Thursday, May 26, 2011

Former IMF chief moves to new housing in NYC

The Associated Press, New York | Thu, 05/26/2011 8:50 AM

Former International Monetary Fund leader Dominique Strauss-Kahn moved Wednesday from a temporary space in a high-rise to a plush, four-bedroom brick town house in Manhattan where he will remain under house arrest as he awaits trial in his attempted rape case, officials said.

The one-time French presidential contender was seen smiling as he got into a gray sport utility vehicle under tight security. He was moved about a mile (1.6 kilometers) away to the stately red brick town home in Tribeca, according a person familiar with his housing arrangements. The person was not authorized to speak publicly and spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity.

The building, which has five bathrooms, is located on a cobblestone street in one of Manhattan's most posh neighborhoods. It also is close to the courthouse where he will attend hearings.

Attorney William Taylor told reporters Wednesday that his client was "doing fine" under house arrest.

"Not much he can do," Taylor said.

Strauss-Kahn is free on $1 million bail under strict house arrest after prosecutors feared him a flight risk given his international status and wealth. He spent about a week in jail on Rikers Island after he was arrested May 14 following accusations that he sexually assaulted a hotel maid in his room at the Sofitel near Manhattan's Times Square. His lawyers maintain Strauss-Kahn is not guilty.

Bail plans hit a snag late last week when tenants at the Upper East Side apartment building initially secured for his house arrest refused to accept him because of unwanted media attention. He was briefly housed at a high-rise near Wall Street, where a throng of media has been camped out at the building, broadcasting as his wife, former journalist Anne Sinclair, entered and left the building.

Strauss-Kahn, who has no prior criminal record, is monitored by armed guards and wears an electronic bracelet, and his movements are recorded on camera. He will be allowed out for court, doctor's visits and religious services. Prosecutors must be notified at least six hours before he goes anywhere, and he can't be out between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. Under his terms of house arrest, he can receive up to four visitors at a time besides family.

Security is being managed by Stroz Friedberg, the same company that handled house arrest for the disgraced financier Bernard Madoff. Strauss-Kahn's agreement is expected to cost him about $200,000 a month.

That doesn't include rent on his new digs, which were advertised for $50,000 a month in an online listing from Town Residential. Broker Robert Dvorin confirmed the home had recently been rented but declined to comment on the identity of the tenant. It was elsewhere listed for sale at $13,995,000.

The town house includes a state-of-the-art theater, gym, spa and four bathrooms with jetted tubs and steam showers. It was recently renovated "with only the finest materials and craftsmanship," according to the listing. The living room has an oversized skylight and fireplace. A large terrace includes potted plants, a gas grill and Japanese paper walls for privacy.

Court officials confirmed that a new location had been agreed upon Wednesday for the economist, but did not specify any details. Spokesman David Bookstaver said only that the judge had approved the plan. The attorneys in the case filed court papers late in the day, but the judge did not immediately release them.

The Manhattan District Attorney's office did not comment.

Strauss-Kahn was pulled from a jetliner bound for Paris after the 32-year-old West African immigrant reported the encounter to hotel staff. She told police she entered his room around noon and he emerged from the bathroom naked, and then chased her around his luxury suite before grabbing her and forcing her to perform oral sex on him.

Earlier this week, people familiar with the investigation told The Associated Press that evidence found on the woman's work clothing matched Strauss-Kahn's DNA.

It was the first forensic evidence to link Strauss-Kahn to the woman - and it's also on track with what his lawyers have suggested would be his defense.

Strauss-Kahn resigned nearly a week ago from the IMF, a powerful international institution that lends billions of dollars to troubled countries.

In his resignation he said he wanted to protect the institution.

"To all, I want to say that I deny with the greatest possible firmness all of the allegations that have been made against me," he said.

Andi Kosasih’s sentence gets heavier again

The Jakarta Post | Wed, 05/25/2011 8:43 PM

The Supreme Court added two years to businessman Andi Kosasih’s sentence after it rejected his appeal.

Krisna Harahap, one of the judges in the panel, confirmed to Antara newswire the punishment increase.
“Aside from the imprisonment, Andi Kosasih has also been given a fine of Rp 6 billion, that, if unpaid, can be replaced with six months imprisonment,” he said.

Andi, whose trial was related to the high-profile graft case of former tax official Gayus H. Tambunan, was first sentenced with six years imprisonment in the District Court. The first appeal’s result was that the punishment increased to eight years.

Andi, along with lawyers Haposan Hutagalung and Lambertus Palang Ama, has been proven guilty of obstructing the investigation process of Gayus’ case.

According to the judges, Andi gave a bogus statement saying that the suspiciously large amount of wealth in Gayus’ account was his and was intended to build a business-housing block.

Obama plans to visit Bali in November: Bali Gov

Ni Komang Erviani, The Jakarta Post, Denpasar | Thu, 05/26/2011 9:56 AM

US President Barack Obama is scheduled to visit Bali in November, Bali Governor Made Mangku Pastika said on Wednesday night.

“I just met with US ambassador to Indonesia Scot Marciel. He told me this time Obama would visit Bali, most likely in November,” Pastika said.

He added that US State Secretary Hillary Clinton will go to Bali in July to attend an international meeting and also check the island preparation in welcoming Obama.

Pastika said Bali would be ready to receive the US president. “Security will be coordinated by the central government, the National Police, and related institutions,” he added.

In 2010, Obama had planned to visit Bali, but he cancelled it due to home affairs problems.

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Joplin tornado death toll rises to 125

The Associated Press, Joplin, Misouri | Thu, 05/26/2011 7:57 AM

Rescuers refused to be deterred from their efforts to find survivors beneath Joplin's jagged piles of tornado rubble, even as the death toll rose Wednesday to 125.

No new survivors had been pulled from the city's wrecked neighborhoods, but determined crews carried on with the search, checking some areas for a fourth time since Sunday's disaster. They planned to do a fifth sweep, too.

"We never give up. We're not going to give up," City Manager Mark Rohr told a news conference. "We'll continue to search as we develop the next phase in the process."

Rohr raised by three the death toll of the nation's deadliest single tornado in more than 60 years. The estimated number of injured climbed to more than 900.

At least 50 dogs have joined the search, and the teams were also using listening devices in hopes of picking up the faint sound of anyone still alive beneath the collapsed homes and businesses.

"We've had stories from earthquakes and tsunamis and other disasters of people being found two or three weeks later," Fire Chief Mitch Randles said. "And we are hopeful that we'll have a story like that to tell."

Searchers "try to get into every space. We're yelling. We've got the dogs sniffing. We've got listening devices," Randles said.

Meanwhile, roughly 100 people were reviewing information about individuals who were reported missing after the storm. Rohr said the group was making progress, but he declined to say how many remain unaccounted for.

Authorities have cautioned that people who are unaccounted for are not necessarily dead or trapped in debris. Many, if not most, of them probably survived the storm but have failed to tell friends and family where they are.

The Joplin tornado was the deadliest single twister since the National Weather Service began keeping official records in 1950. It was the eighth-deadliest in U.S. history.

Scientists said the system was an EF-5, the strongest rating assigned to tornadoes, with winds of more than 200 mph (320 kph).

It also appeared to be a rare "multivortex" tornado, with two or more small and intense centers of rotation orbiting the larger funnel.

Bill Davis, the lead forecaster on a weather service team sent to survey the damage, said he would need to look at video to confirm that.

But, he said, the strength of the tornado was evident from the many stout buildings that were damaged: St. John's Regional Medical Center, a bank that was destroyed except for its vault, a Pepsi bottling plant and "numerous well-built residential homes that were basically leveled."

Davis recalled his first thought on arriving in town to conduct the survey: "Where do you start?"

The Cranberries to perform in Jakarta this year

The Jakarta Post | Wed, 05/25/2011 8:45 PM

Irish rock band The Cranberries is slated to perform at this year’s Gudang Garam International Java Rockingland 2011 along with several other performers such as 30 Seconds to Mars and Happy Monday.

The show is targeted to be held from July 22 to 24 at Ancol’s Carnival Beach, North Jakarta, tribunnews.com reported.

The Cranberries, which rose to popularity during the 1990s, has a number of hit singles, including “Zombie”, “Ode to my Family” and “Linger”.

Shots fired in C. Sulawesi manhunt

The Jakarta Post | Wed, 05/25/2011 9:40 PM

The police say that officers have exchanged fire with two men who allegedly shot two police officers dead at a Bank Central Asia branch in Palu, Central Sulawesi, on Wednesday.

Officers from the Central Sulawesi Police and the National Police’s counterterrorism unit Detachment 88 reportedly exchanged fire with the alleged shooters in Napu after the suspects fled the bank on a blue motorcycle.

“Yes, there were two shots fired in Napu. The local police chief has confirmed that there was a chase and that they’ve conducted blocks,” Central Sulawesi Police spokesperson Adj. Sr. Comr. Soemarno said as quoted by tribunnews.com.

Soemarno added that the suspects were armed and that local police Palu were conducting searches and setting up blocks to capture the alleged shooters.

Public order officer was brains behind robberies: Police

The Jakarta Post | Wed, 05/25/2011 9:41 PM

The police have discovered that a public order officer in Indramayu, West Java, was the brains behind a string of robberies in the town.  

Haji Tri, who lives in Tugu village, Indramayu, owns the house that became the headquarters for a number of thieves specializing in bank and ATM robberies.

“[Haji Tri] is a public order officer and he is now on the wanted list,” Jakarta Police detective unit land and building head Comr. Herry Herryawan said as quoted by tribunnews.com.

He said the Haji Tri group had plenty of members.
“This group specialized in bank and ATM machines in minimarkets on the edge of town,” Herry said.

The police conducted a sting at Haji Tri’s house but he was not home, while one suspect managed to escape in a car. The police are still looking for 10 members of the group.

“[The suspect] carried two short-barreled firearms used in the act [of robbing],” Herry said.

The group has carried out eight robberies so far, including a house in Bantar Gebang, Bekasi, in April, an internet café in Cikedung Elor, Indramayu, on May 14 and a Bank Rakyat Indonesia branch in Kandang Haur, Indramayu, last Tuesday.

Police seize three firearms from Palu suspects

Police have seized three firearms from two suspects who allegedly shot dead two police officers guarding a bank in Palu on Wednesday.

The suspects were arrested on their way to Donggala regency, Central Sulawesi, within several hours of the shooting, kompas.com reported Thursday.

National Police spokesman Sr. Comr. Boy Rafli Amar said the suspects were between 20 and 25 years of age, but declined to provide further details.

“We are questioning them in efforts to find the other two suspects,” he said.

Boy said the Special Detachment 88 Antiterrorist Unit was now involved in the operation to track down the shooting suspects, since their actions had created "terror" in society.

“We still need time to find out their motives and background,” he said.

RI needs 4,000 pilots in five years

The Jakarta Post | Thu, 05/26/2011 8:27 AM

The government estimates that Indonesia needs 4,000 pilots from 2011 to 2015 but local schools can only supply 1,600 pilots.

“The country schools can only produce around 320 pilots a year [or 1,600 in five years],” Bobby R Mamahit, head of human resources development at the Transportation Ministry, said as quoted by kontan.co.id on Wednesday.

“We need more pilots to meet the demand.”

He said the demand for pilot rose as Law No 1/2009 on Flight obliged that each airline has to operate a minimum of 10 airplanes as of Jan. 12, 2012.

Bobby added that the government would establish new pilot schools in Palembang and Surabaya.

From 2011 to 2015, Indonesia also needed 7,500 airplane technicians and 1,000 air traffic controllers.

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

'American Idol' to crown winner in country contest

The Associated Press | Thu, 05/26/2011 9:15 AM

The "American Idol" contest between teenage country crooners Lauren Alaina and Scotty McCreery drew a record 122 million-plus votes, host Ryan Seacrest said during Wednesday's finale.

The Fox TV show itself attracted igh-wattage stars including Beyonce, Jack Black, Tom Jones and Tony Bennett, who performed at the Nokia Theatre with the top-finishing "Idol" contestants. Judge Jennifer Lopez even got into the act. Draped in a scanty outfit and shaking her famous booty, she took the stage to dance while husband Marc Anthonysang, briefly turning the night into a salsa-flavored family affair.

Alaina, 16, and McCreery, 17, represent the first all-country finale and the youngest duo ever to compete on "Idol." Last year, by contrast, Fox didn't announce the total in the much lower-key contest between winner Lee DeWyze and runne-up Crystal Bowersox.

When winner Kris Allen and Adam Lambert duked it out in 2009, more than 100 million votes were cast.

The season's vote total was more than three-quarters-of-a-billion, Seacrest announced as the show got under way. For Fox, it's affirmation there's still life in the series that's ad a long ratings reign as No. 1.

There was drama during Tuesday's performance show when Alaina required medical treatment for a vocal cord injury suffered during rehearsals for Tuesday's performance show. She soldiered on with three tunes, drawing high praise from the Fox TV show's judges.

"This is very tight race tonight, but Lauren, with that song, you may have just won," Lopez said after Alaina sang an emotional "Like My Mother Does," the last of her trio of tunes.

But it was up to viewers to choose between Alaina and McCreery, an equally fresh-faced performer but one with a strikingly mature voice.

Randy Jackson said backstage Tuesday he thought Alaina's performance, not her vocal problem and a possible sympathy reaction, would count in the voting.

"I think she sang brilliantly tonight," said Jackson, who thought she outsang McCreery on two songs.

But the judge stopped short of predicting her victory.

"Going into tonight, Scotty definitely had an edge and he may still have a slight edge," Jackson said. But Alaina "was the best tonight."

Both are impressive singers for the show's "first-ever, all-country final," he said. "These kids are so young ... I just go, 'Wow.' They embody what this whole show is about."

Alaina's other tunes were Carrie Underwood's "Flat on the Floor" and Pam Tillis' "Maybe It was Memphis," which was selected by former "Idol" winner Underwood.

McCreery sang his own possible future single, "I Love You This Big," Montgomery Gentry's "Gone" and George Strait's "Check Yes or No," Strait's pick for the teenager.

After the show, Alaina gave reporters the silent treatment to protect her voice, with McCreery offering his services as spokesman while she scribbled answers on a memo pad or whispered to him.

When Alaina was asked if her finale performance had been at risk, he replied, "She says, 'Yes."'

Judge Steven Tyler said it's not unusual for steroids to be used for a vocal cord injury.

"You pay for it dearly the next day," he said, adding that Alaina shouldn't be affected because she was on stage briefly Tuesday.

The show started with host Ryan Seacrest bringing Dr. Shawn Nasseri on stage to explain that Alaina blew out one of her vocal cords but had been given "a lot of medicine" to be able to sing during the finale.

Monday, May 23, 2011

Tornadoes batter central US, kill unknown number

The Jakarta Post | Mon, 05/23/2011 9:38 AM | World

 Tornadoes ripped through parts of the Midwest on Sunday killing at least one person in Minneapolis and an unknown number of others in a Missouri town where a hospital was damaged.

Damage was widespread across the south side of Joplin, Missouri. John Campbell, operations director for the Missouri State Emergency Management Agency, confirmed fatalities have been reported, but he did not yet have an exact number or specifics.

Phone communications in and out of the city were largely cut off.

The storm was part of a series that battered the Midwest on Sunday night. Tornado warnings and watches were posted from Texas to Michigan.

In Minneapolis, city spokeswoman Sara Dietrich said the death was confirmed by the medical examiner. She had no other immediate details. Only two of the 29 people injured there were hurt critically.

In Wisconsin, a powerful storm caused significant damage in La Crosse, tearing roofs from homes and sending emergency responders to search damaged buildings for anyone trapped inside, officials said. La Crosse County sheriff's dispatcher Tim Vogel described the damage as "sigificant" but told The Associated Press there were no immediate reports of serious injuries.

Those storms followed a tornado Saturday night that swept through a small eastern Kansas town, killing one person and destroying at least 20 homes, as severe thunderstorms pelted the region with hail that some resients described as the size of baseballs, authorities said Sunday.

Kansas Division of Emergency Management spokeswoman Sharon Watson identified the victim as Don Chesmore, 53, of Reading. He was in a mobile home that flipped. He was taken to a hospital in Emporia, where he was pronounced dead

Police confiscate 173 kg marijuana

The Jakarta Post | Mon, 05/23/2011 9:48 AM | National

Police arrested a 35-year-old man, alleged to be a drug dealer, and confiscated 173 kilograms of marijuana in two separate locations in Bekasi, West Java, on Saturday.

According to East Jakarta Police working in cooperation with Jakarta Police narcotics division, the man was identified only by the initials MD.

“We are still pursuing the mastermind in this case. We are requesting help from a number of police offices,” Jakarta Police narcotics division chief Sr. Comr. Nugroho Aji said Sunday as quoted by kompas.com.

The 173 kilograms of marijuana seized was only a small portion of the drugs police planned to confiscate, he added.

Before the arrest police had been tracking the alleged dealer for several months, Nugroho said.

The case has links to two other cases involve 2.8 tons and 3.2 tons of marijuana in Sukabumi and Cianjur, West Java, he said.

“Judging by the quality and packaging of the drugs, we are sure the case is linked to two previous cases police have already investigated. The group involved in the earlier cases transported the marijuana by truck from Aceh to West Java,” he said.

From there, he said, the drug was distributed to big cities across Java.

While serving as the director of narcotics division of West Java Police in mid 2010, Nugroho and his team confiscated the 2.8 tons of marijuana in Sukabumi.

“We arrested four dealers. They have been sentenced to death. However, they have filed appeals,” he said.

In early 2011, the team also confiscated 3.2 tons of marijuana in Cianjur.

“We have three suspects on this case. The trial is still continuing,” he said.

Ancelotti leaves Chelsea after 2 seasons in charge

The Jakarta Post | Mon, 05/23/2011 8:16 AM | Sports

Carlo Ancelotti was fired as Chelsea manager on Sunday following a trophyless season, leaving a year after he led the club to the Premier League and FA Cup titles.

Despite accepting publicly in recent months that his job was under threat, the Italian's departure was only announced shortly after Chelsea lost 1-0 at Everton in the last match of a miserable season.

Chelsea bluntly said the 51-year-old Ancelotti had "parted company" with the London club.

For owner Roman Abramovich, finishing second behind Manchester United was not deemed acceptable for Chelsea, which won the league and FA Cup for the first time in a single season last May.

"This season's performances have fallen short of expectations and the club feels the time is right to make this change ahead of next season's preparations," Chelsea said in a statement. "Chelsea's long-term football objectives and ambitions remain unchanged and we will now be concentrating all our efforts on identifying a new manager."

Ancelotti's replacement will be the seventh Chelsea manager since Abramovich bought the club eight years ago. The club has won every major honor won in that time apart from the one that Abramovich cherishes so much: the Champions League.

The Champions League campaign was ended this season by Man United in the quarterfinals.

Ancelotti, who won the Champions League twice at AC Milan before joining Chelsea, had another year remaining on his contract.

"The owner and board would like to thank Carlo for his contribution and achievements since taking over as manager in July 2009, which included winning the double for the first time in the club's history," the Chelsea statement said.

After that feat, Chelsea had begun the new season with five successive wins and was being hailed as an unstoppable force.

But the decision to allow five senior players, including Michael Ballack, Joe Cole and Ricardo Carvalho, to leave in the offseason appeared to backfire when injuries struck the spine of the team.

That co-incided with the sudden, and unexplained, departure in November of assistant manager Ray Wilkins, which was immediately followed by the club's worst run in the league for almost 15 years.

Even the 70 million pound outlay on striker Fenando Torres and defender David Luiz in January to try and revive the team's fortunes backfired, with suggestions the arrival of Torres had a destabilizing effect.

"I am now on holiday, but I am not sure how long my holiday will be!" Ancelotti quipped at Everton shortly before being fired.

FC Port's Andre Villas-Boas - a former scout at Chelsea - has been installed as the 2-1 favorite to replace Ancelotti by British bookmaker William Will.

The 33-year-old Villas-Boas last week became the youngest coach to win a UEFA club competition, the Europa League title coming in a season in which he also won te the Portuguese Cup, the domestic league and the season-opening Portuguese Supercup.

At 7-2 are Mourinho, the Real Madrid coach, and Turkey manager Guus Hiddink, who have both worked under Abramovich at Chelsea.

Abramovich inherited Claudio Ranieri in the dugout in 2003, but the Italian left in May 24 having failed to mark the start of the owner's regime with a trophy.

Mourinho replaced Ranieri, but back-to-back league titles weren't enough to save the self-appointed "Special One" when Manchester United beat Chelsea to the title in 2007.

The Portuguese manager left a month into the following seon. His replacement, Avram Grant, was dumped after only one campaign. The Israeli left after losing the Champions League final on penalties to Man United.

Luiz Felipe Scolari, Brazil's 2002 World Cup-winning coach, had even fewer games in charge than Grant before departing in February 2009.

Hiddink as a temporary appointment and couldn't be persuaded to stay despite winning the FA Cup before Ancelotti was hired in June 2009.

MA-60 planes are in good condition to fly: Minister

The Jakarta Post | Mon, 05/23/2011 8:56 AM | National

Transportation Minister Freddy Numberi has said the Merpati Nusantara Airlines MA-60 airplanes were all in good condition to fly.

“All the MA-60 planes can fly again. We have checked them technically and there were no problems,” he said as quoted by kompas.com on Sunday.

However, he said, his ministry had yet to finish a management audit on Merpati such as procedure evaluation, pilot training and simulator.

“This is still underway,” he said

A China-made Merpati MA-60 airplane crashed in West Papua recently, killing all 27 people on board.

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Holloway: 'Premier League has never helped me'

The Jakarta Post | Mon, 05/23/2011 8:41 AM | Sports

 Ian Holloway accused the Premier League of undermining Blackpool's attempts to stay in England's top division after his club was relegated.

Holloway said "the fat lady has finished singing and I do not like the tune" after Blackpool's 4-2 defeat at champion Manchester United on Sunday, adding that the Premier League "have never helped me."

Holloway was angry because he was forced to tell players by the third Saturday in May whether options on their contracts were being taken up. In the instances of Richard Kingson, Marlon Harewood and Brett Ormerod, the answer was no.

Others - Ian Evatt and Keith Southern - are being retained but condemned to vastly reduced terms due to Blackpool's relegation to the League Championship.

'60 Minutes' report: Armstrong encouraged doping

The Jakarta Post | Mon, 05/23/2011 10:41 AM | Sports

Lance Armstrong's former teammate, Tyler Hamilton, says Armstrong and other team leaders encouraged, promoted and took part in a doping program in an effort to win the Tour de France in 1999 and beyond, according to a report aired Sunday night on the "60 Minutes" television program.

Hamilton said he saw Armstrong take performance-enhancing drugs, EPO and testosterone and also saw him receive a banned blood transfusion in 2000.

"I feel bad that I had to go here and do this," Hamilton said in his first public admission of doping throughout his career. "But I think at end of the day, like I said, long-term, the sport's going to be better for it."

In the interview, portions of which were aired Thursday and Friday on "CBS Evening News," Hamilton revealed other observations about the U.S. Postal team operation:

-Team leaders, including doctors and managers, encouraged and supervised doping;

-Doping was going on inside the U.S. Postal team even before Armstrong joined in 1998;

-Performance-enhancing drugs, including EPO and human growth hormone, were handed out to cyclists in white lunch bags;

-Team members were met at the airport, driven to hotels, told to lie down and give blood that could be transfused back into their bodies at a later date.

Armstrong long has denied doping and has never tested positive.

On Sunday, his attorney, Mark Fabiani, released a statement deriding the CBS report.

"We have already responded in great detail at www.facts4lance.com," Fabiani said. "Throughout this entire process, CBS has demonstrated a serious lack of journalistic fairness and has elevated sensationalism over responsibility. CBS chose to rely on dubious sources while completely ignoring Lance's nearly 500 clean tests and the hundreds of former teammates and competitors who would have spoken about his work ethic and talent."

The "60 Minutes" report used unidentified sources to report that another Armstrong teammate and close friend, George Hincapie, testified to the grand jury investigating doping within cycling that he and Armstrong supplied each other with EPO and discussed having used testosterone to prepare for races.

Armstrong posted a statement in support of Hincapie on the website: "We are confident that the statements attributed to Hincapie are inaccurate and that the reports of his testimony are unreliable."

Hincapie released a statement Friday, through his lawyer, saying he did not speak with "60 Minutes" and didn't know where the show got its information.

He was not available to reporters Sunday at the Tour of California in Califrnia.

Also at the Tour of California, Jonathan Vaughters, who rode for U.S. Postal in 1999, said every sport has its share of controversies and cycling isn't any different.

"In a lot of ways, I see it as - cycling, people care about it now, and the fact that it's being scrutinized is a function of that," Vaughters said.

Hamilton, meanwhile, described a systematic doping program run by Armstrong's U.S. Postal team. He said he offered the same testimony to the Los Angeles-based grand jury.

Federal prosecutors are investigating what essentially would have been a drug distribution network that was formed to keep Armstrong's teams running at the head of the pack.

The "60 Minutes" revelations, combined with recent requests from federal authorities for evidence in France, have fed a sense of growing trouble for the world's most famous cyclist, an international star and a cancer survivor who has raised millions of dollars to fight the disease.

In his interview, Hamilton said he saw Armstrong use the blood-boosting drug EPO during the 1999 Tour de France and in preparation for the 2000 and 2001 tours. He also described the transfusion technique - from the pickup at the airport to the quick trip to the hotel to the time about halfway through the Tour de France when he and teammates had the blood put back into their bodies.

Armstrong won the world's most-revered race each year from 1999-2005.

But the case federal authorities are trying to compile won't be decided solely on whether Armstrong doped. It has more to do with a doping program allegedly run by the cyclist and his team - a program that could lead to fraud and conspiracy charges.

"He obviously was the biggest rider in the team and he helped to call the shots," Hamilton said. "He doped himself, you know, like everybody else, but he was just being part of the culture of the sport. ... He was the leader of the team and he expected for going in, for example the '99 Tour, (that) we were going to do everything possible to help Lance win. We had one objective, that's it."

Hamilton said it was a team effort, with Armstrong and the managers and trainers promoting the doping. One way he knew he was becoming important to the team was when he was handed one of the white lunch bags filled with doping supplies.

"In a way, it was also an honor that, 'Wow, like, they think I'm good enough to be with the A-team guys,"' he said.

The Associated Press reported last month that federal investigators asked French authorities to turn over evidence, including Armstrong's urine samples from 1999, the same year Hamilton said he saw Armstrong use the EPO during the Tour.

Armstrong's 1999 samples came under scrutiny in 2005 when the French sports daily L'Equipe reported that six of the samples had, in fact, tested positive for EPO when they were retested in 2004. An investigation by the International Cycling Union followed and concluded that the samples were mishandled and couldn't be used to prove anything.

But the samples still exist and are part of the cache of evidence authorities are seeking.

Those samples, along with bank and phone records and witness testimony about drug use, could be used to paint a picture of a doping program allegedly run by Armstrong and his U.S. Postal team.

Also in the "60 Minutes" report, Hamilton said Armstrong told him he had tested positive at the 2001 Tour de Suisse - a warm-up race for the Tour de France - but that he wasn't worried about it.

"He was so relaxed about it and he kind of just said it off the cuff and kind of laughed it off," Hamilton said. "It helped me sort of stay relaxed because, obviously, if he had a positive test, the ... team's going to lose the sponsorship, I'm going to lose my job. Not only am I going to lose my job but, you know, 50 to 60 other people are going to lose their jobs. ... There were a lot of consequences to a positive test."

Hamilton said Armstrong made a deal with the UCI, and they "figured out a way for it to go away."

The Tour de Suisse allegations are similar to those made by Floyd Landis, who had his 2006 Tour de France title stripped for doping. After years of denying he cheated, Landis came out last year acknowledging he used PEDs and alleged Armstrong did, as well.

The "60 Minutes" report referenced a letter provided by Armstrong's attorney that says UCI claims none of the positive samples belonged to Armstrong.

Also in the interview, Hamilton said Armstrong and Italian trainer Michele Ferrari talked about PEDs and when and how to take them.

"He taught Lance how to train properly," Hamilton said. "Obviously, in cycling, there's more than just training and resting and eating correctly. There's one more element - the doping part. And he gave him, you know, a doping schedule."

Ferrari, who has been banned for life by the Italian Cycling Federation, is being investigated in Italy. Armstrong said he has severed formal ties with Ferrari but has acknowledged meeting him nonprofessionally since then. Last month, the AP reported the two had met as recently as last year, before the Tour de France, which was Armstrong's last Tour before he retired for the second time.

Armstrong's new website attacked Hamilton, who has been banned twice for doping despite his long insistence that he never cheated. Hamilton now admits he did use PEDs and has given his 2004 Olympic gold medal to the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency.

"Tyler Hamilton is a confessed liar in search of a book deal - and he managed to dupe '60 Minutes,' the 'CBS Evening News,' and new anchor Scott Pelley," the website said. "Most people, though, will see this for exactly what it is: More washed-up cyclists talking trash for cash."

Group 78 to consult with minister, FIFA

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Sun, 05/22/2011 9:56 PM | Sports

After a deadlock at the Indonesian Soccer Association (PSSI) congress, the controversial Group 78 said on Sunday that they would consult with the State Minister for Youth and Sports Affairs, Andi Mallarangeng, and FIFA to resolve the PSSI leadership problem.

The group also expected there would be no sanction from FIFA.

“We hope our problem will be handled by the new FIFA president, as we thought the current FIFA officials had violated their authority,” PSM Makassar legal director Syahrir Cakkari said on Sunday as quoted by tribunnews.com.

Syahrir said FIFA officials had breached their authority by banning four PSSI chairman candidates – George Toisutta, Arifin Panigoro, Nirwan Bakrie and Nurdin Halid – without clear reasons.

He said George and Nirwan should be eligible to run for the PSSI chairmanship.

He did not mind that Nurdin and Arifin were ineligible, as Nurdin was a convict while Arifin held a league outside the leagues recognized by the PSSI.

Police set to file drug charges against Soeharto’s great grand daughter

The Jakarta Post | Mon, 05/23/2011 10:20 AM | Jakarta

Jakarta Police says it is ready to file charges against Putri Ariyanto Haryowibowo, the great granddaughter of former dictator Suharto, who was arrested earlier in connection with drugs.

Jakarta Police spokesman Sr. Comr. Baharudin Djafar said that along with Putri, police would also file charges against two other people, a police officer identified only by the initial "E", and another man identified only by the initials "GN", who were arrested with Putri.

“God willing their cases will be submitted at 11 a.m. [on Monday],” Baharudin said at Jakarta Police Headquarters on Jl. Gatot Subroto, South Jakarta, on Monday.

Putri is the daughter of Ari Haryo Wibowo Hardjojudanto, popularly known as businessman "Ari Sigit", the grandson of Soeharto. 

Putri was named a suspect on March 18, in connection to the alleged possession of illegal drugs. She was arrested along with a number of others believed to be her friends, during a raid at a hotel in South Jakarta. During the raid, Putri was allegedly caught in the act of smoking crystal methamphetamine.

Earlier, police said GN could have been a major drug dealer and also the person who supplied the drugs to the other suspects. 

Police estimated that GN’s drug network could have distributed up to Rp 2 billion worth (US$234,000) of drugs a month.

Putri and the other suspects are charged with violating article 127 of the law on narcotics, and could face more than five years in prison.

Icelandic volcano flings up ash, shuts airport

The Jakarta Post | Sun, 05/22/2011 10:20 PM | World

Iceland closed its main international airport and canceled all domestic flights Sunday as a powerful volcanic eruption sent a plume of ash, smoke and steam 12 miles (20 kilometers) into the air.

The eruption of the Grimsvotn volcano was far larger than one a year ago at another Icelandic volcano that upended travel plans for 10 million people around the world, but scientists said it was unlikely to have the same widespread effect.

University of Iceland geophysicist Magnus Tumi Gudmundsson said this eruption, which began Saturday, was Grimsvotn's largest eruption for 100 years.

"(It was) much bigger and more intensive than Eyjafjallajokull," the volcano whose April 2010 eruption shut down airspace across Europe for five days, he said.

"There is a very large area in southeast Iceland where there is almost total darkness and heavy fall of ash," he said. "But it is not spreading nearly as much. The winds are not as strong as they were in Eyjafjallajokull."

He said this ash is coarser than last year's eruption, falling to the ground more quickly instead of floating vast distances.

The ash plunged areas near the volcano in southeast Iceland into darkness Sunday and covered buildings, cars and fields in a thick layer of gray soot. Civil protection workers urged residents to wear masks and stay indoors.

Iceland's air traffic control operator ISAVIA said the Keflavik airport, the country's main hub, closed down at 0830 GMT (4:30 a.m. EDT) for the day.

Spokeswoman Hjordis Gudmundsdottir said the ash plume was covering Iceland, but "the good news is that it is not heading to Europe," blowing northwest toward Greenland instead.

President Barack Obama was flying Sunday night to Ireland, but there was no immediate word on whether the volcano would affect Air Force One's flight path.

Trans-Atlantic flights were being diverted away from Iceland, but there was no indication the eruption would cause the widespread travel disruption triggered last year by ash from Eyjafjallajokull.

In April 2010, officials closed the continent's air space for five days, fearing the ash could harm jet engines. Millions of travelers were stranded.

The Grimsvotn volcano, which liesunder the uninhabited Vatnajokull glacier about 120 miles (200 kilometers) east of the capital, Reykjavik, began erupting Saturday for the first time since 2004.

Gudmundsson said the new eruption was 10 times as powerful as the one in 2004, which lasted for several days and briefly disrupted internationaflights. Grimsvotn also exploded in 1998, 1996 and 1993, eruptions that lasted between a day and several weeks.

Sparsely populated Iceland is one of the world's most volcanically active countries and eruptions are frequent. Grimsvotn and Iceland's other major volcanoes lie on the Atlantic Rift, the meetinof the Euro and American continental plates.

Eruptions often cause local flooding from melting glacier ice, but rarely cause deaths.

Gudmundsson said it was hard to predict how long the eruption would last, but it might already be slowing.

"There are some signs the eruption plume is getting lowernow," he said. "We may be seeing the first sign that it is starting to decline. In two or three days the worst should be over."

Mandala to focus on low cost carrier market: Expert

The Jakarta Post | Mon, 05/23/2011 9:08 AM | Business

PT Mandala Airlines will continue to focus on the low-cost carrier (LCC) market because of one of its main investors, the National Air Carrier Association of Indonesia says.

Singapore's Tiger Airways, a key investor in Mandala, is focused on the LCC market, association secretary-general Tengku Burhanuddin said Sunday.

“We expect competition to tighten in the low-cost carrier business,” Tengku said.

Mandala introduced its low-cost carrier service in 2006. At present, Lion Air, AirAsia Indonesia and Citilink – a subsidiary of Garuda Indonesia, are the three dominant players in Indonesia's domestic LCC business.

Mandala Airlines corporate communications chief Nurmaria Sarosa said Mandala, along with two new investors, were expecting to discuss over the airline's flight services in the future and the date to fly.

“We will inform the public once we have reached an agreement together,” she said.

Mandala, which stopped operation early this year, reportedly was acquired by Saratoga Capital and Tiger Airways. Saratoga controls 51 percent of the total shares, Tiger 33 percent and creditors control the rest.

Airlines analyst Arista Atmadjati says Mandala Airlines should focus on the domestic market, since it has already mastered this field.

“Some routes, for example Jakarta-Medan, Jakarta-Semarang and Banjarmasin-Yogyakarta, have frequent flyers,” he said.

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

19 arrested in Kampung Ambon drug bust

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Wed, 05/18/2011 12:42 PM | Jakarta

West Jakarta Police says it arrested 19 suspected drug users and dealers in a raid in the densely populated area of Kampung Ambon, Cengkareng, on Tuesday.

Detectives found seven homes that had been used for drug transactions in the area, West Jakarta Police chief detective Comr. Yossie Rantukuhu said Wednesday.

“We confiscated 25 grams of [crystal methamphetamine], 1.5 grams of marijuana and 400 ecstasy pills of different brands,” Yossie said as quoted by tribunnews.com.

He added that police had also seized 200 used water pipes, 100 new water pipes, aluminum foil, 300 lighters and nine sets of digital scales.

"We also discovered two air soft pistols, one dagger, 10 machetes, spears and sickles," Yossie said, adding that five motorcycles, two cars, seven conterfeited Rp 100,000 notes and two CCTV cameras were seized in the raid.

The drug syndicate in the area was allegedly led by a suspect named Oddi Peter.

Gas development remains govt focus

Rangga D Fadillah, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Wed, 05/18/2011 1:53 PM | Body and Soul

Commenting on Indonesia's declining oil production, Vice President Boediono has reaffirmed the government's commitment to promoting natural gas as the main energy source to fuel economic growth in the future.

"Last year I mentioned that gas was our future. That remains our basic policy. The government obviously has a strong interest in keeping this on track and will continue to closely monitor its progress," he said before the official opening of the 35th Indonesian Petroleum Association (IPA) Annual Convention and Exhibition in Jakarta on Wednesday.

The government, he continued, would continuously facilitate "gradual moves toward economic pricing for domestic gas uses" and direct negotiations between gas producers and consumers to tackle problems on pricing.

"However, we know that the key issues are more than this. The critical step is how to accelerate the development of gas infrastructure," Boediono said.

He promised that the government would speed up the completion of gas pipelines in Java and the construction of floating storage and re-gasification units (FSRU) in Sumatra and Java.

"One unit in Jakarta area is expected to be ready by as early as 2012," he said.

RI fishermen do not use dolphin meat to catch tuna: Govt

The Jakarta Post | Wed, 05/18/2011 2:15 PM | Business

Indonesia has denied allegations that some of its longline vessels fishing for tuna used dolphin meat as bait.

"[Groups] have alleged that our longline vessels intentionally capture dolphins and use the meat for bait. But the pictures they used as evidence are of sharks, not dolphins," Maritime and Fisheries Ministry

fisheries resources director Agus Apun Budhiman said Wednesday in Jakarta.

"We have held a meeting with related associations and they said no such thing happens. Anyone who understands how to fish for tuna knows there is no way dolphins are captured to be used as bait for tuna," he said.

The allegations, Agus said, were made by the US-based Friends of the Sea and Earth Island Institute.

The groups had warned that US buyers would stop purchasing tuna from Indonesia if it failed to certify its tuna products as "Dolphin Safe", he said.

Agus also said that if the two organizations continued making such allegations, Indonesia would take the case to the annual meeting of the Western and Central Pacific Fisheries Commission (WCPFC).

Anand Krishna sexual assault trial resumes

The Jakarta Post | Wed, 05/18/2011 1:30 PM | National

The trial of Anand Krishna, a spiritual guru accused of sexually assaulting female students, is set to resume on Wednesday at South Jakarta District Court, with hearings of testimonies from expert witnesses.

"The witnesses today are psychiatry expert Suryani, hypnotherapy expert Adi Gunawan and legal agency expert Dwija Prayitno," Anand's lawyer, Humprey Jemat, said before the hearing.

Anand is alleged to have sexually assaulted his female students while they were under the influence of hypnosis.

The case came to light when one of the students, Tara Pradipta Laksmi, reported an incident of harassment to police last year. (awd)

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Police investigate hacked website

Mariel Grazella, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Wed, 05/18/2011 1:25 PM | National

The National Police says it is working to investigate the hacking of its website, www.polri.go.id, after it was rendered inoperable by an anonymous party since Monday.

"We need to investigate who the perpetrator was," National Police spokesman Insp. Gen. Anton Bachrul Alam said Wednesday.

The was apparently down since Monday, with site visitors experiencing difficulties loading its pages on computers and other devices.

Anton added the the National Police cyber crimes unit was tasked to carry out the investigation.

"We have obtained certain clues, but we can't share them until the team has worked out from where and how [the problems originated]," he said.

Future of RI oil, gas in deep water, frontier areas: Minister

The Jakarta Post | Wed, 05/18/2011 1:50 PM | Business

Unexplored oil and gas reserves in eastern Indonesia could be vital to the country's energy supply in future, Energy and Mineral Resources Minister Darwin Zahedy Saleh said Wednesday.

"While many oil and gas fields are maturing, continuing their natural decline, we're optimistic that the frontier and deep water areas, mostly in eastern Indonesia, will contribute significantly to future production," Darwin said at the opening of the 35th Indonesian Petroleum Association (IPA) Annual Convention and Exhibition in Jakarta.

He added that the government had launched several initiatives to encourage investment in this area, including to increase the number of offered working acreages for oil, gas, coal bed methane (CBM) and geothermal energy. 

"We're confident we'll see a positive response to new blocks offered in deep water and fontier areas such as Semai, Halmahera, West Ary, South West Timor and South Java," Darwin said.

Judicial Commission to question ballistics expert

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Wed, 05/18/2011 12:04 PM | National

The Judicial Commission is scheduled on Wednesday to question a ballistics expert in relation to a murder allegedly involving former Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) chairman Antasari Azhar.

The meeting with the ballistics expert Maruli was scheduled to commence at 10 a.m.

The Judicial Commission has summoned Maruli twice previously but he was unable to attend earlier meetings, Judicial Commission spokesman Asep Rahmat Fajar said Wednesday as quoted by tribunnews.com

The commission has examined a report filed by Antasari's team of lawyers, which alleges that judges who presided over Antasari's trial at South Jakarta District Court committed ethical violations by ignoring evidence presented by forensics, IT and ballistic experts.

Police arrest new suspect in relation to Cirebon Police bombing

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Wed, 05/18/2011 2:06 PM | National

The National Police says it has arrested another suspect, identified by the initials JM, with alleged links to the network of Cirebon Police bomber Muhammad Syarif.

Muhammad Syarif was alleged to have killed himself in a suicide bombing attack on a mosque situated in the Cirebon Police compound, while police were about to perform their Friday prayers.

The blast killed Muhammad and injured several officers.

"Based on information, the suspect received 30 bullets of a 9-millimeter caliber from [terrorist suspect] Musholla," National Police deputy spokesman Sr. Comr. Boy Rafli Amar said Wednesday.

Suspected terrorist Musholla, who was arrested by police, allegedly made the bomb that was used in the attack.

He reportedly also prepared six other pipe bombs intended for another suicide bomb attack, which he stashed near the Soka River in Cirebon.

Boy added that JM, who was arrested in Karanganyar, Central Java, on Tuesday, gave the bullets to another suspected terrorist who later died in a police shootout.

"The 30 bullets were given to Hendro Yunanto in Cemani," he said.

Terrorist suspects Hendro Yunanto and Sigit Qurdowi were said to have died in a gunfight after they resisted arrest by members of the Densus 88 National Police counterterrorism unit in Cemani, Sukoharjo, on

Saturday.

China's premier to visit tsunami-hit area in Japan

The Jakarta Post | Wed, 05/18/2011 12:06 PM | World

China says Premier Wen Jiabao will visit the devastated area of Fukushima when he travels to Japan this weekend to show his country's support for reconstruction efforts after the twin earthquake and tsunami disasters.

Assistant Foreign Minister Hu Zhengyue told reporters at a briefing in Beijing on Wednesday that Wen himself decided to make the visit and that it was meant to show Chinese concern for those affected and a commitment to helping support the area's reconstruction.

While in Japan, Wen will also take part in a trilateral meeting with leaders of Japan and South Korea.

Group demands reopening of 2005 Nazaruddin forgery case

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Wed, 05/18/2011 1:28 PM | National

A group says it will demand police reopen the investigation of Democratic Party treasurer M Nazaruddin who was alleged to have falsified documents in 2005.

Masinton Pasaribu, a former 1998 activist, said Nazaruddin was arrested by police for a month in 2005 in an alleged document forgery case, but then later released for unclear reasons.

Masinton said Nazaruddin had falsified documents to clear the way for his company, PT Anugerah Nusantara, to win a tender held by the Industry Ministry.

“We demand that President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono does not protect a party cadre who was involved in crimes.

"We urge the President and the Jakarta Police chief to reopen the 2005 Nazaruddin case,” Masinton said Wednesday as quoted by tribunnews.com.

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Dewi will give positive testimony on Jupe

The Jakarta Post | Wed, 05/11/2011 9:22 PM | People

GatraGatraJAKARTA: Starlet Dewi Persik said she would give “positive” testimony on her co-star Julia “Jupe” Perez during trial, after initially reporting her for assault.

“My testimony won’t be harmful to Jupe because we ended up settling our differences peacefully,” she said as quoted by detik.com.

Back in January this year, Dewi reported Jupe to the police while the two were working on a film together. Jupe also reported Dewi for similar reasons. Jupe’s trial was scheduled for Tuesday but later postponed because the judge was sick.

Dewi said she wanted to settle things peacefully with Jupe.

Dewi and Jupe were both involved in producing a film titled Arwah Goyang Karawang (The Ghost of Goyang Karawang) when they got into a catfight. Videos of the two at each other’s necks have been circulating on the Internet, as well as on YouTube. — JP

Ian Frazer: A man with a cure

Andrea Booth, Contributor, Jakarta | Wed, 05/11/2011 9:19 PM | People

Courtesy of The Australian EMbassyCourtesy of The Australian EMbassyIn medical revelations of the century, a cure for certain types of cancer has been an encouraging development.

But for some, it is not enough to stop there.

Ian Frazer, best known for his creation of the vaccine against some strains of the Human Papilloma Virus (HPV) that can cause cervical cancer and who recently came to Indonesia to hold dialogue with its medical industry, would like to see it better available in developing countries.

The World Health Organization WHO 2010 Human Papilloma Virus and Related Cancers Summary Report states that of the approximate 2.4 million women at risk of developing cervical cancer, 1.9 million or 79 percent are from the developing world.

“No one should die of cervical cancer,” Frazer said. “Cervical cancer is a preventable disease. The problem in the developing world is that health services are not readily available or limited.”

The Australian of the Year awardee and director of the University of Queensland’s Diamantina Institute for Cancer, Immunology and Metabolic Medicine visited Indonesia last week as part of an Australian government initiative to strengthen relationships with medical professionals in Indonesia to enhance cancer research.

“I am proud to welcome Professor Frazer to Indonesia,” said Australian Ambassador to Indonesia Greg Moriarty. “His work demonstrates the scientific excellence we have in Australia and I hope his efforts will inspire Indonesian researchers and medical scientists as well as strengthen research collaboration and people-to-people links with Australia.”

Research has come quite some way in the last 20 years following Frazer’s discovery that viruses can cause some cancers: The two most common being Hepatitis B that can develop into liver cancer and sexually transmitted HPV types 6, 11, 16 and 18, the latter responsible for about 70 percent of all cervical cancer cases worldwide, according to WHO and for which Frazer developed a vaccine.

His contribution has the potential to lessen 5 percent of the cancer burden, and WHO also says there is more evidence HPV is a relevant factor in other anogenital cancers (anus, vulva, vagina and penis) and head and neck cancers.

He believes it is important to keep perspective concerning the virus, however. “People should not worry too much if they have HPV, the virus itself is common.”

Only for a minority — one of every 80 people — does the virus become cancerous, he says.

“When HPV becomes cancerous it becomes hard to tackle. But with the vaccine, we eliminate the chance of the virus becoming cancerous altogether,” he said on the possibility of the Indonesian government introducing a national cervical cancer screening and vaccination program for the second most common cancer in women around the world.

“The burden these deaths have on governments are significant, the Indonesian government will soon realize how important it is for the economy to minimize cervical cancer.”

Frazer was born in 1953 in Scotland into a medical family — his parents both medical scientists — and followed the same pursuit graduating with bachelors of science, medicine and surgery at the University of Edinburgh.

After emigrating to Australia in 1976, he began researching viral immunology and it was during this study he found that HPV appeared to trigger precancerous cells.

Using molecular biology, Frazer and his partner, virologist Jian Zhou, mimicked the HPV, which led him to form the HPV vaccine, marketed as Gardasil.

By 1998, now an Australian citizen, he had undertaken the first trials using Gardasil in his position as director of the Diamantina Institute. In 2006 Frazer was awarded the Australian of the Year for his breakthrough.

Five years later, he is still working tirelessly in cancer research and believes it is important to impart prevention knowledge where he can, such as the importance of having a Pap smear every two years, even if you have had the vaccine, as it only protects against sexually transmitted HPV strains 6, 11, 16 and 18.

Gardasil also does not treat existing infections and it is important women receive it between the ages of nine and 26 before it has the opportunity to develop into cancer, which can take around 10 years, according to the Australian government’s Department of Health and Ageing.

“Additionally, a Pap smear every two years is a sufficient measure to use to detect the virus so it can be tackled before it can become cancerous,” he said.

Frazer dismissed the belief that some women may contract HPV for “immoral” behavior. “It doesn’t matter what you have or have not done. Anyone can get this cancer.”

For other cancers such as breast, skin and brain cancer, no signs show that viruses are their cause, but Frazer has not yet ruled out this possibility. “We have not found the fingerprints of viruses in these cancer cells, but we have not obtained enough samples to make any conclusions yet.”

He also warns on misinformation. “People say ‘cancer runs in my family’, but especially now that we are living longer, one in two people get cancer in their lifetime so of course it may be in the family.

“Saying that, there are some cancers that can be genetic, such as breast cancer.”

If two female relatives or one male relative has breast cancer, he said, then you should be tested to see if you have the mutation or not. “And we can screen for that.”

In fact, with the knowledge we have access to today, Frazer says we can prevent 70 percent of cancer.

Ten percent can be avoided by vaccinating against HPV and Hepatitis B. Thirty percent can be avoided by not smoking, consuming excessive alcohol and exposing yourself to too much sun. Another 30 percent is preventable by avoiding toxic substances in the environment such as air pollution, and in some parts of Southeast Asia, excluding Indonesia, arsenic in drinking water.

Gardasil is available in Indonesia but there is not yet a government subsidized nationwide vaccination program.

House denies receiving Rp 168m a year for phone bills

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Wed, 05/11/2011 10:19 PM | National

House deputy speaker Anis Matta denied on Wednesday allegations that legislators have been receiving Rp 168 million (US$19,656) in phone credit allowances every year and another Rp 102 million during five recess sessions.

He said phone credit allowances for House members were not that much.

The Indonesian Forum for Budget Transparency (FITRA) released its latest report that showed that every legislator at the House of Representatives receives Rp 14 million in phone credit every month. They also receive Rp 20 million in communication allowances during every recess session.

“Not that much. Not even half,” Anis said as quoted by kompas.com.

He also said that FITRA might have meant to report the House's budget for lawmakers' political communications allowances and not their phone credit allowances.

Golkar Party legislator Basuki T Purnama said he had never received such an amount. He said he received Rp 7 to 8 million every month for political communications.

National Mandate Party (PAN) faction secretary Teguh Juwarno said he had not paid much attention to how much he received every month because the money always went straight into his bank account.

“Look, I'm trying to find out if [FITRA's data] is correct or not because [lawmakers] don’t feel like [they have been receiving that much]. But I don't want to be pretentious. I don't know what the actual number for communication allowances is ... but I'm not sure it's that much,” he said.

Prison needs to suppress Ba’asyir: Expert

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Wed, 05/11/2011 9:55 PM | National

Special rules should apply to firebrand cleric Abu Bakar Ba'asyir, who has been sentenced to life in prison, terrorism expert Noor Huda Ismail said Wednesday.

"The government should impose a system that forbids him [Ba'asyir] any opportunity to encourage radicalism," he said.

According to Noor, Ba'asyir should get heightened treatment concerning visitors. "Not all individuals should be permitted to visit him. Only his closest [friends]," he said.

He said that a prison could be an ideal place for a terrorist prisoner to recruit new members. In the case of Ba'asyir, he said that the chance of him fomenting radicalism was still very strong.

Therefore, he urged the government to imprison its terrorist prisoners in different buildings. "They would have no chance at all to meet each other," he added. (fem)

Elephant school

Hotli Simanjuntak, The Jakarta Post, Saree, Aceh Besar, Aceh | Wed, 05/11/2011 9:24 PM | Feature

Clean creatures: Two elephants bathe in a spring at the Center for Elephant Trainees (PLG) in Saree, Aceh Besar regency.Clean creatures: Two elephants bathe in a spring at the Center for Elephant Trainees (PLG) in Saree, Aceh Besar regency.Nurdin, 43, is not your usual school principal.

The school he heads is located in the Center for Elephant Trainees (PLG) in Saree, Aceh Besar regency, and has been training 48 elephants.

These creatures have to be kept away from the wild herds roaming the jungles of Aceh because of their prolonged conflict with men.

Elephants taught in this school were once enemies of the locals, damaging their plantations and even trampling on villagers to death.

“Nearly all those trained in PLG-Saree serve useful purposes like driving off wild elephants that disturb village settlements,” said Nurdin.

“Elephants are meek rather than aggressive. But sometimes they can be ferocious and violent when they feel threatened,” he added.

The elephant school in Saree village, known as PLG-Saree, was set up in 1994 within the Cut Nyak Dien Forest Park, around 70 kilometers from Banda Aceh, the capital of Aceh. The park was named after Aceh’s heroine, who fought against the Dutch colonial rule. The 6,300-hectare zone is at the foot of Mt. Seulawah, one of Aceh’s active volcanoes, and is under the protection of the provincial forestry and plantations office.

Elephants trained at his school can execute 25 out of 40 instructions given by trainers, called mahot. They are taught how to walk, sit, drink, eat, raise their legs and carry out other commands. Apart from obeying such orders, some of the elephants who have completed training in PLG-Saree can also play football, sit on chairs and dance. They usually perform at different events to raise funds for the school’s operational costs.

The school has 45 instructors or mahot, a Thai word meaning trainers or handlers.

“Each elephant has its own handler. Each instructor thus controls his own student,” explained Nurdin.

As the principal of an elephant school, Nurdin faces a different set of challenges compared to people in other professions.

Training session: Wild elephants are taught various skills while at the Center.Training session: Wild elephants are taught various skills while at the Center.“Too many things in daily life have to be sacrificed, from time to family. If you don’t love animals, then you won’t last long as an animal handler. This job is an expression of love and devotion to nature,” he said.

Nudin never made it to his wife’s side when she gave birth to their children in hospital. His three children were born when he was a long away from home, taking his troupe of elephants to various places outside of Sumatra.

Training elephants to accept commands from men is not an easy task. Sometimes they are quick to learn but they can also be stubborn, especially the recently caught wild elephants.

“Unlike normal schools, all of us instructors and trainees attend classes in this forest,” said Satimin, a mahot at PLG-Saree. The first skill a new trainee is taught is how to lift a front leg, which takes one to two weeks to learn. During this process, the beginner is tied to a large tree. Some trainers will help control the elephant, and force it to obey.

“Sometimes we also use a tame elephant to train the novice. The skilled one will push the wild animal from behind with its head as a goad,” added Satimin. All elephants, according to him, have a hard time at the beginning. When they are already skilled, the mammals tend to be more tame and docile. A handler has a special relationship with his trainee, which will usually last its whole life.

“Every mahot will feel sad if the elephant under his care is in trouble. Some handlers consider elephants as family members, even as their children,” Satimin said with a laugh. Trained elephants will thus never be returned to the wild. They will always stay in the school area with their mahot.

Happy creature: A trainer teaches an elephant a few tricks at the centerHappy creature: A trainer teaches an elephant a few tricks at the centerThe elephants’ expenses are funded with the regional budget managed by Aceh’s Natural Resources Conservation Agency (BKSDA). “We need about Rp 45 million for animals’ monthly expenses, which amounts to Rp 1 million per elephant,” said Satimin.

Today, many of PLG-Saree’s graduates work as rangers patrolling the forest. They are part of the Conservation Response Unit (CRU) program for the removal of wild elephants trespassing into village settlements.

There are two CRU locations in Aceh, in Sampoinet, West Aceh, and Geumpang, Aceh Pidie.

“It’s important to involve elephants in forest patrol groups because conflict between elephants and locals is intensifying, particularly in areas where illegal logging and forest conversion occur on a large scale,” he pointed out.

ASEAN economies past and future

Maddaremmeng A. Panennungi, Jakarta | Wed, 05/11/2011 9:58 PM | Opinion

Many experts have forecast promising economic growth from member states of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN). And there are several reasons for such expectations, including the region’s advantageous location, global security, the global economy and its policies over the last two decades.

But history has also shown us evidence of the presence of great nations in the ASEAN region in the past. The golden age of Sriwijaya, Majapahit and many other kingdoms in Southeast Asia are in the remaking now, albeit under a different banner: ASEAN countries.

The most important reason for this is the location advantage of the region, which connects two economic giants, China and India, as well as the Middle East and Western nations.

The second most important factor is global security in the past and in the future. The formation of Singapore by Thomas Raffles and the “cooperation” between the British and Dutch in the early 19th century after the Napoleonic Wars in Europe provided security for an economic connection between some Southeast Asian countries and the rest of the world.

The rise of Singapore as the center of trade in Southeast Asia has also provided a better linkage among Southeast Asian nations. However, during the two world wars and the Cold War era, Southeast Asia was one of the centers of battles between great powers. Today, threats of terrorism have also affected this region, especially Indonesia.

The third most important factor is the global economy and its policies. In the past, before Arabs and Western influenced Indonesia, or when India and China became the poles of the global economy, the region was known as “the busy road”, which allowed nations on both sides of the Malacca Strait and Java to enjoy a golden age of trade growth.

If both India and China reemerge as great economic powers, the golden age of this region will reemerge. The simplest explanation of this could be taken from the gravity model: The increasing economic size of both India and China and “the attraction of the economic force” of these giants will impact positively on the economy of this and the ASEAN region.

Economic policy is another important factor in the future of this region. There are at least three institutions helping this region remain on the right track in international trade relations — ASEAN, APEC (Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation) and the WTO (World Trade Organization). Despite many criticisms, especially during the Asian financial crisis of the late 1990s and during the global financial crisis of 2008, these institutions have helped the world, particularly ASEAN, face the challenges.

ASEAN has ratified the AFTA (ASEAN Free Trade Agreement) and the ASEAN-China Free Trade Area (ACFTA). There also other forms of communication forums between ASEAN and other economies, especially with the European Union (EU).

The following facts will help us understand the big picture of economic relations between ASEAN and some major economies, particularly APEC member countries.

The dynamic economic relations between ASEAN founding members (ASEAN-5) and economic powers within APEC were manifested in their trade volume in 1999-2009. Trade between ASEAN-5 and China rose from 3.7 percent from the grouping’s total trade volume in 1999 to 11.1 percent in 2009; ASEAN-5 and Japan trade dropped from 15.9 percent in 1999 to 10.36 percent in 2009; ASEAN-5 and the US’ trade declined from 18.7 percent in 1999 to 9.66 percent in 2009; and trade between ASEAN-5 and APEC economies slumped from 75.1 percent to 72.8 percent in 2009.

The region’s advantageous location, global security, global economy and its policies during the period explain the trade relations well.

First, the ASEAN-5 countries are located in a strategic and advantageous region. Among the ASEAN-5, Singapore booked the fastest average economic growth during 1989-2009 with 6.73 percent, with Malaysia 6.15 percent, Indonesia 5.16 percent, Thailand 5.02 percent and the Philippines 3.79 percent. The location of Singapore and Malaysia near the Malacca Strait (and supported by their seaport infrastructure) are better than the other three economies. However, overall, this region has a very good location in connection with international trade.

Second, during the last two decades (1989-2009), there were no important global conflicts that affected this region. The war on terrorism has hardly impacted the region’s security either.

Third, during this period, the world economy grew by a positive 2.69 percent. APEC economies growth during the same period was 2.83 percent. In comparison economic growth of main APEC economic powers like Japan was 1.31 percent, the US 2.52 percent and China 9.98 percent.

Economic growth in simple average of ASEAN-5 (Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore, and Thailand) during the last two decades stood at 5.37 percent. This shows that ASEAN-5 and China’s economies are becoming more important in the world economy in APEC and the world.

ASEAN countries have a better choice in keeping their relations closer to each other. This strategy will give a better “power” because unilateral action will weaken individual nations in the face of great powers. As small open economies, ASEAN countries should be very responsive to the global events that build relations with the great economic and political powers.

ASEAN’s advantageous location is a blessing, but it will turn into a curse if members of the group act individually and only serve the interests of great powers as happened in the past.

The writer is a researcher at the University of Indonesia’s School of Economics and director of the university’s APEC Study Center (ASC UI)

Legislators spend 168m each on phone credit annually: FITRA

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Wed, 05/11/2011 9:21 PM | National

The Indonesian Forum for Budget Transparency (FITRA) has released its latest data that shows that every legislator at the House of Representatives receives Rp 168 million (US$19,656) annually in phone credit allowance.

The data shows that the House budget for phone credit allowance for each legislator is Rp 14 million a month.

“The number excludes phone credit allowance given throughout every recess session,” FITRA coordinator Uchok Sky Khadafi said on Wednesday as quoted by kompas.com.

FITRA says the country's lawmakers receive around Rp 20 million in communication allowance during every recess session. The total money spent on such an allowance reaches Rp 102 million per legislator for five recess sessions annually.

Uchok said in total every lawmaker receives Rp 270 million every year for their communication needs.

“This is a waste of money. It is outrageous. It is obvious that the phone credit allowance goes straight into the pockets of our lawmakers to satisfy their hedonistic desires,” he added.

He said the huge budget allocated for phone credit allowance did not reflect the condition of Indonesian people, who mostly still live below the poverty line.

“Therefore, FITRA is demanding that the House scrap the budget for phone credit allowance and we also reject the plan to increase the budget for recess sessions during 2012,” he said.

Cannes believes in Woody Allen, even if he doesn't

Jenny Barchfield, Associated Press, Cannes, France | Wed, 05/11/2011 9:35 PM | Feature

Woody Allen might have occasional doubts about his talent, but his adoring fans at Cannes don't.

Widely regarded as the most European of American directors, Allen has consistently garnered warm receptions for his films at the French Riviera cinema showcase - even when they get panned at home.

His latest offering, "Midnight in Paris," which opened the 12-day-long Cannes Film Festival on Wednesday, looked like an immediate success. A clever and entertaining tale starring Owen Wilson as a Hollywood screenwriter who pines for the Paris of the 1920s, the movie is also a cinematic homage to the City of Light.

As expected, the crowd at its first press screening tittered throughout and broke into enthusiastic applause at the end.

Still, Allen sounded a typically self-effacing note at a post-film news conference.

"I've never considered myself an artist," he told journalists. "I've aspired to be an artist, but I never had the depth or the substance or the gift to be an artist.

"If you think that Kurosawa was an artist, and Bergman was an artist and Bunuel was an artist and Fellini, then it's clear as a bell that I'm not an artist," he said, referring to cinema auteurs Akira Kurosawa, Ingmar Bergman, Luis Bunuel and Federico Fellini.

"Still," he added, "I can make films and some of them come out good and some of them come out better and some of them come out worse."

"Midnight in Paris" is Allen's 41st feature film - his 11th at Cannes - and the New York-born director chalked the exceptional longevity of his career up to chance.

"I've had nothing but good luck," he said.

After filming in New York for decades, Allen shifted to Europe, shooting four of his last movies in London and Barcelona. "Midnight" is his first set in Paris, a city he said he'd grown up watching in the French films he devoured as young man.

"I wanted to show the city emotionally, the way I felt about it," Allen said. "It didn't matter to me how real it was or what it reflected. I just wanted it to be the way I saw Paris. Paris through my eyes."

The cast is star-studded. In addition to Rachel McAdams, who plays the Wilson character's slightly shrewish fiancée, other A-list actors make cameo appearances as some of the most brilliant luminaries of the 20th century. Kathy Bates shows off her language skills in a turn as the American-born writer and polyglot Gertrude Stein, while Adrien Brody walks the thin line between genius and madness as Salvador Dali.

French stars, too, shine in the movie. Marion Cotillard, who won best actress Academy Award in 2008 for "La Vie En Rose," plays the lover of Picasso and Hemmingway, and rising star Lea Seydoux is shyly radiant as a Paris antique dealer.

France's high-wattage first lady, model-turned-singer Carla Bruni-Sarkozy, has a bit part as a tour guide who translates a French diary that helps Wilson's character learn the lesson that the past is not necessarily all golden, after all.

Heading into the festival, expectation was high that Bruni-Sarkozy and her husband, President Nicolas Sarkozy would walk the red carpet at the movie's premiere Wednesday. But Bruni-Sarkozy has said they won't attend.

In an interview Tuesday on RTL radio, Bruni-Sarkozy said she regretted missing the festival, but "I unfortunately can't do it for personal and also for professional reasons."

French media have speculated that Bruni-Sarkozy may be pregnant. She has declined to discuss the issue, but her absence from Cannes only fanned the flames of the pregnancy rumors.

Inexpensive books and succeeding in the future

Endy M. Bayuni, The Jakarta Post, Washington, D.C. | Wed, 05/11/2011 9:55 PM | Opinion

I had mixed feelings when Borders bookstore finally closed their outlet on the corner of L and 19th streets opposite my workplace a week ago. I had spent hours sitting in its café and between its shelves, browsing and reading from the huge collection.

But, in the four weeks before the closure, I visited the store every other day to take advantage of the fire sales with discounts of 20 percent that then rose to 40, 50, 60 and 80 percent in the last five days.

Longtime Washingtonians, however, said to shed no tears. They recalled that the arrival of Borders and Barnes & Noble, both giant American bookstore chains, on Washington’s streets one or two decades ago led to the closure of many independent bookstores.

Borders has become victim to the fierce book market it helped to shape. It filed for bankruptcy in February and plans on closing 200 of its 600 outlets in the US and abroad.

More Americans buy their books online, from Amazon.com and Borders and Barnes & Noble’s web sites. And, there is the growing migration to the digital world, with more people reading books on the Kindle, the iPad and other portable digital book readers.

One thing I learned since coming here early this year on a research program is that few people in the US pay full price for their books; only visitors or those who feel strongly about supporting their local independent bookstores do. For avid readers, there are many ways of getting your books aside from library loans.

For best-selling fiction and non-fiction, major department stores sell books at up to 60 percent off the cover price.

For more specialized or older books, check out Borders and Barnes & Noble. If you’re a loyal customer, membership confers large discounts and point awards that entitle you to more discounts in the future.

Online stores, and don’t forget the biggest one of all, Amazon, offer generous discounts like free shipping within the US and awards to build customer loyalty. Check out their used book section. I was amazed at the selection, including many out-of-print titles.

Most are reasonably priced as well. The listing indicates the book’s condition and where it will be shipped from. Put the book in a virtual shopping cart, enter your credit card number and it will be delivered in just a few days.

Most books I need for my research (on Indonesia) were bought this way. For example, I bought a good-as-new copy of Robert Hefner’s 2000 Civil Islam: Muslims and Democratization in Indonesia online.

Check out the regular book sales at your local library. Early in April, the Arlington Public Library, down the corner from my rented apartment, had a sale that lasted three days. Secondhand books were going for 50 cents, US$1, $2 and $4 apiece. On the last day, they were half the marked prices.

These book sales, surprisingly, offer a wide selection. My wife and I bought over 30 titles, not so much because we needed them but more because they were too good to pass up.

At 50 cents or a dollar apiece, we see it as renting the books. We will donate most of them to the library before it holds its next sale. You’re not just recycling books; you’re recycling knowledge and the wisdom contained in those pages.

America is heaven for avid readers, writers and researchers. Not only does it have one of the widest selections, but books are accessible and affordable for most pockets through discount plans, used book sales and recycling arrangements.

It is no wonder the United States consistently ranks highest in the world in terms of the number of books published. The widespread usage of English globally helps its case and many of the books are exported as well as sold domestically.

The United States is strongly represented at the top of global university rankings. The Times Higher Education put four US universities in the top 5, and 13 in the top 20. The QS ranking puts two universities in the top 5, but 14 in the top 20.

What is puzzling, however, is the weak correlation between these achievements and the academic performance of American students globally. Survey after survey indicates that the US education system is rapidly falling behind many other countries.

A recent test of 15-year-olds worldwide conducted by the Program for International Students Association ranked Americans between 15th and 25th in science, reading and mathematics, hardly reflecting the US’s global preeminence.

Mindful of the long-term implications of this decline, President Obama made education the centerpiece of his state of the union speech in January.

He made a passionate plea to Congress to spare investment in education, along with spending on health care, from the axe as the nation struggles to cut its huge federal budget deficit.

Obama invoked the “Sputnik Moment” in calling for more investment in education and technological innovation to restore America’s supremacy, just as it did in beating the Soviet Union in the race to the moon.

Can the United States succeed in the future once again? It will take more than books to pull it off, but at least Americans, in this race, still have the easiest access to a wide range of great books compared with people in most other countries. Take it from this short-term visiting writer: It all starts with reading.

The writer is a fellow at the East-West Center in Washington, D.C. and a senior editor at The Jakarta Post.

Monday, May 2, 2011

Crowds gather in NYC, DC after bin Laden killed

Associated Press, New York | Mon, 05/02/2011 12:20 PM | World

Hundreds of people were gathering in New York City at the World Trade Center site, where the twin towers fell on Sept. 11 nearly 10 years ago, hours after President Barack Obama announced that Osama bin Laden was killed.

Many were waving American flags or taking pictures early Monday. The group broke into spontaneous, jubilant cheers and song, including a rendition of "I'm Proud to be an American."

Farther uptown in Times Square, dozens stood together on the clear spring night, making calls and snapping photos. An FDNY SUV drove by and flashed its lights and sounded its siren, and the crowd broke into applause.

And in Washington, D.C., a large group gathered in front of the White House, chanting "USA! USA!" and waving American flags. Among them was legislative aide Will Ditto. He called bin Laden's death "huge."

Police confiscate suspicious bag with gas tube in Yogya

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Mon, 05/02/2011 10:26 AM | Archipelago

The Yogyakarta Police bomb squad has confiscated a suspicious bag containing a 3-kg gas cyclinder that was abandoned near a motorcycle workshop at Suryotomo Street, just across the Melia Purosani, one of the city's finest hotels, an official said.

“We are confiscating the suspicious bag and taking it to the mobile brigade’s headquarters for further investigation,” Yogyakarta Police deputy chief Sr. Comr. Tjiptono said on Monday as quoted by tribunnews.com.

Tjiptono said the bag’s existence was first reported by Toha, a local resident, who passed by the street at that time and considered the abandoned bag suspicious.

“Given the fact that there have been bomb attacks in several regions around the country lately I believed it best to report the bag to the authorities,” he said.

Obama: Al-Qaida head bin Laden dead

Associated Press, Washington | Mon, 05/02/2011 10:56 AM | World

Osama bin Laden, the glowering mastermind behind the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks that killed thousands of Americans, was killed in an operation led by the United States, President Barack Obama said Sunday

A small team of Americans carried out the attack and took custody of bin Laden's remains, the president said in a dramatic late-night statement at the White House.

A jubilant crowd gathered outside the White House as word spread of bin Laden's death after a global manhunt that lasted nearly a decade.

"Justice has been done," the president said.

The development comes just months before the tenth anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks on the World Trade Center towers in New York and Pentagon in Washington, orchestrated by bin Laden's al-Qaida organization, that killed more than 3,000 people.

The attacks set off a chain of events that led the United States into wars in Afghanistan, and then Iraq, and America's entire intelligence apparatus was overhauled to counter the threat of more terror attacks at home.

Al-Qaida organization was also blamed for the 1998 bombings of two U.S. embassies in Africa that killed 231 people and the 2000 attack on the USS Cole that killed 17 American sailors in Yemen, as well as countless other plots, some successful and some foiled.

Sunday, May 1, 2011

Bush reacts to news of bin Laden's death

Associated Press, Dallas | Mon, 05/02/2011 11:14 AM | World

Former U.S. President George W. Bush says he has congratulated President Barack Obama after hearing about the death of Osama bin Laden.

In a statement Sunday night, Bush said Obama called to tell him that U.S. forces had killed bin Laden.

Bush said, "This momentous achievement marks a victory for America, for people who seek peace around the world, and for all those who lost loved ones on September 11, 2001."

He also said the U.S. "has sent an unmistakable message: No matter how long it takes, justice will be done. "

Bin Laden took a path of fanaticism and terror

Paul Haven, Associated Press | Mon, 05/02/2011 11:33 AM | World

The most intense manhunt in history finally caught up with Osama bin Laden, but his life's story will be told many different ways by different people.

Reviled in the West as the personification of evil, bin Laden was admired and even revered by some fellow Muslims who embraced his vision of unending jihad against the United States and Arab governments he deemed as infidels.

Bin Laden's money and preaching inspired the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks that killed some 3,000 people in New York, Washington and Pennsylvania, and forever ripped a hole in America's feeling of security in the world.

His actions set off a chain of events that led the United States into wars in Afghanistan, and then Iraq, and a clandestine war against extreme Islamic adherents that touched scores of countries on every continent but Antarctica. America's entire intelligence apparatus was overhauled to counter the threat of more terror attacks at home.

Bin Laden was killed in an operation led by the United States, President Barack Obama said Sunday. A small team of Americans carried out the attack and took custody of bin Laden's remains, Obama said.

Bin Laden's al-Qaida organization has also been blamed for the 1998 bombings of two U.S. embassies in Africa that killed 231 people and the 2000 attack on the USS Cole that killed 17 American sailors in Yemen, as well as countless other plots, some successful and some foiled

Perhaps as significant was his ability - even from hiding - to inspire a new generation of terrorists to murder in his name. Most of al-Qaida's top lieutenants have been killed or captured in the years since Sept. 11, 2001, and intelligence officials in Europe and Asia say they now see a greater threat from homegrown radical groups energized by bin Laden's cause.

Al-Qaida is not thought to have provided logistical or financial support to the group of North African Muslims who pulled off the March 11, 2004, bombings in Madrid, Spain - which killed 191 people - but they were certainly inspired by its dream of worldwide jihad. Likewise, no link has been established between al-Qaida and the four British Muslim suicide bombers who killed 52 people in London on July 7, 2005, but few believe the attack would have taken plea had bin Laden not aroused the passions of young Muslim radicals the world over.

The war in Iraq - justified in part by erroneous intelligence that suggested Saddam Hussein had both weapons of mass destruction and a link to al-Qaida - has become the cauldron in which the world's next generation of terrorists are honing their skills.

While scant evidence has emerged of a link between Saddam and bin Laden's inner circle, there is no doubt that al-Qaida took advantage of the chaos of post-Saddam Iraq - helping to drag the United States into a quagmire that led to the death of some 5,000 American troops, and many scores of thousands of Iraqis.

Indeed, bin Laden's legacy is a world still very much on edge.

Frightening terms like dirty bomb, anthrax and weapons of mass destruction have become staples of the global vocabulary; and others like Guantanamo, Abu Ghraib and extraordinary rendition have fueled a burning anger in the Muslim world.

But long before bin Laden became the world's most hunted man, few believed fate would move him in that direction.

Bin Laden was born in Saudi Arabia in 1954. He became known as the most pious of the sons among his wealthy father's 54 children. Bin Laden's path to militant slam began as a teenager in the 1970s when he got caught up in the fundamentalist movement then sweeping Saudi Arabia. He was a voracious reader of Islamic literature and listened to weekly sermons in the holy city of Mecca.

Thin, bearded and over 6 feet (1.8 meters) tall, bin Laden joined the Afghans' waragainst invading Soviet troops in the 1980s and gained a reputation as a courageous and resourceful commander. Access to his family's considerable construction fortune certainly helped raise his profile among the mujahedeen fighters.

At the time, bin Laden's interests converged with those of the United States, which backed the "holy war" against Soviet occupation with money and arms.

When bin Laden returned home to Saudi Arabia, he was showered with praise and donations and was in demand as a speaker in mosques and homes. It did not take long for his aims to diverge from those of his former Western supporters.

"When we buy American goods, we are accomplices in the murder of Palestinians," he said in one of the cassettes made of his speeches from those days.

A seminal moment in bin Laden's life came in 1990, when U.S. troops landed on Saudi soil to drive Iraq out of Kuwait.

Bin Laden tried to dissuade the government from allowing non-Muslim armies into the land where the Prophet Muhammad gave birth to Islam, but the Saudi leadership turned to the United States to protect its vast oil reserves. When bin Laden continued criticizing Riyadh's close alliance with Washington, he was stripped of Saudi citizenship.

"I saw radical changes in his personality as he changed from a calm, peaceful and gentle man interested in helping Muslims into a person who believed that he would be able to amass and command an army to liberate Kuwait. It revealed his arrogance and his haughtiness," Prince Turki, the former Saudi intelligence chief, said in an interview with Arab News and MBC television in late 2001.

"His behavior at that time left no impression that he would become what he has become," the prince added.

The prince, who said he met bin Laden several times years ago in Pakistan and Saudi Arabia, described him as "a gentle, enthusiastic young man of few words who didn't raise his voice while talking."

Abdel-Bari Atwan, editor of Al-Quds al-Arabi, London-based newspaper, spent 10 days with bin Laden in an Afghan cave in 1996. He said bin Laden "touched the root of the grievances of millions in the Arab world" when he presented himself as the alternative to Arab regimes that have been incapable of liberating Arab land from Israeli occupation and restoring pride to their people.

He said bin Laden and his followers never feared death.

"Those guys spoke about death the way young men talk about going to the disco," Atwan said. "They envied those who fell in battle because they died as martyrs in God's cause."

Still, bin Laden had a knack for staying alive.

After being kicked out of Saudi Arabia, bin Laden sought refuge in Sudan. The African country acceded to a U.S. request and offered to turn bin Laden over to Saudi Arabia in 1996, but his native country declined, afraid a trial would destabilize the country.

Back on familiar terrain in Afghanistan - allowed in by the government of Burhanuddin Rabbani - bin Laden and his al-Qaida network prepared for the holy war that turned him into Washington's No. 1 enemy.

When the Taliban - who would eventually give him refuge - first took control of Kabul in September 1996, bin Laden and his Arab followers kept a low profile, uncertain of their welcome under the new regime. The Taliban leader Mullah Mohammed Omar called bin Laden to southern Kandahar from his headquarters in Tora Bora and eventually through large and continual financial contributions to the isolated Taliban, bin Laden became dependent on the religious militia for his survival.

In Afghanistan, he would wake before dawn for prayers, then eat a simple breakfast of cheese and bread. He closely monitored world affairs. Almost daily, he and his men - Egyptians, Yemenis, Saudis, among others - practiced attacks, hurling explosives at targets and shooting at imaginary enemies.

He also went horseback riding, his favorite hobby, and enjoyed playing traditional healer, often prescribing honey, his favorite food, and herbs to treat colds and other illnesses. In Afghanistan, bin Laden was often accompanied by his four wives - the maximum Islam allows. Estimates on the number of his children range up to 23.

Al-Qaida's first major strike after bin Laden returned to Afghanistan was on Aug. 7, 1998, when twin explosions rocked U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania. Most of the victims were African passers-by, but the bombings also killed 12 Americans.

Days later, bin Laden escaped a cruise missile strike on one of his training camps in Afghanistan launched by the United States in retaliation. Bin Laden is believed to have been at the Zhawar Kili Al-Badr camp for a meeting with several of his top men, but left shortly before some 70 Tomahawk cruise missiles slammed into the dusty complex.

Since Sept. 11, bin Laden stayed a step ahead of the dragnet - perhaps the largest in history for a single individual.

As the Taliban quickly fell under pressure of the U.S. bombardment, bin Laden fled into the inhospitable mountains in the seam that separates Pakistan and Afghanistan, keeping up a spotty stream of chatter - first in video tapes and then in scratchy audio recordings - to warn his Western pursuers of more bloodshed.

Just hours after the U.S. assault on Afghanistan began on Oct. 7, 2001, bin Laden appeared in a video delivered to Al-Jazeera, an Arab satellite television station, to issue a threat to America.

"I swear by God ... neither America nor the people who live in it will dream of security before we live it in Palestine, and not before all the infidel armies leave the land of Muhammad, peace be upon him," said bin Laden, dressed in fatigues.

He reappeared in a video appearance broadcast by Al-Jazeera on Dec. 27, 2001, shortly after U.S. forces apparently had him cornered in Tora Bora, a giant cave complex in eastern Afghanistan. Hundreds of al-Qaida suspects are believed to have escaped the massive U.S. bombing campaign there, and bin Laden is believed to have been among them.

During the past decade, bin Laden and deputy Ayman al-Zawahri have appeared regularly in audio and video tapes to issue threats, and comment on a wide range of current events, although the appearances trailed off in recent years.

In November 2002, bin Laden threatened Britain, France, Italy, Canada, Germany and Australia for their support for the United States, saying: "It is time we get even. You will be killed just as you kill, and will be bombed just as you bomb." Later, he called on Muslims to rise up against leaders in Saudi Arabia and Kuwait he saw as Washington's stooges.

In 2004, he tried a new tack, offering a "truce" to European countries that don't attack Muslims, then later saying that the United States could avoid another Sept. 11 attack if it stopped threatening the security of Muslims.

After a long silence, bin Laden stepped up his messages in 2006, and the subjects he addressed became more political. In January 2006, he addressed his comments to the American people rather than U.S. President George W. Bush because, he said, polls showed "an overwhelming majority" of Americans wanted a withdrawal from Iraq. He even recommended Americans pick up a copy of the book "The Rogue State," which he said offered a path to peace.

At several points in the years since the Sept. 11 attacks, bin Laden's capture or death had appeared imminent. After the March 2003 arrest of Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, the alleged mastermind of the Sept. 11 attacks, officials in Islamabad and Washington were paraded out to deny a consistent stream of rumors that bin Laden had been captured.

U.S. forces poured into the border region looking for him and former Taliban and Taliban in hiding said bin Laden had constantly been on the move, traveling through the mountains with a small entourage of security.

Through it all, bin Laden vowed repeatedly that he was willing to die in his fight to drive the Israelis from Jerusalem and Americans from Saudi Arabia and Iraq.

"America can't get me alive," bin Laden was quoted as saying in an interview with a Pakistani journalist conducted shortly after the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan. "I can be eliminated, but not my mission."