maaf email atau password anda salah
There is no need for Jakarta Governor Basuki Tjahaja Purnama to be hesitant when discussing the additional contribution for Jakarta's north coast reclamation project. If there is no evidence of ill intent or losses to the state, it will be difficult to accuse him of corruption even if his initiative is seen as controversial.
The policy proposed by Basuki imposes additional obligations on Muara Wisea Samudra-a subsidiary company of Agung Podomoro Land, a property development giant. Muara holds the permit to reclaim land on which it will build the 161-hectare Island G, to be known as Pluit City. It will have to pay Rp392.6 million to the city treasury as a condition for receiving the reclamation license.
President Joko Widodo should not be duplicitous in dealing with the phobia of the authorities and some of the public towards communism. He must be firm in putting an end to the ban on discussions and performances and the confiscation of books and pictures with communist themes that have occurred with increasing frequency recently.
His indecision on the issue was apparent in two statements that seemed to be aimed at trying to please both sides: those who have a fear of communist revival and those who see the ideology as nothing more than past history.
The release of 10 hostages taken by the Abu Sayyaf terror group should not make us compliant. Before we can crow in victory, we must not forget that four more of our fellow Indonesian citizens are still being held by the separatist groups in the southern Philippines.
The tugboat Brahma 12 was hijacked by the Abu Sayyaf group on March 25 as it was pulling a barge-load of 7,500 metric tons of coal from South Kalimantan to Batangas, south of Manila.
The case of Nurhadi is a sign that dark clouds still hang over our courts. The secretary of the Supreme Court is not someone who has the decisive role in the way the nation's highest court dispenses justice, but the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) has revealed another side to the bureaucrat: He has control over how major cases are handled.
In the past, the reform process targeted the corrupt legal system itself when courts from the district level all the way to the Supreme Court were little more than black markets. Case brokers, attorneys, clerks, judges and justices were all links in the chain that bought and sold justice, both criminal and civil.
The government should not remain silent over the names of civil servants listed in the Panama Papers. It is not enough for President Joko Widodo to summon the officials concerned and listen to their explanations on why they own companies in tax-haven nations, as disclosed in the leaked documents of Panamanian law firm Mossack Fonseca.
The President should be more assertive. He should, for example, conduct an independent investigation to determine the real motives of companies seeking a tax shelter in other countries. Law No. 28/1999 on a Clean Government Free of Corruption, Collusion and Nepotism clearly justifies such action.
It was truly amusing to see the conduct of Ade Komarudin and Setya Novanto in their responses to the tax amnesty bill submitted by the government. The two Golkar legislators busily lobbied faction leaders at the leadership of the House of Representatives (DPR) to determine who would lead the discussions.
DPR speaker Ade Komarudin asked that the tax amnesty bill be discussed by the finance and banking commission, while Golkar faction chief Setya Novanto wanted it to discussed by a special committee. It is fair to suspect that this was the result of the competition between the two men who are currently vying for the Golkar Party chairmanship. But this is not what concerns the public.
The political drama starring the leadership of the Justice and Prosperity Party (PKS) and its member Fahri Hamzah is light entertainment at a time when respect for the House of Representatives (DPR) is at a low as a result of the conduct of its members. This matter did not begin with bribery, scandal or a comparative study tour with attendant high costs.
Even though in 'minor league' of problems, the conduct of several DPR legislators has been far from honorable: napping, looking at obscene pictures on a cellphone screen during plenary sessions, or using impolite language. It is this last misdemeanor that led to Fahri Hamzah, known as a vocal speaker in Senayan, to being fired. The chairman of the PKS central executive board dismissed him from the party on April 1. He also lost his other positions in the party, including his seat as deputy DPR speaker.
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.