June 7, 2016 edition
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Scene & Heard
Hans-Christian Vittinghus
Indonesian Fans Appreciate Us
Indicator
Corrupt Courts
Outreach
IN areas of west and north Kalimantan along the border separating Indonesia and Malaysia, life is hard for most of the local residents, economically, socially, and in matters pertaining to education. Across the border in Sabah, Malaysia's largest oil palm plantation region, over 200,000 Indonesians work on plantations and the refineries, mostly as unskilled labor or domestic helpers. According to the National Migrant Worker Placement and Protection Agency out of that number, about 140,000 are illegal workers.
It is their status that causes them untold problems. One of the most critical issues they face is education for their children. Living in plantations, around 20,000 of these school-aged migrant children have no access to any kind of educational institutions. Parents must often make the painful choice of sending their kids back to their families in Indonesia, or keeping them close, but without getting any education. As illegal migrants, they are also denied the right to attend local schools.
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Indicator
THE Indonesian legal system is at the end of the line. The public no longer trusts in the judges after so many have been caught taking bribes.
The latest case involves Kepahiang District Court Chief Janner Pure who was apprehended by the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) last week. Together with his colleague, Toton, the judge was caught accepting Rp150 million in bribes. The KPK also found Rp500 million while raiding his office.
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Letters
The Term Yahweh in Bible
PRESIDENT Joko Widodo must immediately order the Indonesian Bible Association to stop damaging the Indonesian language in translating the Bible. The association has translated the term Yahweh to 'Tuhan' and 'Allah' although according to the rule, such names should not be translated.
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Opinion
Jails can no longer be relied on to rehabilitate lawbreakers. After four years behind bars, Muhammad Nazaruddin seems as free as ever to influence the procedures of government projects. From Sukamiskin Correctional Facility in Bandung, West Java, the former Democrat Party treasurer is alleged to have pressured and threatened H.M. Wardan, the regent of Indragiri Hilir in Riau, to follow his instructions.
A short message was sent from Nazaruddin's cellphone. It warned the recipient not to forget to pay an agreed amount of contribution. Nazaruddin feels he played a major role in Indragiri Hilir regency getting a certain project. Nazaruddin, who is serving a seven year sentence for bribery linked to the Athlete's Village project, indicated he would see that the Wardan would also go to jail if payment was not made.
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Cover Story
The partnership between state oil and gas company Pertamina and Russian oil firm Rosneft in building the Tuban refinery in East Java seems to have been a tight competition between the ministries of state-owned enterprises Ministry (SOE) and that of energy and mineral resources (ESDM). Pertamina CEO Dwi Soetjipto asserted that Rosneft's win was in line with company procedures. "We have also reported it to our shareholders," he told Tempo reporters Agus Supriyanto and Ayu Prima Sandi at the Pertamina headquarters in Jakarta, last week.
Dwi denied reports that an outsider mediated the selection process. Alongsde Pertamina refinery director Rachmad Hardadi and spokesperson Wianda Pusponegoro, he clarified the selection process, including the geopolitical considerations for choosing Rosneft.
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Economy
Indonesia has missed an opportunity to graduate this month. Last Wednesday, Standard & Poor's (S&P) global ratings confirmed that Indonesia's rating will remain in non-investment grade territory. In S&P language, that means BB+, just one notch short from getting out of the junk category. No offence taken, in financial market lingo, non-investment grade bond is simply a junk bond.
Two weeks ago, the hope of passing that critical one notch emerged when an S&P entourage came to Jakarta for an evaluation, and even paid a short visit to President Joko Widodo. The government's public relation machinery wasted no time in flooding the media with positive signals. Officials boasted that Indonesia deserves to get an investment grade rating.
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National
Activities at the central meeting room at the Golkar Party's offices in Slipi, West Jakarta, paused abruptly last Thursday when the power went out during Golkar Executive Chairman Nurdin Halid's speech. The officials rose from their chairs. Some headed for the table filled with food. Others snuck out to get some fresh air. Darkness and stuffiness filled the room.
Several top officials clustered around the front table. Setya Novanto, Nurdin Halid, and Yorrys Raweyai could be seen talking, their heads close together. Behind them stood Sigit Haryo Wibisono, listening in on their conversation.
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Law
TWO bangs of the gavel were greeted with rapturous applause and calls of 'praise be to God' as dozens of fishermen from North Jakarta cheered the decision handed down by the Jakarta State Administration Court (PTUN) on Tuesday last week. "This is victory for the people and fishermen," said Kuat, one of the plaintiffs in the case.
The presiding judge granted the suit filed by Kuat and four fishermen from Muara Angke, North Jakarta. The other plaintiffs were Gobang, Tri Sutrisno, Muhamad Tahir and Nur Saepudin. The five had challenged the legality of the permit issued by the Jakarta governor to Muara Wisesa Samudra, a subsidiary of Agung Podomoro Land, for the reclamation of Isle G.
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Travel
The flight from Sumbawa disgorged a planeload of small businessmen, missionary families with young children, a few white-veiled nuns, a smattering of French and Dutch tourists, two Australian surfers and myself onto the tarmac of West Sumba's Tambolaka airport. We rode through a dry countryside of steepled churches atop hills, fields of galloping horses, clusters of stone slab graves, roofs of riotous bougainvillea blossoms, and rows of scraggly shops and squealing pigs being loaded into pickup trucks. In the late 1990s, I remember seeing loin-clothed wild pig hunters carrying spears along the road with their dogs, but not this time.
The landscape is still raw and relatively unpeopled-no factories, no billboards, no supermarkets-just gardens and country farmers markets. Sumba's famous top-hat alang-alang (thatch)-roofed traditional wooden dwellings are relentlessly being phased out and replaced by cinder-block buildings that cost considerably less to build. Like the rumah adat (traditional house), horses as transport are also being replaced by a dramatic proliferation of Japanese motorbikes. Cables creeping out from under grass roofs lead to meter-wide satellite dishes. People's calm reaction and behavior indicate that they are getting used to tourists.
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Film
PRENJAK
Director: Wregas Bhanuteja
Screenplay: Wregas Bhanuteja
Actors: Rosa Winenggar, Yohanes Budyambara, Hosea Hatmaji, Banyu Bening
The story is set in a kitchen filled with hanging pots and pans, and cans of flour for pizza. Diah, the short-haired woman, pulls aside Jarwo, a chubby male co-worker wearing an apron.
Director: Wregas Bhanuteja
Screenplay: Wregas Bhanuteja
Actors: Rosa Winenggar, Yohanes Budyambara, Hosea Hatmaji, Banyu Bening