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Sacha Stevenson is one of the most reviled women on the social media scene in Indonesia, with thousands of hate-mail hits to counterbalance the hundreds of thousands 'thumbs-up' she gets a week. As host of the popular How To Act Indonesian on Youtube, she sometimes takes on certain sacred cows that hit a wrong nerve for some of her subscribers. Canadian-born Stevenson has travelled extensively around Indonesia, at one time on roller blades, inspiring her to write her experience in a piece called Bule on Blades. She is a graduate of the American Open University in Islamic studies. she speaks Indonesian and Arabic. Tempo English contributing editor Debra Yatim caught up with her after her appearance at the 2014 Ubud Writers and Readers Festival in Bali recently. Excerpts:
How did you start on your merry path and become so widely known in Indonesia?
I started off treating my YouTube as a Facebook page, uploading stuff for no rhyme or reason, like you would post something on Facebook. I started getting serious when I began putting up parody; I did a parody of a pop song which I called 'BB,' making fun of how everybody in Indonesia was using the BlackBerry. It became difficult for me to do it weekly because I was doing it from my kost (rented room) and had to wait till deep at night to do it. After a while, I came up with the idea to do very, very simple sketches about Indonesian daily life. They would only take me a couple of hours, and I could upload them once a week.
Did you do that like a diary, or what? Why?
Indonesia has gone through incredible changes since reformasi was launched 15 years ago. Its socio-economic progress has been widely acknowledged by the international community. Yet, as a recent report of the Gini coefficient index shows, the development gap between the islands in Indonesia have in that period, widened significantly. Journalist, author and epidemiologist Elizabeth Pisani was first posted in Jakarta in the late 1980s, returning between 2001 and 2005 to work with the Health Ministry as an epidemiologist researching the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). In 2011, she returned again to research for her book, Indonesia Etc. In Jakarta recently to promote her newly-launched book, Pisani spoke with Tempo contributor Melati Kaye about her recent travels in Indonesia.
You mentioned that Indonesia's outer islands lags behind Java, in developing 'the engines of social growth': education, Internet and infrastructure. Can you explain?
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:
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