January 26, 2016 edition
Sidelines
What can we do with the past, when we stand stunned in the ruins of Hatra?
Just a few years ago in the desert between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers, in the midst of a flat brownish dried up river basin about 300 kilometers from Baghdad, the ruins of the ancient town of Hadra still lay to the north. The ruins of the city walls rose high. Archaeologists said that the brick wallwhich protected life 2,200 years agowas a kind of circular fortress two kilometers in diameter. It was also an astonishing feat of architecture: if you walked around it you found four gates, eleven bastions, 28 large towers and 160 small towers.
Read More
More Articles
Word Watch
Yes and No
Scene & Heard
Bambang Widjojanto
Private versus Public Transport
Interview
Hilmar Farid rejects the notion that his new position as director-general of culture at the education and culture department was given to him for his contribution to President Joko Widodo's campaign in 2014. Hilmar insists he had to undergo the entire recruitment procedure, beating all his rivals through a very tight selection process. Hilmar, 47, a University of Indonesia graduate, was sworn in into his new job on December 31, 2015.
He can be said to be the first echelon-one government official outside the bureaucracy to have won the job. Hilmar, who will head a corps of about 3,600 employees, must now adapt to the rhythm of his new job. It is, after all, his first time as a bureaucrat. Until now, he had always been a historian, working in the world of academics, with people's organizations and pro-democracy groups.
Read More
Scene & Heard
There's something different about Bambang Widjojanto, former deputy chairman of the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK). Arriving to attend the launching of Tempo's 45-year celebration logo last week, where he was a keynote speaker, Bambang was seen to drive a shiny black sedan automobile. What's unusual about this is that Bambang almost never drove a car but always used public transportation to get around town.
Has he changed his lifestyle now that he's no longer in the limelight as head of the anti-graft organization? No, was his answer, that he still rode the commuter trains going to and from work. "After I get to the office, then I may ride in a car, usually not mine," claimed 56-year old Bambang: Once an activist, always an activist.
Read More
Diplomatic Bag
Back from her trip to the Middle East, Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi reported on a meeting with her Saudi counterpart Adel bin Ahmed Al-Jubeir in Riyadh, last week. "We discussed investment projects in Indonesia, including a plan to develop oil refineries," said Retno in a text message to Tempo.
These oil refinery projects will be in Tuban, East Java, and Bontang, East Kalimantan. Other projects discussed included a plan to build new towns in Mentawai, West Sumatra, a special economic zone at Tanjung Lesung and 25,000 housing units.
Read More
National
FOR a week now, Budi Supriyanto has disappeared from his office on the 13th floor of Gedung Nusantara I in the parliament complex at Senayan, Jakarta. As Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) investigators searched his office on Friday two weeks ago, the Golkar Party politician was nowhere to be found. "After the raid, he never came to the office," said Zaki, a member of his staff, last Wednesday.
Rambe Kamarul Zaman, a colleague in the Golkar faction of the House of Representatives (DPR), also claimed to not having seen Budi since in the office. "He's probably feeling troubled. We should give him time to calm down," said the member of the DPR governance commission.
Read More
Law
The legal defeat at the Palembang District Court late last year did not deter the environment and forestry ministry to continue filing lawsuits against land-torching companies. This time, the ministry targeted National Sago Prima.
The ministry is accusing the subsidiary of Sampoerna Agro company of setting fire to 3,000 hectares of industrial plantation forest at Tebing Tinggi, Meranti, Riau. The ministry lodged its lawsuit with the South Jakarta District Court in accordance with the domicile of National Sago's head office at Sampoerna Strategic Square on Jalan Sudirman in Central Jakarta. "The lawsuit this time is much more clear. Our evidence is solid. We're optimistic that we'll win," said Jasmin Ragil Utomo, director for environment dispute settlements, last Thursday.
Read More
More Articles
Opinion
When the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) arrested Damayanti Wisnu Putranti, an Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P) lawmaker from Commission V, two serious concerns emerged. First, being arrested and thrown in jail for corruption is apparently not scary or shameful enough to motivate changes. Secondly, the House of Representatives (DPR) has failed to cleanse itself of the taint of corruption, despite the many cases that have afflicted many of its members. The ugly face of our parliament could be seen, once again, when Damayanti and her two assistants were nabbed in the process of accepting a bribe.
Damayanti allegedly accepted the bribe from Ambonese businessman Abdul Khoir. The case also involved two of her assistants, Julia Prasetyarini and Dessy A. Edwin, each of whom received S$33,000 in cash. The same amount was found in Damayanti's house on Jalan Joe, South Jakarta. KPK Chairman Agus Rahardjo said that Abdul Khoir, CEO of Ambon-based company Windhu Tunggal Utama, had promised to pay Damayanti S$404,000, or around Rp3.9 billion.
Read More
More Articles
Indicator
THE public is split on whether to legalize street racing in Jakarta. Last week's Tempo poll indicates that many respondents support the Jakarta government's plan to provide a venue for racing wannabes. However, almost as many respondents oppose the idea, the difference in opinion being 19 respondents from a total of 696.
Opponents feel Jakarta has more to lose from illegal street racing. One concern is over the issue of safety, not only to the racers but also to bystanders, as the city's streets were never built for racing.
Read More
Weekly Business
INFRASTRUCTURE
Jakarta-Bandung High-Speed Railway Project Inaugurated
President Joko Widodo inaugurated the construction of the Jakarta-Bandung high-speed train project at Perkebunan Nusantara VIII's tea estate in Mandalawangi Maswati, West Bandung regency, West Java, last Thursday. The plantation is slated to be a transit-oriented development (TOD) area that will be integrated with the development of New Walini city.
Jakarta-Bandung High-Speed Railway Project Inaugurated