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News of a plan to extend Gen. Badrodin Haiti's tenure as National Police chief has triggered a fiery debate. Some circles support the plan because they feel Badrodin's performance has been outstanding and because it does not break any law. Others are opposed to the plan because they feel it would prevent a regeneration and because it hampers regeneration inside the police force.
THE agriculture ministry had repeatedly refused to import onions. Minister Andi Amran Sulaiman even admitted being lobbied by big-time importers. Despite his initial refusal, Amran finally accepted the result of a closed meeting at the coordinating ministry for the economy, which decided to allow onion imports. "We are the ones who make the decisions," Amran told Tempo reporters Agus Supriyanto and Akbar Tri Kurniawan last week.
From his youth, Mayakovsky was an activist for the Bolsheviks, the outlawed communist organization. He once helped female political prisoners escape from prison. He was arrested and sentenced by the tsarist government to 11 months imprisonment. But this is where Mayakovsky the poet was born. In his cell, he wrote poems-and from then on he never stopped. Over time, his poems, as well as his works of graphic art, theater and film, became increasingly fascinating and brilliant.
After Mayakovsky's death, the now victorious Communist Party erected a statue of him, six meters high, in Triumphal Square in Moscow. "Indifference to his cultural heritage amounts to a crime," Stalin said.
Supreme Court Chief Justice Muhammad Hatta Ali feels the current negative media reports about the court system are excessive and unjustified. "When it comes to reports about our justice system, they tend to be exaggerated," said Hatta during a recent interview.
The reputation of the Supreme Court was once again in question after the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) nabbed Central Jakarta Court Clerk Edy Nasution red-handed accepting a bribe from a businessman.
Daisy Hadmoko, journalist and veteran travel writer, is in a quandary. Now that most of her books have been given away, she wants to ensure that the important large books she still has get a readership. In other words, she wants to donate them to a repository. "But I no longer know anyone," she said with a sigh.
Actually, this is an understatement. Whenever Daisy Hadmoko is in a roomful of people, there are always people who come up to her to chat. Or to tell her that she may not recall them, but they know her from her from when she was managing editor of Indonesian Observer.
President Joko Widodo has turned down license applications from 61 palm oil firms seeking to expand their estates, sparing some 851,000 hectares of forest from conversion, according to the environment and forestry ministry.
The rejection makes good on a promise Jokowi made last April to freeze licenses for new palm oil and mining projects. Since taking office in October 2014, he has put runaway palm expansion at the forefront of his effort to address the country's annual haze crisis, which is triggered by dry-season forest fires closely correlated to land clearing for oil palm plantations.
As on most days, last Monday around 3pm Janner Purba could be seen striding to his car at the parking lot behind Kepahiang District Court in Bengkulu.
At the lot, Janner-who is the chief justice of the Kepahiang District Court-greeted a man later identified as Febri. Febri handed him a package. Neither were aware that a Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) team was watching from a food stall nearby.
Ahead of President Joko Widodo's visit to Russia two weeks ago, the Indonesian embassy in Moscow hosted frequent visits from top Rosoboronexport officials. The Russian company, which is the nation's sales agent for defense equipment, sent seven representatives to meet Ambassador Wahid Supriyadi and bring him an important message.
One government official said they urged him to get the signing of the Sukhoi-35 fighter aircraft purchase included as one of the items in a memorandum of understanding to be signed in the presence of President Jokowi and Russian President Vladimir Putin. "Their request was very odd as, from the outset, such an agenda was never discussed," he said.
Touring the world's capitals, President Joko Widodo clearly has little taste for the sort of diplomacy enjoyed by predecessor Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono in his single-minded pursuit of foreign investment.
Extolling the virtues of doing business in Indonesia, Widodo wants capital for urgently needed infrastructure development and to reenergize the manufacturing sector as the new driver of a revived Indonesian economy.
The government's policies in the agriculture sector are usually reactive. It never gets down to the bottom of problems, hence the problems' frequent recurrence. The recent surge in onion price is a glaring example. The price of the kitchen staple consumed by millions of people from all walks of life has jumped from Rp20,000 to Rp40,000 per kilogram.
It is not surprising why this pungent bulb earned a spot in the palace agenda. The seemingly trivial vegetable has contributed the highest inflation among produce of its kind, according to Statistics Indonesia (BPS) last March. Onions contributed 0.14 percent to inflation, or around 280 percent and 700 percent higher than the inflation contributed by garlic and red chili, respectively.
A COMEDY. This seems to be the proper way to describe the recent Golkar Party chairman election.
Setya Novanto, a former party treasurer and disgraced speaker of the House of Representatives (DPR), won the election somewhat anticlimactically. His closest challenger was Ade Komarudin, the current DPR speaker.
Indonesia is endowed with a rich biodiversity that offers the country huge potential to develop a tourism industry based on an environmentally responsible program. Compared to conventional tourism, ecotourism offers extra benefits. Besides generating revenue, it is an effective medium for education and environmental conservation. Take the biodiversity park in Bangka-Belitung, developed by a group of local environmentalists. They succeeded not only in revitalizing the local economy badly affected by the collapse of the tin industry, they have also proven that through ecotourism, both local residents and tourists can be taught to conserve nature.
Azwir Malaon, deputy assistant minister for tourism at the ministry for tourism development and creative economy, said that these benefits would enable them to maximize Belitung's eco-tourism potential in the next three years, among others, by improving infrastructure and involving both the public private sectors. "Efforts to conserve nature, to improve people's welfare and to boost revenues can go hand in hand," he said. Two weeks ago, Azwir sat down for an interview with Tempo in his Jakarta office. Excerpts:
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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