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PRESIDENT Jokowi's breakthrough in making Papua more open and free of long-running human rights violations deserves praise. This should not be blocked by his subordinates. A solution for Papua needs a firm hand in order to bring about a better Papua.
At the end of last week, President Jokowi 'broke a taboo' that had existed from the beginning of the New Order regime. He gave clemency to five Papuan political prisoners and declared that Papua was open to foreign journalists.
IT is public knowledge that the positions of director-general of oil and gas and that of minerals and coal have always been tightly contested. The two offices under the Energy and Mineral Resources Ministry have been fought over by not just competing political forces, but also by rent-seekers. For years, through various methods, politicians, political parties, plunderers of natural resources or whomever have vested interests in them, will fight hard to gain control over those two positions.
THERE are two fundamental differences between resoluteness and authoritarianism. Firmness is needed in an organization. A leader has the righteven the obligationto use his or her authority to ensure the organization stays on the right path. But authoritarianism must be avoided because it is an abuse of power. National Police (Polri) Chief Badrodin Haiti must be more firm in giving orders, without fearing charges of authoritarianism.
This resoluteness is needed because there are signs of indiscipline among Badrodin's men, regarding the policies adopted by the force. This was seen from the efforts to detain two non-active leaders of the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK), Abraham Samad and Bambang Widjojanto.
THE serious illegal wildlife trade is not a monopoly of Indonesia-let alone of Aceh and other parts of Sumatra-where most of the crime seems to take place. Yet conservationists point to Southeast Asia as the region with the most acute problem. According to a 2008 World Bank report, this region is not only a key supplier of global demand for endangered and protected species, it is also a major consumer center as well as a trafficking transit point.
REPORTS of drugs being found in prisons are nothing new. The fact that some drug dealings escape the prison guard's 'watchful' eyes is also not news. We are also not too surprised that some prisons have been turned into places where ecstasy and shabu-shabu (crystal methamphetamine) are processed and produced. But what makes no sense is how the same person, Freddy Budiman, an inmate on death row, is the brains of this dastardly crime.
Freddy was sentenced to death on July 15, 2013, because 1.4 million ecstasy pills were found in his possession. He has submitted an appeal and was outright denied by the Supreme Court in September last year. It should also be noted that when he was tried for his latest crime, he was already serving a sentence for a separate drug case and serving time at Cipinang Prison.
THERE are three reasons why Megawati Soekarnoputri's speech at the opening of the Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P) congress in Bali last week should be lamented. Commenting on relations between the president, vice president and the PDI-P, which endorsed Jokowi's presidency, Mega as party chair, stressed the importance of the "president to toe the party line because the party's policy is in line with the people."
TO dispel any notion of over-expectations, the critics of the 2015 National Mid-Term Development Plan should take a second look at how the Nawa Cita agenda came into being. This work program containing the nine priorities of the Jokowi-Kalla government is the product of the recent presidential election campaign. Understandably, therefore, the Nawa Cita goals tend to be seen as little more than campaign promises, too high a target to achieve.
To those who hold sacred anything labeled as a Sukarno heritagegiven how the name Nawa Cita resembles Sukarno's speech titled 'Nawaksara'the overly-ambitious features is clear to see. At the risk of sounding exaggerating, some of their objectives are unrealistic, given current economic, social and political factors. For example, how can we 'build Indonesia from the sidelines' with the current development orientation, particularly with the state's financial incapacity to develop much-needed infrastructure.
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