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Articles

Bali bombers to seek Muslim edict on validity of penalty
2008-01-08 09:02:00
THREE Islamic militants on death row for the 2002 Bali bombings met their families yesterday as their lawyer said they would seek an edict from Indonesia's Muslim body on the legality of execution by shooting.The three - Imam Samudra, Amrozi and Mukhlas - could face possibly a firing squad within a month unless they seek presidential clemency, an option which they have already ruled out.Last week, prosecutors handed over copies of a Supreme Court verdict rejecting the men's final appeal, marking the start of a 30-day deadline for them to request clemency or be executed.The three men were sentenced to death for their role in two nightclub blasts on Bali's Kuta strip on October 12, 2002, in which 202 people died, mostly foreign tourists.The attacks were blamed on the South-East Asian militant group Jemaah Islamiah.Samudra's mother, wife and four children visited the men in prison on Nusakambangan island, off the southern coast of Java.Samudra's family travelled with the relatives...
More About: Seek , Penalty , Vali
Critical Soeharto fights as organs fail
2008-01-06 18:19:00
INDONESIA'S former dictator Soeharto was last night in a critical condition in a Jakarta hospital, with doctors struggling to prevent multiple organ failure.Doctors at the hospital said they feared for the life of the 86-year-old former general.His health deteriorated over five days at his colonial-era house in the Jakarta suburb of Menteng, where he lived as a recluse."We can say his condition has worsened, is more serious than before," said Joko Raharjo, one of the doctors."Another heart pacemaker needs to be fitted. We are afraid he could suffer organ failure, so we have recruited some specialists from several hospitals to try everything to avoid organ failure," he said.Doctors said Mr Soeharto's kidney and lung functions had deteriorated and he would likely need dialysis.President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, also a former military general, paid a 12-minute visit to Mr Soeharto's bedside yesterday morning. But Mr Soeharto could not speak."His condition is critical," Dr Yudhoyono...
More About: Fights , Organs , Critical , Organ
The law cannot be expected to enforce itself: Legislator
2008-01-02 00:35:00
In 2007 law enforcement has failed to ensure security as well as resolve major cases from the past. Azis Syamsuddin, a criminal law expert and deputy chairman of the law commission at the House of Representatives talked to The Jakarta Post's Ridwan Max Sijabat on this issue recently. Question: How do you evaluate law enforcement in 2007? Answer: I would like to tell President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono that, as in previous years, there was no rule of law this year (2007). We have government, but it has failed to enforce the law at all levels in public life. Why do you say that? The law can't enforce itself, it must be enforced by the government. The President as the head of the government wasn't able to ensure Police and the Attorney General enforced the law, thus leaving us with legal uncertainty. We see the President and law enforcers do not take actions against groups who use violence against the Ahmadiyah sect and other religious groups who use their houses for worship. The pub...
Higher Pay for Lankan Maids From Tomorrow
2008-01-01 14:56:00
Sri Lankan maids in Saudi Arabia will have their minimum wage increased by over 90 percent starting tomorrow following a recent order issued by the Sri Lankan government. Maids will now receive a minimum of SR750 per month, a SR350 increase over their previous SR400 monthly wage."Since Dec. 25, we have been advising recruitment agents in Saudi Arabia of the increase in salaries and telling them to revise contracts accordingly, " said N.L.D. Abeyrabne, counselor of Employment and Welfare at the Sri Lankan Embassy in Riyadh.Abeyrabne added that Sri Lankan maids currently working in the Kingdom would have their employment contracts adjusted to reflect the pay raise.Meanwhile, officials at recruitment offices in Riyadh and Jeddah said they had been adjusting contracts to reflect the pay raise. "Since receiving the news of the announcement concerning the salary increase of Sri Lankan housemaids, we have had our workload doubled," said a source at Al-Babtain Recruitment Agency in Riyadh.T...
More About: Tomorrow , Higher , Morrow , Tomo
Indonesian mudflow damages claim fails
2007-12-30 09:16:00
INDONESIA's environment watchdog has failed in its efforts to have responsibility for the disastrous mudflows that began in Java 18 months ago slated home to the Banjar Panji drilling joint venture. About 6000 villagers living close to Indonesia's second city of Surabaya in eastern Java had to be relocated after mud began flowing from deep underground. The disaster has already cost millions of dollars, and experts believe the costs could rise substantially. The mudflows have led to claim and counter-claim as to who is responsible, and complaints that the Indonesian Government is not doing enough to resolve the issues, including providing compensation for the thousands whose livelihoods have been destroyed. Australian oil and gas exploration and production company Santos said yesterday the South Jakarta District Court had handed down a decision on proceedings brought by the Indonesian Forum for the Environment (WAHLI) on the mudflows. Santos is a non-operating 18per cent partner in...
More About: Damages , Ages
Indonesia: Women dominate divorce under Islamic law in Aceh
2007-12-29 05:31:00
Three years after the devastating tsunami hit the Indonesia n province of Aceh , Dra Hanisah, a staff member at a local Sharia or Islamic court, said that one little noticed ripple effect of the killer wave is that more women than men are now filing for divorce in the local legal system based on Islamic law. In an interview with Adnkronos International (AKI), Dra Hanisah, described how the current trend started after the December 2004 tsunami that, in Aceh alone, killed nearly 170,000. "We used to have more men filing for divorce but now is definitely more women," said Hanisah who is a member of the Sharia court in the provincial capital of Banda Aceh. Although there isn't comprehensive data available, Hanisah hinted that the ratio is about 3-1. In June, for example, 93 women filed for divorce at the Banda Aceh Islamic Court compared to only 34 men.The clerk, who has access to the requests for divorce, blamed the many quick marriages that took place after the natural disaster. "After...
More About: Divorce , Women
Indonesia Oil Prices
2007-12-25 03:56:00
2008 will be a nightmare for residents of Jakarta and the surrounding areas. It is planned that the government will reduce the supply of 88 octane Premium gasoline to just Jakarta, Bogor, Depok, Tangerang and Bekasi, the Greater Jakarta region, otherwise known as Jabodetabek. In return, the government will ask state oil & gas company Pertamina to make 90 octane gasoline available for private vehicles. Premium 88 gasoline will still be subsidized by the government but only for motorcycles and public transportation. This is one of the options that the government can take in the future in order to overcome further fluctuations in subsidized fuel as a result of global oil price increases. For the 2007 budget year, the government prepared fuel subsidies amounting to Rp55.6 trillion. This was with the assumption that oil prices on the international market would only be US$60 per barrel. In reality however, oil prices are far above the assumptions that were made in the Revised 2007 Sta...
More About: Indonesia , Prices
Rescued Pademelons Reach Home
2007-12-22 19:59:00
When Hendrik and Hesty flew into the local airport here earlier this month, they were given a ceremonial welcome with Papuan warriors in full battle regalia hopping about to the tune of traditional martial music. The warriors fell into two rows as the director of Freeport environmental division Johnny Prewitt, head of conservation bureau of Indonesian forestry ministry Awrya Ibrahim and Danish (one name), chief of the Wasur National Park, and executive staff from the Cikananga Animal Rescue Centre (PPSC) in West Java emerged. But the cynosure of all eyes was Hendrik and Hesty, rescued from the clutches of wildlife traders four years ago, and their extended family of 21 Papuan dusky pademelon, being returned to their natural habitat on Indonesian Papua. Pademelons, wallabies,and kangaroos are similar in body structure, and the names refer to marsupials of three different size groups. Besides their smaller size, pademelons are distinguished from wallabies by their shorter, thicker and...
More About: Home , Reach , Melons
Fuel seeps from capsized tanker
2007-12-20 07:33:00
Fuel has begun seeping from the engine of a small tanker that capsized at an Indonesian port this week, but its hold remains secure, the port master said yesterday.The Karisma Selatan, which has a capacity of 500,000 litres, capsized shortly after it was filled with marine fuel at Surabaya's Tanjung Perak port early Tuesday. Nobody was injured."There is a very small quantity of fuel that has leaked out of the ship, but we already have rubber oil booms in place around the tanker," port master Rocky Ahmad Suherman said.Late Tuesday he said that the ship had been examined and "the cargo is still intact; we are sure that there is no leakage".Suherman said authorities were coordinating with the ship's owner as they tried to work out the best way to salvage the ship. The tanker was operated by local agent PT Pasifik Selatan."We are trying to determine if it is best to upright the ship then suck the cargo out or the other way around," he said, adding that the salvage operation could take...
More About: Fuel , Tanker
Bashir visits death row Bali bombers
2007-12-17 14:25:00
RADICAL Islamic cleric Abu Bakar Bashir has visited the three Bali bombers on death row in prison.Bashir, widely believed to be the spiritual head of South East Asian terror network Jemaah Islamiah (JI), said he wanted to boost the spirits of the three before they face the firing squad. He also warned Indonesia would suffer a big disaster if it went ahead with the executions. Bali bombers Amrozi, Bashir's former student Mukhlas and Imam Samudra are awaiting execution in Batu Prison on Nusakambangan Island, known as Indonesia's Alcatraz, off central Java. The trio played key roles in the 2002 Bali terrorist attacks, which killed 202 people, including 88 Australians. "I want to tell them to stay tough if they believe in what they are doing,'' Bashir told a press conference before visiting the trio. "I am worried there will be a huge disaster if Indonesia still wants to execute these three. "Because they three are mujahid (Islamic fighters). "Bashir visited the prison with 20 other...
More About: Death
Police shame over poll
2007-12-16 06:39:00
An Indonesian Police general could not hide his anger in a recent TV interview about the Indonesian public perception ranking the police as the country's most corrupt institution, when he basically branded the findings of the Indonesian Chapter of Transparency International (TI) as rubbish. But with such rampant red tape, bribery and even extortion -- just look how police extort motorists for example -- perhaps even the general's colleagues in the force would laugh at his denial. In the TI 2007 Global Corruption Barometer issued last week, Indonesian respondents listed the police as the most corrupt institution, followed by the courts, legislatures and political parties. The findings are not surprising, since it approached members of the public, who made their observations from their personal experience in daily life. In nearly all sectors, the police are widely perceived as corrupt and connected with money. Hearing the result must have made the national police ashamed and mad, bu...
More About: Poll , Shame
In Indonesia's shrinking forests, a glimmer of hope
2007-12-06 05:48:00
Here on the island of Sumatra, about 1,200 miles from the global climate talks under way on Bali, are some of the world's fastest-disappearin g forests. From here, to anybody looking out over a vast wasteland of charred stumps and dried-out peat, the fight to save Indonesia's forests can seem nearly impossible. "What can we possibly do to stop this? I feel lost, I feel abandoned," said Pak Helman, 28, a villager here in Riau Province, surveying the scene from his leaking wooden longboat.In recent years, dozens of pulp and paper companies have descended on Riau, which is roughly the size of Switzerland, snatching up generous government concessions to log and establish palm oil plantations. And villagers are in a state of panic. Only five years ago, Helman says, he earned nearly $100 a week catching shrimp. Now, with logging activity having poisoned the rivers snaking through the heart of Riau, he says he is lucky to find enough to earn $5 a month.Responding to global demand for pal...
More About: Hope , Forests
How Poorest Suffer Most
2007-11-29 15:57:00
Global warming is not a future apocalypse, but a present reality for many of the world's poorest people, according to the most hard-hitting United Nations report yet on climate change, published yesterday.A catalogue of the "climate shocks" that have already hit the world is set out in the Human Development Report 2007/08. Fewer than two per cent of these have affected rich countries. Europe had its most intense heatwave for 50 years and Japan its greatest number of tropical cyclones in a single year. But far more intense drought, floods and storms than usual have plagued the developing world.Monsoons displaced 14 million people in India, seven million in Bangladesh and three million in China which has seen the heaviest rainfall - and second highest death toll - since records began. Cyclones blasted Indonesia, the Philippines and Vietnam. Hurricanes devastated the Caribbean and Central America, killing more than 1,600 Mayan people in Guatemala. Droughts have afflicted Africa, drivi...
Debts put boatpeople 'in danger'
2007-11-26 15:10:00
THREE Indonesian families rescued in the Timor Sea and delivered to Immigration officials on Christmas Island yesterday have a rightful claim to asylum if their debts through illegal fishing have placed them in danger, human rights lawyer Julian Burnside QC said yesterday.Fishermen Sukardi Liri, Sadar and Sangaji Jawa, their wives and 10 children arrived at the tiny Australian territory of Christmas Island aboard HMAS Tobruk at 7am yesterday and were taken by barge to the jetty at Flying Fish Cove at 10.50am, where locals waved and called out the Indonesian greeting "salamat datang".Strapped in navy-issue lifejackets and wearing navy hats, the children remained quiet until they reached a bus on dry land, when they began waving back to onlookers, including other children swimming near the jetty. They were taken to a construction workers' camp opposite the island's temporary detention centre. The baby and nine children were looked after in a creche set up for them while the six adul...
More About: Danger
Life no better with sharia bylaws: Survey
2007-11-24 12:31:00
Most Indonesians support the enactment of sharia bylaws even though they know ordinances already in place in several regencies have failed to improve social welfare, a survey has found."People's welfare remains the same as it was before the sharia bylaws were enforced," said the survey report. The survey and its report was being discussed in a workshop in Cisarua, Bogor, West Java, on Thursday. Some regions have enacted sharia bylaws despite warnings the legislation deprives the civil rights of women and non-Muslims.In cooperation with Konrad Adenauer Stiftung, the research was conducted by the Center for the Study of Religion and Culture (CSRC) under Jakarta's State Islamic University in six regencies. Each regency had implemented sharia-inspired ordinances between August 2006 and October 2007, including Bireun in Aceh, Tasikmalaya and Indramayu in West Java, Bulukumba in South Sulawesi, Bima in West Nusa Tenggara, and Tangerang in Banten province. The survey involved 1,000 respo...
More About: Life , Survey , Sharia , Hari
Archives vital for RI's survival ... Expert
2007-11-17 08:00:00
American graduate student Brad Simpson discovered during his scouring of public records for his dissertation that on Dec. 15 1965, Maj. Gen Soeharto swooped down in a helicopter to join a meeting of Indonesian officials discussing then-President Sukarno's plan to nationalize Caltex facilities in Indonesia.Simpson found that Soeharto told the meeting in no uncertain terms the Indonesian army would not tolerate any move toward nationalization.Except until Simpson's work was complete, there was no written record of that one small part of Indonesia's history to be found anywhere in Indonesia.It was not until Simpson published his findings on relations between Indonesia and the United States in 2005 did these facts come to light here."His research is based on U.S. government documents open for the public," historian Asvi Warman Adam said."Some questions are not answered yet, like who had the power to send Soeharto there?"Definitely not Soekarno, because his presidency was facing a gra...
More About: Vital , Expert , Survival , Archives , Pert
Jakarta's jet-set mourners will get a little more for their money, writes P
2007-11-15 12:02:00
Mourners wearing black congregate by a lawn-fringed plot on the outskirts of the Indonesian capital as they await the arrival of the body of their relative and friend. Once the funeral service is over, they have the choice of taking a dip in the Olympic-size pool nearby, rowing a boat across the lake or, in the not-too-distant future, having lunch at an Italian restaurant.In a city where the dead literally face eviction if their relatives fail to pay regular fees for the upkeep of their graves, a new and vast cemetery-cum- entertainment complex aims to fill a niche for the rich. Arriving by helicopter to cut hours off a road trip to this sprawling complex 46 kilometres outside traffic-clogged Jakarta, the ambition of the developers is clear. So far, just 25 hectares out of a planned 500 have been developed at San Diego Hills Memorial Park. Tree-shaded roads wind through the hilly compound, a world away from public cemeteries in Indonesia that are invariably basic and often unkempt."...
More About: Money
Presses Indonesia For Myanmar Talks
2007-11-11 07:33:00
Yuhoyono said he had written personally to Myanmar 's leaders urging them to open talks Indonesia 's president is calling on Myanmar's ruling military to speed up the process of democratisation and hold talks with Aung San Suu Kyi. In an exclusive interview with Al Jazeera, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono said he had written a personal letter to Senior General Than Shwe urging the military government to immediately open dialogue with the opposition."I keep telling my friends in Myanmar that a nation going through a democratic transition must be able to adapt, to respond to ongoing situations," he told Al Jazeera's Jakarta correspondent, Step Vassen. The crackdown in Myanmar has caused unease among fellow Asean members His comments come as Myanmar's ruling generals face ongoing international pressure to step back from their bloody crackdown on anti-government protests.Indonesia and Myanmar are both members of the Association of South-East Asian Nations (Asean), and diplomats say the gene...
Help migrant workers develop their talents
2007-11-05 23:12:00
Indonesian migrant workers in Taiwan won a literary contest for foreign workers last month which was sponsored by the Taipei city government (The Jakarta Post, Oct. 2). The words from one winning piece were; "Please forgive me, time has buried my longing for your love, and I hope you find true love somewhere else". This is a sample sentence from a first-prize- winning essay titled Kinanthi, which was written by Sri Jumitai, an Indonesian migrant worker in Taiwan. Anik Krisnawati, another Indonesian migrant worker, won first prize in the poetry category for her poem titled Happiness Terminal. There are reasons why these works of literature are special and were chosen as winners.First, Sri Junitai and Anik Krisnawati won after beating participants from other countries; migrant workers from the Philippines, Vietnam and Thailand. Second, Kinanthi and Happiness Terminal were two of the best works of literature from a total 2,063 pieces submitted to the judging committee. After a three-st...
More About: Workers , Talents , Develop , Worker , Lent
Mimika police office attacked following death of Panaian policeman
2007-11-04 08:04:00
The Mimika Baru Police sub precinct office was attacked by a Paniai ethnic group early Saturday, following an incident that claimed the life a Paniaian policeman. The policeman, identified as Adj. Comr. Yance, had allegedly gone to the Mimika Baru Police office to protest the arrest of his son, who had been detained for alleged misbehavior and being under the influence of alcohol.The policeman later died at Mitra Masyarakat Hospital, in Mimika. A source told ^YAntara^Y the cause of the officer's death was unknown. Deputy Head of Papua Police, Brig. Gen. Andi Lolo, confirmed the attack but refused to offer further details about the incident.
More About: Office , Death , Attacked , Attack
Bali details to stay secret
2007-10-29 18:08:00
POLITICAL interference in the US Military Commissions will prevent Australians from hearing all the facts surrounding the 2002 Bali bombings with the trial of terror-mastermind Hambali likely to take place in secret, the former chief prosecutor says.Colonel Mo Davis's remarks came as new details emerged at the weekend about the role US Vice-President Dick Cheney played in the trial of David Hicks. Colonel Davis said there was intense political pressure to try Hambali, along with other so-called high-value detainees, before George W. Bush left the White House in January 2009. He said the fear that a new administration, especially a Democrat one, would be less inclined to proceed with trials was driving the pressure. As a result, there would be no time to declassify the evidence against Hambali, meaning Australians would have to take the details of his alleged crimes on trust. "For you in Australia, where Hambali had a direct impact on your lives, you folks need to be able to see wha...
More About: Secret , Details , Stay
Indonesia gets emergency free zones
2007-10-27 07:28:00
After years of policy confusion and political gridlock, Indonesia 's Parliament this month ratified a government plan to establish full free trade zones (FTZ) for areas of three islands located near Singapore. The move represents the latest bid by President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono's pro-business administration to attract more badly needed foreign direct investment (FDI) into the country. His government fast-tracked the policy for the island of Batam, the country's main industrial center, and also parts of Bintan and Karimun, in response to growing regional competition, including from nearby Malaysia's ambitious Iskandar Development Region project, which envisions the establishment of a massive new regional manufacturing hub also aimed at forging linkages with Singapore. So urgent were those competitive concerns that in June Yudhoyono's government issued a state emergency regulation to amend existing FTZ legislation. Indonesian law requires that any emergency law must be approve...
More About: Free , Emergency , Zones , Done
Pilot blamed for Garuda crash
2007-10-24 18:07:00
The chief pilot of an Indonesian passenger aircraft which crashed in March, killing 21 people, has been blamed in part by the country's transport safety committee.The commander of the Garuda Indonesia Boeing 737-400 ignored 15 warnings and approached the runway at excessive airspeed while descending too steeply, the panel's report said.The aircraft "was flown at an excessive airspeed and steep flight path angle during the approach and landing, resulting in an unstabilised approach," the report said.The aeroplane, which was carrying 140 people, burst into flames after skidding off the runway on landing at Yogyakarta airport. Both pilots survived the crash, which happened less than three months after an Adam Air aircraft disappeared with 102 passengers and crew on board. The European Union banned all 51 Indonesian airlines from its airspace after the accidents, citing safety concerns.Failings reported The safety report said the chief pilot's failure to observe safety procedures had...
More About: Crash , Pilot
Plight of Javanese refugees from Aceh
2007-10-24 00:27:00
The Helsinki peace agreement made on Aug. 15, 2005, between the Indonesian government and the Free Aceh Movement (GAM) left some "homework" for elected Aceh Governor Irwandy Yusuf and his North Sumatra counterpart Rudolf Pardede.This homework involves the lot of thousands of Javanese transmigrants stranded in North Sumatra and Riau in the late 1990s and early 2000s after fleeing violent attacks by armed groups. Unfortunately, Governor Pardede perhaps forgets his province harbors thousands of Javanese refugee families from Aceh living in very poor conditions. Aceh Governor Irwandy, a former GAM leader, also may not realize the Javanese transmigrants were evicted by units of armed men, who they believed were GAM combatants. This is especially relevant now as Irwandy is focussing on rehabilitating thousands of indigenous Acehnese villages and inviting foreign investors to help reconstruct Aceh. Irwandy presumably also doesn't realize under the Helsinki agreement, the Javanese transmig...
More About: Refugees
Tapping a gas gusher in Indonesia
2007-10-12 00:12:00
After a series of environmental, funding and supply contract problems, surging regional demand has given new impetus to Indonesia 's US$6.5 billion Tangguh liquefied natural gas (LNG) project, which with 14 trillion cubic feet of proven reserves represents one of the largest gas fields in all Asia. Energy Minister Purnomo Yusgiantoro said last week that the first LNG deliveries from the plant are now expected to start by the end of next year. The gas will help China, the second biggest investor in the ambitious project, to meet its surging energy demand while at the same time tap a valuable new fuel source to power Indonesia's domestic economy. The announcement comes amid surging global LNG prices, which have more than doubled over the past three years. The initial output of the two planned LNG production lines, or trains, as they are known in industry parlance, will be a combined 7.6 million metric tons per year, an output that has been fully contracted for the next 25 years. The ...
More About: Tapping , Done
Garuda chiefs face poisoning trial
2007-10-10 23:58:00
Two former top officials at Indonesia's national airline have gone on trial in connection with the murder of a leading human rights activist.The ex-president and ex-deputy president of Garuda airlines are accused of helping Pollycarpus Priyanto, an off-duty pilot, kill Munir Said Thalib by poisoning him on a flight to Amsterdam three years ago.Indra Setiawan and his former deputy, Rohainil Aini could face up to 20 years in jail if found guilty.Priyanto was convicted of the actual murder and jailed for 14 years in 2005, but the conviction was overturned a year later by the supreme court a year citing a lack of evidence and witnesses.Prosecutors are now appealing that decision.Munir, and lawyer and one of Indonesia's most prominent human rights campaigners, died after ingesting a fatal dose of arsenic while travelling to the Netherlands on a Garuda flight.He had often targeted Indonesia's powerful military and secret service, leading to claims that he was killed because he exposed ...
More About: Trial , Face , Chiefs , Poison
Der erste und ungl?
2007-10-10 00:44:00
von welchen der eine oder andere Eurer Majest?t unausweichlich bevorzustehen scheint. Der erste und ungl?cklichste f?r den Staat w?re ohne Zweifel jener, wenn wir durch unsere ungl?ckliche Lage in einen neuen Krieg mit dem einen oder anderen der beiden Kolosse, die uns bedrohen, verwickelt w?rden. Von beiden stehen m?chtige Armeen an unseren Grenzen, mit beiden w?rden die ersten Feindseligkeiten den Krieg in das Herz der Monarchie f?hren,Die einzelnen Pers?nlichkeiten treten in dieser lyrischen Kunst nicht stark hervor, im Gegensatz zur chinesischen. Japan ist das Land der Gelegenheitsdichter. Wir besitzen Gedichte von Kaisern und Kaiserinnen,Sollte jedoch zwischen diesen beiden grossen Uebeln eines gew?hlt werden m?ssen, so bietet der Krieg mit Frankreich noch unendlich schrecklichere Resultate dar, als jener mit Russland. Meine innere Ueberzeugung entreisst mir das traurige Gest?ndnis: Ein neuer Krieg mit Frankreich und seinen Alliierten ist das Todesurteil f?r die ?sterreichische...
Lucky Winner
2007-10-09 01:28:00
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MUI Says Al-Qiyadah Al-Islamiyah is Misleading
2007-10-06 16:16:00
The Indonesian Ulemas Council (MUI) said Al-Qiyadah al-Islamiyah, which first appeared in 2000, is a misleading sect. The decision was taken after MUI researched the organization for the last three months."Up to 2006, this sect wasn't brave enough to appear. But starting in 2007, they bluntly spread their lessons to the public," MUI Chairman, K.H. Ma'ruf, told the press yesterday (4/10).For a sect that is only seven years old, he viewed, its progress is rapid. The structure is in order and the leaders easily attract public sympathy. Al-Qiyadah's leader, Ahmad Moshaddeq, whose real name is Haji Salam, said he was an apostle since July 23, 2007 after ascetic meditation for 40 days and nights in Bunder Mount, Bogor, West Java."They even changed Islam to existing apostle or prophet after Muhammad, that is Masih Al-Mau'ud," said Ma'ruf.For gaining devotees, according to Ma'ruf, Ahmad promised rewards of a motorcycle for those who can recruit 40 new members and a car for 70 members....
'Time' ruling 'evil omen' for journalists
2007-09-14 16:23:00
Indonesia's Press Council described the Supreme Court's decision ordering Time magazine to pay former president Soeharto Rp 1 trillion (US$106 million) as an "evil omen" for local journalists covering corruption stories.Council vice chairman Leo Batubara said the Supreme Court justices should have implemented the 1999 Press Law, as was done by other justices when they examined a libel case brought against Tempo magazine by businessman Tommy Winata in 2006, instead of using the Criminal Code.Leo said the usage of the Criminal Code in cases relating to the media would paralyze journalists' creativity as they would become anxious when covering stories about corrupt officials. "I hope that every media corporation throughout the country will unite to stand against the ruling by pressing the judges to use the Press Law when dealing with press-related cases ... So they cannot effectively use the Criminal Code in settling legal disputes with the media," he told The Jakarta Pos...
More About: Evil , Ruling , Journalist , Journalists
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