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TWO hours into a pleasant voyage on the waters of the Padaido group of islands to the south of Biak in Papua, the situation became tense. That Saturday morning two weeks ago, photographer Tony Hartawan and I had just passed Pakreki island. The waters around this large unoccupied, rocky island covered in lush tropical forest, seemed to be a final test for us before arriving at our destination: Meosmangguandi island.
The sea, which had earlier been quite calm, suddenly became very rough. Suddenly, our boat, a 'johnson' perahu, as local fishermen call their traditional boats with attached engines, was hit by waves coming from all directions. Tony, who was sitting in the stern, several times glanced to the rear, a fixed smile on his face. I responded with no less a worried expression. "Meosmangguandi!" The shout from Melkias Rumkorem, a traditional Meosmangguandi elder, brought with it a new sense of calm. He pointed towards where the boat was heading, all while it was rising, falling and rolling from side to side over the waves.
On his trip to Lampung two weeks ago, President Joko Widodo met with Energy and Mineral Resources Minister Sudirman Said. At the meeting, Sudirman delivered a message from Kuntoro Mangkusubroto. The former chief of the Presidential Working Unit for Development Monitoring and Control (UKP4) was concerned about the governance of the state electricity company (PLN) to which he had just been appointed chief commissioner.
"Pak Kuntoro felt the need to deliver this message because the mandate of the President is to fix the PLN," Sudirman told Tempo last week. Kuntoro said there had been attempts to reduce his authority shortly after Jokowi appointed him in mid-October.
A, B, C. Folders containing papers with lists of dozens of names lying on a table in a detention center in Jakarta, with classifications that will determine the fate of the detainees. A: to be killed. B: to be exiled to Nusakambangan. C: to be detained at the nearest city. Or for action unspecified.
'Unspecified' is the manifestation of sovereignty in its most extreme form: power acting with the assumption that it will not be challenged to provide reasons. Including when it is determining the life and death of thousands of people. Including when it is wrong.
The speech by Bogor Mayor Bima Arya, 42, at an international conference discussing 'Unity in Diversity' in Florence, Italy, last November 6, triggered quite a bit of criticism back home. It seems the mayor's speech extolled the religious tolerance in the city he governs, better known as the 'Rainy City'. But the fact is that Bogor is anything but an example of religious tolerance, while Mayor Bima himself is guilty of violating the right to freedom of religion.
At the conference attended by about 100 mayors from around the world, Bima shared his views on conflict management and maintaining religious freedom. He also stressed that Bogor was a city that never experienced serious social conflict that threatened its citizens.
Htay Oo looked on in disbelief as he watched the vote tally in Hinthada, an electoral district located on the banks of the Irrawaddy river in Myanmar's delta region.
Htay, a seasoned, 65-year-old politician and chairman of the United Solidarity and Development Party (USDP), was being trounced by a political rookie from the National League of Democracy (NLD). "I want to know the answer," the retired two-star general told Reuters last Tuesday.
It was a Friday night and the Bataclan concert hall was crowded with more than 1,000 fans gathered to watch the Californian band Eagles of Death Metal last weekend. Loud rock music reverberated in the popular venue. Julien Pearce, a journalist from Europe 1 Radio, was inside the concert hall when the shooting began an hour after the band started playing.
Pearce said that a group of men, armed with Kalashnikov assault rifles, entered the hall and started shooting indiscriminately at the crowd. "There were bodies everywhere," said Pearce, describing the shooting, as reported by Reuters.
Sidney Jones
No one questions that Indonesia needs to get more serious about prosecuting hate crimes. It needs to ensure that anyone who uses violence or threats of violence against individuals because of their membership in a disliked group will face the full force of the law, and that a single standard will be applied against perpetrators instead of all too frequently blaming the victim.
Demand that the government accept responsibility for the 1965 atrocities is being revived. "They burned my body with cigarettes," Tintin Rahayu told the courtroom at Nieuwe Kerk in The Hague, the Netherlands, before pausing to compose herself. "In the interrogation room, I was beaten, and at camp in the military headquarters in Cebongan, (Sleman, Yogyakarta), I was trampled on." As Tintin began to sob, the courtroom fell silent.
Tintin was one of many witnesses to testify at the International Peoples' Tribunal 1965 in the Netherlands last week. Organizers said the event aimed to expose the gross human rights violations that occurred following the events of September 30, 1965, as well as highlight the implications for victims of violence.
SR. Comr. Daniel Bolly Tifaona recently invited five members of the Bekasi Regional House of Representatives (DPRD) as well as Bekasi Mayor Rahmat Effendi to his office. The Bekasi city police chief wanted to brainstorm solutions for solving Jakarta's growing trash problem.
Before opening the meeting, Daniel introduced two other officers from Jakarta's metropolitan police command. They were there to deliver a message from Jakarta police command chief, Insp. Gen. Tito Karnavian.
The governments of Jakarta and Bekasi, together with Godang Tua Jaya company, should sit down together to resolve the conflict over garbage. Charges and counter-charges, insults and threats will only make the problem more protracted.
Jakarta Governor Basuki Tjahaja Purnama should realize that it is not easy to simply terminate the contract with Godang Tua Jaya to manage the Bantargebang Integrated Waste Management Facility in Bekasi. This not only affects the relationship between the Jakarta administration and Godang, it also affects Bekasi.
HOUSE of Representatives (DPR) members continue to try and slip an allocation into the State Budget for renovating the DPR building. A similar plan was scrapped in 2011, but when discussions for the 2016 State Budget plan began in August, it was put back on the table. Though it was rejected by the government, at the end of October, an allocation of Rp740 billion for renovations suddenly surfaced in the 2016 State Budget plan approved by the DPR.
The proposal to renovate the DPR building was reportedly made based on Law No. 10/2011 on cultural heritage. Achmad Dimyati Natakusuma, Deputy Chairman of DPR Internal Affairs Body denies that the heritage law was the basis of the plan. "It is based on the need to support amenities and infrastructure so that DPR members can enhance their work," he said.
Helena Megawati's Clarification
MY name is Helena Megawati. I am the owner of Asia Nutrisi which imports animal fodder for livestock. I am also a former CEO of Sierad Produce. I do appreciate Tempo for having written an article on the ins and outs of the animal feed business in the November 1 to 8, 2015 edition under Economy rubric titled Stuffy Aroma an Old Game.
This year, Indonesia and India mark 75 years of diplomatic relations. However, the ties between the two nations have existed much longer, predating the establishment of the Republic of Indonesia and the Republic of India. These connections span social, cultural, religious, economic, and trade aspects. But do those close ties of the past have any bearing on the present relationship? Why is there no direct flight between the capitals of the two countries?
Indian Ambassador to Indonesia and Timor-Leste, Sandeep Chakravorty, shares his views on this matter at TEMPO TALKS.
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