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MINISTER for the Empowerment of State Apparatus and Bureaucratic Reform, Yuddi Chrisnandi, is not really a key player in the process of selecting echelon-I officials. He is only one member of the Final Selection Team, which is tasked with selecting candidates to be forwarded to the president. But he spotted a way of 'fixing' the results, even though this contravened the spirit of reforms mandated by law, to ensure that certain people he wanted could be selected.
MEMBERS of the House of Representatives (DPR) have uncanny ways of improving their welfare. The latest one is their proposal for aspiration funds. They say they need the extra funds to ensure maximum service to their constituents.
The amount they proposed is by no means a small amount: each legislator is recommended to get Rp20 billion. If the recommendation goes through, the state must allocate an additional Rp12 trillion for them. In the midst of a sobering economic slow-down, and judging by the poor performance of the legislators, this outrageous request should be rejected.
THE world has closed its eyes long enough on the Rohingya tragedy. For years, the Muslim minority people in Myanmar who live among the Buddhist majority population, have become a pariah. They have been driven out from their land of birth, their existence unacknowledged and live under a great deal of pressure. The Rohingya are the victims of slow genocide by the regime ruling over the place they have lived in for three generations.
THERE is no need for the public to fuss over whether it is permitted or not to recite the Qur'an in a Javanese style. This matter is trivialor furu, to borrow a term from Islamic law. This squabbling is a waste of energy. There are many other problems faced by this nation.
The fuss started when Muhammad Yasser Arafat recited the An-Najim lines 1-15 of the Qur'an in mid-May. The reading by the lecturer from the Sunan Kalijaga Yogyakarta State Islamic University, which sounded like the chanting characteristic of a wayang Javanese puppet performance, sparked controversy because the way of reciting the Qur'an is not simply a way conveying the holy message. This is even more true if it is done during an official state function, which was the marking of the Isra Miraj holiday at the State Palace in Jakarta.
PERTAMINA began a new chapter in its history last week with the dissolution of Pertamina Energy Trading Ltd (Petral). But there is no reason to stop there. For too long, the Pertamina subsidiary had been suspected of being awash with 'hot money' from commissions to buy and sell oil. Pertamina's new managing director, Dwi Soetjipto, revealed the extent of the wastage within Petral. Only three months after Pertamina took over the responsibilities of Petral, the state-owned oil company made a profit of US$20 million, or around Rp260 billion. This is why the inefficiencies that have continued for years must be unmasked in their entirety.
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.
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