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Ewa Wojkowska Kopernik Co-Founder and COO
Logistics and Transportation are Our Biggest Challenges

EWA Wojkowska and her partner and Kopernik co-founder, Toshi Nakamura, want to prove that simple technologies can make a huge difference to needy people. Wojkowska worked for the United Nations in Timor-Leste, Thailand and Sierra Leone and saw problems in the rural areas that were not being addressed, including the lack of lighting and clean water.

Meanwhile, they both realized that there are simple solutions to those problems. They could be solar-sourced lighting, biomass cook stoves and water filters that are east to produce but not necessarily available or accessible to the people who can really benefit from them.

Outreach Tuesday, September 20, 2016 Edition

Leonika Sari
An Appropriate App for Blood Donors

Leonika Sari Njoto Boedioetomo is a bright and cheerful young woman. She is also smart.At a young age, Leonika is rated one of Asia's young influential leaders by ForbesAsia magazine. She is regarded as an inspiration for creating the Reblood app.

Reblood is a site or application that connects interested would-be donors with various blood drives in Surabaya. It provides a slew of information on the events themselves, while at the same time getting users to fill in relevant personal information, especially about their individual blood types.

Cover Story Tuesday, April 19, 2016 Edition

Husni Kamil Manik, General Elections Commissioner:
I Was Just The Referee

HUSNI Kamil Manik stared at the chess board in front of him, his brows wrinkling as he contemplated what to do with the black king, trapped by the white king and two of his pawns. "Look at this black king, he will definitely lose," he said. He picked up the black king and threw him out of the game.

Husni, the current commissioner of the General Elections Commission (KPU) is no stranger to pawns, rooks, ministers and kings, since his elementary school days. If there was no one to play with at home, he would play alone, learning by reading strategic tips published in newspapers. Playing chess has taught him to be cautious but also to be decisive at the same time, when contemplating important steps.

Interview Tuesday, August 5, 2014 Edition

A Piggyback Bombing Plot

The police arrested Abdul Basith, an IPB lecturer, and members of his group, for making preparations to carry out bombings in Jakarta. They planned to conduct it at the same time as a 212 Jihadi Action event. Three retired military generals are implicated.

Law Tuesday, October 8, 2019 Edition

Bribing and Taming the Police

In West Java, law enforcement authorities, like elsewhere, are tasked with arresting criminals, not cover up their crimes. But the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) testimony of former Subang Regent Ojang Suhandi, who confessed to having bribed police officers to escape the law, proves otherwise. Instead of chasing criminals, the police conspired with them to cover up crimes.

For his part, Ojang, a member of the Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P), was caught bribing a prosecutor in an attempt to have his name erased from the social security fund (BPJS) graft case file. A court had found two former officials of the Subang health services department guilty of embezzling Rp4.7 billion from the social security claim refund of Rp41 billion, and subsequently sentenced them to four years in prison.

Opinion Tuesday, June 28, 2016 Edition

Intelligence Disconnect and the Brussels Bombing

At a busy intersection in the Etterbeek area, several police officers suddenly burst into a cafe where people usually just gathered to smoke. Pistols in hand, last Tuesday afternoon they moved quickly to search every corner. Then they left just as quickly as they had come. There was no fuss.

Search followed search in the midst of increasingly tight security in Belgium in the aftermath of the terror bombings at Brussels' Zaventem Airport and Maelbeek Metro Station that morning. The attacks, which killed 30 people, left locals in a precarious situation, completely disrupting their daily routines.

International Tuesday, March 29, 2016 Edition

The Marriott Bombing Part 2

Long before the bombs went off at the Marriott and Ritz-Carlton hotels last Friday in Mega Kuningan, Jakarta, the police were on to the possibility of an attempted bombing. In fact, a day before the explosions, the bomb squad had combed through the office of the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK), following a telephoned bomb threat. However, just like the incident six years ago at the same location, the police were too slow to act.

Cover Story Tuesday, July 21, 2009 Edition

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