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This year, Angin Prayitno Aji is not messing around. The head of the taxation directorate-general's Central Jakarta regional office said he had held five taxpayers 'hostage' during the first four months of 2016. This detention of someone against their will by tax officials, which is known in Dutch gijzeling, is a last-ditch effort to force a delinquent taxpayer to pay up. The taxation directorate-general has named 2016 'Law Enforcement Year'.
Only one of the five has been released, after being detained for a month. The taxpayer, whose name begins with an 'U', was freed only after paying off a tax debt of Rp1.6 billion.
THE Best Halal Tourism and World's Best Halal Honeymoon awards at the World Halal Travel Summit last year prompted a number of regions around Indonesia to work on winning those awards. The interested provinces were Aceh and West Sumatra. The provincial administrations of these two provinces are now competing to develop halal (acceptable according to Islam) in their respective areas in the next three years. They are campaigning hard among tourism industry practitioners to develop this industry genre and allocating the necessary funding for the effort.
Lokot Ahmad Enda, who is assistant deputy director for the development of cultural tourism destinations at the tourism ministry, said in an interview that Indonesia has been late in developing halal tourism. In fact, the program was only seriously developed in Indonesia around 2012. "Even Thailand has been doing it for the last 15years and Malaysia started it 10 years ago," Lokot told Tempo English reporter Isma Savitri in an interview last April. Excerpts.
THE government has not budged from its refusal to apologize for the September 30, 1965 tragedy, when hundreds of thousands of Indonesian Communist Party (PKI) members and those thought to be affiliated with the group were killed or arrested and held for years without trial. Vice President Jusuf Kalla said the victims of the tragedy had been the army generals whom PKI members allegedly killed in an attempted coup.
Both the families of generals and the families of those killed and jailed in the ensuing crackdown have been wronged.
More than a month has passed since President Joko Widodo announced his decision on the Masela Block, but nothing more has been heard about it. The two operators awarded the right to manage the block, Inpex Masela Ltd. and Shell Plc., have shown no signs of carrying out another feasibility study, following the President's decision. If this state of affairs continues, both the operators as well as the state will lose out.
The Masela Block issue emerged once again when the President visited the Netherlands last week. In a meeting with Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte and several businessmen, the decision to opt for an onshore refinery was raised. It was still seen as a controversial choice.
The atmosphere in the Royal Ballroom at the Sofia Hotel Balkan in the morning of March 11 resembled a reunion of celebrities. There were academics, scholars, religious leaders, ministers, princes, international organization executives, human rights activists-reporters and writers. About 200 guests filled the meeting room of this five-star hotel. Discussion topics changed quickly, flowing in an array of European languages: English, German, French, Italian, the Slavic languages: Bulgarian and Russian, and Arabic.
The main guests that morning were 20 speakers from 10 countries of Europe, the Middle East and Indonesia-representing Southeast Asia. They had been invited to share their experiences in an international conference titled, 'What Values Unite Us Today', when violence and radicalism are running rampant in the world without heeding borders.
When Joko Widodo entered the State Palace 18 months ago, he did so with less than a decade of political experience, and with little knowledge of world affairs.
This inexperience, combined with the urgent need to rejuvenate a flagging economy, led many to worry Jokowi would tether Indonesia's foreign affairs to a domestic reform agenda, backpedaling from his predecessor's committed internationalism.
Five men sat chatting in front of a shophouse in Pluit Sakti Raya, North Jakarta, on Tuesday last week. Though lacking uniforms, they behaved like security guards, glowering at any stranger who passed.
In official documents, the house is listed as headquarters for an export-import firm. But local residents know it as a currency-exchange business. "It's not an export-import office; it's a money changer," said Agustama Putu, a security guard employed at a nearby shopping complex.
Last year was Marina Walker Guevara's busiest time. She had to face piles of documents, layers of digital data, and, most importantly, she was commanding hundreds of journalists from 80 countries who collaborated on investigating and publishing the Panama Papers.
The report involves 2.6 terabytes of data on companies set up in tax-haven countries like Panama or regions like the British Virgin Islands. The companies' owners are a mix of politicians, public officials, thieves, drug lords, billionaires and celebrities, including world-class athletes and sports people.
Pardon' cannot be separated from memory, but can memory be everlasting? Is it possible for us to speak about 'pardon' outside of history?
In Milan Kundera's novel The Joke, Ludvik seeks revenge for the pain his friend inflicted upon him in the past, when, just because of a joke, he was ostracized by the ruling Communist Party. He succeeds in his revenge, but this does not make him happy. It turns out there is another 'joke': people are deceived if they think that memory can be eternal, and deceived to think that mistakes of the past can be set right. In the end, Kundera writes, vengeance and forgiveness "will be taken over by forgetting." Once vengeance is gone, forgiveness is no longer important.
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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