February 23, 2016 edition
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Sidelines
Bedouins
Sidelines
There is a story about a Bedouin living far from Damascus, in the interior of Syria, who was disappointed when he rode a train for the first time. "I'm not satisfied," he complained to his friend. "The ticket was expensive, but the journey ended too quickly."
This might sound stupidlike other stories city people make up to poke fun at country peoplebut actually the Bedouin makes modern people aware: reaching someplace 'quickly', which to most of us is the formula of achievement in our times, might not equate the value of experience. Speed produces results but at the same time wards off something else.
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Music
The news came to Joey Alexander over breakfast at his home in Connecticut, USA, in mid-December. Jason Olaine, the producer of Joey's Motema Music-released My Favorite Things, told the young prodigy that the album had been nominated for a Grammy. "I tried to stay calm and pray. It was an incredible blessing," Joey wrote in an e-mail to Tempo, recalling the moment.
Two months later, on February 15, Joey jumped on stage at the Staples Center in Los Angeles for the 58th Grammy Awards. There, 12-year-old Joey's talents wowed the world.
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Indofile
Hiromi Kano slowly walks over to a rebab (two-stringed bowed gamelan instrument). "This is one of my favorite instruments of the gamelan. It has a very unique sound," she said Friday two weeks ago.The bespectacled woman sat on the carpet in a room on the second floor of the Mojosongo Subdistrict office in Solo. With deft strokes, she draws a small bow across the strings, and a low, almost moaning sound follows.
Hiromi is not only skilled at playing the rebab. She is equally proficient with other instruments of the Javanese gamelan. Every Wednesday afternoon, she practices karawitan (Javanese vocal and instrumental music) alongside other villagers at the Mojosongo subdistrict office.
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Asean & Beyond
The US-ASEAN Summit held on February 15-16 in Sunny-lands, California, set the tone for an enhanced economic cooperation between the United States and the 10 member states of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN). The first day of the summit was spent discussing trade and economics, with the theme 'Promoting an Innovative, Entrepreneurial ASEAN Economic Community'.
"The US-ASEAN Summit is a great opportunity to strengthen the relationship, especially in the economic sector," said President Joko Widodo at the Interactive Gallery in California last week. Jokowi raised the importance of small and medium enterprises (SMEs) and the emerging digital economy. He said that the SMEs made up around 90 percent of businesses in ASEAN and they could provide a lot of jobs in the region.
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Environment
Palm giant Astra Agro Lestari, Indonesia's biggest agribusiness firm by value, has signed the Indonesian Palm Oil Pledge (IPOP), joining five other major palm producers in promising to stop cutting down trees.
"Astra Agro Lestarihas a lot of power over the fate of Indonesia's forests," said Deborah Lapidus, spokesperson for the Center for International Policy in a statement. "Astra joining the IPOP is an important signal that it is ready to use that power for good."
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Law
Three-years of determined effort on the part of the Indonesian Judges' Discussion Forum is starting to bear fruit two weeks ago, the Expert Council at the House of Representatives (DPR) delivered a bill on the Office of Judges to the DPR's Legal Affairs Commission.
Chairman of the Judges' Discussion Forum, Djuyamto, described the inclusion of the draft in the 2016 National Legislation Program (Prolegnas) as a new stage in the struggle for expanding welfare and stability for judges. "So far there has been some disparity," Djuyamto said on Wednesday last week. In 2012, Djuyamto and peers initiated a special rule on the office of judges.
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National
A one-on-one meeting between Bandung Mayor Ridwan Kamil and businessman Sandiaga Salahudin Uno took place on January 31 under the media's radar. Oddly enough, no one was aware of the mayor's agenda that day. The two met at the mayor's official weekend residence. During the meeting that lasted an hour-and-a-half, the two men talked about the plan to modernize 37 traditional markets in Bandung.
Just before the call to prayer at sunset, however, Sandiaga brought up the topic of the election for the next Jakarta governor. As the meeting was coming to an end, he asked Ridwan abouthis readiness to be a candidate. Ridwan said he would think about it. "In that case, I'll start (campaign) activities before you in Jakarta," Sandiaga said. Last Thursday, Ridwan dismissed the news that their meeting had been specifically to discuss the election. "It's only about investing in the markets," he said.
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Interview
HIS name came up after the Jakarta government announced it would raze down the Kalijodo neighborhood because it stood in the middle of a green zone and because many of its occupants were unscrupulous figures. One particular figure stood out: Abdul Aziz, known as the 'King of Kalijodo', who decided to go to the authorities and express his disapproval on the attempts to regulate the biggest, low-level entertainment district in the capital city.
Forty-seven-year-old Daeng Aziz, as he is familiarly known, caught the public's attention when he went to the office of the National Human Rights Commission (Komnas HAM) last week to speak on behalf of his fellow Kalijodo residents. He told Commissioner Hafid Abbas, whom he met, of his consternation over the planned eviction of his neighborhood. Then, along with other Kalijodo residents, Aziz went to the Jakarta Council of Representatives (DPRD) to protest the government's action that would deprive residents of their homes and their source of income, if Kalijodo were to be totally 'cleansed'.
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Opinion
There is no strong argument to oppose the Jakarta city government's plan to restore Kalijodo as a green zone. For decades, people have illegally occupied the area along the Angke river and the eastern flood canal in North Jakarta.
With all the road and building construction currently going on in the capital city, much of it affecting water catchments, any effort to create more green areas should be supported. The plan would achieve two objectives: Transform the location in question into a natural green habitat and, at the same time, cleanse the area of centuries-old dens of prostitution, gambling and bootlegging.
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Indicator
THE murder charges against Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) investigator Novel Baswedan have been suspended by the district attorney. The court hearing, which was supposed to be held last Tuesday at Bengkulu District Court, was canceled. The Attorney-General Office (AGO) withdrew the charges a week after documents containing the KPK investigator's case were submitted to the court.
Technically speaking, the case should have been dropped last Thursday, as it had already expired. To paraphrase Paragraph 78 Article 3 and Paragraph 79 of the Criminal Code, a crime with the threat of imprisonment of over three years shall be voided 12 years after it has taken place.
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Letters
Reject the Revision of the Oil and Gas and the Mineral Resources and Coal Laws
I AM afraid that the Joko Widodo administration is aiming for the destruction of the energy, mining and oil and gas sectors. The energy and mineral resources ministry and the coordinating ministry for maritime affairs are now prioritizing the revision of the oil and gas law and the mineral resources and coal law. These two laws are sacred to the nation's fate. Reportedly, the ministry will establish three state-owned enterprises (SOEs) in the oil and gas sector. Upstream, there is a special SOE, a reincarnation of SKK Migas, the oil and gas supervisory agency, in charge of regulations. Downstream, there is Pertamina and the PGN (state gas company), which will become a SOE in charge of gas affairs.
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Outreach
Various traditional and cultural rituals in Indonesia can be quite expensive to carry out. Among the people of Toraja in South Sulawesi, for example, one traditional ceremony can cost billions of rupiah. Getting out of such rituals is not easy, although many communities around the country are determined to let go of certain traditional requirements that can often impoverish them, such as the villagers of Borokanda, at Ende Lio, Flores.
Director of Religion and Traditional Faith at the Education and Culture Minister, Sri Hartini, said that a simplification of rituals can be achieved through deliberations without reducing the substance of tradition. "Only the superficial aspect is simplified," she told Tempo English reporters Isma Savitri and Dahlia Rera in an interview, three weeks ago. Excerpts:
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Weekly Business
ENERGY
Fuel-Stealing Rampant in Java
The Trade Ministry alleges that some 30 percent of filling stations (SPBU) along Java's north coast have been fudging the numbers, cutting down on the real volume of fuel sold to consumers. "This finding is based on a control (study) we conducted in 2015," said the Director-General for Consumers Protection and Trade Orderliness, Widodo, on Tuesday last week.
Fuel-Stealing Rampant in Java