September 23, 2014 edition
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Sidelines
Westphalia
Interview
STROKING his beard and looking pensive, Abraham said, in a low voice, "Some untouchable people will be arrested." The chairman of the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) added, "Be patient, we will reveal all."
Abraham and his team have indeed exposed many people involved in corruption cases, among them a big-time businessman, a police general and the most recent one, the former energy and mineral resources minister, Jero Wacik. But this doesn't seem to be enough. Public pressure is on Abraham to solve other big cases, like Bank Century and Bank Indonesia Liquidity Assistance (BLBI) funds. At one time, he did promise to solve both those cases.
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Sidelines
Imagine, there is no country.
Sometimes people get fed up with borders. I think most Indonesians entering another country feel that every immigration booth is placed to convey suspicion. The officers look at us, without a smile, as if to decipher something from the shape of our nose or ears. Usually they will sigh and fiddle with their glasses, as if to say: I will allow you into our country, but actually you are a nuisance.
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Environment
With fresh haze plaguing cities in Sumatra and Kalimantan this month, Indonesia finally ratified the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Agreement on Transboundary Haze Pollution last week, making it ASEAN's final member to ratify the pact signed in 2002.
"Finally, the ratification has been done, after 12 years and several filings," said Arief Yuwono, the Environment Ministry's deputy for environmental damage control and climate change.
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Interlude
JALAN Kiai Saleh 12 in Semarang testifies to the history of Oei Tiong Ham. On the road, the mansion of the wealthiest tycoon in the Dutch East Indies during the early 20th century-he was known as Asia's 'Sugar King'-still stands imposingly. The sugar magnate occupied a grand residence of classical European architecture with eight pillars supporting its terrace, beautified by several chandeliers. A Javanese touch of architecture is seen on the eaves with wooden shingle ornaments.
Passing the main entrance, Tempo enters the principal room, which resembles the hall of a grand old European building. Broken white hues dominate the room, almost as big as half a soccer field. From white marble floors, the walls rise up to more than five meters, to convex ceilings bearing brass, flower-shaped decorations. Two paintings of elderly couples in the style of Dutch aristocrats adorn the room.
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Column
Dewi Anggraeni*
It was a convivial gathering of friends and relatives in a city in Provence, France, but the conversation began to develop a racist edge to it. And it was not initiated by a neo-Nazi redneck, but by a former diplomat with a Southeast Asian wife. After a few glasses of wine, the former diplomat now residing in Marseille, confessed to being disturbed by the current demography of his city. He mentioned the numbers of Algerians, Moroccans, Comorrans, Congolese and other West Africans dominating the population. "We the French have become a minority," he said.
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Letter From
Tunisia captured world attention three years ago when protests in the North African state ignited a political fuse that spread a political revolution across the Middle East, known as the Arab Spring. On December 18, 2010, 26-year-old fruit vendor Mohamed Bouazizi set himself on fire in the town of Sidi Bouzid, in protest over police corruption and ill treatment, triggering nationwide protests that led Tunisian President Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali to flee the country. But unlike similar rebellions that followed in countries like Egypt, Lybia, Yemen and others, it is only Tunisia which has persevered and overcome the challenges of democratization.
Despite subsequent political hiccups, Tunisians voted in a National Constituent Assembly to draft a Constitution that was approved in January this year. Tunisians will go to the polls next month to vote directly for candidates to their first bi-cameral parliament. In November, they will choose a new president. This is a remarkable achievement, given the continuing tension around the region, both in the neighboring Maghreb states of Algeria, Libya, Mauritania and Morocco, but also in Egypt, following the violent political turmoil that led to the return of a military-led government and in war-torn Syria.
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Arround The Archipelago
A national research team has discovered ancient buildings and artifacts at the Mount Padang archaeological site in, Cianjur regency, West Java. The team's deputy chairman for geology, Danny Hilman Natawidjadja, said they had found a 22-centimeter-long stone rod on the mountain's southern slope, about two or three meters below the surface. The rod has pores and magnetic characteristics that attract it to metal. "It resembles Harry Potter's magic wand, which is fit for gripping," Danny said last week.
Other finds included knife-shaped metals, metal waste and burned soil with stacks of stones beneath. Based on laboratory tests, the burned residual materials have been in the location since 5,200 BC.
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National
THE speculation was answered on Monday evening last week. In front of the press, President-elect Joko Widodo and Vice President-elect Jusuf Kalla announced how many ministries will exist after they take office on October 20. "Thirty-four," said Joko in front of the office of his Transition Team in Central Jakarta.
Joko also revealed the number of politicians and professionals his cabinet would include, which had been the subject of endless speculation: "There will be 18 experts and 16 'professional' representatives from political parties." Transition Team Chief of Staff Rini Soemarno and her deputies-Andi Widjajanto, Anies Baswedan, Hasto Kristiyanto, and Akbar Faizal-were also present at the announcement.
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Opinion
IT is an open secret that there are often illegal practices in the procurement of oil from overseas. Brokers pretending to be traders look for profits by manipulating the price when there is a domestic oil deficit. These illegal practices by the oil mafia have continued for decades-and have cost the state hundreds of trillions of rupiah.
Due to the shortfall in domestic crude oil that can be refined in the country, state-owned oil and gas company Pertamina was tasked by the government to import fuel. The year-on-year increase in the demand for the oil means that imports are a necessity. In accordance with regulations, Pertamina must give priority to crude oil from domestic fields in its refineries before deciding to buy imported oil. There should be a clear calculation of the additional requirement before imports begin.
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Indicator
The regional elections bill has become a national scandal. Lawmakers are talking about changing Indonesian democracy so that governors, regents and mayors are elected not directly by the people, but by members of the Regional Houses of Representatives (DPRD).
The version of the bill that would see that happen has been pushed by Prabowo Subianto, who lost the recent presidential election to Joko Widodo but has retained the coalition of political parties he assembled to run. Not all of them back the draft bill, but the parties that do-the Great Indonesia Movement (Gerindra) Party, Golkar Party, National Mandate Party (PAN), Justice and Prosperity Party (PKS), United Development Party (PPP) and the Crescent Star Party (PBB)-hold 292 seats in the House of Representatives (DPR). Those opposed to the bill-the Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P), National Awakening Party (PKB), People's Conscience Party (Hanura), Democrat Party and the Indonesian Justice and Unity Party (PKPI)-hold just 268 seats.
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Letters
Regulating Foreign Workers
Indonesia, in my opinion, is a heaven not only for foreign tourists but also for foreign consultants. I am not xenophobic, but almost all megaprojects in Indonesia, such as in the construction of toll roads, ports and bridges, enlist foreign consultants. I am afraid the construction of the Sunda Strait Bridge will also be left in the hands of foreign consultants and workers.
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Outreach
THERE is no need for the House of Representatives (DPR) to insist on passing the Advocates Bill it is currently deliberating. It would be a complete waste of time if the Bill was passed but later caused problems. The politicians should delay discussions and ask the opinions of more legal experts, academics and most of all, from their own organization.
Last week, attorneys grouped in the Indonesian Advocates Association (Peradi) demonstrated, calling for the DPR to listen to their demands. The organization, established in 2004-a year after Law No. 18/2003 on Advocacy-was enacted, plans to take to the streets again if the DPR continues to pass the bill in the next few weeks.
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Law
SIX men in dark brown uniforms walked back and forth on floor 7C in the Graha Pos Indonesia building in Bandung last week. Between afternoon working hours, two members of the Attorney General's Office's (AGO) Corruption Eradication Task Force emerged from behind a glass wall. The partition separates the lobby from Pos Indonesia CEO Budi Setiawan's workspace.
The two attorneys entered the elevator and rode downstairs. Fifteen minutes later, the elevator door opened again on floor 7C, and out walked the men again, with a trolley full of cardboard boxes and piles of documents. The pair scurried behind the glass wall's door, avoiding the reporters who had waited for them since morning. "There are still many files to be checked. It would take some time," one of the prosecutors said while pushing the cart. Both of them disappeared from view at end of the hall.
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Weekly Business
SUBSIDIZED FUEL
Pertamina To Launch Fuel Card
To prevent misuse of subsidized fuel, state oil and gas company Pertamina, in cooperation with Bank Rakyat Indonesia will launch Fuel Card, an e-money card to be used for purchase of subsidized fuel. "As an initial step, the card will be introduced in Batam and the Riau Islands first," Hanung Budya, Pertamina's marketing and commercial director, said last week.
Pertamina To Launch Fuel Card