Monday, August 29, 2011

Typhoon hits Taiwan after pummeling Philippines

Associated Press, Taipei | Mon, 08/29/2011 9:51 AM

Typhoon Nanmadol has slammed into Taiwan, closing schools, workplaces and government offices. It has dumped more than 19 inches (half a meter) of rain in the mountainous south, where vulnerability to catastrophic landslides prompted the evacuation of some 8,000 people.

Nanmadol made landfall just before daybreak Monday in Taidung county in the remote southeast and headed toward heavily populated coastal areas on the west coast. It is packing winds 68 mph (108 kph), down from earlier peaks almost twice that high.

It is expected to pass about 130 miles (200 kilometers) south of Taipei before heading for the Taiwan Strait and the eastern China coast.

Commuter line operates normally during holiday

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Mon, 08/29/2011 2:02 PM

Greater Jakarta Electric Trains (KRL), popularly known as the commuter line, will keep to its normal schedule over the Idul Fitri holiday period.

On Monday, the trains will operate from morning until 11 p.m., with no anticipated delays to the schedule, a ticket officer at Rawabuntu station in South Tangerang said Monday as quoted by kompas.com.

With one day left before most Muslims celebrate Idul Fitri, many Jakartans were seen using the commuter line, with some choosing to park their cars at stations and continue their journeys by train.

Nazaruddin prison transfer unnecessary, says judicial taskforce

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Mon, 08/29/2011 9:22 AM

Two members of the Judicial Corruption Taskforce have criticized Nazaruddin’s jail transfer request over safety concerns, which they say are unwarranted.

“We see that the police have installed a good and strict security system that can protect Nazaruddin against any threats. We fail to see what has made him feel unsafe,” taskforce member Mas Achmad Santosa said Sunday as quoted by tempointeraktif.com.

Achmad added that Nazaruddin's cell was being monitored by the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) with 17 CCTV cameras, and guarded with 24-hour security by mobile police brigade personnel.

Earlier, through his lawyer OC Kaligis, Nazaruddin, who is now jailed at the National Police's mobile brigade detention center in Depok, stated that he would only cooperate with KPK investigators if he was transferred to another detention facility, such as Cipinang Penitentiary or Salemba prison.

Nazaruddin said the sole reason behind the jail transfer request was because he felt his safety had been compromised.

Taiwan hospital transplants 5 HIV-infected organs

Associated Press, Taipei | Mon, 08/29/2011 1:17 PM

One of Taiwan's best regarded hospitals transplanted organs from an HIV carrier into five patients, a hospital official said Monday, in what appears to be one of the most egregious examples of medical negligence in the island's modern history.

The five are now being treated with anti-AIDS drugs, said the official at National Taiwan University Hospital in Taipei.

The official spoke on condition of anonymity because she is not authorized to deal with the media.

In a posting on its website over the weekend, the hospital said the mistake occurred because a transplant staffer believed he heard the English word "non-reactive" on the donor's standard HIV test, which means negative, while the word "reactive" was actually given.

The hospital added that the information on the test result was given over the telephone and was not double-checked, as required by standard operating procedures.

"We deeply apologize for the mistake," the hospital said.

Shih Chung-liang, a Health Department official, said a department team will look into the mistaken transplants and decide on possible penalties for NTUH.

Sunday, August 28, 2011

Indonesian Muslims celebrate Idul Fitri on different days: Expert

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Mon, 08/29/2011 1:08 PM

While Muslims across the archipelago started Ramadhan this year on the same date, different groups may end the fasting month on different days, an expert says.

Some may say that the end of Ramadhan is on Tuesday while others may say it ends Wednesday, National Aeronautics and Space Agency (LAPAN) research professor Thomas Djamaluddin said Monday.

“The difference occurs because until now most Muslim mass organizations in this country have no agreement on which criteria to use to determine the beginning of hijrah [Islamic year] months,” Thomas said as quoted by kompas.com.

At least two criteria are used: hisab, which is based on mathematical calculations, and rukyat or direct observations of the lunar cycle. Both methods are used to determine the emergence of the first crescent moon at the beginning of hijriah months, known as hilal.

If hilal can be seen on Monday afternoon, Muslims will mark the next day as Idul Fitri. If, however, hilal can not be seen then the fasting month will be extended to 30 days and Idul Fitri will fall on Wednesday.

FPI pulls scalpel on Hanung Bramantyo's plurist film '?'

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Mon, 08/29/2011 3:02 PM

The Islam Defenders Front (FPI) is calling for a dialogue with filmmaker Hanung Bramantyo over the latter’s film ?, which promotes religious pluralism.

“We refuse [for the film to be screened], so let’s sit together in a discussion to decide which parts of the movie should be cut,” FPI chief Habib Salim Alatas said Monday as quoted by tempointeraktif.com.

Habib added that the discussion was necessary to prevent further demonstrations over the film.

“Hanung should talk about the film’s mission, and after that we shall decide whether the movie should be screened at theaters.”

On Saturday last week, hundreds of FPI members demonstrated in front of SCTV television station in Central Jakarta over its plan to broadcast the film on the night of Idul Fitri.

After meeting with the protesters, SCTV management later decided not to screen the film.

In April, FPI also demonstrated against the film being screened at theaters. At that time, Hanung met with the Indonesian Ulema Council (MUI) and decided to cut some parts out of the movie.

Muhammadiyah tells Muslims to strengthen solidarity during Idul Fitri

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Mon, 08/29/2011 1:24 PM

The chairman of Indonesia’s second-largest Muslim organization, Muhammadiyah, has urged Muslims to use Idul Fitri as a time to improve and strengthen social solidarity.

“Idul Fitri is a time to tighten brotherhood and to foster our affection toward others,” Muhammadiyah chairman Din Syamsuddin said Monday as quoted by tribunnews.com.

Din also asked every member of Muhammadiyah to prepare their Idul Fitri prayers well and coordinate with others who would celebrate Idul Fitri on the same day, so that their prayers run smoothly, accordingly to Islamic teachings.

Muhammadiyah has declared that Idul Fitri falls on Tuesday.

Gadhafi forces killed detainees, survivors say

Associated Press, Tripoli | Mon, 08/29/2011 12:10 PM

Retreating loyalists of Moammar Gadhafi killed scores of detainees and arbitrarily shot civilians over the past week, as rebel forces extended their control over the Libyan capital, survivors and a human rights group said.

In one case, Gadhafi fighters opened fire and hurled grenades at more than 120 civilians huddling in a hangar used as a makeshift lockup near a military base, said Mabrouk Abdullah, 45, who escaped with a bullet wound in his side. Some 50 charred corpses were still scattered across the hangar on Sunday.

New York-based Human Rights Watch said Sunday that the evidence it has collected so far "strongly suggests that Gadhafi government forces went on a spate of arbitrary killing as Tripoli was falling." The justice minister in the rebels' interim government, Mohammed al-Alagi, said the allegations would be investigated and leaders of Gadhafi's military units put on trial.

So far, there have been no specific allegations of atrocities carried out by rebel fighters, though human rights groups are continuing to investigate some unsolved cases.

AP reporters have witnessed several episodes of rebels mistreating detainees or sub-Saharan Africans suspected of being hired Gadhafi guns. Earlier this week, rebels and their supporters did not help eight wounded men, presumably Gadhafi fighters, who were stranded in a bombed out fire station in Tripoli's Abu Salim neighborhood, some pleading for water.

No three-in-one rule this week: Police

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Mon, 08/29/2011 12:07 PM

Jakarta Police traffic division has announced that there will be no three-in-one policy for major thoroughfares in the capital this week, with fewer vehicles expected on the roads over the Idul Fitri holiday period.

“The three-in-one policy is intended to restrict the number of cars [on main roads] so we can avoid traffic congestion during peak hours.

Because we expect to see less cars on [Jakarta's] main roads this week, we are waiving this policy for this week only,” Jakarta Police traffic division member Comr. Purwono Pujianto said Monday as quoted by the division's website, www.tmcmetro.com.

Purwono added that the traffic rules would return to normal next Monday.

The three-in-one policy allows only cars with minimum three passengers to use the city’s main thoroughfares during peak hours (from 7 a.m. to 10 a.m. and from 4.30 p.m to 7 p.m.).

Israeli police: 6 wounded in apparent attack

Associated Press, Jerusalem | Mon, 08/29/2011 7:15 AM

Israeli police say five Israelis have been wounded in a Palestinian militant attack near a Tel Aviv nightclub.

Police spokeswoman Luba Samri says an attacker crashed a car into two people early Monday, wounding them. He then gt out and stabbed three others.

Samri says the attacker was a 19-year-old from the West Bank city of Nablus. He was arrested.

He too was injured and was taken to hospital.

Samri says the wounded include several policemen who were manning a police checkpoint near a popular nightclub in south Tel Aviv,Israel's metropolitan center.

Thursday, August 11, 2011

Comment: TNI prefers imported weapons

Aug. 7, Online

State-owned weapons manufacturer PT Pindad complained on Sunday that it faced difficulties in selling its products to the Indonesian Military (TNI), as the latter preferred imported weapons.

“For example, we have offered BT-250 bombs for the past 10 years; however, the TNI has not taken them,” Pindad president director Adik Avianto Soedarsono said as quoted by kompas.com on Sunday.

Adik said the TNI was Pindad’s biggest customer but Pindad had yet to sign any purchasing deal with the TNI this year.

Your comments:

Once quality control is implemented (perhaps outsourcing proper management or quality control to third parties) I think the TNI and National Police will be more than happy to buy from Pindad, instead at this moment in time for the safety of the personnel they will buy overseas.

Deddy
Jakarta

There are a lot of reasons for buying local Indonesian products. It seems utterly irrational for TNI/National Police not to buy Pindad’s products. Why? Well, surely one needs to understand the story behind it right?

Maybe the “kickback” from Pindad was not as fantastic as foreign’ ones, if Pindad offered it at all. This kind of practice is not uncommon in government agencies. Speechless.

Petruk
Yogyakarta

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Govt. assigns special team to hunt two more graft fugitives

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Wed, 08/10/2011 7:56 PM

Legal and Human Rights Minister Patrialis Akbar said a special team has been assigned to hunt down two other graft fugitives, Nunun Nurbaeti and Anggoro Wijojo.
Nunun is wanted by the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) for her alleged role in the Bank Indonesia traveler’s checks bribery scandal, while Anggoro is wanted for a graft case relating to the procurement of an integrated radio communications system for the Forestry Ministry.

“It’s difficult to hunt down Nunun because she is silent, unlike “Nazar”, who consistently appeared [in the media],” said Patrialis, who was referring to former Democratic Party treasurer Nazaruddin.

Nazaruddin, a graft suspect in the SEA Games athletes’ village development project in Palembang, South Sumatra, was finally arrested in Cartagena, Colombia on Sunday, after months of moving from one country to another.
Nunun, wife of Prosperous Justice Party (PKS) politician and former National Police deputy chief Adang Daradjatun, and whose whereabouts remain unknown, reportedly fled to Singapore on February 23, 2010. Meanwhile, Anggoro left Indonesia on July 28, 2008. Both are listed as Interpol fugitives.

Text your say: Alternative presidential candidate

Your comments on the nomination of World Bank managing director Sri Mulyani Indrawati as a presidential candidate by a new political party:

I heard from people who know her personally that she has all the qualities to be a good president: courage, confidence and credibility.

I read her articles and followed interviews with her on TV.

I think she is still the one at the moment who fill the criteria of a person who has integrity and intelligence to lead Indonesia.

But I know also that there would be huge challenges ahead for her, since politics everywhere doesn’t favor clean and good people.

Sjeline Lukiman
Jakarta

Her nomination is no problem because Indonesia is a democratic country.

Anyone can to be a presidential candidate.

S. Blank
Jakarta

She is new on stage and definitely we love new stars, don’t we?

Eddy Arjuna Zainy
Bekasi, West Java

She will reject the nomination, I am sure.

Win Muhammad Adab

I don’t think she will accept the nomination.

Heru Prasetia

It would better if she was nominated by the Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P).

Lavenia L G Sinaga

She deserves it. She has great skills for this great responsibility.

Theresia Bhekti P

Sri Mulyani Indrawati has a big chance to win in the 2014 presidential election because the public wants a cleaner government.

Moeljono Adikoesoemo
Jakarta

I am not sure whether Sri Mulyani has agreed to be nominated as a presidential candidate in the 2014 elections.

The birth of the SRI Party was declared by academics and intellectuals.

I don’t think they have adequate financial resources to fight in the elections.

Zed
Jakarta

Next topic

While there are many other graft fugitives, law enforcers are focusing much their attention on Muhammad Nazaruddin, former treasurer of the Democratic Party. Why?

Send your thoughts by email, SMS, Twitter or Facebook. Include your name and city.

Stocks tumble as post-Fed relief rally peters out

Pan Pylas, Associated Press, London | Wed, 08/10/2011 9:30 PM

Stocks in Europe and the US tumbled Wednesday, a day after a Federal Reserve pledge to keep extremely low interest rates for two more years temporarily calmed investors' jitters.

The Fed's surprise announcement Tuesday that it woud likely keep its Fed funds rate at near zero percent through 2013 to help the ailing US economy fueled a late Wall Street surge - the Dow Jones industrial average rallied 6 percent just in the final hour of trading, one of the biggest turnarounds ever seen.

That continued into Asian and European trading sessions Wednesday, although traders remained nervous after the market turmoil of recent weeks, which has sent many global markets officially into bear market territory - falling 20 percent from recent peaks. That nervousness became more acute as the US open loomed and European markets gave up all their earlier gains.

"So far, panic has eased but fear remains," said Kit Juckes, an analyst at Societe Generale.

In Europe, the FTSE 100 index of leading British shares was down 1.4 percent at 5,093 while Germany's DAX fell 2.5 percent to 5,814. The CAC-40 in France was 2.5 percent lower at 3,098.

In the US, the Dow Jones industrial average was down 2.7 percent at 10,940 while the broader Standard & Poor's 500 index fell 2.6 percent to 1,141.

Over the past few weeks, markets have suffered a severe reverse amid worries over the US economic recovery and the country's debt situation in light of a protracted debate in Congress to get the debt ceiling lifted. That contributed to last weekend's announcement by Standard & Poor's to downgrade the US's credit rating for the first time ever.

And in a sharp reversal of opinion, economists now believe there is a greater chance of another US recession.

The other major market concern is Europe's debt crisis. Investors have grown increasingly worried that Italy and Spain could become the next European countries to have trouble repaying their debts. Greece, Ireland and Portugal have already received bailout loans because of Europe's 21-month-old debt crisis.

The fears have pushed investors to shun Spanish and Italian bonds, which have led to higher yields and even higher borrowing costs for the two countries.

The European Central Bank stepped in Monday and began buying billions of euros worth of their bonds. The move has helped to lower yields on Spanish and Italian bonds to around the 5 percent mark from over 6 percent. The two countries' borrowing costs, though high compared to Germany and other euro countries, are considered manageable for now.

Earlier in Asia, the Shanghai Composite Index rose 0.9 percent to 2,549.18 and the smaller Shenzhen Composite Index gained 1.4 percent. Indexes in Taiwan and India also gained. Hong Kong's Hang Seng jumped 2.3 percent to 19,783.67.

Japanese stocks underperformed somewhat as investors continued to fret over the export-sapping appreciation of the yen.

Japan's Nikkei 225 index climbed 1.1 percent to close at 9,038.74 as the dollar headed near to post World War II lows against the yen. By mid-afternoon London time, the dollar was 0.9 percent lower at 76.40 yen, not far above the level last week that prompted the Bank of Japan to intervene in the markets.

Meanwhile, the euro was down 0.8 percent at $1.4246.

In the oil markets, prices fell from earlier highs as stock markets turned lower again. Benchmark oil for September delivery was up $1.34 to $80.64 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Earlier oil prices had risen to $82.

Comment: Beggars renting infants to be arrested

Aug. 6, Online

The Jakarta Police said that they would arrest beggars who hit the streets with infants who are not their own and charge them with child exploitation.

“The beggars will undergo legal processing if it is proven that the baby does not belong to him or her,” Jakarta Police spokesman Sr. Comr. Baharudin Jafar said on Saturday.

Public order officers are currently cracking down on street beggars and other people deemed “suffering from social welfare problems”.

People from outside Jakarta habitually flood the city to work as beggars during the Ramadhan period, during which more fortunate people frequently hand out alms to the poor. Beggars usually “rent” infants and toddlers to gain more sympathy from those giving alms.

Jafar added that using other people’s infants to beg was a form of child exploitation, which went against the 2002 Law on Child Protection.

Your comments:

This situation is a reflection that the government has failed to eradicate the poverty in this state. It is so ironic. A country that has abundant natural resources is becoming a crippled state. The causal factors are mismanaging, corruption, etc.

Adank
Riau

The real problem is that 200 million people have lost their traditional occupations and the rich ecosystem from which their lives depended on for generations. It is being exploited and destroyed, so they are forced to live “modern” lives, but there are no real jobs and development in the rural areas other than being slaves to private companies backed by the government, so they have no choice but to find jobs in the cities.

You want to solve the so-called “urbanization problem”? Start doing real development in rural areas, and then they won’t have to come to the cities.

Fox
Jakarta

Letter: Invest in education, not tower

According to the news media, Saudi Arabia’s Prince Alwaleed bin Talal plans to build the world’s tallest building in Jeddah less than two years after the Burj Khalifa opened in Dubai.

An investment firm agreed to a US$1.2 billion deal to build the Kingdom Tower, which would exceed three thousand feet and be the world’s tallest building.

The reality is that, due to a lack of spending on education and research, the Muslim and Arab world is passing through worst stages of its history.

Poverty, hunger, political uncertainty and a lack of medical facilities have become part and parcel of the lives of their people. Several African countries are also passing through the worst drought in modern history.

Due to a lack of higher education and research facilities, thousand of young talented people are going to western countries in search of better futures and jobs. Modern countries are getting the benefit of their talents and abilities.

According to UNESCO’s latest figures, Islamic Asian countries spend less than 0.1 percent of their total income on research work, which is five times less than African countries, which are spending 0.5 percent of their total income.

No universities in Islamic countries are included in world top 500 universities. The realty is that the world’s tallest building in Dubai will not stop the downfall of the Dubai economy.

Instead of spending huge amounts of money on high-rise buildings and other luxuries, higher spending on education, universities and research centers can provide better opportunities to younger generations and can also bring economic revolution in Islamic countries.

Khawaja Umer Farooq
Jeddah

Letter: Time for a rethink of the Papua strategy

The threat of the military approach in Papua (The Jakarta Post online, Aug. 4) only further alienates Papuans from the rest of the country and adds fuel to the fire.

If a crime has been committed, then it should be a police matter, not an excuse for more military offensives to antagonize and intimidate more communities. And who is it that always automatically labels perpetrators of any violence as “separatist rebels”?

It is in their interest to justify their continued activities in the province to keep labeling even common criminals as “separatist rebels”. Just like in the 1960s when anyone Soeharto didn’t like was, without any evidence, labeled a “communist” and killed or exiled. Now the TNI labels them “separatist rebels”, often without any evidence.

Papuans have a good reason to feel they are being treated as third-class citizens in a country with so much of its focus and spending in the western half of the archipelago. There are still those in Jakarta that see Papua as a colony to be exploited. Whilst those attitudes persist, Papuans will understandably carry resentment and weigh up their options.

Papuans only need look across the border into what they see as a proud, prosperous and independent Papua New Guinea, where their fellow Papuan traditional landowners share directly in the benefits of the mining boom. No amount of military crackdown in Papua Province will kill off the hopes and aspirations of the Papuan people, rather, only encourage them to “think outside the box” that they find themselves in.

A far better strategy would be to pull the military out of their current provocative role and for the civilian government to pay a lot more attention to building a strong community through genuine sharing in the benefits of development.

Under Indonesian law, Papua’s provinces have a right to autonomy, but they keep saying it is not working and they are still being dictated.

Former president Abdurrahman “Gus Dur” Wahid started a whole new positive mood in Papua. Megawati became captive of the TNI and allowed a reversal of the Gus Dur process and things drifted back to the Soeharto era military strategy. And SBY has allowed things to just drift along as the TNI wishes.

It is time to start treating Papuans and Papua with greater respect and equality, as partners, as brothers and sisters in RI. Building a proud and happy community will be the only way to win over Papuans from thinking greater autonomy or even independence. So why not start now.

Nairdah
Sydney

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Company distributed Rp 16 b to lawmakers: Witness

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Wed, 08/10/2011 9:30 PM

An employee of Muhammad Nazaruddin’s company testified that she distributed Rp 16 billion (US$1.87 million) to members of the House of Representatives to secure the athlete’s village development project for his company.

The testimony was given by Yulianis, deputy financial director of Permai Group, mother company of Nazaruddin’s business, before the Corruption Court on Wednesday.

She was presented as a witness for defendant Mindo Rosa Manulang, a marketing director of PT Anak Negeri, sa ubsidiary of Permai Group.

Rosa allegedly helped fix a bid to secure a contract for PT Duta Graha Indah (DGI) in a project commissioned by the Youth and Sports Affairs Ministry.

She was arrested red-handed along with the ministry’s secretary Wafid Muharam and marketing manager of PT DGI Mohammad El Idris when handing over bribes.

Yulianis said the money was distributed in several phases during April to September 2010. She said she disbursed US$1.1 million, Rp 3 billion and Rp 500 million to Wafid, Rp 150 to a person identified as Paulus, another Rp 50 million to Wafid, Rp 100 million for South Sumatra Public Works Agency and Rp 150 million to a person identified as Wesler.

She could not recall the other recipients.

Nazaruddin’s arrest the dawn of corruption eradication: Anas

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Wed, 08/10/2011 8:28 PM

Democratic Party chairman Anas Urbaningrum says that graft suspect Muhammad Nazarrudin’s arrest is just the beginning of corruption eradication in the country.

“This is an important beginning for a just and transparent legal process,” Anas said on Wednesday as quoted by kompas.com.

Anas said the Democratic Party would not interfere with the law in regards to a bribery case centering on the construction of the 2011 SEA Games athletes’ dormitory, in which Nazaruddin has been named a suspect.

However, Nazaruddin has alleged that Anas and other senior members of the party were also involved in the case.

Former party treasurer Nazaruddin was arrested in Cartagena, Colombia, on Sunday, after more than two months on the run from Indonesian authorities.

KPK gets Nazaruddin first: Police

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Wed, 08/10/2011 7:43 PM

The National Police said that graft suspect Muhammad Nazaruddin would be handed over to the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) after he arrived in Indonesia.

“Nazaruddin’s arrest was initially the demand of KPK. Therefore, we will send Nazaruddin to the KPK,” National Police spokesman Insp. Gen. Anton Bachrul Alam said on Wednesday.

Anton’s statement means the National Police Criminal Investigation Division would have to wait before it could have Nazaruddin testify in several cases such as the police investigation of Nazaruddin in relation to defamation accusations from Democratic Party chairman Anas Urbaningrum.

Nazaruddin is also suspected of using his cousin’s passport to flee the country and is mentioned in corruption cases involving the National Education Ministry and the Health Ministry that are being investigated by the police.

Anton said the police would wait for the KPK’s legal processes before pursuing its own questioning of Nazaruddin.

Anton added that he was confident the KPK would cooperate with the police in terms of where Nazaruddin would be detained.

Nazaruddin is a suspect in a high-profile bribery case linked to the 2011 SEA Games and was arrested by Colombian Police and Interpol in Cartagena, Colombia, on Sunday. He was later transferred to Bogota. A team of law enforcers and ministry officials was formed to facilitate his repatriation.