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Investigation into a case of suspected corruption over the regulations on land reclamation on the northern coast of Jakarta has entered a new phase. The Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) discovered an advance payment by Muara Wisesa Samudra, a subsidiary of Agung Podomoro Land, to the Jakarta government in the form of 13 work projects. This transaction is considered unusual because it had no legal basis. The draft of a regional regulation that was being prepared as a legal foundation for the imposition of the levy failed to pass after it was revealed that the deliberations were marked by bribery.
Women's participation in politics in Indonesia is still low. The number of female legislators in the House of Representatives (DPR) for the 2014-2019 term is only 97, or 17.32 percent of the total number of parliamentarian seats. This is what is making Indonesia's legislature and policymaking not pro-women and children.
Heru Prasetyo Kasidi, the deputy minister in charge of gender issues at the women's empowerment and child protection ministry, called for an increase of women in the legislature. He said the government was attempting to raise the participation of women in politics through a variety of training programs. "Ideally, women should have a more equal role to men in the public sector, including in politics and development," said Heru.
HISTORY has proven that communism is unable to mature in most societies. Currently, only a few countries still practice the ideology, with some adjustments. For instance, Vietnam adopted capitalism in 1986 through their Doi Moi policy. China, too, has slipped in democratic principles into its government.
What about Indonesia? Officially, a 1966 People's Consultative Assembly (MPR) provision remains in force, meaning communism is banned. However, security forces and several mass organizations insist communism is coming back. To eradicate the perceived-some would say manufactured-threat, they have confiscated t-shirts, books with 'leftist' teachings and even shut down discussions and films about the lives of political prisoners.
Severe Punishment for Sex Offenders
THE many cases of violent sex crimes are an indication of an ongoing moral crisis in Indonesia. Following the rape of 14-year-old YY by 14 men, another victim surfaced this May, the 19-year-old girl EP. She was found dead with numerous wounds on her body and a hoe forced into her lower parts. Three men were the perpetrators; one of them was her own boyfriend.
Efforts to maintain investor confidence in this republic often seem arbitrary in nature. Ironically, this amateurish approach is being used at a time when the government is busily campaigning to entice foreign businesses to invest in Indonesia. Hopes of large numbers of foreign investors coming will be for nothing.
Foreign investors have had many bad experiences in the infrastructure and mining sectors. The latest black mark for investment in Indonesia is the midstream stoppage of the tender for the construction of the Jawa 5 Steam Power Station by PLN, the state-owned electricity company.
RIDWAN Bae and I Ketut Sudikerta had to wait outside the entrance to Setya Novanto's villa at Mulia Resort, Nusa Dua Bali last Tuesday. The chairmen of Golkar's Southeast Sulawesi and Bali chapters wanted to meet their host, the incoming Golkar Party chairman. Setya was doing the rounds, greeting all the guests who were paying him a visit. Not all were able to enter, some were forced to queue up outside the villa's entrance. Two people close to Setya, Nurul Arifin and Roem Kono, were acting as visitors' guides.
Yorrys Raweyai was also there, accompanying Setya while various media people interviewed the latter. In his villa, costing Rp250 million a night, Setya was assembling Golkar's core management team. Roem Kono revealed many people had come proposing various names. "That's normal. After he won, of course lots of people will come," the chairman of the Kinship and Mutual Help Council told Tempo.
Muhammad Syafi'i has had a hectic month. As chairman of the special committee formed to draft a new antiterrorism bill, he has been holding a slew of discussions and seminars. This week, the Great Indonesia Movement (Gerindra) lawmaker scheduled a two-day seminar to gather feedback from experts. "We're searching for material to start a discussion with the government," Syafi'i said last week.
Faced with the new threats posed by the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) terrorist group, the House of Representatives (DPR) has opened debate on revisions to Law No. 15/2013 on Counterterrorism. Justice and Human Rights Minister Yasonna Hamonangan Laoly had already submitted the government's recommended changes to the DPR late last April.
State Electricity Company (PLN) CEO Sofyan Basir is once again in hot water, this time for his decision to call off an ongoing power tender process. Energy and Mineral Resources Ministry believes Sofyan's decision will slow down the 35,000-megawatt project the government is set to launch.
But Sofyan dismissed the charges. "We've worked very hard and now we're told there hasn't been any progress?" he said in an interview last week. Sofyan, a former boss of Bank Rakyat Indonesia, gathered all of his board members to answer all the criticisms directed at PLN.
President Joko Widodo referred to South Korea as a 'strategic partner' last week in a meeting with his South Korean counterpart Park Geun-hye. The state visit was held to commemorate the 10-year anniversary of the signing of the Joint Strategic Partnership to Promote Friendship and Cooperation in the 21st Century.
"The state visit to South Korea shows our commitment to intensifying the bilateral relationship," Jokowi said at the Chong Wa Dae Presidential Palace in Seoul on Monday last week.
We have so many wonderful be-ed words in English and this song features three of them. 'Beguiled' is an old English word formed from adding be- and -ed to the French word guile (deceit), to mean 'lured', 'charmed'. 'Bewitched' adds be- and -ed to the word 'witch', to mean 'put under a spell'. The creation of this wonderful word is often attributed to Shakespeare, although he may have merely popularized it. (Shakespeare did coin at least two other be-ed words, though; 'besmirched' from 'smirch' meaning 'stain', and 'bedazzled'.) 'Bewildered' is made from the word 'wilder', an old verb meaning 'to lose your way', and with which we are familiar from the word 'wilderness'. 'Bewildered' is to be overcome by losing your way, and thus, hopelessly confused.
Indonesian can do a similar thing by putting ke- and -an around words. First, though, before these exciting twists and turns, the basics. The most standard use of ke- and -an is to turn a word into an abstract noun, words that in English often end in -dom, -hood, -ship or -ness. So raja is 'king', and kerajaan is 'kingdom'; merdeka is 'free' or 'independent', and kemerdekaan is 'freedom' or 'independence'; baik is 'good', and kebaikan is 'goodness'; anggota is 'member' and keanggotaan is 'membership'; sulit is 'difficult', and kesulitan is 'difficulty' and so forth. But beware: It is not all smooth sailing. There is the well-known trap for new language learners. While malu means 'ashamed' or 'embarrassed', kemaluan does not mean 'shame', as one would expect, but rather, 'genitals'. I was once told the story of an Australian diplomat's wife in Jakarta, who in her halting Indonesian was telling an Indonesian woman friend that her husband had made some social gaffe, and how embarrassed he was-but she said his kemaluan was great (besar). Without missing a beat, the Indonesian woman friend congratulated her on her choice of husband.
It has been more than six months since devastating forest fires in Sumatra and Kalimantan caused the annual havoc not only in Indonesia but also in neighboring Singapore and parts of Malaysia. There were loss of life, health hazards and massive environmental degradation.
With another dry season just around the corner and about 50 hotspots already detected by the Meteorology, Climatology and Geophysical Agency (BMKG) in Sumatra and the Riau archipelago, the question that needs to be asked is just how ready we are to deal with yet another potential disaster.
His sideburns and mustache are unkempt. He prefers wearing hats inside out, and favors faded jeans and t-shirts. This is Dwi Martono, who looks very much the painter that he is.
This son of Kebumen, Central Java is a highly skilled artist despite having never graduated from art school. "Yes, I never formally finished my studies. I was in the 1988 batch, along with Ugo Untoro and Muhammad Operasi Rahman," he recalled.
FOR Fify Manan, commuting between Jakarta and Georgia in southern United States, is probably like other Indonesians traveling between Jakarta and Yogyakarta or Surabaya. Every month, this 51-year old president and CEO of the Formcase Group, which designs, manufactures and markets modern office furniture, divides her time between those two cities in Indonesia and Atlanta, Georgia.
Fortunately, she doesn't mind the long commute, as it's the only time when she can indulge in her favorite hobby: watching movies. "I like dramas and comedies," she said, during an interview with Tempo English in Karawaci, Banten, where she was resting after a month-long trip to the US. "Beside doing business as usual, I attended the Diaspora's Wonderful Indonesia Festival in New Orleans," said Fify, who is Vice President of the Indonesian Diaspora Business Council (IDBC). Wonderful Indonesia is an Indonesian diaspora and government campaign to promote the country around the world. "I also took time to attend a wedding of a friend who's been a customer for 21 years, in the Dominican Republic."
LAST March, Mustafa Ali Haji was once again chosen as Bulgaria's grand mufti, reinstating him as the highest Muslim leader in the country. This Balkan country's muftiate is today made up of 21 areas, each led by a regional mufti. According to the National Statistics Institute in Bulgaria, almost 10 percent of its 7.3 million population are Muslims. As such, this former communist country has set a new record for a Balkan country and in Europe, as a nation with the fastest-growing Islamic community after the 1989 fall of the its communist regime.
Mustafa acknowledges that Islam in Bulgaria, and in the Balkans in general, is very different from that in Indonesia. "Here the state does not require religious education and Islamic school graduates have no interest in becoming imams (clerics) and taking care of the congregation," he told Tempo in a recent interview. This is one of our major problems," said Mustafa, who holds a doctorate in Islamic theology from Turkey. This is why he is keen to collaborate with Indonesia, as "the quality of its Islamic education is very high," he said.
Minister for Women's Empowerment and Child Protection Yohana Susana Yembise, 58, cannot afford to take it easy yet, even though Law No. 35/2014 is ready to be enacted. Better known as the Bill on Castration, this piece of legislation will soon be deliberated on at the House of Representatives (DPR).
The bill was drafted by three ministries at the instruction of President Joko Widodo as a response to the emerging cases of sexual abuse. The ministries involved are the ministries coordinating human development and culture, social affairs and women's empowerment and child protection. "The President has instructed the attorney-general and me to monitor the passage of the bill," said Yohana in a recent interview.
'How profoundly you are cursed, O Granada!'
In Heinrich Heine's tragedy Almansor, Almansur bin Abdullah returns home to Granada from exile. He goes back to the castle of his childhood: The building is still intact on the 'old and beloved' land with its floors covered with carpets of varied hue; the marble pillars still stand strong. Almansor feels at home. But something makes him anxious. Life has changed. The Spanish Muslim kingdom, self-absorbed in its own brilliance, has fallen, conquered by the Catholic power under Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand.
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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