have been captured or killed since February. His lawyers said he would appeal the verdict, which was five years less than prosecutors had sought.

Eight protests in Jakarta today: Police

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Wed, 01/19/2011 9:47 AM | Jakarta

Eight demonstrations have been scheduled to take place across the capital on Wednesday, the Jakarta Police Traffic Management Center reports.

In the morning, two groups are expected to hold rallies at the Hotel Indonesia traffic circle, .one starting at 8 a.m. and ending at 10 a.m., and the other starting at 9 a.m. and ending at 5 p.m.

At 9 a.m., two demonstrations will be staged in front of Customs and Excise Directorate General office on Jl. Jend. A. Yani in East Jakarta, and in front of the state-owned banknote printing company Perum Percetakan Negara RI on Jl. Percetakan Negara in Central Jakarta.

Another two groups will hold protests in front of House of Representatives building on Jl. Gatot Subroto, Central Jakarta, from 9 a.m. and 10 a.m.

The last two rallies will start at 1 p.m. and take place in front of State-Owned Enterprises Ministry building on Jl. Medan Merdeka Selatan in Central Jakarta, and in front of Presidential Palace on Jl. Medan Merdeka Utara in Central Jakarta.

Major 7.2 earthquake hits SW Pakistan

The Associated Press, Islamabad | Wed, 01/19/2011 8:10 AM | Headlines

A major 7.2 magnitude earthquake rocked a remote area of southwestern Pakistan early Wednesday, shaking many parts of the country and causing tremors as far away as India and the United Arab Emirates.

The quake was centered in Baluchistan province, the country's most sparsely populated area, said the United States Geological Service, occurring at 1:30 a.m. local time at a depth of some 50 miles (84 kilometers.

Its epicenter was in a remote area some 200 miles (320 kilometers) southwest of the Baluchistan capital of Quetta, said chief Pakistani meteorologist Arif Mahmood, not far from the Afghan border.

The closest town to the epicenter was Dalbandin, with a population around 15,000 people, and is so remote that the nearby Chagai hills were the site of Pakistan's 1998 nuclear tests.

There was no word on damage in Dalbandin. But another town close to the epicenter, Karan, suffered no major damage, said Fateh Bangar, Karan's deputy commissioner. The town was some 45 miles (70 kilometers) from the epicenter, he said.

Nasir Baluch, a police officer in Karan, said several mud houses collapsed or were damaged in an area outside the town called Mashkil. There was no immediate word on casualties, but the area is sparsely populated, he said.

There was no major damage in Quetta either, but the quake caused widespread panic in the city, said residents.

Local TV reports said the quake was felt throughout several other provinces as well. Many residents in the country's largest city, Karachi, ran out into the streets once the quake started, said the reports.

Karachi resident Mohammad Zubair said he was watching a cricket match on TV when his bed began to shake.

"I jumped out of bed realizing it was an earthquake," said the 28-year-old. "My mom started reciting verses from the Quran, and we rushed outside."

Tremors lasting at least 20 seconds were also felt as far away as Dubai in the United Arab Emirates and in India's capital, New Delhi.

Earthquakes often rattle the region. A magnitude 7.6 quake on Oct. 8, 2005, killed about 80,000 people in northwestern Pakistan and Kashmir and left more than 3 million homeless

Napoli advances to Italian Cup quarterfinals

The Jakarta Post | Wed, 01/19/2011 7:48 AM | Sports

Napoli extended its run of good form in Serie A to the Italian Cup with a 2-1 win over Bologna on Tuesday that set up a quarterfinal meeting with defending champion Inter Milan.

French midfielder Hassan Yebda put Napoli ahead with a header in the ninth minute at the San Paolo stadium and Argentine striker Ezequiel Lavezzi doubled the lead in the 23rd following a pass from Marek Hamsik.

Riccardo Meggiorini converted a penalty for Bologna in the 56th.

The match was suspended briefly shortly after halftime due to a lighting outage.

The quarterfinal pairings will be completed Wednesday and Thursday with AS Roma facing Lazio in a derby, Sampdoria hosting Udinese and Serie A leader AC Milan facing Bari.

Napoli is second in Serie A, four points behind Milan.

Police need clear working standard: Commission

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Wed, 01/19/2011 9:39 AM | National

The National Police Commission on Wednesday ordered the police to set up a clear working standard so the public could learn about improvements to police services.

“This is to fulfill public expectations, because people always expect a lot from the police, while the police face various problems and limitations regarding their capacity in providing these services,” commission member Novel Ali said Wednesday in Semarang, Central Java, as quoted by Antara.

Novel said that with a clear working standard, deadlines could be set for case investigations, especially for police criminal detectives.

The public had the right to demand better services if they were not satisfied with the police performance, he said.

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Gayus verdict in S. Jakarta District Court today today

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Wed, 01/19/2011 9:35 AM |

South Jakarta District Court is scheduled on Wednesday to deliver its verdict for graft defendant Gayus Tambunan, charged with tax-related corruption.

State prosecutors had earlier asked the court to sentence the defendant to 20 years’ imprisonment and pay fines of Rp 500 million (US$55,000).

Gayus’ case has attracted public attention as it has also implicated many high-ranking tax officials, law enforcers and large companies.

City beats Leicester 4-2 to reach FA Cup 4th round

The Associated Press, Manchester | Wed, 01/19/2011 7:29 AM | Sports

Carlos Tevez's 16th goal of the season helped Manchester City earn a 4-2 win over second-tier Leicester in a FA Cup third-round replay on Tuesday.

The Argentina striker set City on its way in the 15th minute with a stunning individual effort and although he later missed a second-half penalty, the hosts had too much for Leicester as they set up a match at Notts County in the fourth round.

Patrick Vieira and Adam Johnson scored in the space of 77 seconds to put Roberto Mancini's side 3-1 up at the break and Aleksandar Kolarov's late finish saw off the plucky visitors, coached by former City manager Sven-Goran Eriksson.

Premier League struggler Wolverhampton thrashed Doncaster 5-0 to progress and will next play Stoke, which beat Cardiff 2-0 thanks to two extra-time goals by striker Jon Walters.

Arsenal travels to Leeds, which plays in the second-tier League Championship, on Wednesday in the other third-round replay.

Eriksson was making his return to Eastlands for the first time since he was fired by City at the end of the 2007-08 season, after just one year at the club.

Since then, things have changed a lot at a club which is second in the Premier League and trailing neighbor Manchester United only on goal difference. A group of wealthy Abu Dhabi investors has taken over the club and its four scorers against Leicester were all signed after the ex-England manager's departure.

The first match between the teams ended 2-2 at Leicester on Jan. 9, but the second-tier side battled just as gamely nine days on.

Tevez opened the scoring when he barged his way into the penalty box before unleashing a powerful shot that flew into the net.

Paul Gallagher equalized from the penalty spot after holding midfielder Vieira, one of four changes made by City from the 4-3 win against Wolves in the Premier League at the weekend, brought down Lloyd Dyer.

However, the hosts, four-time winners of the competition and one of the favorites this season, netted twice in the space of a little more than a minute to kill the game off.

Vieira made amends by tapping in from close range in the 37th after Spain winger David Silva's shot was cleared off the line, and Johnson ran onto a pass from Silva before slotting home a neat finish.

Tevez missed a chance to double his tally for the evening when his poor 57th-minute penalty, awarded after the Argentina international was fouled by Jack Hobbs, was easily saved by Leicester goalkeeper Chris Weale.

With City almost playing at walking pace, Dyer set up a tense finish by scoring with eight minutes left but Leicester was unable to snatch an equalizer and Serbia left back Kolarov claimed City's fourth following a late counterattack.

Off-season signing Steven Fletcher met Stephen Hunt's cross in the fifth minute to put Wolves ahead at Molineux, before three goals in the space of 13 second-half minutes put paid to second-tier Doncaster's chances.

Belgian midfielder Geoffrey Mujangi Bia smashed in his first goal for the Midlanders to make it 2-0 in the 61st and further goals by Kevin Doyle and substitute Matt Jarvis made it 4-0. David Jones added gloss to the scoreline with the team's fifth in second-half stoppage time.

After a low-standard period of normal time at the Cardiff City Stadium, Walters got Stoke off to the perfect start in extra time by heading in Michael Tonge's cross after just one minute.

The same player ended Cardiff's hopes by finishing from an acute angle in the 115th to seal the midtable Premier League team's progress.

Fire razes Brayan market, Medan

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Wed, 01/19/2011 8:07 AM | Archipelago

A fire razed thousands of kiosks in Brayan Market, Medan on Tuesday night.

Witnesses said the fire spread quickly after first being seen at 8 p.m., tribunnews.com reported.

There were no reports yet about the cause of the fire.

Fire razes Brayan market, Medan

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Wed, 01/19/2011 8:07 AM | Archipelago

A fire razed thousands of kiosks in Brayan Market, Medan on Tuesday night.

Witnesses said the fire spread quickly after first being seen at 8 p.m., tribunnews.com reported.

There were no reports yet about the cause of the fire.

Light showers in Greater Jakarta on Wednesday: BMKG

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Wed, 01/19/2011 9:37 AM | Jakarta

The Meteorology, Climatology and Geophysics Agency forecast light showers across the capital on Wednesday afternoon.

Showers are expected to continue into the evening in most parts of Jakarta, with the exception of Central and West Jakarta, which can expect medium showers, while Tangerang will remain overcast.

Temperatures are expected to range between 23 and 30 degrees Celsius.

Monday, January 17, 2011

Elderly couple behind bars for providing free education

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Wed, 01/19/2011 9:23 AM | Archipelago

A couple who had been providing free university-style programs for students who were unable to pay their tuition fees have been detained since December, in Kendari, Southeast Sulawesi.

Yonathan of Kendari Legal Aid Foundation (LBH), which is handling the case, said he suspected an ulterior motive behind the arrest, kompas.com reported Tuesday.

Yonathan said the couple, Abdul Rifai, 80, and Zaliha Lasope, 70, were the founders of the Buton Islamic University (Unisbon) Foundation.

The couple, who founded the university in 2000, were being held at the Bau-bau Detention Center, he said, adding that LBH Kendari had been in contact with the Education Ministry Directorate General for Higher Education (Dikti) in Jakarta on Monday.

Dikti had been monitoring Unisbun since the year it was founded, but the institution was still awaiting its permit, Yonathan said.

“The campus has a unique operating method, in which tuition is free for those who are unable to pay. Students can pay after they have finished their studies and have begun earning a living,” he said.

Yonathan said the problem with permits came when the university started garnering more enrollments, in around 2008.

“The campus started being stigmatized as illegal,” he said.

The couple was arrested for allegedly falsifying certificates for its students.

Bahasyim to attend 4th hearing after consecutive delays

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Mon, 01/17/2011 9:47 AM | National

Bahasyim Assifie, a defendant in a Rp 64 billion (US$ 7.1 million) money-laundering and corruption case, is scheduled to stand trial at South Jakarta district court today, after the hearing has been postponed three times.

The court has adjourned previous hearings because of Bahasyim’s ill health and prosecutors’ failure to prepare the indictment.

On Jan 13th, Attorney General chief Basrief Arief demanded a clarification from prosecutor Fachrizal on the reasons for the repeated delays.

Fachrizal has not yet provided a response.

Hong Kong launches 4th Asian Financial Forum

Hasyim Widhiarto, The Jakarta Post, Hong Kong | Mon, 01/17/2011 9:51 AM | Business

On Monday, Hong Kong officially opened one of the biggest financial forums in Asia, with the main agenda to discuss the region’s growing role in the global economy.

Taking “Asia: Reshaping the Global Agenda” as its theme, the two-day 2011 Asian Financial Forum will feature dozens of influential business, finance and government leaders as the event’s speakers, including United Kingdom Secretary for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs William Hague, former vice chairman of the Standing Committee of China’s National People’s Congress Cheng Siwei, and 1999 Nobel Prize laureate in Economics Robert Mundell.

In his opening remarks, Hong Kong 's chief executive Donald Tsang said he hoped the forum to be an ideal platform for businesspeople and policy makers in the region to learn about the world’s economic changes and its effects on Asian countries.

Held annually since 2007 to celebrate the 10th anniversary of the establishment of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, the forum has continuously attracted the world’s influential leaders in business, finance and government. 

This year, the event has successfully attracted more than 1,500 participants from 31 countries and regions.

Tifatul to discuss BlackBerry with House

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Mon, 01/17/2011 11:00 AM | National

Communication and Information Technology Minister Tifatul Sembiring is scheduled on Monday to meet members of House of Representatives Commission I to discuss BlackBerry smartphone services in Indonesia.

“Since it’s a closed meeting, the statement from the government will be made through Communications and IT Minister Tifatul Sembiring at 2 p.m. today during the hearing at the House,” ministry spokesman Gatot S. Dewa Broto said Monday.

As reported earlier, the Communications and IT Ministry plans to hold a meeting today with RIM, the manufacturer of the BlackBerry handsets and telecommunications network, before the scheduled meeting with the House.

The meeting will discuss RIM’s commitment to filter pornographic content. Should it refuse, the government has threatened to disable BlackBerry services.

According to Gatot, today RIM is also expected to submit a timeline for the development of a data center in Indonesia.

The meeting will be attended by, among others, Post data source and Informatics Director General Muhammad Yustiawan, Post and Informatics Management Director General Sukri Batubara, Informatics Application Director General Aswin Sasongko, RIM Asia Pacific managing director Gregory Wade, Goverment relations director Jasson Sounderson, Canada Embassy Commercial Attache Richard Belle and RIM Southeast Asia senior public relations manager Oliver Pilgerstorfer.

However, Communications and IT Minister Tifatul Sembiring is not scheduled to attend the meeting with RIM.