maaf email atau password anda salah
It took a whole minute for Ananta Purba to remember whether his institution ever received donations or assistance from the North Sumatra provincial government. This deputy secretary-general of the Batak Protestant Christian Church (GBKP) executive committee only recalled two specific instances. In 2010, the GBKP received Rp20 million in assistance. Then, in 2012, their church at Tebing Tinggi received Rp175 million. "After that, there was no more assistance," said Ananta last week.
Located 2,500 meters above sea level, the mountainous Tolikara regency is nearly isolated from the outside world. It is not easy to reach this area. Traveling there by land, through the Wamena regency, takes seven hours over mostly damaged roads. The easiest way to reach these mountains is by aircraft. Yet, despite the remote mountainous location, the Tolikara youths are not alienated.
Each year, they travel to neighboring nations, such as Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands and Palau, and sometimes to Israel. These trips are facilitated by the Indonesian Evangelical Church (GIDI), in cooperation with their missionary counterparts in various countries. An agreement with Israel is clearly posted on its website. "Jesus and Israel cannot be forsaken. They are the chosen people of Allah," said former GIDI Youth Chairman, Wekis Wonda, last week.
AFTER his preoccupation with the controversy over the Javanese-intonation reading of the Qur'an, Religious Affairs Minister Lukman Hakim Saifuddin now must focus his attention on the Nusantara Islam issue. This involves the debate of a genre of Islam that is unique to Indonesia, one that is being unofficially supported by the government.
The rejection by hard-line Islamists has not dampened the government's plan to keep pushing for a Nusantara (archipelagic) Islam. "They got it wrong. Nusantara Islam is not an ideology," said Lukman, in a special interview with Tempo reporters Sugiharto and Sunudyantoro, last week.
NOVEL Baswedan stood by his testimony at the Constitutional Court on May 25. Even though his superiors at the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) contradicted him, Novel, a senior KPK investigator stressed there was recorded proof of intent to terrorize, intimidate, and threaten KPK leaders and employees last January to February. "My statements remain the same," said Novel, last week.
ON four separate occasions over the past month, Jasrul had heard disturbing reports. The TNI (Indonesian Military) retiree learned that the engine on the C-130 Hercules plane which his son flew on had often experienced engine failure. He heard this from Captain Riri Setiawan, Jasrul's son, a navigator on C-130 Hercules planes. Riri also informed his two younger siblings of the issue.
CABINET Secretary Andi Widjajanto carried a large folder as he quickly exited the back door of his office at the State Secretariat main building, located at the Presidential Palace complex in Jakarta, two weeks ago. The folder bearing the logo of the Cabinet Secretariat contained the reports of 34 cabinet ministers, as requested by President Joko Widodo. "The president is waiting for me. I'm in a hurry," Andi told Tempo.
This was the final day to submit the ministers' performance reports. The deadline was 3pm last Thursday. Andi's job was to collect all the reports and turn them over to the president. It took just two minutes for a golf cart to swiftly deliver him to the State Palace, located on the grounds of the Presidential Palace complex.
SUGENG Suparwoto was back on the list of candidates to be a member of a selection committee. His application was sent to the State Civil Administration Commission. After having been dropped from a list at one place, his name appeared as a candidate for a selection committee for echelon-1 officials at the Creative Economy Agency. Triawan Munaf, head of the Creative Economy Agency, had submitted the name of Sugeng, and others, in a letter at the end of last April.
Independent journalism needs public support. By subscribing to Tempo, you will contribute to our ongoing efforts to produce accurate, in-depth and reliable information. We believe that you and everyone else can make all the right decisions if you receive correct and complete information. For this reason, since its establishment on March 6, 1971, Tempo has been and will always be committed to hard-hitting investigative journalism. For the public and the Republic.