April 7, 2015 edition
Sidelines
A great leader departs, Lee Kuan Yew dies; and then what? One hopes: an empty seat.
The world acknowledges Lee's greatness as the builder of Singapore: he laid the foundations that made his country, the tiny former British colony with no natural resources, manage over the last ten years to overtake the United States in prosperity.
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Interview
THESE days, the YouTube blog of Sacha Stevenson, 32, appears to be somewhat dry. Besides her busy schedule shooting for a film, she has become more selective in what she uploads. Yet two years ago this Canadian wrote a weekly piece full of satirical humor on the ways of Indonesians, like the ubiquitous bureaucrat, the busker with his cellphone, or the way Indonesians use the toilet. All of them the fruits of Sacha's observations since she first came to Indonesia 14 years ago.
In a video series titled 'How to Act Indonesian' Sacha is not only the director, she is also the actor. One day she is a subdistrict official wearing a hijab who's slow in doing her bureaucratic tasks. Another time, she's a kampung woman clad in a housedress terrified of a man wearing a white gown, threatening her.
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Asean & Beyond
After a yearlong investigation, and interviews with 40 current and former crewmembers of fishing vessels, the Associated Press exposed PT Pusaka Benjina Resources as a slave operation. The company's mostly Burmese employees told of being kicked, whipped with stingray tails and forced to drink unclean water. A number of them were imprisoned in a remote village in the Aru Islands called Benjina. Their catch was shipped as far afield as Europe and the United States.
Maritime and Fisheries Minister Susi Pudjiastuti has been shocked by the case. "Local law enforcement officials said that there was no slavery. [But] we cannot deny it any longer, and we apologize to the world because we have been unable to see it." She revealed that there are still 1,185 fishermen from Myanmar, Cambodia and Thailand on Benjina whose fate remains unclear. Twenty to thirty fishermen die in the Aru Islands every year as a result of illegal slavery practices.
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Law
Four cells at the end of the hallway of the National Narcotics Agency (BNN)'s detention center are now empty. The rooms, each measuring 30 square meters, are sealed off with police tape. Iron bars block access to the cells and separate them from the other eight cells. Down the hallway, at the bottom of an iron ventilation grille panel, is a gaping hole the size of a 21-inch TV screen. Right above is an active CCTV camera.
Last Wednesday, several workers were seen busily trying to close the gap, which had been used as an escape route for ten prisoners the Monday before. "The Inspectorate's team is still investigating how the escapees punctured a hole through the wall," said Sr. Comr. Slamet Pribadi, BNN's spokesman last Thursday.
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Opinion
IT'S high time the government gave the Mahakam concession block in East Kalimantan back to Pertamina. In many other oil- and gas-producing countries, state-owned companies stand first in line to get such concessions. This applies to new projects as well as old concessions whose contracts are expiring.
Mahakam, currently operated by Total Indonesie (France) and Inpex Corp (Japan), are the biggest producers of gas in Indonesia. Every day, no less that 1.6 billion cubic feet is pumped out of that offshore block. The production-sharing contract with Total-Inpex will end in 2017.
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Indicator
THE Jakarta State Administrative Court (PTUN) provisional decision on the Golkar party has opened a new chapter in debate over which faction of the party has a rightful claim over its leadership. In his ruling, Judge Teguh Setya instructed the Justice and Human Rights Minister Yasonna H. Laoly to postpone the confirmation of Agung Laksono's authority to manage the party on account of complaints from Aburizal Bakrie's faction. "Alhamdulillah, the truth is starting to show," said the Bakrie faction chairman, Ade Komarudin.
The House of Representatives (DPR) to suspend the status of Golkar as a consequence of the judge's ruling. According to the House's Deputy Chairman Fadli Zon, the party whose symbol is a banyan tree will be reconfirmed only after the party decides a management system internally. Agung's faction tried to wrench control from Aburizal's faction on the same day as Fadli's announcement.
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Outreach
The Institute of Eijkman Molecular Biology, Jakarta, made a visit to Rampasasa, Flores, in early 2014, to compare the genetics of the local pygmies to that of other ethnic pygmy groups. "We can simply compare them because the data have been uploaded," said Professor Herawati Sudoyo, vice director of Eijkman Institute. The result of Eijkman research will be published at the end of this year.
Pygmy populations - ethnic groups characterized for their short stature - are actually widespread throughout the globe. The causes of the genetic tendency towards shortness has been linked to various factors, including food scarcity, low levels of calcium in local soil, the lack of ultraviolet light and therefore vitamin D in dense jungle. Vitamin D helps bones build calcium.
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National
When they registered themselves as a candidate presidential team, Joko Widodo and Jusuf Kalla set forth a rubric for their campaign points that they called Nawa Cita. Now, the rubric's nine priority areas have become the official framework for the team's development programs.
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Weekly Business
TAX
Revenue Slumps, Tax Target Remains
AS of March 27, national tax revenue was recorded as Rp 170 trillion, or 13.66 per cent of the government's targeted annual total of Rp 1,244 trillion. The finance ministry said that this should not be a cause for alarm. "Our focus is on the tax reporting agency (SPT) submission at the end of April," said Finance Minister Bambang Brodjonegoro, last Monday.
Revenue Slumps, Tax Target Remains