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TEMPO readers who followed last week's poll were divided on the question of whether to halt or continue the reclamation of the Jakarta bay. Out of 2,216 respondents, 50.7 percent wanted the reclamation to be stopped, compared to 48.1 percent who wanted to see the project go on.
The question rose again as a national dispute when newly appointed Coordinating Maritime Affairs Minister Luhut Binsar Panjaitan ended a moratorium on reclamation activities. Luhut also recalled the prohibition of reclamation for Island G, which was decreed by former Minister Rizal Ramli.
A survey conducted by the Wahid Foundation has revealed shocking data. The findings showed that of 1,520 Muslims chosen at random around Indonesia, 49 percent were intolerant of groups they did not like. 'Communists', lesbians, gays, bisexuals and transgender persons were the most disliked groups.
STAGE-two restructuring of the cabinet has been greeted with applause. Expectations are high, especially because a familiar figure, Sri Mulyani Indrawati, has returned from abroad.
Sri Mulyani, born in Bandar, Lampung, 54 years ago, was persuaded to fill the position of finance minister. In 2010, she left the same position to become the World Bank managing director, located in Washington, DC, United States.
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