maaf email atau password anda salah
A hearing for a pretrial motion held on Thursday last week regarding the investigation into the purchase of land owned by the Sumber Waras Health Foundation at the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) did not last long. It took less than 15 minutes for the sole presiding judge at the South Jakarta Administrative Court, Tursina Aftianti, to strike the gavel, ending the proceedings.
That day, they were supposed to hear the testimony of witnesses and test the evidence held by the KPK. However, when the session began, the team from the KPK's Legal Affairs Bureau only showed evidence of the case being processed. They rejected the request to hear from witnesses and experts. "The case is still in the investigation stage and is not subject to a pretrial motion," said KPK Legal Affairs Bureau member Mia Suryani Siregar. "So there is no need for witnesses."
Conventional wisdom regards oil as a boon to countries who have it, not as a curse. However, Juan Pablo Perez Alonso, one of OPEC's founders, would beg to differ. He called oil 'the devil's excrement', the harbinger of disasters. There are many countries that are rich in oil, yet mired in debt and economic mismanagement, all because their leaders seem enthralled by the oil's bounty.
Alonso had this insight back in 1975 and how prophetic he turned out to be. Let us look at Venezuela, Alonso's motherland, now in chaos and on the brink of bankruptcy. Then there is Brazil, whose former president must perform legal acrobatics to avoid imprisonment on corruption charges, while the economy is in a mess.
RELIGIOUS issues typically color the public's discussion of politics prior to an election. When Basuki Tjahaja 'Ahok' Purnama ran as Joko Widodo's running mate for the Jakarta governorship in 2013, for example, his Christian identity in Muslim-majority Jakarta was invoked in attempts to discredit his candidacy. The strategy is common nationwide.
It now seems, however, that such strategies are losing favor, with voters becoming more nuanced in their selection of a candidate.
Clarification from the Village Ministry
WE would like to respond to the Noise-Makers and Underperformers news report published in Tempo's March 14-20, 2016 edition, page 16, about the low realization of 2015's village funds of Rp20 trillion based on the assessment from the Indonesia Forum for Budget Transparency, and the accusation of politicization behind village assistant placements. These two issues could mislead the public because they are not based on facts. Our clarification is as follows:
President Joko Widodo's stance on the development of the Masela block in the Arafura Sea, Maluku, could trigger negative sentiment from those wishing to invest in this nation. The government's selection of the onshore refinery option for the gas field shows its inconsistency in building business links with oil and gas contractors.
The President claims that he chose the onshore option because it would be more profitable and would bring greater economic benefits. But this argument is highly debatable because there has been no comprehensive study that reaches those conclusions.
ATTORNEY Made Rahman Marasabessy gave his client Jailani Paranddy an unusual bit of advice. Instead of fighting the corruption charges against him, Made suggested Jailani turn himself in to the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK). He also advised the KPK to take the 40-year-old man into custody if necessary.
Made said the advice was sound, as there was little doubt Jailani played a role in the graft case facing Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P) politician Damayanti Wisnu Putranti. Jailani was thrust into spotlight when CEO of Windu Tunggal Utama, Abdul Khoir, began to reveal a bribery scheme at the House of Representatives (DPR) infrastructure commission.
At a busy intersection in the Etterbeek area, several police officers suddenly burst into a cafe where people usually just gathered to smoke. Pistols in hand, last Tuesday afternoon they moved quickly to search every corner. Then they left just as quickly as they had come. There was no fuss.
Search followed search in the midst of increasingly tight security in Belgium in the aftermath of the terror bombings at Brussels' Zaventem Airport and Maelbeek Metro Station that morning. The attacks, which killed 30 people, left locals in a precarious situation, completely disrupting their daily routines.
Marine Affairs and Fisheries Minister Susi Pudjiastuti has threatened to file charges against China in the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea.
The controversy erupted two weeks ago when a Chinese trawler was captured by an Indonesian patrol boat in Indonesia's Natuna waters. In an apparent attempt to foil the arrest, a Chinese coastguard ship rammed into the patrol boat.
The 6th Ministerial Conference on the Bali Process, held in Nusa Dua, Bali, on March 22-23 and co-chaired by Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi and her Australian counterpart Julie Bishop, resulted in a regional mechanism on irregular migration. The agreement, called the Bali Declaration of People Smuggling, Trafficking in Person and Related Transnational Crimes, reflects the commitment to take swift and concrete action when these issues arise.
"Through this mechanism, the co-chairs can build communication with the relevant countries including the country of origin, transit country and destination country, in case of any emergency," said Retno in an official statement.
If you watch TV news pretty much anywhere in the world, the announcer opens with a 'Good morning', or 'Good evening'. Unless it is a global 24-hour repeat news channel, that is. Actually, there will probably be two studio announcers reading in turn from the teleprompter and occasionally turning to look at each other. And it will probably be one male and one female. The point is, there is a format that emerges in the US, which is copied the world over.
Greetings and salutations are part of replicated situations. Move the format from one country and language to another, and the new language will come up with something to match. Like saying 'Good morning' or 'Good evening'. The verbal greeting is translated as part of the replication.
Rosen Plevneliev, 52, was Bulgaria's fourth democratically elected president in 2011, continuing a new political tradition that began after the fall of communism in 1990. A graduate of Sofia Technical University, he has a business background in the field of construction and real estate, with eight years working in Germany before starting his political career. In 2009, he was appointed as minister of regional development and public works, following general elections for seats in the National Assembly.
Some of his works can be seen in the high-quality highways that stretch along the country's borders with Greece and Turkey, also in the construction of the Sofia Business Park and the Sofia Residential Park. He has maintained his good relations with Germany since he became president. "Germany is now our biggest market," he told Tempo in an exclusive interview.
To Shanti Poesposoetjipto, the current chairperson of the board of Samudera Lines, awards come easily. Under her belt are at least 20 acknowledgements of her busy and productive life in business and in civil society. Before she was conferred the 'Order of the Crown' from the Belgian government and witnessed by visiting HRH Princess Astridwho was in Indonesia to lead a business delegation of about 300 peopleshe has, under her belt, the Woman Entrepreneur of the Year (2009), the Asia-Pacific Entrepreneurship Award in that same year, and most impressively, she was listed as the 14th most powerful out of 100 women in Indonesia (2007, 2008) by Globe Asia magazine, which named her the 10th most powerful woman in Indonesia the following year.
The list goes on and on, yet little known by the public at large is her dedication to environmental and governance issues, having founded a few environmental NGOs and who sits in the boards of transparency and governance organizations. Because of her business acumen, she was selected to also be a presidential as well as ministerial advisory council member.
They include bankruptcy and crossborder insolvency, constitutional law, cultural property rights, economics, fundraising, management and governance for foundations, human rights and civil liberties, indigenous rights, customary law and adat communitiesthe list goes on and on. His particular specialties include arbitration, legal and judicial reform, documentation and information, legal research and analysis and planning for institutional change.
Arriving in Indonesia for the first time in late 1969-early 1970, most likely as a hippie backpacker the way he tells it but one who had just completed a sterling education at Cornell University and was gearing up to go to Harvard Law School afterwardsGreg has nurtured a love affair with Indonesia for nigh on 46 years now.
AIDUL Fitriciada Azhari, 48, turned out to be the dark horse in the search for a chairman of the Judicial Commission. He was a last-minute entry after the House of Representatives' (DPR) law commission rejected two of the candidates, and he got the job. "I wasn't even under consideration so it was just pure chance," said Aidul at his Jakarta office last week.
He is now responsible for completing the work to be done by the commission, from reinforcing its legitimacy to ironing out relations with the Supreme Court and addressing the problem of judges' safety. "All this is to protect the integrity of the judiciary," he told Tempo reporters Tulus Wijanarko, Fransisco Rosarians and Raymundus Rikang.
Einstein was completing his curriculum vitae one day in 1932. The prestigious Kaiser Leopold German Academy of Scientists, where Goethe had once been a member, had asked him to join.
He had to answer nine questions. To question number eight he answered, "several medals were awarded me." But he did not explain what those medals were for. Nor did he state that in 1921 he had received the Nobel Prize for Physics...
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.
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.