Monday, October 31, 2011

Public complains over Komodo SMS charges

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Mon, 10/31/2011 1:11 PM

The Indonesian Telecommunications Regulatory Body (BRTI) says it has received numerous complaints from members of the public who were charged to vote for Komodo Island in the New7Wonders contest via SMS, a service that was initially touted as free.

At the beginning of the campaign, voting by SMS was said to be free of charge, but apparently cost the sender between Rp 1,000 (11 U.S. cents) and Rp 1,500 per SMS, before the fee was later cut to Rp 1 per SMS over the past three weeks, BRTI member Heru Sutadi said Monday.

“We received complaints regarding Komodo SMS [votes] from the public, who feel they have been wronged," Heru told tempointeraktif.com on Sunday.

He added that the Komodo SMS voting service was provided by Mobilink, in partnership with Indonesia's largest cell phone operator, Telkomsel, among others.

“We will summon Mobilink to question them on the matter. The management must return any funds allegedly taken from the public because it was earlier said to be free,” Heru said.

Sunday, October 30, 2011

VP inspects SEA Games preparations in Jakarta

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Mon, 10/31/2011 1:04 PM

Vice President Boediono on Monday inspected a number of sport facilities in Jakarta to be used in the upcoming SEA Games 2011.

During the inspection, Boediono visited Kelapa Gading Sports Hall basket ball courts, Rawamangun Velodrome and Bung Karno Sporting Complex, which is set to host athletics, soft ball, archery, karate and wushu, among other sports.

The Vice President also met several Indonesian athletes to check their preparedness ahead of the regional sports event.

During the inspection, Boediono was accompanied by chief welfare minister Agung Laksono and Jakarta Governor Fauzi Bowo.

Earlier, Boediono had examined the SEA Games facilities in Jakabaring, Palembang.

The 26th SEA Games is scheduled to be opened on Nov. 11 and will run until Nov. 22, featuring 44 sports and offering a total of 542 gold medals, Antara reported.

SEA Games torch arrives in Makassar

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Mon, 10/31/2011 1:44 PM

The 2011 SEA Games torch arrived in Makassar on Monday after it began its journey across the country eight days ago.

The torch was lit by the “eternal flame” source in Manggarmas village in Godong, East Java, on October 23.

It then traveled to Central Java, Yogyakarta, East Nusa Tenggara and Papua before reaching the South Sulawesi capital of Makassar.

The torch was handed over by Papua SEA Games torch envoy Meli Mofu to Makassar torch envoy Arif Taufan Samsudin, at Hasanuddin Airport in Makassar, Antara reported.

Arif then handed the torch to South Sulawesi Governor Syahrul Yasin Limpo. The torch stayed at the governor’s residence for a few hours before being paraded across the city, including at Losari beach, and ended its Makassar trip at the local office of the Indonesian National Sports Committee (KONI).

The torch will later be paraded around Maluku, East Kalimantan and Jakarta before arriving in Palembang, South Sumatra, where the 26th SEA Games will be officially opened.

The regional sports event is scheduled to run from Nov. 11 to 22.

Pondok Labu flood caused by narrowing of river: Official

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Mon, 10/31/2011 1:35 PM

Floods that inundated the Pondok Labu area in Cilandak, South Jakarta, on Sunday, were likely caused by the narrowing of the nearby Krukut River, a local official says.

“There was a high intensity of rains in areas upstream, namely Depok and Bogor [West Java]. But the floods were also trigged by the narrowing [of the Krukut River], which was once 6 meters wide but has become only 2 meters wide,” Cilandak district head Sayid Ali said Monday in Jakarta.

He added the narrowing was a result of the expansion of a nearby shooting ground used by the Indonesian Navy.

“You can see it for yourself,” Sayyid said as quoted by tribunnews.com.

A total of 239 families were evacuated from Pondok Labu on Sunday when floodwaters up to 2 meters deep inundated their homes.

On Monday morning, however, the waters receded to half a meter, prompting the evacuees to return to the area to commence the cleanup.

Jakarta Governor Fauzi Bowo visited Pondok Labu during the floods and ordered that the river be dredged and land acquired in the area to support the construction of a dam that is planned to be built there next year.

Paskah has not been released: Cipinang penitentiary

Ina Parlina, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Mon, 10/31/2011 2:55 PM

Despite earlier reports, Cipinang penitentiary says it has not yet released former national development planning minister Paskah Suzetta, on parole.

“No, he has not been released,” Cipinang penitentiary chief Suharman told reporters on Monday.

Suharman asserted that there was no connection to the recent moratorium on remissions and parole for corruption and terrorism convicts.

“We do not see the link,” he said. “We have definitely not put him on parole."

Paskah was sentenced to 16 months in prison in mid-June after being found guilty of accepting Rp 600 million (US$68,400) in the form of 12 travelers' checks that were allegedly paid to win Miranda Swaray Goeltom a Bank Indonesia senior deputy governor post in 2004.

Earlier it was reported that Paskah may soon be granted parole.

Jakarta Corruption Court also sent to prison four of Paskah's colleagues from the Golkar Party, who at that time were lawmakers and members of House of  Representatives Commission IX overseeing finance. They all were sentenced to 16 months in prison.

The lawmakers are Ahmad Hafiz Zawawi, Martin Bria Seran, Bobby Suhadirman and Anthony Zeidra.

The case has also imprisoned another 23 former lawmakers from the Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P), the United Development Party (PPP) and the now-defunct army/police faction.

Various '7 billionth' babies celebrated worldwide

Associated Press, Manila, The Philippines | Mon, 10/31/2011 2:03 PM

Countries around the world are marking the world's population reaching a record 7 billion by holding lavish ceremonies for newborn infants symbolizing the milestone.

The Philippines was already celebrating the birth of baby Danica May Camacho. Photos flashed and people cheered soon after she was born at two minutes before midnight in Manila. Doctors say that was close enough to count for a Monday birthday.

While demographers are unsure exactly when the world's population will reach the seven billion mark, the U.N. is using Monday to symbolically mark the day.

"She looks so lovely," mother Camille Galura whispered as she cradled her tiny baby.

A series of symbolic 7-billionth babies are being honored in various countries.

Saturday, October 29, 2011

New law minister, deputy report wealth to KPK

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Mon, 10/31/2011 2:43 PM

Law and Human Rights Minister Amir Syamsudin and Deputy Minister Denny Indrayana on Monday visited the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) office in Jakarta to deliver wealth status reports, after both were inaugurated only recently.

“We come here to submit our wealth reports,” Amir said before entering the KPK office.

Since Yudhoyono appointed both Amir and Denny in his latest Cabinet reshuffle, the two have launched several programs, including raids on airport immigration offices and penitentiaries in Jakarta.

The ministry also recently introduced a new regulation halting the granting of remissions for corruption and terrorist convicts. (rpt)

Bangka Belitung govt wants Rp 650m for car

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Mon, 10/31/2011 2:22 PM

The government of Bangka Belitung Island has proposed to spend Rp 650 million (US$73,629) on the governor's official car.

The chief of the administration's general secretariat, Suharto, said the official vehicle would be used by the governor when he was on duty in Belitung Island.

“At present we don’t have an official car, so we need to rent a car every time an official comes to visit Belitung,” Suharto said Monday as quoted by kompas.com.

He added that Rp 600 million of the amount would be used to purchase the vehicle, and the remainder would finance the car’s service for one year.

Prya promises Jakarta a fleet of 1,000 new buses

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Mon, 10/31/2011 3:00 PM

Golkar Party member Prya Ramadhani, who is eyeing candidacy in the coming Jakarta gubernatorial election, has promised — if elected — to provide the capital with 1,000 buses to improve public transportation and reduce traffic congestion.

Prya, a member of Jakarta House of Regional Representatives (DPRD), said the buses would improve the quality of public transportation, which has long been criticized for its low service standards and quality.

“I will provide 1,000 buses. I see this as [achievable],” Prya said Monday as quoted by kompas.com.

He added that the Jakarta regional budget could afford the purchase.

“To provide 1,000 buses will cost about Rp 1 trillion (US$114 million). The Jakarta regional budget has up to Rp 4 trillion in idle funds,” he said.

Despite the promise and optimism, Prya has a long way to go before the election. Two other Golkar politicians, Tantowi Yahya and Azis Syamsudin, have also mentioned plans to run in election next year.

VP optimistic Indonesia can win SEA Games

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Mon, 10/31/2011 4:23 PM

Vice President Boediono is optimistic Indonesia can come out on top of the medal tally in the upcoming SEA Games, the biggest sporting event in the ASEAN region, which is scheduled to be held in Jakarta and Palembang, South Sumatra, from November 11 to 22.

“I see we have prepared the best for the games. God willing, we will win first position,” he said as quoted by Antara news agency.

Boediono added that winning the games as the host country may have advantages for Indonesia.

On Monday, Boediono visited several SEA Games venues in Jakarta, including the archery field at Bung Karno Sports Complex and basketball courts at the Kelapa Gading Sport Hall.

The 26th SEA Games has a total of 542 gold medals up for grabs in 44 sporting categories.

Historically, Indonesia won the medal tally when hosted the games in 1979, 1987 and 1997.

Monday, October 24, 2011

Investment trend downstream, says BKPM

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Tue, 10/25/2011 9:41 AM

The Investment Coordinating Board (BKPM) says it is currently focusing on promoting investment in Indonesia's downstream industries among efforts to boost growth in the sector.

“Aside of the growing infrastructure sector, we’re offering the downstream sector to investors because Indonesia needs a lot of processing industries,” BKPM deputy chief for promotions Himawan Hariyoga said Monday in Jakarta, as quoted by tribunnews.com.

Himawan added BKPM was planning to follow the investment trend next year, with an increasing focus on energy and downstream sectors. He also said the Board would focus particularly on offering investments in agricultural and mining processing industries.

According to BKPM data, most local investments have been in food and plantation, electricity, gas, water, publishing and mining industries.

Meanwhile, the majority of foreign investments have been in the transportation, warehouse, telecommunications, mining, electronics, electricity and pharmaceutical industries, among others.

Africans remember Qaddafi as martyr, benefactor

Associated Press, Bamako, Mali | Tue, 10/25/2011 8:31 AM

Moammar Qaddafi's regime poured tens of billions of dollars into some of Africa's poorest countries. Even when he came to visit, the eccentric Libyan leader won admiration for handing out money to beggars on the streets.

"Other heads of state just drive past here in their limousines. Qaddafi stopped, pushed away his bodyguards and shook our hands," said Cherno Diallo, standing Monday beside hundreds of caged birds he sells near a Libyan-funded hotel. "Qaddafi's death has touched every Malian, every single one of us. We're all upset."

While Western powers heralded Qaddafi's demise, many Africans were gathering at mosques built with Qaddafi's money to mourn the man they consider an anti-imperialist martyr and benefactor.

Critics, though, note this image is at odds with Qaddafi's history of backing some of Africa's most brutal rebel leaders and dictators. Qaddafi sent 600 troops to support Uganda's much-hated Idi Amin in the final throes of his dictatorship.

And Qaddafi-funded rebels supported by former Liberian leader Charles Taylor forcibly recruited children and chopped off limbs of their victims during Sierra Leone's civil war.

"Is Qaddafi's life more important than many thousands of people that have been killed during the war in these two countries?" asked one shopkeeper in the tiny West African country of Gambia, who spoke on condition of anonymity fearing recrimination.

Some analysts estimate that the Qaddafi regime invested more than $150 billion in foreign countries, most of it into impoverished African nations.

"Qaddafi was a true revolutionary who focused on improving the lives of the underdeveloped countries," said Sheik Muthal Bin-Muslim, from the Qaddafi mosque in Sierra Leone's capital that was built with Libyan funds. Muslim worshippers were planning an all-night vigil in honor of the slain Libyan leader.

In Bamako, the capital of the desert nation of Mali, one huge Libyan-funded mosque was built right next door to the U.S. Embassy.

And in Uganda, Qaddafi built a mosque that can host more than 30,000 people. Libyan-funded companies - everything from mobile phone companies to cookie factories - are valued at $375 million and employ more than 3,000 people in the small East African country. Schoolchildren and Muslim supporters lined the roads, waving Libyan flags, whenever Qaddafi visited.

"Qaddafi was a godfather to many Ugandans," said Muhammed Kazibala, a head teacher at a Libyan-funded school in the country's capital.

The Libyan leader also built a palace for one of Uganda's traditional kingdoms. It was a fitting donation for a man who traveled to African Union summits dressed in a gold-embroidered green robe, flanked by seven men who said they were the "traditional kings of Africa."

Qaddafi used Libya's oil wealth to help create the AU in 2002, and also served as its rotating chairman. During the revolt against Qaddafi, the AU condemned NATO air strikes as evidence mounted that his military was massacring civilians.

Qaddafi's influence even extended to Africa's largest economy: The Libyan leader supported the African National Congress when it was fighting racist white rule, and remained close to Nelson Mandela after the anti-apartheid icon became South Africa's first black president.

Current President Jacob Zuma also was one of the most outspoken critics of the NATO air strikes in Libya, and he told reporters he thought Qaddafi should have been captured and tried, not executed.

The ANC Youth League described Qaddafi as an "anti-imperialist martyr" and a "brave soldier and fighter against the recolonization of the African continent."

For many of Qaddafi's supporters, the military operation to oust him was another example of the Western interference and neocolonialism that he railed against.

F. Mbossa, 52, a school teacher in Brazzaville, Republic of Congo, said she was shocked by the "arrogance of the West" in carrying out the NATO air strikes.

"It's clear that France and the others never truly wanted an independent Africa and that is why they never hesitated to kill all those who advocate for a strong and unified Africa," Mbossa said with tears in her eyes. "But for Africa, Qaddafi remains a martyr."

In Central African Republic, Qaddafi sent troops to support a government confronting coup attempts and an insurgency in 2001. But he also fomented instability. He funded rebel movements that committed some of the worst human rights abuses on the continent, including the brutal civil war in Sierra Leone. Qaddafi also supplied arms, training and finance to rebels in Liberia and Gambia, and invaded Chad from 1980-1989.

Historian Stephen Ellis called Qaddafi's World Revolutionary Headquarters, just outside Benghazi, "the Harvard and Yale of a whole generation of African revolutionaries."

In the 1980s, they included Charles Taylor of Liberia and Foday Sankoh of Sierra Leone, as well as former Congolese President Laurent Kabila.

While Qaddafi won praise from some for not fleeing Libya, others chastised him for failing to see how it all would end.

In Zimbabwe, businessman Daniel Musumba said Qaddafi had been trapped by his own ego.

"For a man who was telling his people they were rats and cockroaches to end up in a drain. Who is the rat now?" he said. "But the rat needed to be captured alive."

Philippine military bombs Moro rebels

Philippine Daily Inquirer/Asia News Network, Manila | Tue, 10/25/2011 9:17 AM


The Armed Forces of the Philippines mounted an air and ground assault on a suspected position of a breakaway faction of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) following a series of rebel attacks that left at least 33 people dead, the military announced.

In the first Philippine Air Force (PAF) strikes ordered by the Aquino administration following widespread indignation at the massacre of 19 soldiers last week in Basilan, two OV-10 attack planes bombed a remote village on the edge of Payao town in Zamboanga Sibugay.

"The bombing attacks began at 11:30 a.m. today," Maj. Harold Cabunoc told reporters. "About 100 heavily armed bandits are holed up in their bunkers and running trenches."

There were no immediate reports of casualties, but the military said about 3,000 civilians had already fled the area last week.

He said a combined contingent of 200 police and military commandos on the ground were also involved in the operation.

The regional military spokesperson, Lieutenant Colonel Randolph Cabangbang, said the gunmen targeted by the air strikes were rogue MILF rebels who were involved in kidnapping and other criminal activities.

The air strikes were the first against the MILF since 2008, when the military also used aircraft to bombard followers of two rebel commanders who had launched deadly raids across Mindanao that left about 400 dead, Cabangbang said.

"This is the first time since 2008, but I would like to stress the (rebels) we are after are operating outside the control of the MILF leadership," he told Agence France-Presse.

The same group of rebels was blamed for ambushes that killed four soldiers and four policemen on Thursday.

Those rebel attacks came just two days after 19 Special Forces members were gunned down by MILF fighters after they strayed into rebel territory in Al-Barka on Basilan Island.

Five rubber plantation workers and two soldiers were killed in separate attacks on Sunday, while 200 rebels also occupied two elementary schools in remote farming villages, stealing cattle and harassing residents.

The Armed Forces of the Philippines mounted an air and ground assault on a suspected position of a breakaway faction of the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) following a series of rebel attacks that left at least 33 people dead, the military announced.

In the first Philippine Air Force (PAF) strikes ordered by the Aquino administration following widespread indignation at the massacre of 19 soldiers last week in Basilan, two OV-10 attack planes bombed a remote village on the edge of Payao town in Zamboanga Sibugay.

"The bombing attacks began at 11:30 a.m. today," Maj. Harold Cabunoc told reporters. "About 100 heavily armed bandits are holed up in their bunkers and running trenches."

There were no immediate reports of casualties, but the military said about 3,000 civilians had already fled the area last week.

He said a combined contingent of 200 police and military commandos on the ground were also involved in the operation.

The regional military spokesperson, Lieutenant Colonel Randolph Cabangbang, said the gunmen targeted by the air strikes were rogue MILF rebels who were involved in kidnapping and other criminal activities.

The air strikes were the first against the MILF since 2008, when the military also used aircraft to bombard followers of two rebel commanders who had launched deadly raids across Mindanao that left about 400 dead, Cabangbang said.

"This is the first time since 2008, but I would like to stress the (rebels) we are after are operating outside the control of the MILF leadership," he told Agence France-Presse.

The same group of rebels was blamed for ambushes that killed four soldiers and four policemen on Thursday.

Those rebel attacks came just two days after 19 Special Forces members were gunned down by MILF fighters after they strayed into rebel territory in Al-Barka on Basilan Island.

Five rubber plantation workers and two soldiers were killed in separate attacks on Sunday, while 200 rebels also occupied two elementary schools in remote farming villages, stealing cattle and harassing residents.

'Lawless elements'

Armed Forces Chief of Staff Gen. Eduardo Oban Jr.  said in a press briefing Monday night in Camp Aguinaldo that an operation in Basilan was targeting “lawless elements,” avoiding mentioning the MILF which has assumed responsibility for the ambush in Al-Barka.

"We have crafted a deliberate and calibrated response, we just have to couple this with good intelligence work," said Oban who faced reporters for the first time since the ambush.

But he reiterated that the military would uphold the ceasefire agreement with the MILF, which required the government to "coordinate" any armed operation in recognized MILF camps.
When asked if troops would pursue the targets inside the MILF "area of temporary stay" in Al-Barka, Oban replied: "As long as they are lawless elements, we will pursue them wherever they are."

"The pursuit is a clear directive of the President. We were given an instruction to pursue lawless elements. That is the directive. We have to give appropriate resources towards that end," he said.

MILF hits operation

MILF spokesperson Von Al Haq denounced the military operations as a violation of the ceasefire agreement.

"There are hard-headed people inside the military. With this new action, they are making the situation worse," he said, adding that innocent people were put at risk.

He insisted that any move against MILF forces facing criminal cases should be directed to the Coordinating Committee on the Cessation of Hostilities.

The air strikes happened as the International Monitoring Team and other peace groups were on their way to Zamboanga Sibugay to investigate the weekend incidents, according to Al Haq.

Lieutenant General Raymundo Ferrer, head of the Western Mindanao Command (Westmincom), said in a statement the military and police would continue joint operations in Zamboanga Sibugay against the MILF faction of  Waning Abdulsalam, which was blamed for the killings of eight soldiers and policemen.

Ferrer said Abdulsalam “should be brought to justice for all the past kidnappings and extortions done by him and his group. The clamor of the people from Zamboanga Sibugay is to end Abdulsalam’s notoriety,” said the Westmincom chief.

4,000 flee homes

The attacks in Zamboanga Sibugay happened just two days after the 19 soldiers were killed in Al-Barka town in Basilan province. The troops were in Al-Barka to arrest a local MILF commander, Dan Ansawi, when they clashed with rebel forces.

Officials said some 1,200 families, or at least 4,000 individuals, had fled their homes in Al-Barka. Basilan Vice Governor Al Rasheed Sakalahul led the distribution of relief supplies to the evacuees sheltering with their relatives or scattered on roadsides.

Taha Katoh, the chairman of Tumahubong Agrarian Reform Beneficiaries Development Cooperative Inc., said Abu Sayyaf bandits, not MILF troops, ambushed and killed five of its workers on Sunday after extortion demands of P50,000 monthly were ignored.

During the meeting of the government-MILF Coordinating Committee on the Cessation of Hostilities (CCCH) and the Ad Hoc Joint Action Group (AHJAG) on Saturday in Davao City, the military demanded that the MILF surrender a commander, Laksaw-Dan Asnawi, and five of his men who led the ambush in Al-Barka.

The military also demanded that the MILF surrender Abu Sayyaf leaders Furuji Indama and Long Malat who were believed to be in the MILF’s custody and who were also involved in the ambush in Al-Barka.
The military also demanded that the MILF turn over Abdulsalam, a notorious kidnap gang leader who is the target of the ongoing military offensives in Zamboanga Sibugay, and Putot Jakaria and Ogis Jakaria who have pending murder cases.

Peace mechanism

In an interview, Brigadier General Ariel Bernardo, head of the government panel in the CCCH, said the military would coordinate with their counterparts and continue to respect the peace negotiations.

"They are amenable to using the peace mechanism," Bernardo replied when asked for the MILF’s reaction. When asked what the military would do if the MILF would refuse to comply, he said: "Let’s not speculate because these things are under the joint agreement."

"We will not go in there unilaterally…The target has to be clearly identified. You cannot wage war with everyone. We’ll be guided by the AHJAG teams," Bernardo said.

Colonel Arnulfo Burgos, the AFP spokesperson, said the military wanted the MILF to turn over the wanted rebels "as soon as possible, otherwise the military will pursue them within the framework of the peace mechanism."

Vice President Jejomar Binay said the government should review the ceasefire agreement to ensure that those behind last week’s attacks were brought to justice.

"What I can tell you is that there will be a lot more action coming from the President," he said.

Senator Gregorio Honasan said hot pursuit should be raised as part of the government’s “automatic procedural response” against perpetrators of attacks.

"Let’s not view this in the context of the peace negotiations. (The massacre) was a violation of the ceasefire," he said. 

With reports from AFP; Julie S. Alipala and Jeoffrey Maitem, Inquirer Mindanao; and Dona Z. Pazzibugan, Philip C. Tubeza and Cathy Yamsuan in Manila.

PLN: Dahlan set to appoint replacement director

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Tue, 10/25/2011 10:16 AM

Newly installed State Owned Enterprises Minister Dahlan Iskan is scheduled to officially announce a candidate president director of state electricity firm PT PLN on Tuesday.

“I already have a name and we will announce it Tuesday,” Dahlan said Monday as quoted by tempointeraktif.com.

Dahlan, who is the former director of PLN, said he had to find a replacement as soon as possible because if the position was left vacant for too long it could disrupt the company's internal stability and interfere with its services to the public.

Earlier, Dahlan confirmed that his replacement was already a member of PLN staff and that other staff had  accepted the government decision to replace Dahlan.

Inequality a thorny issue in ITU Telecom World

Damar Harsanto, The Jakarta Post, Geneva, Switzerland | Tue, 10/25/2011 12:23 PM

As the world economy is grapples with nagging discontent over the unequal distribution of wealth to a fortunate 1 percent, some telecom governmental bigwigs and industrial heavyweights gathering at the 2011 Telecom World in Geneva, Switzerland have contended to the monstrosity of the widening gap between of the haves and have-nots, and vowed to take this issue seriously during the three-day conference.

UN Agency International Telecommunication Union (ITU) secretary-general Dr Hamadoun I. Touré said superfast Internet connections and broadband would be among the key vehicles in the technological revolution.

"Broadband will revolutionize the lives of everyone, everywhere. It will help deliver radical improvements in healthcare, education, transportation, utility supplies and government services," Touré said Monday in the opening speech for the Broadband Leadership Summit, one of the programs at the conference.

Touré added that broadband would also help accelerate efforts to meet the Millennium Development Goals.

However, he said, the risk ahead is "a world of broadband rich and broadband poor."

"We must therefore step up our efforts to make access to broadband networks and services equitable and affordable for all world’s people wherever they live and whatever their means," he asserted.

World No. 1 billionaire Carlos Slim Helu, the chairman of Grupo Carso, who also attends the conference, voiced a similar view.

The Mexican magnate said that people, rich and poor or those living in urban and rural areas, as well as businesses, big and small, should benefit from the use of fast Internet.

"We need to look for best practices worldwide [during the summit]," he said.

At least 250 world leaders ranging from heads of state and officials, city mayors, telco industry CEOs and technology gurus attend this year's first forum of the ITU Telecom World.

Rwandan President Paul Kagame whose video speech was run in the opening ceremony also highlighted issues of inequality.

"For a long time, many countries have been unable to effectively participate or contribute in the digital economy simply because of their limited access to broadband. It is our duty to build broadband infrastructure to meet the needs of our citizens," Kagame said.

"We need broadband to improve education and  healthcare and to boost tomorrow's economy," he added.

ITU along with UNESCO has established last year the Broadband Commission for Digital Development.

ITU secretary-general Touré said the commission had met on Monday and had agreed to create measurable broadband targets covering in particular the issues of affordability and uptake.

"The affordability target sets a maximum percentage of monthly income as a target for broadband access; and the uptake targets set minimum desired thresholds for households with Internet access, and Internet penetration as a whole," Touré said.

"We will measure progress annually and publish country rankings to quantify and evaluate broadband progress around the globe," he added.

He asserted that all discussions should serve and focus on the main goal, which is to put broadband at the service of sustainable social and economic development.

"I'd like to see a world where we replicate the mobile miracle of the past decade for broadband, a world where individuals rich and poor can be connected to the global knowledge society, a world where what matters is human ingenuity, not simply where you were born, or how wealthy your parents were," he said.

Beside government institutions, some industry leaders taking part in the conference include Huawei Technologies Co., Alcatel-Lucent, Cisco, Ericsson, Fujitsu, Intel, NTT Group, NTT DoCoMo, Qtel, RIM, Satorys, Swisscom, Telkom SA, Turk Telecom, TDIA, and ZTE.

Prosecutor Cirus Sinaga gets 5 years in jail

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Tue, 10/25/2011 12:40 PM

Jakarta Corruption Court judges have found prosecutor Cirus Sinaga guilty of obstructing the course of justice and sentenced him to five years' imprisonment, with a fine of Rp 150 million (US$16,950) or an extra three months in prison.

“We find defendant Cirus Sinaga officially and convincingly guilty of indirectly obstructing the investigation, prosecution and court hearing of a corruption case,” chief judge Albertina Ho said in court on Tuesday as quoted by tempointeraktif.com.

The sentence is slightly less than the prosecutors' demand for six years' imprisonment and Rp 150 million in fines.

Cirus made headlines last year when notorious former tax officer Gayus Tambunan, who is serving a prison sentence of his own and who was on trial for multiple other charges, announced that he had paid Cirus a $50,000 bribe to drop the graft charges against him.

Oil hovers above $91 ahead of Europe debt plan

Associated Press, Singapore | Tue, 10/25/2011 10:54 AM

Oil prices hovered above $91 a barrel Tuesday in Asia as investors await details of Europe's plan to contain its debt crisis.

Benchmark crude for December delivery was up 17 cents at $91.44 a barrel at midmorning Singapore time in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. he contract rose $3.87, or 4.4 percent, to settle at $91.27 in New York on Monday.

Brent crude was down 20 cents at $111.25 a barrel on the ICE Futures Exchange in London.

Oil has jumped 21 percent in three weeks amid growing investor optimism that European leaders will devise a plan to limit the damage from a possible default of Greek sovereign debt. Details of the plan are expected to be announced Wednesday.

"Although the euro zone debt issue remains quite murky, the market appears to be pricing in a viable resolution to this crisis," energy consultant Ritterbusch and Associates said in a report. "Wednesday's EU summit could still bring some bearish news if a comprehensive debt plan is not forthcoming."

Crude has also rebounded this month because of signs global economic growth may not slow as much as some investors had previously expected. China, which has led global commodity demand growth in recent years, sad Monday manufacturing likely improved in October from September.

Last week, China said its economy grew 9.1 percent in the third quarter.

"We continue to grow more positive on the outlook for China's commodity import demand over the remainder of the year," Barclays Capital said in a report. "Improving evidence from the macroeconomic front for October are in line with our soft landing assumptions."

In other Nymex trading, heating oil fell 1.1 cents to $3.04 per gallon and gasoline futures slid 1.0 cent at $2.66 per gallon. Natural gas was steady at $3.61 per 1,000 cubic feet.

Sunday, October 23, 2011

Katy Perry plans Jakarta debut

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Tue, 10/25/2011 10:10 AM

US singer Katy Perry has confirmed plan to hold a concert in Jakarta early next year. On her verified Twitter account, @katyperry, she says the concert will take place on Jan. 19.

“INDONESIA! I'm FINALLY coming to see you January 19th,” Perry announced Monday.

Ismaya Live is reportedly the concert promoter. At the time of writing, however, it was unclear when and where the concert would be held. Ticketing information was also unavailable.

Eurozone to boost bailout fund

Associated Press, Berlin | Tue, 10/25/2011 7:44 AM

The 17-nation eurozone is set to shore up its bailout fund to contain the debt turmoil that threatens to engulf more countries across Europe, and German lawmakers said the plan could boost the fund's lending capacity to more than (euro) 1 trillion ($1.39 trillion).

A document obtained by The Associated Press shows the currency zone wants to boost the (euro) 440 billion ($600 billion) bailout fund by offering sovereign bond buyers an insurance against possible losses and by attracting capital from private investors and sovereign wealth funds.

Eurozone governments hope that the enhanced European Financial Stability Fund, or EFSF, will be able to protect countries such as Italy and Spain from being engulfed in the debt crisis. To do that, however, it needs to be bigger or see its lending powers magnified.

Leading German opposition lawmakers, who were briefed earlier Monday by Chancellor Angela Merkel on the plan, said the fund's lending capacity will be boosted "beyond (euro) 1 trillion" ($1.39 trillion).

But the draft document by the eurozoe working group - which Germany's government was sharing with key lawmakers Monday - did not provide a headline figure for the bailout fund, stressing "a more precise number on the extent of leverage can only be determined after contacts with potential investors" and rating agencies.

Because of the move's significance, members of Merkel's party proposed that the change receive full parliamentary approval on Wednesday - although it would have been enough for the parliament's budget committee to approve the plan.

The changes look likely to pass by a wide margin in Germany's parliament.

Lawmakers will vote only ours before an EU summit in Brussels that is set to adopt the new rules for the EFSF.

The enhanced bailout fund rules are meant to guarantee "continued market access of euro area member states under pressure and the proper functioning of the sovereign debt market," the document said.

Therefore the EFSF is set to have the ability to provide investors with a partial insurance against losses from its member states' government bonds, thus making them a safer and more attractive investment.

The eurozone document also foresees setting up one or several special investment vehicles that would partly compensate possible losses on sovereign bonds in a bid to attract outside investors such as sovereign wealth funds, combining "public and private capital to enlarge the resources available."

The draft document stressed that the EFSF would "benefit from the flexibility to deploy both options, which are not mutually exclusive."

The insurance model is designed to increase the demand for newly issued eurozone government bonds, lower the yields, "thereby supporting the sustainability of public finances," the document said.

Lowering the yields for troubled eurozone governments is a key step to counter the widening debt crisis because spiraling yields on debt issued by Greece, Portugal and Ireland eventually cut them off from market financing, forcing the eurozone to provide those nations with an emergency loan package.

In the event of a default, "the investor could surrender the partial protection certificate" and "receive payment in kind with an EFSF bond," the document said, referring to the insurance model.

The new investment facility, a so-called Special Investment Purpose Investment Vehicle (SPIV), is meant to create "additional liquidity and market capacity to extend loans, for bank recapitalization via a member state and for buying bonds in the primary and secondary market," the eurozone draft document said.

Any assistance from the fund for member states, however, would come with tough strings attached and the "appropriate monitoring and surveillance procedures," the document said.

Greece, for example, must implement harsh austerity measures in return for last year's (euro) 110 billion bailout.

Beefing up the EFSF is one part of a three-pronged eurozone plan to solve the crisis.

The other two parts are reducing Greece's debt burden so the country eventually can stand on its own and forcing banks to raise more money so they can take losses on the Greek debt and ride out the financial storm that will entail.

Greece's private bondholders agreed in July to accept losses of 21 percent on their holdings, and getting them to take deeper losses to lighten the country's debt load is proving particularly difficult.

Experts agree that Greece needs to write off more of its debt - German officials have said up to 50 or 60 percent - if it is ever to make it out of its debt hole.

But many say such a deal with private creditors needs to be voluntary. Imposing sharp losses against the banks through a so-called haircut could trigger massive bond insurance payments that could cause panic on financial markets.

Charles Dallara, managing director of a global banking lobby group currently negotiating a wider Greek debt reduction with eurozone officials in Brussels, cautioned that "there are limits to what could be considered as voluntary."

He insisted that any approach not based on cooperative discussions but unilateral actions would be tantamount to a Greek default, isolating the country for years from capital markets.

"It would also likely have severe contagion effects, which would cost the European and the world economy dearly in terms of employment and growth," Dallara said in a statement.

The European Central Bank, meanwhile, has been taking on the role of firefighter by buying the bonds of financially weakened governments on the open market. That keeps the bond prices up and the rates down, allowing the countries to borrow on financial markets at lower rates than they otherwise could.

The ECB said it bought (euro) 4.5 billion ($6.3 billion) in government bonds last week. That was up from (euro) 2.2 billion the week before, bringing the total of sovereign bonds held by the ECB to (euro) 169.5 billion.

The ECB hopes it will be able to stop the bond-buying program once the bailout fund's new powers are active.

Batam stands out in housing management, says minister

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Tue, 10/25/2011 11:59 AM

Public Housing Minister Djan Faridz says Batam has set good example in how to manage the housing industry, particularly in providing good access to available land and affordable public apartments.

Djan added that the management of the industry was in line with the government’s efforts to provide decent housing for all people.

“Low-cost apartments are the answer to the question of how the government can provide decent housing facilities,” Djan said Tuesday as quoted by kompas.com.

Batam government was also a recent recipient of the Adi Upaya Puritama Award for its inspiring role in providing affordable rental apartments for the public in the Mukakuning region.