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Two weeks ago, the cages for local cattle at the Tapos slaughterhouse in Depok, West Java, appeared deserted. Only two Bali cows could be seen tethered at the front of the 2,000-square-meter pen. By contrast, in the back, some 70 Australian cows stood crammed in a similar-sized pen.
Domestic cattle have become increasingly scarce in the capital city, crowded out by the import of foreign-raised cattle. Marina Ratna Dwi Kusumajati, CEO of Dharma, a Jakarta-owned slaughterhouse (RPH), said the number of heads of local cattle was indeed dwindling. "At the moment, 97 percent of slaughterhouses in Greater Jakarta are filled with imported cattle," she said Tuesday two weeks ago.
Pertamina's plan to launch a new type of gasoline actually reached Juan Tarin's ears in February. The Chairman of the Regional Executive Board of the National Association of Oil and Gas Entrepreneurs (Hiswana Migas) in Jakarta, Java, and Banten, was informed of a product with higher-octane levels than Premium but priced cheaper than Pertamax.
The meeting between the chief of the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) and the Board of Commissioners of Telkom two weeks ago lasted two hours. The purpose of the meeting was to discuss the state-owned enterprise's plan to swap shares of Telkom in Dayamitra Telecommunications (Mitratel) for shares in Tower Bersama Infrastructure (TBIG).
Telkom Commissioner Hendri Saparini arrived at the KPK building in Jakarta accompanied by three independent commissioners, namely Parikesit Suprapto, Johnny Swandi Sjam, and Virano Gazi Nasution. They were welcomed by interim KPK chairman Taufiequrrahman Ruki, and current KPK vice-chairman Johan Budi Sapto Prabowo. State-Owned Enterprises (SOEs) Minister Rini Soemarno had been invited to the meeting but was not present.
The Indonesian Air Force's Super Puma helicopter hovered over the coast of Cilamaya in north Karawang, West Java, with Vice President Jusuf Kalla inside. As the pilot turned to leave the area, Kalla ordered him to circle around for one last pass over the oil rigs and gas facilities owned by Pertamina off the Cilamaya shore.
In the beginning it was a dinner party at the Palace. On Thursday, March 12, President Joko "Jokowi" Widodo invited a number of palm oil entrepreneurs for an evening of Padang food. "It was a relaxed program. There was a buffet of food, but the theme of the night was serious," Managing Director of Sinar Mas Group, Gandi Sulistiyanto, related about the event on the phone last Wednesday.
Gandi accompanied his big boss, Franky Widjaja that evening. According to Gandi, the President focused discussions on the weakening rupiah. Collectively, the oil palm magnates represent Indonesia's largest non-oil and non-gas export foreign exchange earner. If the value of their exports was retained in-country, foreign exchange reserves could strengthen and keep the rupiah from slipping further.
Doni Tirtana, owner of Lorco Menara Multimedia, is carefully re-calculating production costs for a number of his firm's projects this year. One of his clients, a multinational oil mining company, has requested some changes to a contract involving the production of computer-training tutorials. Doni was asked to bring down the price, which he will achieve by replacing the voice talent. "Usually, we use expatriate voice talent. Now we are using local voice talent," Doni told Tempo on Tuesday last week. "The savings are quite significant, about 50 percent."
Sunari's nimble feet criss-crossed his coffee plantation in Sidomulyo village, Jember, East Java. Suddenly he stopped, kneeling to tend to a crop of young shoots sprouting on the ground. Fatigue from the heat was no deterrent; along with hundreds of other robusta coffee farmers, he was already imagining the windfall from the plunging value of the rupiah against the US dollar.
Historically, coffee exports soar when the dollar strengthens, boosting the incomes of Sidomulyo farmers significantly. "We will be able to replace our television antenna with a parabolic one," Sunari said last Thursday.
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