September 9, 2014 edition
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Sidelines
Shane
Sidelines
A stranger arrives on horseback at a homesteading community in a Wyoming valley in 1889. His appearance is unusual. He had a 'haunting' look, a child who was watching him says, "chilling in his dark solitude."
The man is not armed, but looks as though he is familiar with pistols and guns. He does not talk much. Always on guard. Always alert. Danger implicit in everything he does.
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Interview
ADRIANUS Meliala-a member of the National Police Commission (Kompolnas)-nervously stroked his hair, scratched his face, stared at his hands and stammered when he spoke. "I never knew it would turn out so bad. What will Kompolnas do to me?" he asked.
The public was recently shocked by his statement in a television interview last month that two police officers assigned to the West Java Police Crime Unit had been indicted for the crime of gambling online. Even more astounding was his revelation that the same Crime Unit was an ATM (cash machine) for police officers. When other sections needed money, they always came to this unit for help. "Like it or not, we must admit that the police has indeed been involved in shenanigans," said Adrianus in the interview.
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Arts
In a walled-off alcove within the Salihara Gallery in South Jakarta, visitors entered the darkened space and were riveted by disturbing images of animated cats performing various activities with blood pouring from their empty eye sockets.
It was a good thing that one of the artists, Maythee Noijinda, was on hand to give the audience a short background to the work. Twelve Cats, animation was inspired by a Thai folk tale about 12 women who have their eyes taken out by a giant who then locks them up and tortures them in a cave. Maythee and her colleague, Yuree Kensaku, changed the female characters into cats and served up a fantasy world full of nightmares. "The artists' new animal characters are both lovely and painful at the same time," said the blurb in the catalog.
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Diplomatic Bag
Indonesia and Singapore finalized a treaty on the delimitation of territorial seas in the eastern part of the Singapore Strait. The agreement was signed by Foreign Affairs Minister Marty Natalegawa and his Singaporean counterpart K. Shanmugam on August 2 in Singapore. President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, on an official three-day visit to the city-state, oversaw the signing of the agreement together with Lee Hsien Loong, Singapore's prime minister.
"The treaty was on the border of the eastern part of the Strait of Singapore segment I, because the border on the western part had been agreed upon," Marty said. He added that the agreement on the western part had been signed in 2009.
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On The Record
The deadline for the ASEAN Economic Community (AEC) is looming. In just a few months, there will be a freer flow of labor, services, investment and goods between the ten Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) member states. But so far, there have been few serious discussions on how this policy of regional economic integration will impact on the people.
To address this concern, the International Labor Organisation (ILO) and the Asian Development Bank (ADB) launched a report titled ASEAN Community 2015: Managing Integration for Better Jobs and Shared Prosperity in Jakarta two weeks ago, which highlights the demographic and employment trends in ASEAN.
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Weekly Business
MINING
Newmont Can Begin Exporting This Week
The government has given Newmont Nusa Tenggara the green light to begin exporting copper concentrate from its Batu Hijau mine on the island of Sumbawa this week. A memorandum of understanding (MoU) on a new working contract with the company was expected be completed soon. "The negotiations will not take long," said R. Sukhyar, the Energy and Mineral Resources Ministry's directo-general of minerals and coal, said last week. "This week, Newmont will be able to export."
Newmont Can Begin Exporting This Week