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By shuttering the Dolly red-light district earlier this year, Surabaya Mayor Tri Rismaharini intended above all to keep local children away from the sex industry.
But the move was criticized last week by a former minister and a United Nations health expert at a panel discussion organized by the Jakarta Foreign Correspondents Club last week, on the subject of prostitution, trafficking and HIV/AIDS.
The Pagu woman raised her voice in the presence of officials from the mining company that had caused her so much grief.
To cement her tribe's territorial claim, she invoked centuries-old place namesand a landmark Constitutional Court ruling from last year.
"This is our land, not the state's land!" Afrida Erna Ngato hollered in the hearing room in Ambon, Maluku. The gallery cheered.
Hundreds of people were crowded in the Grand Mutiara meeting hall in downtown Kupang on Thursday night last week. Public figures, heads of local government offices, leaders of the Regional Legislative Council (DPRD) and local politicians filled the two-storey hall, the largest building in the capital city of East Nusa Tenggara. They were celebrating the selection of Setya Novanto as chair of the House of Representatives (DPR) for the 2014-2019 term.
Setya, general treasurer of the Golkar Party, had become a legislator representing this election district. Speaking to reporters, he said this was not the only thanksgiving event being held in Kupang. Before that particular reception, he had been at many other places, including the Diocese of the Catholic Church of Kupang, the Yesus Maria Oebelo Pilgrimage Park and a livestock farm in Amfoang, 150 kilometers outside the city. "I am going to turn East Nusa Tenggara into a repository of livestock," he said.
JUSUF Kalla received a special guest on his first day of work as vice president on Tuesday last week. It was the chairman of the Great Indonesia Movement (Gerindra) Party, Prabowo Subianto, who had run against Kalla and newly-elected President Joko Widodo in the July 9 election. Prabowo arrived with Fuad Hasan Mansyur, the chairman of the Golkar Party information and public relations division. "I came to offer my congratulations and to apologize," Prabowo said, conveying the purpose of his visit. In politics, Prabowo added, people often have to talk tough, but their hearts remain united.
Military ceremony is apparently of great importance to outgoing President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, whose term ends this week. In a cabinet meeting last week, the ex-general twice brought up that he wanted Monday's inauguration to include military formalities.
Yudhoyono said the new tradition would be set when he welcomed his successor, Joko Widodo, with a grand military ceremony at Merdeka Palace, the president's official residence. "Joko will receive his first homage from the Presidential Guard," Yudhoyono said at his last cabinet meeting in Central Jakarta.
Police Wants FPI Disbanded
The Jakarta Metro Police has recommended the dissolution of the Islamic Defenders' Front (FPI) to the Home Affairs Ministry. The recommendation letter was served after FPI members staged a violent protest last week against the appointment of Basuki Tjahaja 'Ahok' Purnama as Jakarta's new governor.
High-ranking officials from President-elect Joko Widodo's coaliton of politican parties seemed panicked as the House of Representatives' (DPR) consultation body convened on Wednesday night last week. Aria Bima, an Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P) politician, quickly headed to a different room where a discussion was happening on whether the impending election for the new House leadership would happen that night or be delayed until the following day.
Shortly thereafter, Aria raced back to the consultation body room, where members of the parties supporting Joko had gathered-the PDI-P, the National Awakening Party (PKB), the National Democrat (NasDem) Party and the People's Conscience (Hanura) Party. Aria, apparently downcast, uttered not a word. PKB politician Marwan Ja'far left the room. Marwan's cell phone rang, and he spoke in near whispers when he took the call.
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