maaf email atau password anda salah
There is a Malay word that has changed along with history: daulat.
In times gone by, Malay subjects would accede to a request by the sultan with the phrase, 'Daulat, Tuanku', meaning 'My Sovereign Lord'. In that phrase, the word 'daulat' implies a relationship with His Highness. But today the word daulat is used as an idiom to refer to the opposite direction: to the people. "The head of the group is requested (didaulat) by the audience to come up on stage and sing."
NOT so long ago Home Affairs Minister Gamawan Fauzi was a student busy preparing his dissertation, something he has been doing over the past year. On weekends, he would work on his quantitative researchdisseminating questionnairesand analyzing them, mainly for his doctoral dissertation, titled 'The Impact of Direct Local Elections on Corruption among Local Chief Executives in Indonesia' which he has now completed. "I defended it last month," he said, with a tone of relief.
On Tuesday last week at his office in Central Jakarta, Gamawan met with Tempo and proudly showed off his 400-page opus, a requirement to complete his doctoral degree program from the State Institute of Public Administration. "It's not the thickness that matters, but my passion to keep on studying," he said.
Jennifer Lindsay*
Indonesia has a new President- and Vice President- elect. One speaks Indonesian with a marked Javanese accent, Central Javanese to be precise. The other speaks with an Eastern Indonesian accentSulawesi, to be precise. The outgoing President and Vice President both speak Indonesian with slight Javanese accents.
Sowhat is a Javanese accent? It is a question of intonationand also a particular way of pronouncing certain consonants, particularly 'd' and 't', with the tongue immediately behind the teeth. It is also heard in the tendency to wipe all diphthongs (so ram not ramai) and in the open 'o' sound. Listen to the way President-elect Joko Widodo pronounces his name, 'Widodo'. The 'o' is pronounced halfway between an 'o' as in 'or' and a' as in 'ah', and the 'd' is right at the front of the mouth. His name is not Indonesian but Javanese, of course, so indeed that is how it should be pronounced, but many Indonesians of Javanese background carry this same pronunciation into Indonesian in general. He does. They also tend to speak Indonesian (formally at least) using a relatively narrow pitch range.
The waters south of Java were ground zero for a tsunami preparedness drill in which more than 20 countries, including Indonesia, participated last week.
The two-day exercise was intended to test the extensive prediction, detection, analysis and communication systems that have been put in place since 2004, when a massive earthquake struck off Sumatra's west coast and claimed around 300,000 lives.
The recent Sixth UN Global Forum on the Alliance of Civilizations, which is aimed at mobilizing action against extremism through the forging of international, intercultural and interreligious dialogue, brought together world leaders and luminaries to Bali, venue of the conference. Among them was 60-year-old John Ashe, an Antiguan national who currently chairs the 68th United Nations General Assembly. Ashe, who holds a doctorate in bioengineering, is no stranger to global affairs, having been involved with the UN since 1989, at first working in his country's permanent representative office and subsequently serving in various UN agencies and as his country's ambassador, before taking up his current posting. He spoke to Tempo English reporter, Yuli Ismartono, on a number of global issues. Excerpts:
PERTAMINA's intention of becoming a world-class company by 2025 could flounder. A number of its overseas investments have not yielded the hoped-for results. In fact, investments in foreign oil fields were expected to boost Pertamina's production to 2.2 million barrels of oil equivalent per day (boepd) by 2025.
In 2025, Pertamina targets production capacity of 900,000 barrels from domestic fields and 600,000 barrels from its overseas expansion. "The rest will come from increases in participatory rights and elsewhere," Pertamina spokesman Ali Mundakir said last week.
FOR a philologista person who studies literary textssuch as Suryadi, 49, the Library of the University of Leiden, Holland, is like the cave full of treasures in A Thousand and One Nights. How could it not be, with thousands of ancient manuscripts from Indonesia. This is where Suryadi found old Minangkabau manuscripts such as Syair Sunur, which he perused to write a thesis for his master's degree from the Leiden in 2002. He also discovered the Poetry of Mecca and Medina, said to be the first Malay-language book on haj pilgrimages rites.
"In my article for the festschrift (a book of contributed writings) of Professor Taufik Abdullah (History and Dialogue of Civilization: Contributions on 70 Years of Prof. Dr. Taufik Abdullah), I called this work of poetry the world's first haj pilgrimage rites book written in Malay," Suryadi told Tempo.
Sidney Jones*
Ayman Al-Zawahiri's announcement last week that al-Qaeda had established a new franchise on the Indian subcontinent will have little effect on Southeast Asia. It is the Islamic State (IS), formerly known as ISIL or ISIS, that is the problem for Indonesia, because unlike al-Qaeda, it is attracting young people by social media and because many of its supporters here support violence at home.
Does that mean we can safely ignore al-Qaeda India? Not necessarily, because it raises some interesting questions about where extremism in Indonesia is headed. We can start by looking at al-Qaeda's historic links to Indonesia and how they have evolved.
Hivos, a Dutch humanitarian agency, is planning a biogas project for Sumba Island, East Nusa Tenggara. From August 31 to September 6, Hivos sent two expedition teams to chart suitable areas for bio-digester installations on the 11,153-square-kilometer island.
"Our main reason is to open access to a renewable source of energy on this third-poorest island in Indonesia," Hivos spokesperson Dewi Suciati said in a press conference at Hotel Grand Kemang in South Jakarta.
TOWARDS the end of the House of Representatives' (DPR) five-year term, the legislators are creating one big controversy. People are protesting over the Local Elections (Pilkada) Bill, which seeks to return the local election system to the old one by which local chief executives would be selected by the regional councils (DPRD).
Even though the legislation is still in the planning stage, the conflict between the two groups in the DPR indicates the rivalry between the Red and White Coalition against the parties led by the Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P) has not ended. The Red and White Coalition wants elections via the DPRD while the 'other side' want to retain direct elections of local leaders. It is, moreover, clear that the Pilkada Bill was launched because of the need to dominate power, not to comply with the people's wishes.
THE Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) is combing through money flows related to allegations against Energy and Mineral Resources Minister Jero Wacik. Antigraft investigators recently questioned Presidential Special Staff of Communication Daniel Sparringa, Indopos Chief Editor Don Kardono, Jero's subordinates at the Energy Ministry and a teller at the Jakarta Thamrin branch of Mandiri bank. "They are being interrogated as witnesses," KPK deputy Bambang Widjojanto said.
A source at the KPK said Kardono was being investigated because he was suspected of involvement in a 2012 public relations project that cost around Rp1 billion. "It was related to dissemination efforts ahead of the oil-based fuel (OBF) price hike," the source said. Kardono denied receiving money from the Energy Ministry. He also said he had never met Jero.
What's the Use of the BJPS?
I have been a registered Class I participant of the Social Insurance Organizing Body (BPJS) since July, paying monthly dues of Rp59,500 for what the BPJS assured me was a guarantee for all my medical examinations. I suffer from hypothyroidism. My doctor has advised me to take a blood test every three months.
Seven men strolled through the fog along the main road in Kudu Ganting village, Padang Pariaman regency, West Sumatra. Dressed in sarongs, they were heading for the community security post (poskamling). That night was their turn to guard the hamlet. Muhammad Yani arranged the next watch after they arrived at the location. He assigned four people to go on foot patrol, while the others kept watch at the post.
The poskamling post is located at the entry point of the residential area on the main road. Rice fields and a few homes lie nearby. This stilt structure measures about five-by-six meters. Youths often gather there in the early afternoon. While conducting their daily activities, they also guard the road into the hamlet.
BASUKI Tjahaja 'Ahok' Purnama resigned as a member of the Great Indonesia Movement (Gerindra) Party on Wednesday last week. Ahok, the acting governor of Jakarta, said he could not go along with Gerindra's push to eliminate direct elections for governors, regents and mayors across Indonesia. "Because I disagree, I submitted my resignation," he said.
Prabowo Subianto, the chairman of Gerindra's Board of Patrons, said he respected Ahok's decision. "Joining or leaving a party is a political right. Why would I resent that?" he said at the home of Golkar Advisory Board Chairman Akbar Tandjung on Wednesday last week. Prabowo, who lost the presidential race in July, said he had not yet received Ahok's letter of resignation.
A Sia's wide circle of acquaintances was evident when Tempo tried to approach the owner of Delta Asia Sekawan on Thursday two weeks ago, when the Pontianak Court was hearing his case. Before reaching A Sia, who was waiting for the session to begin, a senior journalist blocked Tempo from getting any closer. "No interviews, he'll get angry," the journalist said. A Sia, who was looking on, merely smiled and waved.
The police's willingness to raid A Sia's sugar warehouse, arrest him and bring him to trial has been widely praised. A Sia had been thought to be above the law. His network includes bureaucrats, politicians and journalists.
THE home of businessman Soetrisno Bachir in South Jakarta, was enlivened by the banter among the guests on the night before the end of Lebaran, last July. Their chat in a room adjacent to the swimming pool was about candidates for cabinet positions. Joko Widodo and Jusuf Kalla, who were supported by Soetrisno, a former chairman of the National Mandate Party (PAN), were officially declared the winners of the presidential election by the General Elections Commission (KPU). "Rizal would make a good foreign minister, why would he be considered for the labor minister," asked Soetrisno, which made his colleagues burst into laughter. He said he preferred to take care of people. The guests responded by saying, "Ok, Pak Soetrisno should become the coordinating minister for people's welfare."
The Rizal in question is Dr. Rizal Sukma, executive director of the Centre for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) and chairman of the foreign relations board of the Muhammadiyah organization. He prepared the material on foreign policy for Joko Widodo during the presidential debates.
This year, Indonesia and India mark 75 years of diplomatic relations. However, the ties between the two nations have existed much longer, predating the establishment of the Republic of Indonesia and the Republic of India. These connections span social, cultural, religious, economic, and trade aspects. But do those close ties of the past have any bearing on the present relationship? Why is there no direct flight between the capitals of the two countries?
Indian Ambassador to Indonesia and Timor-Leste, Sandeep Chakravorty, shares his views on this matter at TEMPO TALKS.
Independent journalism needs public support. By subscribing to Tempo, you will contribute to our ongoing efforts to produce accurate, in-depth and reliable information. We believe that you and everyone else can make all the right decisions if you receive correct and complete information. For this reason, since its establishment on March 6, 1971, Tempo has been and will always be committed to hard-hitting investigative journalism. For the public and the Republic.