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Bigshots and Brokers

The role played by House of Representatives (DPR) Speaker Setya Novanto in seeking to divvy up shares of Freeport Indonesia is irrefutable. The recording played out at a hearing of the DPR ethics council cleared up any previous confusion on the subject.

Setya, accompanied by oil trader Muhammad Riza Chalid, met with Freeport Indonesia CEO Maroef Sjamsoeddin on June 8 at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel in Jakarta. The speaker was clearly out of place, as he was unauthorized to determine how Freeport's shares should be divested or broker an extension to the company's contract or to determine how Freeport's shares should be divested. Even if his excuse was to seek information on the process of selling the shares, he should have stuck to parliamentary procedures.

Opinion Tuesday, December 8, 2015 Edition

The Mysterious Photograph

Almost every Indonesian knows the picture of Bung Tomo standing in front of a round microphone under a striped umbrella, his hand pointed at the sky, the sleeve of his uniform rolled to his elbow, eyes ablaze. This picture has been reproduced in numerous history textbooks. And it is easy enough to find the picture online: simply Google Bung Tomo, and hundreds of the same picture will appearwith or without Photoshop touches.

The picture is so iconic that every time the November 10 battle is commemorated, the picture is displayed. The photograph is often associated with the Battle of Surabaya itself, although no one seems to know for sure when and where the picture was taken, or who the photographer was. The only accurate information on the photo is that its negative belonged to the IPPHOS (Indonesia Press and Photo Service). "The IPPHOS photo collections rarely had complete photo credits," said Oscar Motuloh, head of the Antara Journalistic Photo Gallery (GFJA), which now owns most of IPPHOS's photographs.

Special Report Tuesday, November 10, 2015 Edition

That Photo

...and the grave
Proves the child ephemeral...
-W.H. Auden

That photo-that shocking photo, the one we can't bear to look at, the one we worry will make sensitive people the world over have nightmares-has quickly become the symbol of our current anxiety. The body of a small three-year-old boy lying facedown on the shore. His tiny, fragile forehead dipped in the waves that washed his body back up on Turkish soil. The blue of his shorts and the red of his t-shirt seem to be calling out to the entire Bodrum Peninsula.

Sidelines Tuesday, September 15, 2015 Edition

Whistleblower Shot!

A loud gunshot woke nine youngsters sleeping in a small gazebo in a house on Jalan Teuku Umar in Bangkalan, East Java, on Monday last week. That midnight, Mat Dai sprang up to the sound of someone screaming in pain beyond the fence outside. He ran toward the sickening noise.

Mat Dai then saw Rofi, a friend, carrying Mat Dai's father, Mathur Husairi. The 49-year-old's body was covered in blood. A bullet had struck his waist and severely injured his intestine.

Law Thursday, January 1, 1970 Edition

Who Shot the Judge?

Who shot Supreme Court judge Syafiuddin Kartasasmita? And more important, who ordered his killing? Police investigators assume it was someone he had sentenced in his work. Attention is again on Indonesia's missing bad boy, Tommy Suharto.

Law Tuesday, August 7, 2001 Edition

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