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Friday, September 30, 2016

Indonesia Raids Google Office After Warning on Tax Audit Refusal

(Bloomberg) -- Google Inc.'s Jakarta office was raided by Indonesian authorities after they warned the company for refusing a tax audit.

Officers visited Google's office in central Jakarta "many times" in the past two weeks to collect data and repeatedly sought meetings with senior company officials, Muhammad Haniv, the head of special taxpayers at the Finance Ministry, said in a phone interview Thursday. Google has "paid all applicable taxes in Indonesia," Taj Meadows, a spokesman, said by e-mail, adding the company is cooperating with the government.

"Everyone must comply, whoever they may be," Haniv said. "If you refuse to be audited, then we will keep chasing you." The government had earlier written to the company warning it for refusing a tax audit, which can result in criminal punishment, he said.

President Joko Widodo's government is following in the footsteps of European authorities in pushing Google to pay more taxes as it steps up efforts to earn more revenue from internet companies. He's under pressure to do so as this year's state revenue is set to suffer an estimated 218 trillion rupiah ($17 billion) shortfall, while earnings from a tax amnesty program are set to miss his target. 

Indonesia May Block Websites of Tech Companies Avoiding Tax

Indonesia has been asking internet companies to set up permanent local entities for tax purposes since as early as April. It's also promising lower rates compared to the 30 percent corporate income tax and 25 percent value-added tax that would otherwise apply to Google's sales of advertisement to local companies, according to Haniv.

--With assistance from Rieka Rahadiana To contact the reporters on this story: Herdaru Purnomo in Jakarta at hpurnomo1@bloomberg.net, Yudith Ho in Jakarta at yho35@bloomberg.net, Amit Prakash in Singapore at aprakash1@bloomberg.net. To contact the editors responsible for this story: Linus Chua at lchua@bloomberg.net, Amit Prakash, Karthikeyan Sundaram

©2016 Bloomberg L.P.


Source: Indonesia Raids Google Office After Warning on Tax Audit Refusal

Thursday, September 29, 2016

Tourism Ministry: Tourism Future Industry

"Alvin Toffler has already predicted, at the end of wave III it will be the era of Recreation Industry (Hospitality, Recreation, Entertainment). In the future the tourism industry, which is supported by creative industry that already has the commercial values, will become the leading sector," said Arief Yahya, in a written statement in Jakarta.

The minister said he had read the book of The Third Wave written by Alvin Toffler, who says the Waves of Human Civilization are divided into three. The Wave I is the Agriculture Era between 800 BC to 1500 AD, the era of agriculture, plantation and agricultural technologies. The Wave II is Manufacture Era (1500-1970), industrial society, the generation of the factories, the birth of imperialism and colonialism. The Wave III is Information Technology Era (1970-2000).

The minister told about President Joko Widodo's worries after attending the series of Summits of G20 and ASEAN in China and Laos back then. The president held a meeting on 9 September 2016 with his ministers to discuss the results of his working visits. President Jokowi wanted Indonesia to soon find the core economy or the core business for the country.

What is the strongest advantage of Indonesia, compared with other countries in the world? What industry can compete and win the battle in today's global era? What industry should be supported by all parties and will be the mainstay of Indonesia in the future? By having the core business, the concentration of the president won't be too wide and able to be more focus in pushing the public economy.

The data show that Indonesia foreign exchange revenues from oil and natural gas tend to fall drastically. In 2013, it generated US$ 32.6 billion. In 2014 it fell to US$ 30.3 billion. And in 2015 it fell more drastically to US$ 18.9 billion. The world oil prices plunged from US$ 100 per barrel to US$ 60, down further to US$ 50, and the last price was at US$ 36. "So it was predictable, the cause is the falling selling prices, and the target to lift it was difficult to achieve," said Arief Yahya.

"Only revenues from tourism sector rose, from US$ 10 billion in 2013to US$ 11 billion in 2014, and increased further to US$ 12.6 billion in 2015. It is potentially to keep rising, because this is a sustainable industry," said the minister.

"As a significant contributor to GDP, foreign exchange revenues and employment, tourism is the easiest and inexpensive sector to develop. Regarding GDP, tourism contributes 10% of national GDP, with the highest revenue generation come from ASEAN. The GDP of national tourism grew 4.8% with the uptrend to 6.9%, far higher than the agriculture industry, automotive manufacturing and mining. The tourism foreign exchange is at US$ 1 Million, generating GDP at US$ 1.7 million or 170%, the highest compared to other industries," he said.

Regarding the foreign exchange, tourism is number 4 in the national foreign exchange earners, 9.3% compared to other industries. The growth of foreign exchange revenues is also highest at 13%, compared to the industry of oil and natural gas, coal, and palm oil whose growths are negative. "The cost for marketing is only requiring 2% of the projected foreign exchange revenues," said Arief Yahya.

Regarding the employment, tourism accounts for 9.8 million jobs or 8.4% nationally and ranks fourth in all industry sectors. In job creation the tourism sector grew by 30% within 5 years. Tourism is also the lowest price in job creation, costing only US$ 5.000/one job, compared to the industry average of more than US$ 100,000/one job.

In 2015, compared to Singapore and Malaysia, the two closest countries, the growth of tourism in Indonesia rose higher. Malaysia dropped by 15.7 percent. Singapore rose 0.9%, assuming 1 percent. Indonesia is very confident with 10.3% increase, to 10.4 million foreign tourists. "It shows that our performance is not too bad, the growth and the industrial atmosphere are very passionate, very aggressive and continue to grow," he said.


Source: Tourism Ministry: Tourism Future Industry

Wednesday, September 28, 2016

Hooters to soon open its First Indonesia Location

Internationally renowned 'breastaurant' (that's the industry term, not ours) Hooters, is opening its first location in Indonesia. While some speculated that the Asian expansion of 30 new locations would include Indonesia, it was thought most likely to be in the popular tourist destination, Bali.

Read More: Hooters to be Less Sexy in Southeast Asia Expansion?

Maybe in the future, but for now the first Hooters in the world's most populous Muslim nation will open in the Kemang neighborhood in the capital city of Jakarta.

An instagram user snapped this shot of the building in progress:

As we reported last year, the Atlanta, Georgia-based chain announced plans to open 30 restaurants across Southeast Asia over the next six years with franchises in Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Vietnam, Hong Kong and Macau.

Photo: Hooters Jakarta Facebook pagePhoto: Hooters Jakarta Facebook page

While Hooters will, for now, stick with its brand strategy of women in short shorts and tight t-shirts, there has been talk of tinkering with the brand by focusing more on positioning itself as an American-style casual bar and restaurant experience –similar to TGIF and Outback, which have enjoyed great success in the Asia.

If you're thinking of applying for a job there, here is the recruiting video posted on the Hooters Jakarta Facebook page.

What do you think?

comments


Source: Hooters to soon open its First Indonesia Location

Tuesday, September 27, 2016

Workers to Stage Massive Protest Rally in Jakarta on Thursday

Jakarta. Jakarta Police deputy chief Brig. Gen. Suntana said Jakarta's labor unions will stage a massive protest rally on Thursday (29/09) in front of the State Palace and several other strategic spots in the capital.

"I've talked to our friends [in the labor unions]. They've promised to keep the rally peaceful. They will not block roads or harass people during the protest," the general said on Tuesday.

He said the rally on Thursday will start at 8.00 a.m. and end at 6.00 p.m. according to official regulation.

"Hopefully before 6.00 p.m. they will have met with representatives from the state institutions they're protesting against so the crowd can disperse before rush hours," Suntana said.

The labor unions had reportedly promised the Jakarta police they will disperse on time and avoid conflicts with security personnel.

Show More  
Source: Workers to Stage Massive Protest Rally in Jakarta on Thursday

Monday, September 26, 2016

Jakarta Administration to Ban Overpass Advertisements Following Pasar Minggu Accident

"When the contract has ended, we will build an overpass like the one we have at the Hotel Indonesia traffic circle. So, the bridge must be clear and open, there will be no billboards that disrupt the airflow. This will also address incidents involving robbery and sexual abuse," Ahok said at Jakarta City Hall.

Ahok added, all overpasses that are used by TransJakarta passengers will now be managed by the Jakarta Transportation Agency. Ahok also said that he rejected several proposals from advertising agencies who offered to repair the broken bridges in exchange for billboard permits.

The Jakarta administration will also inspect all overpasses across the city before proposing that they be repaired. If deemed unsuitable, the repair costs will be funded by both the regional budget and the developer.


Source: Jakarta Administration to Ban Overpass Advertisements Following Pasar Minggu Accident

Sunday, September 25, 2016

Need the Latest News on Flooding? In Jakarta, There's an App for That.

Feri Yadi, a resident of Muara Baru in North Jakarta, stands atop the seawall recently built to protect his neighborhood. He has little confidence that the wall will work as expected. "Like in the past, this will be broken somehow" he says. Credit: Muhammad Fadli/GroundTruth

Feri Yadi, a resident of Muara Baru in North Jakarta, stands atop the seawall recently built to protect his neighborhood. He has little confidence that the wall will work as expected. "Like in the past, this will be broken somehow" he says. Credit: Muhammad Fadli/GroundTruth

This article by Chris Bentley originally appeared on PRI.org on September 16, 2016. It is republished here as part of a content-sharing agreement.

Like millions of Jakartans, Dedi Setiawan lives along one of the city's 13 rivers, in a village-style neighborhood called a kampung. The area's unpaved paths are jammed with people selling snacks and cell phone credits out of carts, residents hang laundry out to dry between bamboo shacks and small brick homes, and the river crossing is a wooden boat pulled along a wire strung between the banks.

Life along Jakarta's rivers can be challenging. The city faces some of the worst flooding problems of any major urban area in the world, in part because those 13 rivers, often swollen by monsoon rains, drain into a dense urban area that's rapidly sinking below sea level.

In 2013, rising waters sent Setiawan scrambling to the second floor of his house, and during the flood, he couldn't get in touch with anyone to find out what was going on elsewhere.

"Back then we didn't have the communication system," he says.

But the growth of social media has changed that.

Listen to this story on PRI.org »

"Now we mainly use WhatsApp and Facebook groups to communicate with each other," he says.

Word spreads organically — people upriver might text their friends a photo of flooding in their part of town so their neighbors downstream can prepare.

Going online for flood information is faster than waiting for official announcements, and residents say they trust the information more because it's coming from a real person.

Fajar Inayati, who lives upriver from Setiawan, says during a recent flood her friends were sharing photos before the government could get the word out, and even before it hit the local news.

Seawater floods some streets in Jakarta's Muara Angke neighborhood even during low tides and the dry season. Most of the district's residents are fishermen who work in nearby Jakarta Bay. Credit: Muhammad Fadli/GroundTruth

Seawater floods some streets in Jakarta's Muara Angke neighborhood even during low tides and the dry season. Most of the district's residents are fishermen who work in nearby Jakarta Ba y. Credit: Muhammad Fadli/GroundTruth

"We were not at the area where the flood came, but we heard it from our friends who shared it," Inayati says. "They were there, so I believe that the news must be reliable and factual."

The social media posts prompted her and her neighbors to start prepping sandbags to keep the water at bay.

Of course social media can also be unreliable sometimes. Rumors spread fast, and even good information can get drowned out in the chaos of a natural disaster.

Faster and more reliable

That's where PetaJakarta comes in. It's an open-source, real-time, online map of the city that automatically filters Tweets about flooding to improve accuracy and fill in the gaps between official city reports.

When someone tweets "banjir"  — the Indonesian word for flood —  and tags @PetaJkt, PetaJakarta automatically replies, asking them to verify the tweet with geotagged photos. The app then combines all those reports with official data from the city into an up-to-the-minute, online flood map that can be more reliable than other social posts.

"If you have four people with photos at different angles showing one event, that's a pretty difficult thing to stage," says Etienne Turpin, a Canadian-born designer and research scientist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology 's Urban Risk Lab. He founded PetaJakarta in 2014 along with colleague Tomas Holderness. Today they operate an eight-person team of mostly local residents out of an office in Jakarta's Guntur neighborhood.

Holderness and Turpin both study disaster resilience, and that's what drew them to Jakarta. Turpin says he once heard Indonesia referred to as a "living laboratory for disaster." And Jakarta, he says, "is the sort of center of that laboratory."

Slums line the Ciliwung river, one of 13 that run through Jakarta. Trash accumlated on the banks shows the high water mark during monsoon season. Credit: Muhammad Fadli/GroundTruth

Slums line the Ciliwung river, one of 13 that run through Jakarta. Trash accumlated on the banks shows the high water mark during monsoon season. Credit: Muhammad Fadli/GroundTruth

By one estimate, Jakarta is also the world's capital of Twitter activity, which Turpin says makes it a goldmine of data, full of what he calls "human sensors" for tracking disasters and vetting real-time reports.

Compare PetaJakarta's real-time flood mapping with the city's standard practice of circulating static PDF maps every six hours.

"If you want to decide if you should leave work early to pick up your children from school, or check on your elderly parents, having a picture of a map every six hours doesn't give you a lot of confidence about making those decisions," Turpin says.

It's about democratizing disaster management, he says.

"If decision support is just concentrated in the hands of the government, we have a bottleneck of information. But if real-time information is being collected, validated and shared, then we have 31 million decision makers deciding, 'Should I drive this way? Should I avoid a certain area?'"

Given its speed and accuracy, even some government officials have turned to PetaJakarta. Soon after it went online, Jakarta's governor urged his followers on Twitter to use PetaJakarta to tweet about flooding.

Anto Sugianto, who works for the city in the flood-prone northern district of Ancol, says PetaJakarta has become an important tool in flood response.

During a flood in April, Sugianto says he used PetaJakarta to help city teams decide where to deploy pumps to suck water away from important streets, and what roads to close to keep people from being trapped in their cars. His team even contributed their own geotagged photos to the site while they worked.

Sugianto says Petajakarta has begun to transform flood response in the city from a top-down effort to a cooperative relationship between the city and its residents.

"It's not only that the Kelurahan [district] can give information to the public," Sugianto says. "Now we get information from them, too. Give and get."

A model for elsewhere

And PetaJakarta is getting noticed beyond Indonesia. Both the US Federal Communications Commission and the International Federation of the Red Cross and Red Crescent have cited PetaJakarta as a model of community engagement in disaster response.

Aerial view of North Jakarta. Nearly all of the northern part of the city is now below sea level. Credit: Muhammad Fadli/GroundTruth

Aerial view of North Jakarta. Nearly all of the northern part of the city is now below sea level. Credit: Muhammad Fadli/GroundTruth

Of course, better online mapping won't help actually prevent the flooding that plagues Jakartans like Dedi Setiawan and Fajar Inayati. That would take an overhaul of the city's stormwater system, including new urban planning ideas and investments in green infrastructure to restore some of Jakarta's paved-over landscape.

But as cities like Jakarta struggle to adapt to the new normal of high water that's coming with global warming, online tools like PetaJakarta may help them live better with what they can't change — and connect with each other while they do.

Read or hear the whole series: Living with Rising Seas


Source: Need the Latest News on Flooding? In Jakarta, There's an App for That.

Saturday, September 24, 2016

Pilkada Post in S. Jakarta Completed with Communication Network

Sudin Kominfomas Siapkan Jaringan Komunikasi Untuk Posko Bersama

South Jakarta Communication, Informatic and Public Relation Sub-dept has provided facilities for communication technology needs in the joint pilkada post at the mayor building.

" internet network for teleconference and LED television to countdown the voting time is also ready as well"

"Some of them are we have installed CCTV that connected with offices of communication, informatic and public relation sub-dept, kesbangpol and Saptol PP. Internet network for teleconference and LED television to countdown the voting time is also ready as well," disclosed Lestari Ady Wiryono, Head of South Jakarta Communication, Informatic and Public Relation Sub-dept, Saturday (9/24).  

Related to data communication network in the committee secretariate office, it has been installed at 65 urban village offices, 10 sub-district voting committee offices and South Jakarta KPU secretariate office. 

"In its implementation, the network will be connected with Jakarta KPUD," she stated. 

According to her, later on, in the lost, her sub-dept would also provide call center service that can directly serve public complaint to the post.


Source: Pilkada Post in S. Jakarta Completed with Communication Network

Friday, September 23, 2016

City Council Requests Santa Market Kiosk Lease System Improved

ketua DPRD DKI Minta Pengelolaan Pasar Santa Dibenahi

Jakarta City Council asks PD Pasar Jaya to improve the kiosk lease at Santa Market, Kebayoran Baru, South Jakarta.

" The lease system must be improved as soon as possible"

"The market condition was quiet. Thanks to the youngsters who promoted the place and became one of favorite places to hang out. Unluckily, the kiosk lease rate is too high. Now the market condition is quiet again," said Prasetio Edi Marsudi, Jakarta City Council Chairman, Friday (9/23).

According to him, local traders have complained the matter since a month ago. Jakarta City Council has delivered the problem to PD Pasar Jaya.

Prasetio wants PD Pasar Jaya taking steps to improve the traders welfare.

"The lease system must be improved as soon as possible," he closed.


Source: City Council Requests Santa Market Kiosk Lease System Improved

Thursday, September 22, 2016

Bank Indonesia Cuts Benchmark Rate

Sept. 22, 2016 4:43 a.m. ET

JAKARTA, Indonesia—Bank Indonesia cut its benchmark interest rate Thursday a quarter percentage point to 5.0% to help spur the country's fragile recovery in domestic economic growth amid low inflation while the current-account deficit has narrowed.

With the U.S. Federal Reserve keeping rates unchanged at its meeting on Wednesday, the Indonesian central bank saw an opportunity to take easing action to support the economy without putting too much pressure on the local currency.

"Bank Indonesia views that various measures are still needed to help prop up domestic demand," The central bank Governor Agus Martowardojo said. Mr. Martowardojo added that the economy continues to grow in the third quarter but at a slower pace than in the previous quarter.

Ten out of 11 economists polled by The Wall Street Journal predicted a quarter-point cut in the seven-day reverse repo rate, which BI last month adopted as its new benchmark rate, to 5.0%. While one of them expected the central bank to hold the rate steady.

Economic growth picked up a little on a year-over-year basis to 5.18% in the second quarter from 4.92% in the first quarter, but it remains shaky, economists said.

Indonesia's current-account deficit shrank to $4.7 billion, or equal to 2% of gross domestic product in the second quarter from $4.8 billion, or 2.2% of GDP in the first quarter, making the rupiah less vulnerable to volatility in the global financial market.

The year-over-year inflation rate eased to 2.8% in August, its lowest level since the end of 2009.

With the latest move, Bank Indonesia has cut borrowing costs by 1.25 percentage points so far this year, as the U.S. central bank has declined to raise interest rates.

Write to I Made Sentana at i-made.sentana@wsj.com


Source: Bank Indonesia Cuts Benchmark Rate

Wednesday, September 21, 2016

DHL Express opens expanded gateway in Jakarta

DHL Express has opened its two million euro ($2.2 million) Jakarta Gateway 530 at Soekarno-Hatta International Airport following years of sustained growth.

The 1,353 square metre facility can handle up to 20 million kilogrammes of shipments and two million per annum. It adds to the existing Jakarta Gateway 510, and the new facility is equipped with equipment such as Dual View X-Ray security screening, Heavy Duty X-Ray Security and an Explosive Trace Detector system.

DHL Express Asia Pacific chief executive officer, Ken Lee says: "Our new Jakarta Gateway 530 will enable local businesses to trade seamlessly with customers around the world. SMEs play a vital role in the Indonesian economy, contributing close to 58% of Indonesia's GDP and Indonesia remains a key pillar in supporting South East Asia's economic growth."

"This new facility allows DHL to continue supporting the growing export and import needs in Indonesia by providing greater access to international markets."

DHL says the facility's airside location provides air access and focuses on export and formal import processes with in-house customs. It says the most popular trading partners that will benefit from the expansion include China, Germany, Japan, Hong Kong, Singapore and the USA.


Source: DHL Express opens expanded gateway in Jakarta

Tuesday, September 20, 2016

Drugmakers pledge to clean up antibiotic factories, curb overuse

Thirteen leading drugmakers promised on Tuesday to clean up pollution from factories making antibiotics and take steps to curb overuse of the medicines as part of a drive to fight the rise of drug-resistant superbugs.

The industry announcement coincides with a high-level meeting on antimicrobial resistance as part of the United Nations General Assembly in New York.

Companies that have signed up to the scheme include leaders in both branded and generic drug production, including Pfizer, Merck, Novartis, GlaxoSmithKline and Allergan, as well as Indian drugmakers Cipla and Wockhardt.

The group will work with independent experts to set new factory standards and review supply chains to ensure antibiotic waste does not enter waterways, where it can lead to the breeding of superbugs.

Efforts to prevent overuse of antibiotics will involve a review of promotional activities and the implementation, by 2020, of concrete measures such as the removal of incentives to sell the drugs in larger volumes.

Though the problem of drug-resistant bacteria has been a feature of medicine since the discovery of penicillin in 1928, it has grown in recent years with the emergence of infections resistant to multiple drugs, such as MRSA.

(Reporting by Ben Hirschler; Editing by David Goodman)


Source: Drugmakers pledge to clean up antibiotic factories, curb overuse

Monday, September 19, 2016

BWW Preview: MAHABHARATA Part 3: Kurusetra War

BWW Preview: MAHABHARATA Part 3: Kurusetra War

Kelola Foundation with Teater Garasi/ Garasi Performance Institute will perform Mahabharata Part 3: Kurusetra War in Yogyakarta, September 24-25 and Jakarta, September 28-29, 2016. This performances are supported by Asia Center-The Japan Foundation and Jakarta Arts Council.

Mahabharata Project is a pan-Asia international work by Hiroshi Koike Bridge Project (Tokyo, Japan) with Artistic Director Hiroshi Koike. This 8-years span project is launched in 2013 and will end in 2020. They have performed Mahabharata Part 1 in Cambodia, Part 2 in India, and Part 2,5 in Japan. This year, they plan to perform the Part 3 in Indonesia. There are five actors / dancers from Indonesia, alongside actors / dancers from Japan, Malaysia and The Philippines.

An epic poem Mahabharata has been known all across Asia and contain the most important essence of the philosophical of and Asia sensibility, showing path in life which connects humans against fear and disparaging attitudes with others. Inspired with the history, this cross culture project Mahabharata intend to find a fresh way of view over the past and at the same time to find back what being divided by the cultures of each other and comprehensively created the story of man, not the story of gods.

Combining abstract and factual things, this comprehensive performance creates a theatre which polarizing conventional dance and theatre movement by bringing basic essential in human body movement to the stage through active imagination from many disciplines and cross culture talents.

The conflict arose from a dynastic succession struggle between two groups of cousins, Pandawa and Kurawa. Mahabharata Part 3 is in the point where this long conflict is in their peak, war must be declared. Across time, countries, and religions, this story is written. For us who lives today, they asked, "What is human?"

You can purchase the ticket for Mahabharata Part 3: Kurusetra War here or contact Dewi in (+62) 812 8245167.

Playwright

Hiroshi Koike

Director

Hiroshi Koike

Actors / Dancers

Carlon Matobato (Philippines); Gunawan Maryanto (Indonesia); Lee Swee Keong (Malaysia); Riyo Tulus Pernando (Indonesia); Sachiko Shirai (Japan); Sandhidea Cahyo Narpati (Indonesia); Suryo Purnomo (Indonesia); Tetsuro Koyano (Japan); Wangi Indriya (Indonesia)

Music Director

Peni Candrarini, Kensuke Fujii

Costume Designer

Lulu Lutfi Labibi, Mandakini Goswani

Artistic Director

Agung Kurniawan, Firos Khan

Lighting and Technical Director

Ignatius Sugiarto


Source: BWW Preview: MAHABHARATA Part 3: Kurusetra War

Sunday, September 18, 2016

EU to license Indonesian timber in effort to reduce illegal cutting

JAKARTA, Indonesia -- The European Union has admitted Indonesia to a special licensing system it hopes will prevent the illegally felled tropical timber that makes up a substantial part of the country's wood production from being shipped to the 28-nation bloc.

photo

Workers sort logs for a customer at a timber yard in Jakarta, Indonesia, last week. (By: BINSAR BAKKARA) (Credit: AP)

The EU said last week that Indonesia is the first country to qualify for the licenses. It will mean that traders of goods such as wooden furniture, plywood and paper that earn the certification will find it easier to do business with Europe.

But some environmental and civil society groups are already concerned the licensing system could become a conduit for illegal timber from a country where tropical forests are being cut down at an epic rate.

The EU has been trying to implement its timber system internationally for over a decade, and over the same time Indonesia has developed its own legal wood verification scheme that has become a key part of its admission to the EU's program.

"We do believe the system is credible," said Charles-Michel Geurts, deputy head of the EU mission to Indonesia, who emphasized the lengthy process to establish it reflected substantial effort in countering deep-seated problems in Indonesia's forestry industry. "But today is the start date, not the finish."

Indonesia has struggled for years to combat illegal logging that destroys the tropical forest habitat of unique animal species and deprives the government of significant revenue that could be used to improve basic services for a largely poor population of more than 250 million.

A study by the country's anti-corruption commission estimated that the commercial value of undeclared logging amounted to $60.7 billion to $81.4 billion between 2003 and 2014. The study released in October last year said official statistics on timber production capture less than a quarter of what is cut down.

Fires deliberately set by agricultural conglomerates and small-time farmers to clear forests and peatland for plantations also contribute to deforestation and are responsible for the unhealthy haze that chokes a swathe of Indonesia and neighboring countries each year.

Under the EU system, Indonesia will be able to issue the special licenses to producers using timber that it believes complies with environmental, social and economic laws. Third-party certifiers issue the licenses, and the overall process will be monitored by environmental groups. Indonesia will be able to issue the licenses from Nov. 15, the EU announced Thursday.

Christopher Barr, executive director of Woods & Wayside International, said a "critical weakness" of Indonesia's timber verification system is that it largely focuses on administrative compliance and falls short in the area of field checks, including surprise inspections, to ensure logs are harvested from fully legal areas.

The system was designed to audit timber from selective forestry concessions, but in the past decade increased volumes of wood have been produced through the clearing of forests for palm oil and pulpwood plantations and other uses, he said.

Lafcadio Cortesi, Asia director of the Rainforest Action Network, said it may be premature for the EU to create a "green lane" that expedites the export of Indonesian timber and timber products.

Deforestation in Indonesia often goes hand in hand with human-rights violations, such as companies grabbing the traditional lands of communities, he said.

The scale of illegal and unreported logging in Indonesia could be beyond the scope of agencies and environmental groups to effectively monitor, and when violations are identified, the process for dealing with them is cumbersome and lengthy, he said.

"There is not adequate capacity in the system," said Cortesi. "The government has had to contract out auditing."

Earlier this month, a palm oil company held captive seven officials from the Ministry of Environment and Forestry who had visited its plantation as part of an investigation into forest fires.

Mardi Minangsari from the Independent Forest Monitoring Network, which is involved in checking companies' compliance with legal timber requirements, said the system is not perfect but can be refined and improved.

The environment and forestry ministry has demonstrated its commitment to reform with more than a decade of effort to tackle the illegal timber crisis, she said.

A potential loophole stems from the wood furniture industry in Java, which comprises many small-scale producers who use wood from private forests that can be as small as 2 to 5 acres, and get less scrutiny. Larger companies could abuse that by representing products as coming from small producers, Minangsari said.

"Implementation is the biggest challenge," she said. "If the government is not really hands-on, they can blame the third-party certifiers" for any failures.

Europe is already an important market for Indonesian wood, buying about a third of its tropical timber shipments and more than a tenth of its paper and other timber products.

A study in the journal Nature Climate Change estimated that by 2012, Indonesia was clearing 2.1 million acres of forests a year, more than any other country.

In 2014, it renewed a moratorium on new licenses for logging in virgin forests, but deforestation has continued largely unabated.

SundayMonday Business on 09/18/2016


Source: EU to license Indonesian timber in effort to reduce illegal cutting

Saturday, September 17, 2016

Don’t worry, Jakarta tells tax amnesty applicants flagged by Singapore banks

Singapore's Central Business District. Pic: Flickr/Brian Evans

Singapore's Central Business District. Pic: Flickr/Brian Evans

JAKARTA officials are urging taxpayers not to be overly concerned by reports that Singaporean banks have reported to local police the names of those participating in Indonesia's tax amnesty program.

Jakarta Post wrote Saturday that the state palace believes that Singapore would not hinder the implementation of the program.

Cabinet Secretary Pramono Anung told those with money parked in Singapore they need not fear signing up for the program as participation would not be considered tax evasion.

Furthermore, the official pointed out that Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati had already spoken to her counterpart in Singapore about the matter.

"Thus, anyone who puts their assets in Singapore and wants to join the tax amnesty, whether in the form of assets repatriation or declaration, please do not be afraid because the applicable law is the Indonesian tax regulation," he was quoted saying in Jakarta Friday.

The same assurance was offered earlier by Sri Mulyani during an unplanned press conference in the capital, the newspaper reported Thursday night.

Indonesia's Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati. Pic: AP.

Indonesia's Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati. Pic: AP.

The minister, responding to reports about the move by Singapore's banks, revealed that she had even contacted the island state's authorities for a response on the matter.

"I directly checked with Singaporean authorities, specifically Deputy Prime Minister Tarman to get official explanation from the Singaporean government," she was quoted saying in Kompas, according to Jakarta Post.

Sri Mulyani said the Singaporean government responded by telling her that they had encouraged all banks in the country to support clients wanting to join Indonesia's amnesty program.

In an exclusive report earlier, Reuters quoted several Singapore banking sources as revealing that private banks were sharing with local police the names of the clients who have embraced Indonesia's tax pardon.

SEE ALSO: Singapore remains least corrupt country in Asia; NKorea most corrupt

The Jokowi administration rolled out the controversial tax amnesty program on June 28 in a bid to offset an impending budget shortfall on the back of sluggish economic growth and poor annual tax collection rates.

The government hopes that the program would help it bring home some IDR165 trillion (US$12.5 billion) of the country's wealth currently parked by its citizens overseas.

Under the program, Indonesians are offered low penalty rates for assets abroad or at home that were not previously declared. A Bloomberg report said the rate changes in stages, beginning from 4 percent for declared assets that taxpayers choose to leave overseas, and up to 10 percent as the program draws to a close in March 2017.

Those who agree to repatriate their assets for a minimum three-year period are offered a rate of just 2 percent, as well as investment opportunities.

Concerns were raised previously that the program would lead to a massive outflow of assets from Singapore, where Indonesians are believed to have stashed some US$200 billion in private banking assets, which accounts for 40 percent of the island's total, according to reports.

Reuters in its exclusive noted that Singapore made tax evasion a money-laundering offence in 2013 and tightened rules further after the investigation on Malaysia-owned 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB) revealed that some of its banks had failed to highlight dubious money movements.

SEE ALSO: Singapore: BSI Bank to be shut down due to 'gross misconduct' amid 1MDB scandal

Under rules stipulated by Singapore's Financial Action Task Force (FATF), banks are required to file a suspicious transaction report (STR) whenever a client participates in a tax amnesty scheme.

But the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) told Reuters that participation in any such tax amnesty scheme would not trigger a criminal probe in Singapore.

"The expectation for an STR to be filed on account of a client participating in a tax amnesty program should therefore not discourage clients from participation," it was quoted saying.

Noting this, Sri Mulyani said Indonesians need not worry about taking part.

Bloomberg said today that so far, Indonesians have declared IDR117.3 trillion (US$8.9 billion) of assets held in Singapore under the government's tax amnesty.

Of the total Singapore assets declared, however, only IDR14.1 trillion, or 12 percent, has been repatriated, the report said, quoting Indonesia's Finance Ministry.


Source: Don't worry, Jakarta tells tax amnesty applicants flagged by Singapore banks

Friday, September 16, 2016

Jakarta water woes 'problem on top of problem'

A civil security worker guides an office employee through flood waters on a road outside the presidential palace in Jakarta on Feb. 9, 2015.(Photo: Romeo Gacad, AFP/Getty Images)

The Java Sea to the north. Thirteen rivers flowing through the city from mountains to the south. For as long as it's been inhabited, the Indonesian capital, Jakarta, has been regularly inundated by these two forces of nature.

Now, confronted by increasingly heavy monsoon rains, rising seas and other challenges, the metro area of 30 million people is facing a dire threat from climate change.

A good place to see what's at stake is in north Jakarta, where a leaky concrete seawall is the only thing holding back the Java Sea from flooding almost half of the city. Even on a clear day, the seawall is just a few inches from overtopping.

"Basically this is a life threatening situation," says Victor Coenen, an engineer for the Dutch engineering firm Witteveen+Bos, whom the Indonesian government has asked for help shoring up its flood-control infrastructure.

"If this seawall breaks, you have three meters of water in this kampung area where nobody can swim."

"Kampung" means village, and it's what Indonesians call the kind of neighborhood below the wall. This is a working-class community, where people live under asbestos roofs and earn a meager living by fishing in the bay or selling snacks on the street.

Roughly 100,000 people live right next to the seawall, well below the sea level.

Rising water, sinking land

About 40% of Jakarta today is below sea-level, and that share is growing. That's partly because climate change is slowly raising sea levels, but the bigger problem right now is that much of Jakarta itself is sinking as the water table beneath the city depletes. Jakarta has some of the world's highest rates of land subsidence, with some parts sinking nearly 10 inches per year.

"It's really a problem on top of another problem, making things even more difficult," Coenen says.

Jakarta's problems managing water have piled up over decades as it ballooned into one of the biggest cities on Earth. Now the Indonesian government is trying to address some of them with an ambitious "national coastal development" strategy. It includes a $30 billion plan to build a new seawall, 300 miles long, and to enclose Jakarta Bay behind a chain of artificial islands.

But the plan isn't popular with some of the very people it's supposed to protect.

Kuat Wibisono, who leads a fishermen's group in a seaside kampung called Muara Angke, says new islands in the bay are already affecting local fishermen's catch. He acknowledges that flooding can be a real problem, but he doesn't think the bay development plan will solve that, or anything else.

"We don't really see how the reclamation project will improve (our) economy, or how it will benefit us socially or environmentally, because the reclamation is burying our fishing area," Wibisono says.

And he faults the process as well.

Wibisono claims local fishermen only found out about the government's plans when their boats started running aground in unfamiliar places, where engineers were already raising the seafloor for new artificial islands.

"There was not any discussion, or announcement to our community from government. [It's] as if Jakarta Bay is theirs," he says.

Wisbono's group successfully sued to stop the construction of artificial islands. There's currently a moratorium on new islands, and later this year the country's president is supposed to weigh in on whether construction can continue.

Wibisono says he thinks the real motivation for Jakarta's land reclamation isn't flood control, but making more room for rich people. That's because the new seawall and protective islands would be financed by leasing the newly created land to wealthy developers.

Engineer Victor Coenen understands that sounds like a land grab.

"This does create the image that this is a project for the rich," Coenen says. "Unfortunately, if you don't want to do it with this kind of high-end development, then you have to find some public money. And public money is scarce in Indonesia."

Riverside evictions

One place where public money is being spent to try to help address Jakarta's flooding problem is inland, where Jakarta's 13 rivers are choking on the twin problems of trash and overcrowding. Millions of people live along riverbanks in kampung neighborhoods of cement and brick houses and bamboo shacks, and many residents toss their garbage and even defecate directly into the rivers.

"People still put rubbish in the river because they don't have to pay," says Sri Tantri Arundhati, Indonesia's director of climate change adaptation.

Arundhati says trash can clog pumps and dams, and prevent the rivers from draining to the sea. "(So) you have to solve first the drainage problem"

Overcrowded riverbanks can make flooding worse, and lead to disaster during severe floods.

The government's answer to these twin problems is to relocate as many as 100,000 riverside residents to new subsidized apartment buildings, widen the rivers so they can hold more stormwater and install levees to hem in high water.

Of course the plan also means demolishing vibrant communities that in some cases have been here for generations, even if many were never quite legal.

"It's government land," says Arundhati.

Most kampung residents are squatters, although many of those evicted claim they had title to their land, sometimes dating back to Jakarta's Dutch colonial days.

But Arundhati says the neighborhoods are not only flood-prone, they're dangerous.

"Removing them and giving them proper housing, I think it's better for their health," Arundhati says. "And for Jakarta I think it's healthier to have a river more managed than before."

Neighborhood resistance

Here, too, though, the flood control plans are meeting with pushback.

Hundreds of families have filed class action lawsuits against their evictions. Some continue to squat in tents erected on the ruins of their bulldozed neighborhoods. There have been clashes with police when residents have refused to leave.

"I can't accept it. It felt like my heart was torn into pieces," says a former resident of the kampung named Syafitriani.

Syafitriani says she was given just four months' notice before bulldozers arrived one morning at 7 a.m. to level her neighborhood.

She says she owned the land and paid taxes on it for 25 years, and she stayed to protest its demolition.

"I stood in front of my house," Syafitriani says. "I was crying, shouting."

More than a year later, she's still fighting for compensation. She's moved into one of the new high rises, but she says she makes less money there selling snacks from a cart than she did from her home by the river, and she's having trouble paying the rent.

To make things worse, Syafitriani says her new apartment leaks. So after being evicted for a flood control project, she still has to deal with pools of water when it rains.

Jakarta Post journalist Evi Mariani, who's been covering forced evictions since 2003, agrees that there's a real need for flood control projects in the city, but she says the relocations are also a convenient excuse to make Jakarta more upscale and touristy like Singapore.

"(The residents are) just being called … the great unwashed of Jakarta," Mariani says. But the new social housing is "not taking into account their needs … They probably don't get flooded anymore, but their life is much harder."

A lesson for other cities

As for other possible measures that have been floated to help fight flooding in Jakarta — things like replacing open space, restoring the water table, even somehow shrinking the size of the sprawling city — there's little effort to carry those out.

Victor Coenen, the Dutch engineer, acknowledges that the big technical fixes being proposed and implemented to address Jakarta's massive flooding problems only get at part of the problem. Even the most basic fix — like repairing the existing seawall — disrupts a way of life for kampung residents who actually live on top of it.

"If you strengthen the seawall … these people will lose their livelihood," Coenen says. "It's not a technical solution that's the problem, it's the social problem."

Some Indonesians see Jakarta's mountain of challenges managing water as a window into the future for many coastal cities around the world as climate change brings rising water over the next few decades and beyond.

Coenen agrees that here in Jakarta, there are already no good choices, especially for the city's most vulnerable residents.

But he says other coastal cities still have time to start planning ahead

"The lesson for other cities is act while you still can," Coenen says, "and then you can avoid these mega-engineering solutions."

It's a reminder, he says, that while it's possible to engineer solutions to climate change, the hard part is finding solutions that are fair to the vulnerable people they're designed to protect in the first place.

This report was produced by PRI.org in partnership with The GroundTruth Project. Its content was created separately to USA TODAY.

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Source: Jakarta water woes 'problem on top of problem'

Thursday, September 15, 2016

Over 200 tech minds to share ideas in Jakarta

Following its success last year, Ideafest 2016 marks its return by presenting more than 200 speakers from diverse backgrounds, scheduled for Sept. 23-24 at the Jakarta Convention Center in South Jakarta.

Among the renowned figures who will be attending the event are Mashable Asia strategy director Gwendolyn Regina, Grab co-founder Hooi Ling Tan, Bandung Mayor Ridwan Kamil, journalist and presenter Andy F. Noya and BukaLapak.com CEO Achmad Zaky.

(Read also: Productivity apps to help you through your work days)

A press conference was held by (from left to right) Ideafest 2016 festival director Chaerany Putri, Ideafest co-founder Ben Soebiakto, Tokopedia founder and CEO Wiilliam Tanuwijaya and Indovidgram co-founder Benakribo on Wednesday.(JP/Ni Nyoman Wira )

Embracing SHIFT(THINK) as this year's theme, which means changing our thinking to improve lifestyles through technology, the event aims for its participants to expand their networks. "The best way to grow business today is by building connections," said Ideafest co-founder Ben Soebiakto.

Debuted in 2011, the event will collaborate with the creative video community Indovidgram to host Indovidfest, which is said to be the biggest creative video festival in Indonesia. Numerous performers, such as SkinnyIndonesian24, Chandra Liow and Devina Aureel, are scheduled to take the stage during the session. In addition to the aforementioned events, the competition ideas aim to find the best social entrepreneurs from Indonesia, in which the winner will receive mentorship funding as well as an education trip. (kes)


Source: Over 200 tech minds to share ideas in Jakarta

Wednesday, September 14, 2016

Theatrical show ‘Mahabharata’ to grace Jakarta, Yogyakarta stages

A theatrical show based on the Mahabharata epic is set to be performed in two cities at the end of September by a team of Indonesian, Japanese, Malaysian and Filipino artists.

Dubbed Mahabharata Part 3: Kurusetra War, the show will highlight the culmination of Pandawa and Kurawa's long-lasting conflict, which eventually lead the two deity-descendant families into war. "This performance transcends time, country and religion. It also combines what is abstract and concrete," said the show's spokesperson Asa Rahmana as quoted by tempo.co on Wednesday. He added that the performance was "trying to find a fresh approach to the past" and that the story would focus on the humans instead of the deities.

(Read also: Indonesian theater steals the show at Asian theater festival)

The play is part of a project helmed by Japanese director Hiroshi Koike from Tokyo since 2013. In Indonesia, his team are collaborating with the Kelola Foundation and Garasi Performance Institute.

Prior to the third installment, the team had performed Mahabharata Part 1 in Cambodia, Mahabharata Part 2 in India and Mahabharata Part 2.5 in Japan. In Indonesia, the show is slated to be held at Societet Militer in Yogyakarta Culture Park on Sept. 24 to 25 and Graha Bhakti Budaya in Taman Ismail Marzuki on Sept. 28 to 29. (kes)


Source: Theatrical show 'Mahabharata' to grace Jakarta, Yogyakarta stages

Tuesday, September 13, 2016

Investigation warned of police torture claims in Jakarta school case

An investigation into the alleged sex abuse of children at a prestigious Jakarta school warns some suspects claimed to have been tortured by police.

  • Neil Bantleman and Ferdinant Tjiong leaving the police station to be transferred to prison. Photo: Michael Bachelard

    Neil Bantleman and Ferdinant Tjiong leaving the police station to be transferred to prison. Photo: Michael Bachelard

  • From left: Ferdinant Tjiong and Neil Bantleman. Photo: Michael Bachelard

    From left: Ferdinant Tjiong and Neil Bantleman. Photo: Michael Bachelard

  • Yayah Heriyah, the wife of Syahrial, one of the cleaners jailed for alleged sex abuse at Jakarta Intercultural School, carries her son Muhammad Farid outside Jakarta's Cipinang prison. Photo: Tatan Syuflana

    Yayah Heriyah, the wife of Syahrial, one of the cleaners jailed for alleged sex abuse at Jakarta Intercultural School, carries her son Muhammad Farid outside Jakarta's Cipinang prison. Photo: Tatan Syuflana

  • Yayah Heriyah says that when she was reunited with her husband Syahrial after his arrest in 2014, he had been so severely beaten that she did not recognise him. Photo: Tatan Syuflana

    Yayah Heriyah says that when she was reunited with her husband Syahrial after his arrest in 2014, he had been so severely beaten that she did not recognise him. Photo: Tatan Syuflana

  • exit

    Jakarta: An investigation into the alleged sex abuse of children at a prestigious Jakarta international school warned some of the suspects claimed to have been tortured by police until they confessed.

    A report by the National Commission on Human Rights (Komnas HAM), obtained by Fairfax Media, outlines claims by some of the suspects, who were cleaners at the school, that "they were forced to admit their action because they could not stand being tortured any longer".

    "With regards to the allegations of torture, Komnas HAM needs to further investigate to uncover the truth," the report says. "We also urge that the legal process is not carried out in ways that violate the law and human rights."

    Five Indonesian cleaners, Canadian teacher Neil Bantleman and Indonesian teaching assistant Ferdinant Tjiong have been jailed for up to eleven years for the alleged sexual abuse of three kindergarten children at the school in 2013 and 2014.

    Lawyers and family members of the cleaners and teaching staff insist they are innocent and plan to request a judicial review of the case, which is the last legal resort.

    Komnas HAM conducted an investigation after receiving complaints in September and October 2014 from lawyers for the cleaners and teachers, lawyers for an alleged victim's family and parents from the Jakarta Intercultural School, who all requested the commission monitor the legal process.

    The Komnas HAM investigation was completed while the trial was ongoing in the South Jakarta District Court. The report has never been publicly released.

    It details horrific allegations of cigarette burns and beatings that were so severe the wife of one of the cleaners, Syahrial, did not recognise her husband's face because of the wounds and bruises.

    Another cleaner - Agun Iskandar - alleged a police investigator covered his face with duct tape, whipped him with a hose, hit his chest, electrocuted him and smeared his genitals with balm and chilli sauce.

    "The corroboration is when Epi Gunawan [his brother] paid a visit to the suspect, there were wounds around the eyes and face and scars from cigarette burns," the report says.

    "Based on these findings it is clear that the actions committed by investigators of the PPA (women's and children's affairs) Unit of the Jakarta police against the suspects were cruel and inhumane and degraded human dignity."

    The report does not explicitly state if it believes the alleged sexual abuse occurred.

    However Komnas HAM found at least four human rights violations in the event of the alleged sexual assault at the Jakarta Intercultural School.

    One of these was a violation of children's rights, especially the right not to be a victim of abuse.

    There was also a violation of the right to live (a sixth cleaner, Azwar, died in custody), a violation of the right not to be treated in a cruel, inhumane and demeaning way (the alleged torture of the cleaners) and a violation of the right to a feeling of security.

    Police claimed Azwar died from drinking bleach he found in the toilet while in custody. The Komnas HAM report says further evidence, such as an autopsy, was required to establish the actual cause of death.

    "In this case, Jakarta police investigators were negligent in failing to prevent actions that could endanger the suspect under their care," the report says.

    Its recommendations included that the Indonesian police chief investigate the alleged torture of the cleaners and the alleged network of perpetrators of sexual violence against children at Jakarta Intercultural School and that the school increase its security, such as installing CCTVs on every corner.

    Yayah Heriyah told Fairfax Media she did not see her husband, Syahrial, who was a cleaner at Jakarta Intercultural School, until five days after his arrest in 2014. Police said she could not visit prior to this because the investigation was ongoing.

    Asked if she was shocked when she saw Syahrial for the first time, she said: "I wasn't just shocked, I didn't recognise him at all.

    "There were bruises all over his body and face but there were more bruises on his face, especially around his eye."

    Ms Yayah said the judicial review was the family's last legal avenue. "I hope the Supreme Court will decide that my husband is innocent. There is nothing else we can do, we are just poor people, we can only hope for the best."

    The alleged sex abuse at Jakarta Intercultural School has attracted intense international scrutiny and raised questions about the integrity of the Indonesian legal system.

    Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau brought up Mr Bantleman's case with Indonesian President Joko Widodo at the G20 summit in China this month.

    "I'm constantly talking about how important it is to respect the rule of law and to defend Canadians' rights abroad," Mr Trudeau said.

    Follow Jewel Topsfield on Facebook

    The story Investigation warned of police torture claims in Jakarta school case first appeared on The Sydney Morning Herald.


    Source: Investigation warned of police torture claims in Jakarta school case

    Monday, September 12, 2016

    Duterte: No problem if Jakarta decides to execute Mary Jane Veloso

    Geographic areas

    mediazioni e arbitrati, risoluzione alternativa delle controversie e servizi di mediazione e arbitrato

    » 09/12/2016, 12.48

    INDONESIA - PHILIPPINES

    Mathias Hariyadi

    The Philippine president, on a diplomatic visit to Indonesia, had a private meeting with Widodo on the possible the condemnation of the Filipino woman. Veloso is in jail on charges of drug dealing, but her execution was postponed several times due to the efforts of former President Aquino and criticism of the Catholic Church.

    Jakarta (AsiaNews) - The Philippine president Rodrigo Duterte has given the green light for the execution of Mary Jane Veloso,  a filippino woman held on death row on charges of drug dealing. The news came via the statements of Joko Widodo, President of Indonesia, which reported a conversation with the leader of Manila.

    Duterte is in Indonesia for a two-day visit. Widodo spoke to the press in Serang (Banten), during which he took part in the Hajj "Lebaran" Idul Adha, the Islamic feast which includes a sacrifice in the Great Mosque of the city. "I talked to the president Duterte about the Mary Jane Veloso case - said Widodo - and the fact that the woman brought 2.6 kilos of heroin into Indonesia. I also shared with him my thoughts on the possible cancellation of her execution. "

    "During our discussion - he added - President Duterte told me that 'it's ok' if the Indonesian authorities decide to go ahead with the execution".

    Mary Jane Fiesta Veloso, a 31 year old d omestic worker, has been held on death row in Indonesia since 2010 after she was stopped at the airport with 2.6 kilos of heroin. The woman has always declared herself innocent, claiming she became a drug courier without unknowingly. Requests for clemency have been made by the Philippine Church, the Indonesian, and several Asian countries. In recent weeks, the defense lawyers have produced "new evidence" that would prove the woman innocent. Joko Widodo said that the Indonesian Justice Department has not yet disclosed the decision on the new evidence.

    So far Veloso has been spared in rounds of executions carried out by the Indonesian authorities, the last of which was in July. The woman is set to appear as a witness in the trial of Maria Kristina Sergio, suspected of having "recruited" Veloso  under false pretenses to make her a drug courier.

    Indonesia, the most populous Muslim nation in the world, has one of the strictest anti-drug laws in the world, to fight what Presi dent Joko Widodo has called "a national emergency." From 1979 to 2015, 66 executions have been carried out.

    Former Philippine President Benigno Aquino had tried to put pressure on the Indonesian Government to suspend the Veloso's sentence. Unlike the Rodrigo Duterte's approach who, from the outset of his election campaign, promised death to all the dealers present in the Philippines and is condemned by the international community for the spate of extrajudicial killings (about 3 thousand) of alleged traffickers.

    See also

    04/08/2015 PHILIPPINES – INDONESIAFor Filipino bishop, Mary Jane Veloso is innocent; those who took advantage of her should be punishedThe Filipino woman is in jail in Indonesia, convicted of drug trafficking. The death sentence still hangs over her. The president of the Episcopal Commission for the care of migrants told AsiaNews, "They used her, and robbed her of her innocence." The Church will pray for her and protect her children. "We hope and we are convinced that Mary Jane will be spared the death sentence."

    14/06/2016 17:44:00 INDONESIAJakarta ready to execute 48 drug traffickers

    In mid-July, after Ramadan, 18 death row inmates will be executed. Another 30 are set for early 2017. More and more young people are getting addicted to drugs. About 104,000 have died so far. Currently, 50 people die from overdose every day. The Indonesian Church is involved in rehab work, but lacks the facilities.

    12/05/2016 14:18:00 INDONESIAJakarta: firing squads ready for 15 drug traffickers

    No official date has been set, but death row inmates, five Indonesians and 10 foreigners, will be executed "in mid-May". Mary Jane Veloso, a 30-year-old Filipina maid sentenced to death, was spared because her case is being prepared in the Philippines.

    13/04/2015 INDONESIA - PHILIPPINESIndonesia, Catholics pray for Filipino on death rowA national prayer campaign for 30 year-old Mary Jane, sentenced to death (though innocent) for drug trafficking. The initiative was launched to coincide with the feast of Divine Mercy. Her family targeted with threats. Her mother: "I fear for my grandchildren's lives".

    29/04/2015 PHILIPPINES – INDONESIAFilipino bishop calls Mary Jane an iconic figure for migrants, urges authorities to stop workers from leavingThe chairman of the Commission on Migrants told AsiaNews that he is happy for her reprieve. He urges the authorities to act and traffickers to stop. The prisoner left 'execution' island for Yogyakarta. Her alleged recruiter, Maria Kristina Sergio, turned herself in to the authorities who now can investigate.

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    Saint Mother Teresa, pray for us

    Bernardo Cervellera

    On the eve of the canonization and the AsiaNews symposium on Mother Teresa of Calcutta, learning from her message and experience. She overcomes the "globalization of indifference"; her work has redefined poverty: poverty is not just material, but also human, lives devoid of love. The memory of Princess Diana. Her "haste" to respond to the poor. Her work as a response to the love of Jesus Christ. Mother Teresa is the icon of mission in the twenty-first century and the example of how to be Church after Vatican II: She united contemplation of Christ, and action in the world, tradition and development. The program of our International Symposium.

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    Speaking to AsiaNews, Anil Gomes (not his real name for security reasons) explains that he converted to Christianity after reading a passage from the New Testament. Since then he has lost every job. His body shows the wounds from assaults and murder attempts. "I cannot maintain my family. Pray for me".

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    Source: Duterte: No problem if Jakarta decides to execute Mary Jane Veloso

    Sunday, September 11, 2016

    Short film 'Mauka' bags International Award of Excellence at Jakarta

    Pak PM raising Kashmir bogey to deflect attention from personal problems: Govt

    New Delhi, Sep 11 (UNI) The government has firmly rejected the charge that it had pursued a 'flip flop' policy on Pakistan during the past two years and is quite convinced that Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif had deliberately raised the pitch on the Kashmir issue following the killing of Hizbul Mujahideen Commander Burhan Wani in early July to deflect mounting pressure on him from his opponents to resign following the Panama paper leaks.

    see more..    11 Sep 2016 | 11:54 AMAt least 21 civilians killed in Saudi-led air strikes in Yemen - residents

    SANAA, Sep 11 (Reuters) At least 21 civilians were killed in two separate air strikes by the Saudi-led coalition in northern Yemen, residents said today, as fighting intensified in the country before the Muslim Eid al-Adha feast.

    see more..    11 Sep 2016 | 2:46 PMMajor infiltration bid foiled, 4 militants killed at LoC in north Kashmir

    Srinagar, Sep 11 (UNI) Four heavily armed militants were killed when alert troops foiled yet another infiltration bid from Pakistan occupied Kashmir (PoK) in the frontier district of Kupwara early this morning.

    see more..    11 Sep 2016 | 4:12 PMWriters strongly protest Subhash Chandra as chief guest in Sahitya Akademi seminar

    New Delhi, Sep 11 (UNI) The writers have protested over Sahitya Akademi extending invitation to TV baron and Rajya Sabha MP Subhash Chandra to be the chief guest on the occasion of Hindi Diwas this year to deliberate on 'challenges before Hindi language' charging that the politicisation of the akademi was being attempted.

    see more..    11 Sep 2016 | 4:48 PMPak rules out granting transit facility to India for trade with Afghanistan

    Islamabad, Sep 11 (UNI) Pakistan has rebuffed calls by Afghan President Ashraf Ghani to involve India in transit trade with Afghanistan, saying it is not possible.

    see more..    11 Sep 2016 | 12:16 PMAbout 40 injured in fresh clashes in south Kashmir

    Srinagar, Sep 11 (UNI) About 40 people were injured when security forces fired pellets and burst teargas shells to disperse demonstrators, protesting against the early morning raids in south Kashmir district of Pulwama.

    see more..    11 Sep 2016 | 12:27 PMDay 65: Life remains crippled in Kashmir

    Srinagar, Sep 11 (UNI) Life remained crippled for the 65th consecutive day today in Kashmir valley, where 77 people, mostly youths, were killed and about 8,000 others wounded in security force action since July 9, a day after Hizbul Mujahideen (HM) commander Burhan Wani and two other militants were killed in an encounter in Anantnag.

    see more..    11 Sep 2016 | 2:08 PM
    Source: Short film 'Mauka' bags International Award of Excellence at Jakarta

    Friday, September 9, 2016

    Philippines’ Duterte tells Obama he never cursed him

    JAKARTA, Indonesia — Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte said Friday he told President Barack Obama during their encounter in Laos that he never cursed him.

    On a visit to Indonesia, Duterte told the Filipino community there that he told Obama: "President Obama, I'm President Duterte. I never made that statement, check it out."

    He said that Obama responded: "'My men will talk to you,' and he replied 'OK.'"

    Duterte blamed the media for distorting his words, saying he did utter "son of a bitch" but it was not directed at Obama.

    Before traveling to Laos for regional summits, Duterte said Monday that Obama should not question him about the rising death toll in his war on drugs, which has been criticized abroad and by Duterte's opponents in the Philippines. More than 2,800 suspected drug dealers and users have been killed since Duterte took office.

    Asked how he would explain the killings to Obama, he said in a long answer that the Philippines has long ceased to be a colony of the United States and he ddid not have a master except the Filipino people.

    "I do not care about him. Who is he?" Duterte said. "You must be respectful. Do not just throw questions and statements. Putang Ina, I will swear at you at that forum," he added, using the Tagalog phrase for "son of a bitch."

    Obama then canceled a meeting with Duterte in Laos but the two met informally on Wednesday in a holding room before attending a gala dinner.

    Duterte, who assumed the presidency in June, has had an uneasy relationship with the U.S., his country's longtime treaty ally. He has said he is charting a foreign policy not dependent on the U.S., and has moved to reduce tensions with China over rival territorial claims.

    He also said he showed a picture of an atrocity during the U.S. pacification campaign in the southern Philippines at the beginning of the last century at the East Asia Summit in Laos that included Obama, in order to stop criticism over human rights violations in the war on illegal drugs. The photograph showed about 200 dead Filipino Moros stacked in a common pit, with an American soldier holding a rifle while stepping on the breasts of a naked Moro woman.

    He said he told the leaders, "This is human rights, what do you intend to do?" and "Human rights violations whether committed by Moses or Abraham, is still violation of human rights."

    The whole room was silent and he waited for Obama to respond but he remained quiet, Duterte said.

    ___

    Associated Press writer Teresa Cerojano in Manila, Philippines, contributed to this report.

    Copyright 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


    Source: Philippines' Duterte tells Obama he never cursed him

    Thursday, September 8, 2016

    Greater Jakarta: No expired ingredients found in pizza outlets

    The head of the Jakarta Health Agency, Koesmedi Priharto, told The Jakarta Post that the agency did not find any expired ingredients in any Pizza Hut and PHD outlets in Jakarta.

    "We have checked at some Pizza Hut branches across five municipalities [of Jakarta] and found no expired ingredients at all," he said on Tuesday, adding that in Jakarta, the team inspected outlets in Pesanggrahan, Taman Palem, Kalimalang and Cempaka Putih.

    PHD's general manager, Andrias Chandra, said on Tuesday that the company always made sure to maintain the quality and hygiene of its ingredients, particularly in its distribution process.

    "All of the imported ingredients, locally or internationally, are being checked strictly to ensure their quality. For instance, they have to be kept in cold storage under the temperature of 5 degrees Celsius and we implement a high standard of procedure," he told reporters at one of Pizza Hut's cold storage facilities in Bantar Gebang distr ict, Bekasi, West Java.


    Source: Greater Jakarta: No expired ingredients found in pizza outlets

    Wednesday, September 7, 2016

    Australian expert Professor Beng Beng Ong who testified in alleged coffee murder case to be deported

    An Australian expert who testified that a woman was unlikely to have died from cyanide poisoning will be deported and banned from Indonesia for six months.

  • Jessica Wongso, who prosecutors allege poisoned her friend with a Vietnamese iced coffee. Photo: Tatan Syuflana

    Jessica Wongso, who prosecutors allege poisoned her friend with a Vietnamese iced coffee. Photo: Tatan Syuflana

  • Wongso appears in court in Jakarta. Photo: Tatan Syuflana

    Wongso appears in court in Jakarta. Photo: Tatan Syuflana

  • exit

    An Australian expert who testified that Indonesian woman Wayan Mirna Salihin was unlikely to have died from cyanide poisoning after drinking a Vietnamese iced coffee will be deported and banned from entering Indonesia for six months.

    Professor Beng Beng Ong, a forensic pathologist and senior lecturer at Queensland University's School of Medicine, had cast doubt over the central plank of the prosecution's premeditated murder case on Monday, when he questioned whether Ms Salihin had been fatally poisoned.

    Ms Salihin died on January 6. Prosecutors allege her friend Jessica Kumala Wongso, an Australian permanent resident, spiked her Vietnamese iced coffee with cyanide at the upmarket Olivier restaurant in Grand Indonesia shopping mall. Ms Wongso has maintained her innocence.

    However hours after Professor Ong questioned in the Central Jakarta District Court whether Ms Salihin was fatally poisoned, he was intercepted at Jakarta's international airport by immigration officers who confiscated his passport at about 4am on September 6.

    The head of Central Jakarta immigration, Tato Juliadin, said Professor Ong's mistake had been to testify in court when he entered Indonesia on a free visa on arrival, which is for tourists.

    "He should have used a temporary stay visa instead. A free visa cannot be used for work," Mr Juliadin said.

    "(Beng Beng Ong) entered Indonesia using a free visa so we will deport him and he will be banned from entering Indonesia for six months."

    Ms Wongso has been accused of the premeditated murder of Ms Salihin, with whom she studied at the Billy Blue College of Design in Sydney. The maximum sentence for premeditated murder is the death penalty although the Indonesian government assured this would not be imposed when it requested assistance with the investigation from the Australian Federal police.

    Despite Professor Ong's deportation, his testimony in the case will stand.

    "I would say the death was very likely not to have been caused by cyanide," he told the Central Jakarta District Court on Monday.

    However he said no autopsy had been performed to determine the cause of death, with the only examination the opening of the abdomen to collect toxicology specimens.

    "There was no post mortem autopsy to rule out the natural cause of death and the toxicology is not conclusive of poisoning," he said.

    "I would say the cause of death is uncertain or not determined."

    Professor Ong testified the low level of cyanide detected in Ms Salihin's stomach was not consistent with fatal poisoning and symptoms of cyanide poisoning typically developed about 30 minutes after ingestion, not the two minutes claimed by the prosecution.

    "There was no post mortem performed, there was a delay in (obtaining) the toxicology specimen, there was a contradictory toxicology result and therefore the cause of death cannot be concluded," Professor Ong said.

    The circumstances surrounding the death of Ms Salihin have obsessed many Indonesians. There are all the plot points of a soap opera - two beautiful women from wealthy backgrounds, an alleged murder and an unknown motive. Vietnamese iced coffees have enjoyed a ghoulish spike in popularity.

    "What doesn't kill you makes you stronger. Vietnamese coffee. Stronger than you think," a billboard says outside a South Jakarta outlet of MonViet, a Vietnamese restaurant chain.

    A MonViet employee insisted this was a coincidence and the phraseology came from a song. But she said many customers ordered iced Vietnamese coffee after the Jessica case because they were curious about it. "Sometimes customers joke: 'Does your Vietnamese coffee contain cyanide or not?'

    Professor Ong, who was the first witness for the defence, told the court he had been an expert forensic witness in Malaysia, Singapore, Brunei and Australia. He said he would expect a "very high level of cyanide" to be found in the stomach of someone who had been fatally poisoned - in some cases more than 1000 milligrams per litre.

    The senior forensic pathologist said he would also expect cyanide to be detected in the bowels and liver.

    However Professor Ong said just 0.2 milligrams of cyanide had been detected in Ms Salihin's stomach and tests on her bowel and liver came back negative.

    He also said symptoms of cyanide poisoning typically occur about 30 minutes after it has been ingested, which did not fit with Ms Salihin collapsing two minutes after drinking the allegedly spiked iced coffee.

    "I wouldn't suspect it was cyanide, I would consider other causes, including natural disease," Professor Ong said.

    The forensic pathologist spent time in Indonesia in 2002 assisting the Australian Federal Police with post mortems of the victims of the first Bali bombing.

    The head of Central Jakarta immigration, Mr Juliadin, said Professor Ong had only held a cultural visa at the time, but he was assisted by the Australian government and had not appeared in public.

    "It was discretion," he said.

    Mr Juliadin said Professor Ong would return to Australia via Singapore on Wednesday. His passport would be returned to him on "departure day".

    "He did not commit a crime however he violated the visa regulation." he said.

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    The story Australian expert Professor Beng Beng Ong who testified in alleged coffee murder case to be deported first appeared on The Sydney Morning Herald.


    Source: Australian expert Professor Beng Beng Ong who testified in alleged coffee murder case to be deported