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Although Sofyan Djalil, Indonesia's minister of national development planning, rushed to Tokyo on Sunday evening, September 27, he failed to meet Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe. The Japanese leader was attending the United Nations General Assembly in New York.
Instead, on Tuesday at the end of September, Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga met with Sofyan. The envoy bore news from President Joko Widodo: the Indonesian government had made a decision regarding the Jakarta-Bandung high-speed railway project. However, since the government preferred a fully business-to-business arrangement that does not involve any state funding, Indonesia would forgo the Japanese proposal. China's offer seemed more suitable.
Joshua Oppenheimer*
When The Act of Killing and The Look of Silence were released, I had high hopes that these two films would be useful for the reconciliation process in Indonesia. With The Act of Killing, I wanted to invite the audience to see a history that is different from what we read in the school textbooks. With The Act of Killing, I wanted us to deconstruct the New Order's black propaganda that justified the mass killings in 1965 and even celebrated them as being heroic.
The positive trend on digital economics has caught the attention of President Joko Widodo. This lucrative business has been expanding in the past few years and is expected to continue growing in line with the increasing numbers of Internet users with their smart-phones. The Indonesian E-Commerce Association (idEA) recorded at least US$12 billion worth of online commerce in 2014. This has led the President to urge Communications and Information Minister Rudiantara to prepare the necessary steps to ensure Indonesia can benefit from the rapid growth of online businesses.
Rudiantara himself is optimistic that digital transcations in Indonesia can reach US$137 billion or eight to nine percent of national gross domestic product (GDP) by 2020. "We must establish the rules of the game so Indonesia can benefit from it," he said. Rudiantara shared his views on this new economic phenomenon with Tempo reporters Akbar Tri Kurniawan and Ursula Florence at his residence in Jakarta last week. Excerpts:
Satellite data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) downloaded by the Indonesian Forum for the Environment (Walhi) was shocking. A large amount of forested areas in Riau which had seen forest fires over the past three years are located in concession areas held by large companies.
One of them is Satria Perkasa Agung, which is affiliated with Asia Pulp and Paper (APP) Groupthe parent company of the largest group of paper companies in Indonesia, and an umbrella for the Sinar Mas Group. "In 2014 alone, the licensed controlled forest area of Satria Perkasa covered 1,000 hectares," said Riko Kurniawan, Director of Walhi in Riau, last week. This is about 2.5 percent of total forested area in Riau which burned down last year. This company's licensed area in Serapung village, Kuala Kampar, Pelalawan Regency, has again caught fire, along with another 4,000 or so hectares of peat land.
FLANKED by the Coordinating Minister for the Economy, Darmin Nasution, who will be the point-man for the government's agenda to kick-start the lethargic economy, along with economic ministers, President Joko Widodo last week unveiled the government's economic policy package. Intended to unblock structural and regulatory obstacles to accelerate priority development programs, the first of three packages is seen by analysts as being high on expectations but low on implementation.
Tens of investigators from the National Police's Criminal Investigation Unit forced their way into the offices of Pelabuhan Indonesia II (Pelindo II) in Tanjung Priok, North Jakarta, two Fridays ago. Head of the Criminal Investigation Unit, Comr. Gen. Budi Waseso, led the team that came with armed guards.
After showing a search warrant, police spread to several floors of the state-owned company. This included the office of Pelindo II CEO Richard Joost Lino on the seventh floor. The search ended just before midnight.
AT a construction site in the Kendawangan District of Ketapang in West Kalimantan, scores of men in shabby-looking, grey-colored uniforms scurry about, carrying steel bars, digging dirt and pushing wheelbarrows, under the sharp supervision of foremen, riding around on motorcycles. They are not local hires, but workers brought in all the way from China to work at projects funded and operated by the China Hongqiao and Winning Investment companies, in partnership with the local Citra Mineral Investindo, a subsidiary of the Harita Group. The joint venture is currently building a bauxite smelter that will produce 4 million tons of alumina per year.
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