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Thursday, December 18, 2008

Prosecutors seek death for cocaine smugglers

Saturday, November 08, 2008
Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang


Prosecutors at the Tangerang District Court sought the death sentence for three foreigners convicted of smuggling cocaine into the country through Soekarno-Hatta International Airport in February.

Prosecutors Teuku Rahman and Haryadi said in a hearing Thursday evening the defendants, a Thai woman, Thitirat Charoensuk, 24, and two British men, Michael Anthony Guevara, 34, and John Patrick Patton, 52, were proven guilty of smuggling the drugs.

The prosecutors said the defendants violated Article 82 of the 1997 Drug Law. The article carries a maximum penalty of execution.

"The defendants intentionally smuggled 515 grams of cocaine into the country," Teuku Rahman told the panel of judges presided over by Haryono, with two other members Barmen Sinurat and Arthur Hangewa.

He said Guevara and Patton were the owners of the cocaine, and had asked the Thai woman to take the drugs to Indonesia.

The defendants were shocked to hear the penalty demand. Charoensuk fainted.

The defendants were arrested soon after their arrival at the airport on Feb. 20. Customs and excise officers became suspicious after Charoensuk appeared to be nervous at the customs check point.

After being examined, officers found drugs estimated to be worth Rp 2 billion (US$181,000) hidden in a bag she was carrying.

An interrogation led officers to arrest Michael Anthony and his Thai girlfriend Naksri, who flew from Thailand to Jakarta on the same flight.

"Naksri was released later because she was not involved in the smuggling attempt," Eko Darmanto, chief of intelligence at the Customs office, said Friday.

The police subsequently learned of the alleged receiver's address and arrested John Patrick Patton in Cilandak, South Jakarta, seizing eight grams of cocaine from him.

The presiding judge postponed the hearing until Monday to hear the defendants' lawyer Husin Tuhuteru read out the defense.

Banten province gets ready for floods

Wednesday, November 05, 2008
Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Banten


As the wet season approaches, Banten's provincial administration has been making moves to mitigate the effects of floods that will likely occur across the province in the middle of this month.

The administration has spent Rp 10 billion (US$950,000) building several embankments designed to hold back overflow of river water in Pandeglang, Lebak, Serang regencies and Serang municipality, an official said.

To cope with possible flooding in Tangerang regency the provincial administration has spent the Rp 135 billion it received from the central government last year.

The money disbursed by the central government from the 2007 state budget has been used to finance the repair of dam sluices and dredge mud at Bendungan Pintu X in Pasar Baru subdistrict, Tangerang municipality, Situ (lake) Parigi, Situ Pamulang, Situ Cilandak, Situ Ciputat and along the Cirarab river.

"All of the flood handling projects are now underway," head of the provincial Resettlement and Water Resource Agency Winardjono said on Tuesday.

He said 87 locations in Banten are prone to flooding. Of them, 63 are spread across Tangerang regency, with 14 in Pandeglang and six in Lebak. The remaining four are in the Serang regency.

Tb. Baihaki, head of society protection at the National Safety Office, said that the administration had also spent Rp 1.48 billion purchasing four rubber boats, a minibus and a pick-up truck to evacuate flood victims, as well as 178 army tents, 77 tarpaulin tents and utensils for public kitchens.

The provincial Geophysics and Meteorology Agency (BMG) predicted that heavy rain would begin in mid November.

The Tangerang municipal administration has also taken a number of measures, such as preparing water pumps, dredging rivers and setting up a crisis prevention team, in preparation for the wet season.

"We have built and repaired several embankments in certain areas prone to flooding," Mayor Wahidin Halim said. The embankments have been built at several flood-prone points along the Cisadane, Sabi and Angke rivers, to prevent water from entering residential areas in Cileduk, Cibodas, Karawaci, Periuk and Pinang districts.

Wahidin said the total budget needed to completely free the municipality from flood disasters was around Rp 1.5 trillion.

"We will likely start the dredging, the widening and the straightening of rivers flowing through the municipality next year, because the central government has promised to disburse flood handling funds in 2009," he said.

Around 150,000 houses in Periuk, Jatiuwung, Karawaci, Pinang, Cipondoh, Cibodas and Cileduk districts are prone to annual flooding.

Widespread flooding in Tangerang regency earlier last year resulted in a temporary but significant 20 percent increase in unemployment, as many factories were forced to stop production.

The floods also damaged 23,716 hectares of rice fields in Tangerang regency, causing farmers losses of Rp 35 billion.

South Tangerang to have roads repaired, widened

Tuesday, November 04, 2008
Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang


The Tangerang municipal administration has prepared detailed engineering designs for road construction and repairs in the newly approved South Tangerang city, Tangerang regent Ismet Iskandar said over the weekend.

The regent asked the residents to help the projects progress smoothly because the administration would also widen several roads connecting seven districts in the new municipality.

The seven districts are Ciputat, East Ciputat, Pamulang, Pondok Aren, Serpong, North Serpong and Setu.

"Therefore, we ask the residents to not increase the price of the land for the road construction and road widening projects," Ismet said Saturday.

The regent said he had heard the price of land in Ciputat had increased soon after the administration decided the area would be the administrative center for South Tangerang.

"Before we announced Ciputat as the administrative center for South Tangerang, the land only cost between Rp 700,000 (US$64) and Rp 900,000 per square meter but now the price has increased to 2 million," he said.

Ismet promised that road repairs in South Tangerang would continue until 2009 because this is only part of the preparations needed to establish the city.

Data at the regency's Public Work Agency showed that the total length of damaged roads in South Tangerang was at least 1,646 kilometers, and includes 258 bridges.

However, the administration will only repair several main roads in South Tangerang in the near future.

Ciputat district administrative secretary Aplahunnajat said the district administration had proposed that the municipality repair all damaged roads this year.

"There are at least 73 roads in South Tangerang that need repairs and the administration has only allocated Rp 18 billion from this year's budget to repair them," he said.

Commenting on the recruitment of new civil servants to fill the new administration, Tangerang municipal assistant Mas Iman Kusnadar said it had yet to become a priority because more than 4,000 existing civil servants would be transferred to the new administrative office.

He said there were two kinds of services -- civil service and public service -- that the new municipal administration would have to deliver in the near future following the establishment of the city.

"Civil service is for ID cards (KTP), family cards (KK) and yellow cards for job seekers," he said, adding that public service deals with parking and environmental sanitation.

He said the Tangerang municipality was currently preparing a design competition for South Tangerang's logo.

"We have 45 days to find and determine the administrative logo; it must suit the city's culture and characteristics which have been developed into residential areas, education, trade, business and tourist areas," he said.

Security tightened ahead of bombers' execution

Monday, November 03, 2008 pyraerg
Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang


The details of the executions of the Bali bombers remain unknown, but authorities are taking no chances, with security at Soekarno-Hatta International Airport being tightened and the Australian government warning its citizens against traveling to Indonesia.

Airport security guards and police have been tightening inspections of vehicles entering the area since Saturday, fearing a backlash from Islamist militants over the executions of Amrozi, 47, his brother Mukhlas, 48, and Imam Samudra, 38.

"We will tighten security at the airport until the execution of the convicted terrorists is done," Comr. Sutimin, chief of traffic police at the airport, told The Jakarta Post.

He said a number of plain-clothed detectives had been deployed to monitor the situation at the airport.

The 2002 Bali bombings killed 202 people, mostly foreign holidaymakers, including 88 Australians.

The executions by firing squad are expected to be carried out in the next week or two.
These will be the first executions to be carried out under Indonesia's terrorism laws.

Although there has been no official confirmation of a circulating text message claiming National Police anti-terrorism squad intelligence indicates there could be retaliatory bomb attacks in public places, especially big shopping malls, authorities have placed foreign embassies, shopping malls and ports under close guard.

The Australian government issued a travel warning Sunday over fears of an extremist backlash against the executions. Australian Foreign Affairs Minister Stephen Smith said any Australians traveling to Indonesia should stay clear of places that could be targeted.

"We are making sure that we advise Australians firstly to reconsider their need to travel to Indonesia," Smith told the Nine Network television channel.

"We also indicate to them that if they do travel to Bali and Indonesia, to keep away from sites which have obviously been terrorist sites in the past."

Foreign Ministry spokesman Teuku Faizasyah said the Australian travel warning was unnecessary as Indonesian security officers would guarantee the safety of foreign nationals.

"We hope tourists won't cancel their trip to Indonesia," he said Sunday, as quoted by detik.com.
According to Faizasyah, the Australian government issued a travel warning last year that was still in effect, but rather than discouraging tourists, the number of visitors increased by 50 percent.

Immigration Office spokesman Maroloan Baringbing also said the planned execution had not affected the number of people visiting the country.

"No significant fluctuation (in the number of visitors)," he told detik.com on Sunday, adding that domestic security would be tourists' main concern.

"Therefore, we have to work together to ensure security," he said. "It's not just the task of the authorities."

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Residents, councilors support new city

Saturday, November 01, 2008
Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang


Many Tangerang residents have expressed their support for the new South Tangerang City.

"It is high time that several districts in the southern part of the regency have autonomy," Rita Zahara, a housewife who lives in East Ciputat district, told The Jakarta Post on Friday.

The district is one of six in southern Tangerang regency, which borders with Jakarta, that used to be at odds over the idea to form a new municipality.

But soon after the House of Representatives approved the proposed South Tangerang City and nine other new regions Thursday, the residents' skepticism suddenly turned into support.

Abdul Rohim, Communication Forum of Tangerang Village, is the most vocal critic of the move. Abdul said he first thought the idea was to accommodate the interests of several people wanting to control the vast area, and, therefore, it should have been ignored.

"I didn't think the proposal would reach the House. I was wrong," he said.

Councilors Abdul Muin Basuni of the National Awakening Party (PKB), Haris Sudiono of the Democratic Party, Dicky Syafrudin of the Golkar Party and Basuki Rahardjo of the National Mandate Party (PAN) voiced their support.

Basuki said 17 councilors representing the six districts agreed with the move because South Tangerang had been unfairly treated by the administration.

He argued that the South Tangerang City contributed 40 percent of the regency's Rp 1.3 trillion (US$119 million) annual revenue, but little of the money came back to the area.

Tangerang regent Ismet Iskandar, who attended a thanksgiving ceremony for the new South Tangerang City on Thursday evening, said he had prepared four candidates to be put forward as the municipality's acting mayor.

The officials are regency secretary Nanang Komera, administration assistant Mas Iman Kusnandar, head of the regency development planning body Bunyamin Davnie and head of the regency sanitation and landscape agency Hery Haryanto.

"We will propose the four names," Ismet said. "The Banten provincial administration will decide which of will be appointed with the task."

The ceremony was attended by Presidium for the Formation of South Tangerang City chairman Zarkasih Nur, legislator and resident Jazuli Juwaini, and hundreds of community figures.

The idea to establish the new city first emerged in 1992 and was backed by a group of Ciputat, Pamulang, Serpong and Pondok Aren residents.

In 2000, residents of the newly established Cisauk and Pegedangan districts said they also wanted to become part of the new city, which would have a total population of 1.6 million and Rp 69 billion in potential revenue.

Incumbent mayors secured second term

Friday, October 31, 2008
Multa Fidrus and Theresia Sufa, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang, Bogor


Incumbent Tangerang mayor Wahidin Halim and running mate Arief R. Wismansyah were reelected in a landslide victory over two other running pairs, securing their second term in office.
Similarly Bogor mayor Diani Budiarto, pairing with the former West Java legislator Achmad Ru'yat, convincingly outdid four other pairs to secure her position at the Bogor municipality office until 2014.

Wahidin won around 88 percent of the total votes in Tangerang. Muhamad Bonie Mudfijar and Diedy Faried Wadji came in second with 10 percent of the votes, while Ismet Sadeli Hasan and Mahfud Abdullah only obtained 2 percent.

The election took place peacefully on Oct. 26 despite accusations of irregularities.
The losing pairs in Tangerang can file for a review within the next three days should they have any objections.

"Each candidate can file their objections within the next three days. We will submit the election results to the municipal legislative council for approval and prepare for the mayor's swearing-in ceremony on Nov. 16," Imron Khamami, the chairman of the municipal elections commission (KPUD), told The Jakarta Post.

In Bogor, Diani won 64 percent of the votes, exceeding the 15 percent of votes collected by Dody Rosadi-Erik Irawan Suganda pair. The three other couples shared the remaining votes.
The leads were expected as both winning candidates received support from political party coalitions.

In the municipality's first-ever direct poll, Wahidin and Arief were backed by a coalition of several political parties such as the Golkar Party, the Indonesian Democratic Party for Struggle (PDI-P), the Democratic Party, the United Development Party (PPP), the National Mandate Party (PAN), the Star Crescent Party (PBB), the Reform Star Party (PBR) and the National Awakening Party (PKB).

The Diani-Ru'yat pair was supported by PDI-P, Golkar, PKS, Democracy Party, PBSD, PSI, PKPI, PPDI and PDK.

The voting process itself, however, still faces some challenges. Tangerang municipality suffered a low voter turnout rate of around 67 percent. Imron said the commission had registered a total of 972,207 eligible voters, but only 653,944 turned up to vote on Oct. 26.

Meanwhile, the Bogor election commission faces a problem of invalid votes. Of 415,612 votes cast, around 7 percent was deemed invalid.

More former Banten councilors arrested for corruption

Thursday, October 30, 2008
Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Banten


Banten prosecutors arrested eight former provincial legislative council members for their alleged involvement in a Rp 14 billion (US$1.32) corruption case in 2003.

Yunan Harjaka, special crime assistant at the prosecutor's office said the arrests were made after his team obtained enough evidence of the misuse of funds and because there were fears the suspects would escape or damage the evidence.

"We have completed the dossiers and we will soon hand the case over to Serang District Court for trial. The suspects received an average Rp 75 million each from the housing fund," he said Wednesday.

The eight former councilors are Rosyid, James Tangka, Eli Soepriyadi, Encep Daden Ibrahim, Toto Heryanto and Yahya Sanusi of the Indonesian Democratic Party for Struggle (PDIP), Irsyad of the Indonesian Democratic Party (PDI) and Maman Prihatna of the Star Crescent Party (PBB).

The suspects have not returned the money they took from the provincial administration's budget for councilor housing and welfare allowances.

The former councilors were initially summoned to the prosecutor's office for questioning only, but were sent to Serang prison directly after the examination was finished.

The case centers on the alleged misuse of budgetary funds under former governor Djoko Munandar. The eight councilors served during the 1999-2004 period.

More than Rp 3.5 billion was allocated to councilor activities, but they were granted an extra Rp 10.5 billion for the construction of 75 houses.

When councilors for the 2004-2009 period took office it was discovered that no housing complexes had been built.

An initial investigation into the corruption case resulted in six former councilors being sentenced in 2005 to up to four years' imprisonment.

The six former councilors jailed were Dharmono K. Lawi, a former Banten council chairman from the PDI-P; former Banten council deputy speaker Muslim Djamaludin; ousted council deputy speaker Mufrodi Muchsin; council secretary Tardian; former secretary of the council's budgetary committee Tuti Sutiah Indra; and former Banten governor Djoko Munandar.

Last year, 14 more former councilors were arrested in a different case.

The 14 councilors were accused of extorting money from the administrations budget for disaster relief.

Five of them -- Iwan Rosadi, Riril Suhartinah, Achdi Syamlani, Jhon R Maulana and Zaenal Novani -- walked free after the district court declared them innocent. The remaining nine are still serving jail terms at Serang prison.

Japanese-built school opens for kids with disabilities

Wednesday, October 29, 2008
Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang


The sounds of laughter and cheerful chatter filled the air at the new school building for children with disabilities in Tangerang on Tuesday.

The students, most of whom are from low-income families, knew something different was going on because the campus of SLB Yanaiz had been decked out for the building's inauguration ceremony.

Japanese Ambassador Kojiro Shiojiri presided over the ceremony at the campus on Jl. H. Ridwan, Bojong Poncol kampung in Pinang district, Tangerang municipality.
Tangerang officials also attended the event.

According to Shiojiri, the Japanese government had financed the construction project of the school under the Grassroots Program. The financial assistance amounted to US$85,994, he said.

"We want children with disabilities to be able to study at this school," he said.

Twenty-year-old Khalid, a fourth grader in a class for people with autism, said the new school building was closer to his home.

"I love the new classroom," Khalid said, who is suffering from hydrochepalus and needs regular medicine to control its symptoms.

The school's 123 students pay school fees of between Rp 5,000 (40 US cents) and Rp 10,000 each month.

"The most important thing is that I pay (school fees), no matter how much it is. The money is for the teachers' salaries," Khalid said.

SLB Yanaiz is managed by Erihatu Samasuru Lesuri Tapirone, a humanitarian foundation established by Izak Timisela in 2000.

"We started the school in a small rented house and now we have a three-story building with 12 classrooms, a health clinic, a kitchen, a teacher's office and a meeting hall, thanks to the Japanese government," he said.

Unfortunately, the classrooms have yet to receive new furniture so the students and teachers still use old desks and chairs. Some of the desktops even have holes in them.

Wahidin wins 88.5 percent of votes

Tuesday, October 28, 2008
Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang


Incumbent Tangerang Mayor Wahidin Halim looks set to win the first-ever direct municipal election, according to preliminary results announced by the municipality's elections commission on Monday.

Wahidin and running mate Arief R. Wismansyah have 572,967 (88.5 percent) of the vote from Sunday's election.

Poll commission chairman Imron Khamami said the commission had counted poll results at 2,000 out of the total 2,273 polling stations throughout the municipality.

"We will soon complete the counting," he told The Jakarta Post.

There were 909,800 registered voters for the election and 90 percent of them cast ballots on Sunday.

Trailing the leading candidates are Muhamad Bonie Mudfijar and his running mate Diedy Farid Wadji, with 65,657 votes (9.2 percent).

Ismet Sadeli Hasan and Mahfud Abdullah trail well behind with 16,596 (1.7 percent) of the votes.
"We will announce the final, official results of the vote on Oct. 30 and the elected mayor will be inaugurated on Nov. 16," said Imron.

Imron added that, as of Monday, the commission had not received any reports of possible election violations.

Moreover, Tangerang Elections Supervisory Body chairman Syafril Elain confirmed his institution had not received any reports concerning violations during either the casting or counting of votes.

"So far, we have received no reports or complaints ... However, we are ready to deal with any reports of possible fraud," he said.

During his inspections of five polling stations, he noticed that three of the stations did not have all their voting booths covered.

"It's unusual, but not considered a violation of the election law," Syafril said.

The poll watch had also received several reports of alleged fraud by supporters of the incumbent, including text messages people received on their cell phones saying voters could cast ballots more than once, as long as they cooperated with the polling stations' working committee, he added.

"There have also been reports of intimidation, money politics and other violations at polling stations before voting began, but we could not process the reports because those who filed complaints could not produce any evidence," he said.

Wahidin and Arief are backed by a coalition of 15 political parties including the Golkar Party, the Indonesian Democratic Party for Struggle (PDI-P), the Democratic Party, the United
Development Party (PPP), the National Mandate Party (PAN), the Star Crescent Party (PBB), the Reform Star Party (PBR) and the National Awakening Party (PKB).

Bonie and Diedy are backed by the Prosperous Justice Party (PKS), while Ismet and Mahfud are running as independent candidates.

Incumbent takes early lead in election

Monday, October 27, 2008
Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang


The first-ever direct election for Tangerang mayor ran peacefully Sunday with preliminary counts putting incumbent mayor Wahidin Halim in the lead.

It was reported that 90 percent of registered voters turned up to vote.

The high turnout was unexpected as most Tangerang residents work in Jakarta and therefore tended not to be well-informed about the municipal election.

Polling stations, particularly in suburbs on the border of Jakarta, saw as many as 10 people at a time turning up between 8 a.m. and 1 p.m.

Many residents said they had good knowledge only of Wahidin, who is trying to secure his second term.

"I know a lot about Wahidin Halim but nothing about the other two candidates," said Jusniati of Tajur subdistrict, Cileduk.

Tangerang municipality, formerly part of the Tangerang regency, stretches from the fast-growing western outskirts of Jakarta to Soekarno-Hatta International Airport in the northwest.
When the municipality was established in 1993, it had six districts but has now developed into 13 districts with a total population of 1.4 million.

As of Sunday afternoon, the municipal elections commission had recorded about a turnout of 90 percent and put the pair of Wahidin and Arief Wismansyah in the lead with 89.07 votes, followed by Muhamad Bonie Mudfijar and Diedy Farid Wadji with 9.19 percent, and Ismet Sadeli Hasan and Abdullah Mahfud trailing with 1.8 percent votes.

"We got the preliminary results from an electronic count reported by 83 polling stations," commission chairman Imron Khamami said, adding there were 2,276 polling stations set up across the municipality.

The final results are expected Monday afternoon.

The commission registered 909,800 eligible voters for the election.

Wahidin, who looked tense while waiting for information on the result, said he had not set a target for the votes.

"I never set a target of a percentage of votes to win. I will thank God if I am reelected mayor," he said.

"It means I can continue the development programs I'm already committed to."

Separately, Tangerang Elections Supervisory Body chairman Syafril Elain said that during his inspections of five polling stations, he noticed that three of the stations did not have all the polling booths covered.

"There was no cover behind the voters which means (their vote) could just be seen from behind when they voted for a candidate and the secrecy of the ballot was not guaranteed at all," he said.

Syafril said he believed the three noncompliant polling stations were among many that failed to ensure voters' privacy.

Wahidin and Arief, president director of Sari Asih Group, which manages several hospitals in Tangerang and Serang, are backed by a coalition of 15 political parties including the Golkar Party, the Indonesian Democratic Party for Struggle (PDI-P), the Democratic Party, the United Development Party (PPP), the National Mandate Party (PAN), the Star Crescent Party (PBB), the Reform Star Party (PBR) and the National Awakening Party (PKB).

Bonie and Diedy are backed by the Prosperous Justice Party (PKS), while Ismet and Mahfudz are running as independent candidates.

Respiratory problems among children rises

Saturday, October 25, 2008
Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang


Tangerang health officials are on alert following a jump in the number of cases of acute respiratory infections in children in the regency this year.

"We have recorded a total of 5,764 children under five years of age who have contracted respiratory infections since January," Yuli Sunar Dewanti, head of communicable disease prevention at the agency, said Friday.

She said 1,883 of those cases had been recorded in just the past two months.
The total number of cases last year is 2,058.

Yuli said the figure was bound to increase should community health centers in the regency fail in their prevention efforts.

"We have instructed all 47 health centers in 36 districts to improve service and take preventive steps through early detection because respiratory infections are the number one killer for children under five in the regency."

She explained these airborne diseases could easily spread, especially during the transition from the dry to the rainy season.

The agency has also ordered each health center to disseminate information to residents on how to curb the spread of the diseases and to train volunteers in emergency response.

"We have also prepared medicines to be distributed to all health centers," Yuli said.

In response to agency instructions, Endang S. Sumarah, head of Pondok Aren's community health center, said she had already trained 11 volunteers for emergency response not only in anticipation of more respiratory infections but also for possible flooding.

"We have even formed an emergency post to help serve patients better."

Drowned kids mar election campaign

Friday, October 24, 2008
Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang


The Tangerang municipal poll watchdog (Panwas) and local police are investigating a series of alleged electoral breaches by candidates including a campaign event at Lake Cipondoh in which two children drowned.

At the event for candidate pair Wahidin Halim and Arief R. Wismansyah, several violations of the electoral regulations reportedly occurred. The most serious allegation breached a law regarding the involvement of children in the campaign.

The organizing committee for the event, chaired by Syachrudin, Cipondoh district chief, asked residents to scramble for one ton of fish released into the lake.

Two children, identified as 10-year-old Eko Nur Faizi and 14-year-old Aditya, were allegedly among hundreds of residents who plunged into the water. The pair subsequently drowned among the crowds.

Cipondoh Police chief Insp. Sukarna said police were still looking into the incident to determine whether those distributing the fish acted negligently during the event.

"We will question all the organizing committee members as witnesses but so far haven't decided whether any of them will be named as suspects," he said.

The Tangerang municipal poll watchdog (Panwas) chairman, Syafril Elain, said Thursday the involvement of children and civil servants in the campaign event for Wahidin, the incumbent, and Arief was considered a serious breach.

He said besides Wahidin and Arief, the other two pairs of candidates also reportedly committed minor violations of electoral regulations.

"We began to receive reports of violations being committed by candidates on the first day of campaigning, ranging from the use of children, excessive use of vehicles and placing campaign posters in the areas far before the campaign period had started," he said.

According to Syafril, the other two pairs of candidates, Muhamad Bonie Mudfijar and Diedy Farid Waji, and Ismet Sadeli Hasan and Mahfud Abdullah, only violated minor regulations set by the municipal Elections Commission (KPUD).

"However the use of minors and civil servants in the campaign is a serious offense," Syafril said. Both KPUD law and a government regulation forbid administration officials and district and subdistrict chiefs from campaigning on behalf of any municipal candidates.

Syafril said the campaign watchdog would suggest that the KPUD impose sanctions against the offending candidates.

"We will also advise the KPUD to process two of 11 violations reported to Panwas during the campaign period because they are serious violations," Syafril said.

Supporters for Wahidin and Arief erected banners before the campaign period had begun while supporters of Bonie and Waji (Niji) were reportedly spreading hatred, accusations of blackmail and defaming candidates Wahidin and Arief.

KPUD chairman Imron Khamami said the commission had sent warnings to the candidates over these violations.

"The campaign period ran peacefully. However, we will impose administrative sanctions to each pair of candidates because they committed administrative violations," he said.

The campaign started on Oct. 10 and ended Thursday. The election is scheduled for Oct. 26.

Air traffic controllers reject civil-servant status

Wednesday, October 22, 2008
Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang


Air traffic controllers are asking the government not to recast their employment status from professionals managed by a state enterprise to civil servants managed by a government office.

"To guarantee the quality of air traffic service, as recommended by the International Civil Aviation Organization, we are asking the government to let air traffic control continue to be managed as a state enterprise," Adri Gunawan, president of the Air Traffic Controllers Association (IATCA), said in a press conference at Soekarno-Hatta International Airport on Tuesday.

The association came out against the wholesale revision of the air transportation law now being deliberated which calls for placing air traffic control management under a public service office.

"If passed, the new bill will allow the government to function as both regulator and operator of air traffic service," Adri said.

That would mean air traffic operations would be dependent on the state's tight budget, he added.
"If air traffic control is administered as part of a public office, it will be part of the bureaucracy ... the degrading of the quality of our service would be inevitable."

IATCA is a professional organization established in 1999 by air traffic controllers. It currently has 1,271 members nationwide.

Adri said his association had not been involved in drafting the bill currently being deliberated by the government and the House of Representatives.

"The association was invited once to a House hearing on the revision plan, but nothing else after that. The draft bill needs a clearer formulation and better transparency."

The 1992 air transportation law comprises 14 chapters and 104 articles, while the newly proposed law is far more extensive with 26 chapters and 405 articles.

Susila, head of air traffic control at I Gusti Ngurah Ray International Airport in Denpasar, who attended the press conference, said rumors about the possible change to their employment status had spread among the employees.

"None of the air traffic controllers want to be civil servants because they are professionals," he said, adding that air traffic service could wind up someday being led by civil administrators with little understanding of air traffic control.

One IATCA member who declined to be identified said that, should the government insist on changing air traffic control management status from a state enterprise to a public office, air traffic controllers would likely strike.

"The government and the lawmakers should reconsider this.... Air traffic control has been doing a good job under state enterprise management," he said.

Pondok Aren braces for possible floods

Thursday, October 16, 2008
Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang


As the rainy season nears, Pondok Aren district, in cooperation with Tangerang regency's social welfare agency, has begun to repair and clean drainage systems in several flood-prone sites in the district.

The district chief Chaerudin on Wednesday identified six flood-prone areas, all housing complexes.

They are: State Secretary (Setneg) in West Pondok Kacang subdistrict; Taman Mangu in West Jurangmangu subdistrict, Vila Bintaro Regency; Pondok Maharta and Prima Pondok Kacang complexes in East Pondok Kacang subdistrict; and the Ministry of Defense complex in Pondok Betung subdistrict.

"Last year those housing complexes chronically flooded so we will monitor them throughout this year," he said, adding the administration had also established a crisis center in the district.

He said officers from the social welfare agency would check in on each vulnerable site once the rainy season arrives.

"We are optimistic these housing complexes will not suffer similar flooding this year because we have worked hard to improve the drainage," Chaerudin said.

Separately, Abdul Qadie, an official with Ciputat's meteorology and geophysics agency, said the southern part of Tangerang regency had already entered the transition period from the dry season to the rainy one.

"The rainy season this year will begin early next month. We are calling on residents to be on the alert for flooding."

Flyers to pay more to jack up regency's tax revenue

Monday, October 20, 2008
Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang


The Tangerang regency legislative council will soon approve a bylaw which will pave the way for the regency to collect fees from passengers at the Soekarno-Hatta International Airport.
The fee will be collected at Terminal 2, which is located in the regency's jurisdiction.

About 340 out the total 2,600 hectares of the airport area is located in Rawa Rengas, Rawa Burung, Belimbing and Jatimulya subdistricts in Kosambi district, in the northern part of Tangerang regency.

"We will soon approve the transportation bylaw which will function as the administration's legal umbrella to collect fees from passenger taxes," Council speaker Endang Sudjana said Saturday.

He said the fee would be collected along with the airport tax. It means that when passengers pay the airport tax, they will also pay a fee to the regency.

However, the council has yet to decide how much each passenger will be charged.

"The fee may be 10 percent of airport taxes for domestic and international flights. For example, if the domestic tax is Rp 25,000, each passenger will pay Rp 2,500. For international flights, the fee may be Rp 5,000," he said.

The administration has long prepared plans to collect fees at the airport. A decision to create the bylaw became firmer after the council's Commission C conducted a comparative study in several other regions across the country.

"We found that most of other regional administrations obtain revenue from air transportation activities and we have yet to do so. The airport has been operating a long time and we have only been collecting taxes on the land and the buildings."

According to the council speaker, with the implementation of the regional autonomy law, the regency should also be obtaining revenue from several other sources of levies at the airport such as advertising and parking taxes.

"We will propose the revenue collection from passengers first. Later we will consider other sources which are under the regency's authority and we are sure that airport operator PT Angkasa Pura II will listen to our wishes," he added.

The council said this bylaw was expected to be approved by the end of the month.

PT Angkasa Pura II spokesman Trisno Heryadi refused to comment on the regency's plan to ask for fees through one of the company's airports. He said the issue was a matter for the administration.

He said he was aware that outside Soekarno-Hatta airport, regional administrations had installed counters to collect money from air passengers.

"We do need to clarify that we (the company) collect no tax from passengers. Only the government does so," he told The Jakarta Post.

According to Trisno, the term "airport tax" is actually a service charge that airport operators collect from air passengers at every airport. The money is used for cost recovery and for the maintenance of the public facility, he said.

PT Angkasa Pura II manages 12 airports in Jakarta, West Java and Sumatra.

Airport facelift costs questioned

Tuesday, October 14, 2008
Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang


Prosecutors will soon launch an investigation into the development of public facilities at Soekarno-Hatta International Airport, following allegations of misappropriation of state funds earmarked for the project.

"We received information that renovations of washrooms at the airport cost Rp 40 billion (US$4 million). This is very odd," Tangerang head prosecutor Agus Sutoto said Monday.

"We are still monitoring and collecting supporting data about the project work to date."

He said prosecutors who had inspected the recently opened washrooms at terminals I and II and other public areas at the airport had found nothing special about the new facilities.

"However, we have to be very careful in launching an investigation into the airport because there are so many vested interests there," he said.

Agus added that if prosecutors found sufficient initial evidence of misappropriation of project funds, the investigation would be developed.

Airport operator PT Angkasa Pura II inaugurated the new facilities on Sept. 23 as part of its Clean Airport Action (CAA) program. The program consisted of upgrades to facilities such as restrooms and musholla (prayer rooms).

At the inauguration ceremony, attended by Transportation Minister Jusman Syafei Jamal and Culture and Tourism Minister Jero Wacik, PT Angkasa Pura president director Eddie Haryoto announced that the CAA program had cost Rp 59 billion.

"We installed 139 new toilets and renovated 168 existing ones and we constructed nine prayer rooms in response to public complaints about conditions at the airport," Eddie said at that time.

Other items listed as included in the improvement plan are an integrated food court, new trash cans and more seats in waiting areas.

In response to suggestions of possible misuse of funds from the renovation project, Angkasa Pura II spokesman Trisno Heryadi said the budget was not used for toilet renovations alone.

"Rp 40 billion was an accumulative figure of the entire renovation work, covering toilets, musholla, bus shelters, a canopy for the terminal lobby and infrastructure such as the three-lane ring road in front of terminal I," he said.

All construction and renovation projects had been open for tender and had been carried out in line with the appropriate procedures, he added.

"The improvements of public facilities at the airport were financed from PT Angkasa Pura's own budget and not from the state budget," Trisno said.

Police still seeking Kosambi fire cause

Monday, October 13, 2008


Tangerang Police are still investigating the cause of the fire which claimed the lives of eight workers in a steel-cutting factory in Kosambi district, Tangerang.

Tangerang police chief Sr. Comr. Agus Andrianto said Saturday forensic investigators were still looking into evidence at the site, which belongs to PT Surya Sejahtera Metalindo Lestari.

"We have questioned six workers, the company's president director Warjono and the director Wiriyanto as witnesses in the fire incident," he said.

He said so far, however, arson by the owner was unlikely because two of the victims were relatives of the warehouse owner.

Fire burned down the steel-cutting factory located at Pantai Indah Dadap Warehousing Complex Block K-7 in Kosambi on Friday afternoon. Workers panicked and fled but eight workers got trapped and died.

Survivors of the incident said a big blaze suddenly appeared in the welding area on the first floor.
"The big fire spread really quickly and all the workers on the first floor ran in a panic," survivor Eko Marhaen Dianto said.

Firdaus, who worked in the cutting department, said flames first appeared right under the stairs leading to the second floor.

"It flared up quickly and blocked the way out from the second floor. At least seven workers were up there along with two mechanics repairing computers," he said.

The eight fatalities were identified as Endang, 20, Lisye, 25, Malla, 26, Mei Ling, 32, Merry, 20, Priyono, 30, Ratna, 20, and Tasya, 28. They were found dead on the second floor which functioned as the factory's administrative office.

The victims' bodies were sent to the morgue at Tangerang General Hospital for identification.

Forensic investigators at the fire scene said strong indicators suggested the fire was caused by sparks from the welding area.

"The sparks landed on the foam of the partition wall in the factory warehouse and the fire spread quickly," said one officer who requested anonymity.

One male worker, Muhamad I'if, was rushed to the hospital after being badly injured. He survived the fire trap by jumping from the second floor. -- JP/Multa Fidrus

Poll body reports candidates' wealth

Saturday, October 11, 2008
Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang


The Tangerang Municipal Elections Commission (KPUD) on Friday published a list of the personal fortunes of all mayoral candidates that will contest this year's election, scheduled for Oct. 26.

The list was compiled from documents demanded of the candidates in accordance with a Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) regulation.

At the top of the rich list is incumbent mayor Wahidin Halim, whose total personal wealth, comprising property, vehicles, bank accounts and bonds, is Rp 8 billion (US$842,000).

Second on the list, with a personal wealth of Rp 6.5 billion, is Wahidin's running mate, Arief Wismansyah, who is also president director of Sari Asih Group, which manages several hospitals in Tangerang and Serang.

The coalition of parties in support of the duo includes the Golkar Party, the Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P) and the United Development Party (PPP).

"The candidates' wealth was calculated from the list of assets they submitted to the KPUD. They have to declare their liquid and non-liquid assets, including vehicles, land and buildings, bank accounts, bonds and gold," poll commission chairman Imron Khamami said Friday.

He said the list was published to offer transparency to voters.

Dadang Hermawan, chairman of the Candidacy Working Group at the KPUD, said the requirement had been prompted by the many cases of corruption that plagued politics in Indonesia.

"If a candidate's wealth has been verified by the KPK and publicly announced before they are elected, it will be easy to monitor any fluctuations of wealth once they take up their new position," he said.

Ismed Sadeli Hasan, a retired civil servant and a former Jakarta City council secretary, is the second richest mayoral candidate, with a wealth of Rp 3.5 billion.

His running mate, Mahfud Abdullah, a Muslim preacher, has a personal fortune of Rp 1.1 billion. Ismed and Mahfudz are independent candidates.

Muhamad Bonie Mudfijar, who is backed by the Prosperous Justice Party (PKS) is third on the list with a total wealth of Rp 293.5 million. His running mate, Diedy Farid Wadji, is worth Rp 1.7 billion.

Bogor and Tangerang start mayoral campaign

Thursday, October 09, 2008
Multa Fidrus and Theresia Sufa, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang, Bogor


All candidates slated in Tangerang's upcoming mayoral elections have promised a peaceful campaign and vowed to focus on improving the welfare of local residents if elected.

Three pairs of running mates -- Wahidin Halim and Arief Wismansyah, Ismed Sadeli Hasan and Mahfud Abdullah, and Muhamad Bonie Mudfijar and Diedy Farid Wadji -- made a joint declaration at the municipal elections commission (KPUD) office on Wednesday.

KPUD chair Imron Khamami said the next phase of the election called for each party's ticket to deliver vision and mission statements Thursday.

All candidates told journalists Wednesday their agendas would outline policies in agribusiness, education, health care, industry, infrastructure, tourism and trade as well as strategies for developing human resources across the board.

There were no significant differences among the three pairs.

Tangerang municipality will hold its first ever direct elections on November 26.

A coalition of 15 political parties are backing the ticket of Wahidin, the incumbent, and Arief, president director of Sari Asih Group which manages several hospitals in Tangerang and Serang.

Parties in the coalition include the Crescent Star Party (PBB), the Democratic Party (PD), the Golkar Party, the Indonesian Democratic Party for Struggle (PDI-P), the National Awakening Party (PKB), the National Mandate Party (PAN), the Reform Star Party (PBR) and the United Development Party (PPP).

Bonie and Diedy are backed by the Prosperous Justice Party (PKS). Ismet and Mahfudz are independent candidates.

Poll watch agency chair Sapril Elain, also present during the declaration, said his agency had only found administrative infractions on the part of the Wahidin-Arief ticket.

"Wahidin Halim-Arief Wismansyah is the only ticket which kicked off its campaign before the period officially started. We will remove all banners and flags they've placed on the streets soon."
The joint declaration specified all candidates would campaign between October 10 and 22.
Tangerang municipality, which will celebrate its 16th anniversary on February 28, is home to 1.5 million people.

In another outskirt municipality, Bogor, five pairs of mayoral candidates delivered their vision and mission statements Wednesday.

The five tickets all presented agendas focusing on environmental issues, Bogor's traffic woes and street vendors.

The five, in campaign-numbered order, are: independent candidates Syafei Bratasendjaya-Akik Darul Tahkik; the independent pair of the purported psychic Ki Gendeng Pamungkas running under his given name Iman Santoso with Ahmad Chusaery; Iis Supriatini-Ahani backed by, among others, PD and PBR; Dodi Rosady-Erik Irawan Suganda backed by PAN, PPP, PBB and PKB; and Diani Budiarto-Achmad Ru'yat with support from Golkar, PDI-P and PKS.

The head of Bogor's KPUD, Radjab Tampubolon, said the campaign period was starting Wednesday and would run through October 20.

The election is scheduled for Oct. 25.

Green group accuses battery producer of toxic dumping

Wednesday, October 08, 2008
Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang


Dozens of local environmental activists of green group Yayasan Peduli Lingkungan (Yapelh) staged a rally in front of a battery factory in Tangerang municipality Tuesday to protest alleged toxic dumping.

The protesters urged consumers to boycott batteries produced at the PT Yuasa factory, which they said dumped toxic waste into the nearby Cisadane river, the main source of fresh water for residents of Tangerang municipality and Tangerang regency.

"We call on the public not to buy all Yuasa products and we ask the Tangerang municipal administration to quickly take stern action against the company," Uyus Setia Bakti, Yapelh executive director, told journalists.

Yuasa security officer Dewan Hadi Setiawan, who said he had been authorized to speak on behalf of the company, denied the allegations.

"We have obtained business and operational permits from the government and therefore we always process the waste at our waste treatment facility before dumping it into the river," Dewan said.

Uyus said that since 2004, laboratory tests had continuously shown that waste discharged from the factory exceeded legal limits, but that the local administration had turned a blind eye to the findings.

He said the company dumped untreated waste, including mercury, into the river, and that the factory's waste-treatment facility was incapable of filtering out all toxins.

Some sections of the Cisadane river, once a popular fishing and recreational attraction, resemble a muddy swamp.

State Minister for the Environment Rachmat Witoelar, who inspected the Cisadane river on a boat earlier this year, said the river was polluted and that cleaning efforts would take up to 20 years.

Natural sedimentation has also decreased the quality of the river's water.

Water suppliers PDAM Tirta Kerta Raharja and PDAM Tirta Benteng, owned by Tangerang regency and Tangerang municipality, respectively, depend on the river for water supply.

PDAM Tirta Kerta Rahardja distributes treated water from the river to Jakartans via a water utility company in the capital.

Suspect in murder of marine evades police

Tuesday, October 07, 2008
Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang


A murder suspect, whom the Tangerang police arrested last month for allegedly killing a marine soldier, managed to escape from four officers on Sunday.

The missing suspect, identified as Zahiri alias Miki bin Marsan, was leading four detectives to the hideout of three other members of his robbery gang, who were still at large in Pandeglang on Sunday, when he ran off.

Police had not officially detained Miki when he slipped through their fingers.

Miki had been taken into police custody along with two other gang members identified as Ali Sadikin bin Ambarwan and MD in Kalijodo, West Jakarta, on Sept. 17.

MD was shot dead for trying to escape arrest whereas Ali is still in custody. Two other members, identified as Yuliandri and Zanuri, are still at large.

A marine platoon arrived at police headquarters in Tigaraksa on Sunday following reports the suspect had gone missing.

Maj. Elfian Rakawira, a marine public relations official, said the Marine Corps were respecting legal procedure; they were aware the police were still investigating.

"We just hope the police are handling the case professionally because the robbers were reckless enough to kill a military soldier, as well as civilians. They are very dangerous people," he said.

Tangerang Police chief Sr. Comr. Agus Andriatno gave a statement about the newest case development.

"The missing murder suspect has yet to be registered as a detainee under police custody. I've ordered P3D (internal affairs) officers to examine the officers who were escorting him to determine if there was negligence or other factors."

A member of a robbery gang allegedly shot dead 1st Brig. Diki Nur, 28, a marine soldier who was trying to stop a grocery store holdup in Pondok Aren, Tangerang, on Sept. 16.

Diki Nur was assigned to a military facility in Cilandak, South Jakarta. He was passing by the crime scene on his way home. He was living in a rented house with his wife and their two-month-old in the Pondok Jagung subdistrict.

The soldier stopped after he heard a scream coming from a grocery store belonging to Tri Martin, known as Atjong, 55. The robbers were forcing Atjong to hand over money from the till when the soldier stepped in.

They shot Diki in the chest and made Atjong give them Rp 43 million (US4,600) before leaving the crime scene on two motorcycles.

Soekarno-Hatta airport gets 139 new toilets, nine prayer rooms

Wednesday, September 24, 2008
Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang


PT Angkasa Pura II, operator of the Soekarno-Hatta International Airport, invited three cabinet ministers on Tuesday to inaugurate newly installed facilities.

The new facilities are part of the operator's Clean Airport Action (CAA) program, comprising infrastructure improvements such as washrooms and Islamic prayer rooms, an additional terminal and other upgrades.

"We installed 139 new toilets and renovated 168 existing ones, and we constructed nine prayer rooms as our response to public complaints about unsanitary conditions at the airport," president director Edie Haryoto said.

He said CAA had cost the operator Rp 59 billion (US$6.35 million) this year.

"We will always monitor complaints filed by the public about our service because complaints challenge us to improve our performance," Edie said.

Earlier this year, a number of non-profit organizations surveyed hundreds of airport users. Complaints about airport toilet facilities topped the list.

Edie said he would be reminding all users of airport services to help keep the airport clean.

Present during the washroom inauguration ceremony were Transportation Minister Jusman Syafii Jamal, Culture and Tourism Minister Jero Wacik, State Minister for State Enterprises Sofyan A. Djalil, Banten Governor Ratu Atut Chosiyah and Tangerang Deputy Regent Rano Karno.

Wacik cited a survey which showed 70 percent of air travelers who arrived at the airport from overseas visited the washrooms.

"We have to support the airport's efforts to take better care of the public toilets and other facilities for visitors," he said.

The airport is also getting ready a new, third terminal which will start operating Dec. 3. Train service from Jakarta to the airport is also still in the works.

Other items listed in the improvement plan are an integrated food court, new trash cans and increased seating.

The passenger lounges now have new stainless-steel seats and minigardens decked out with Balinese sculptures and wood carvings, but the lobbies and entrance halls still have limited seating, forcing passengers to sit or crouch on the floor.

The departure area taxi stands have been better organized, enabling passengers to take their preferred service more promptly without having to wait in long lines or go through the hassle of bargaining with aggressive drivers.

The airport management has also set up new welcome billboards at the airport gates as well as a statue of Indonesia's founders, Sukarno and Mohammad Hatta.

"We will invest whatever we must to gradually improve the services and facilities at the airport," the airport executive general manager Haryanto said.

Some travelers, however, still voice complaints about the presence of hawkers offering various informal services: ojek drivers (offering motorcycle hire), ticket scalpers and illegal taxis.

Minister visits young inmates

Monday, September 22, 2008
Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang


TV presenter Dewi Hughes (holding a microphone) led a discussion Friday between State Minister for Women's Empowerment Meutia Hatta and 300 inmates at the Tangerang Juvenile Penitentiary during an event to break the fast.

"Ibu Meutia is with you today because she cares about all of you. Don't worry, she wants to share stories about a difficult period in her childhood and listen to how you feel about being in prison and what you want to do after you leave. She will do her best to help you all," Hughes told the inmates.

"You have to look at the penitentiary as your temporary home. Look at it as a place where you can study and learn various skills. You have everything you need to support your future here."

During the visit, the minister distributed souvenirs for the juveniles including books, equipment for futsal, koko (tradition shirts worn by Muslim men) and mukena (prayer robes).

"We're away from our parents. We still want to go to school and study," Pindrewila, a female inmate from Ambon, told the minister.

"We've gotten everything we need for a better future here, but our friends who left this place complain because it's difficult for them to get a certificate of good conduct from the police. Can you help us fight for our rights?" Abdulrokhin, another child inmate, said.

"I will send a request letter soon to the National Police Chief concerning your rights," Meutia said.

Doni, an inmate, asked the minister to provide remission to all inmates serving their jail term on National Children's Day.

According to Meutia, the government has drafted a bill on remissions on National Children's Day for child inmates.

Monkey survey questioned as tall tale

Monday, September 22, 2008
Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang


Tangerang Regency council members have questioned a Rp 300 million budget proposal to conduct a census on long-tailed monkeys in the area, saying the amount is a "fabrication".

The administration has proposed an allocation of Rp 300 million from the regional budget to study the population growth of the monkeys in their habitat around the site of Syeh Mas'ad grave in Solear district.

Almost all of the regency's legislative council members have questioned the allocation.

"I think the proposal is fabricated," Anugrah, a counselor of the Prosperous Justice Party faction said, adding that the administration should have allocated the funds for the public's interest.

"But we can do nothing now, the budget proposal for the monkey census has been approved already. We don't understand how this could have slipped through our discussion. It is unbelievable," deputy speaker Arief Wahyudi said.

"I am sure such a proposal would not have been approved had we been aware of it during the discussion."

"The regency's administration allocates the funds with the intention to develop tourism in the region. The budget will be used by the regional development planning body," said Solear District Chief Surya Wijaya.

He said the administration had struggled to develop Solear as a tourist attraction, and especially as the destination of a pilgrimage that is expected to increase regional revenue.

Dahyat Tunggara, a counselor representing Solear district at the council said the census was not urgent.

He said a census on the monkey species was conducted by the Bogor Institute of Agriculture and the University of Indonesia several years ago.

"They made the study by catching the monkeys with nets. After that, the monkeys were gathered and counted one by one.

"The population of monkeys at the time was not so high. But the present population is predicted to be as high as 300," he said, adding that the cost of the census per monkey was Rp 1 million.

Minister lobbies EU over palm oil restrictions

Friday, September 19, 2008
Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta, Tanggerang, Banten


Indonesia, the world's largest palm oil producer, has sent Agriculture Minister Anton Apriyantono to lobby the European Union (EU), over concerns the group were planning a policy that would limit imports of the commodity.

After arriving in Jakarta on Tuesday from a week-long visit to the continent, Anton said Indonesian and Malaysian representatives met EU parliamentarians, assuring them the palm oil produced by the two countries met emission standards set by the EU.

Anton visited several European countries -- the United Kingdom, Netherlands, and Belgium -- with his campaign. During a meeting on Sept. 11 with the EU, he filed Indonesia's opposition to a planned EU directive on renewable energy and fuel quality (DREFQ) which would enter a voting phase during the general assembly next month.

Anton, who is a tout supporter of the Prosperous Justice Party (PKS), argued that this directive would hamper palm oil exports from Indonesia and Malaysia to EU member states.

The directive, however, regulates palm oil supply for alternative energy use, while imports for cooking oil and soap are not subject to the same laws.

Palm oil exported to the EU for biofuel is required to have a minimum emissions benchmark rate of 35 percent (the higher the rate the lesser the impact of the commodity on the environment).

According to the EU, however, the average recorded emissions rate of 32 percent for palm oil was below the minimum requirement.

Malaysia has denied the emissions rate measurement made by the EU, arguing that it was in fact around 60 percent.

Indonesia and Malaysia account for 85 percent of the world's palm oil output.

Anton said the planned EU directive was merely aimed at reducing the group's dependency on palm oil, which it could not produce itself.

"We are being attacked with environmental issues, while the real reason is trade competition, specifically with rapeseed. I asked the audience in a seminar why it should be us who makes the sacrifice and not those producing rapeseed or soybean."

"The EU was influenced by negative campaigns from non-governmental organizations (NGOs). We feel it's not about environmental issues, it's about trade," Anton said.

According to the ministry, Indonesia's palm oil exports reached 16.9 million tons last year with a total value of US$7.9 billion. Exports to Europe accounted for one fifth of this figure.

The EU has also accused palm oil producers of damaging the environment by planting crops in or near natural forests, and even in the middle of protected animal habitats.

SawitWatch researcher Norman Jiwon said oil palm plantations had caused huge amounts of damage to the environment.

"Aside from peatland damage, the planting and production of palm oil is damaging our environment," he said.

However, Anton argued that of the 133 million hectares of forests cleared, oil palm plantations accounted for 6.3 million hectares, highlighting the relative size of the damage.

"It's only a small proportion. And the peatland cleared for the plantations was only 5 percent of the 6.3 million hectares," he said.

"We should choose between human interests or those of the monkeys," said Anton, adding that the palm oil sector currently employed more than 5 million people.

Founder of the Center for Orangutan Protection, Hardi Baktiantoro, said the numbers Anton cited were only statistics.

"On paper, these plantations are said to be developed on grasslands or in agricultural areas when in reality they have flattened forests containing high biodiversity."

"It's mafia at every layer. From the map making, through to other production and legal processes," Hardi said. (iwp)

Dropouts dive deep for small change at Merak port

Tuesday, September 16, 2008
Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Banten


Watching a squad of sunburnt teenage boys diving after coins may be an entertaining spectacle for ferry passengers at Merak port in Cilegon, Banten.

For those who frequently cross the Sunda Strait from Merak to Bakauheni in Sumatra, the coin-diving boys are a familiar sight. These children all live around this busy crossing port.

They dive into the water, ignoring the risks while scrambling for coins that ferry passengers throw.

The boys know the rules of this game. They climb to the top of the ferry, even scaling its chimney, as it rests at anchor at the wharf. They wait for many passengers to board the vessel.

Once a crowd lines up along the vessel's railing, they start diving into the sea, one by one. Looking up as they tread water, they appeal to the passengers to throw coins.

If passengers do throw their coins from the deck, they boys dive like cormorants racing to get to the coins before the others.

This occupation is quite dangerous, but the coin divers, ranging in age from 10 to 20 years old, say they enjoy the activity. Some see it as a routine job since they have dropped out of school.

Sadri, 10, a coin diver who lives with his parents in Pulomerak district in Cilegon, said being a coin boy required bravery as well as caution.

He said if they were not careful, they could be dragged too close to the ships' propellers which could slice them into pieces.

"We have to be quick when retrieving coins from the bottom of the sea," Sadri a coin boy since the age of eight, told The Jakarta Post.

Sadri said he and his fellows coin divers were aware of the dangers lurking beneath the surface.
They often had to dive below moving ferries but they would not stop retrieving the coins because they said the activity was fun and they made money.

"I am scared about getting hit by a boat or pulled into its propellers. That's why I swim fast when diving for coins," Sadri said, adding he could earn between Rp 5,000 (54 US cents) and Rp 10,000 each day.

Palar, 13, another coin diver, said he was proud of what he earned this way.

"It's not so bad, we can earn money to buy snacks on our own without having to ask our parents," he said.

Palar said he was also scared of drowning or getting hurt by a propeller, but he had to do this for money because he had no other skills besides swimming and diving.

"The fun and challenge in snagging the coins crushes my fear. Me and my diver friends, we can earn 12,000 a day from hunting for coins," he said.

Sadri, Palar and some 50 other coin divers at Merak port claimed they could earn Rp 50,000 each day during the Idul Fitri holidays because the ships are ferrying more passengers with each crossing.

"I hope my friends and I can earn more money so we can buy new clothes for the Idul Fitri holidays coming up," Palar said.

"We have to be fast because we compete for each coin a passenger throws; if we're slow we get nothing at all," he said.

Merak ferry port expects increase in passengers

Monday, September 15, 2008
Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Banten


The number of homeward-bound ferry passengers at Merak port -- the main gateway to sea routes between Java and Sumatra -- may increase during the Idul Fitri holiday season, an official says.

As a result of the potential rise in the number of ferry passengers, national water-crossing transportation operator PT ASDP Ferry Indonesia has been preparing additional vessels and facilities at the port.

"Last year, we recorded 12,659 vehicles of various types crossing the Sunda strait on ferries during the holiday season and have predicted that figure will rise to more than 15,000 this year," ASDP's Merak branch manager Teja Suparna said Saturday.

The number of travelers moving through the port will increase to 117,377 this year, up from 111,788 last year, he added.

A significant increase in the number of travelers usually occurs during Idul Fitri, Teja said. This year, peak time for the port will be from Sept. 25 to 30.

"The port serves an average of 60 round-trip ferry journeys per day between Merak and Bakauheni in Lampung, carrying some 12,000 passengers in total. For the upcoming holiday season, we expect to serve between 75 and 90 round-trips a day," Teja added.

The company will deploy 24 ferries and 12 speed boats to handle the increase in passengers and vehicle loads.

According to Teja, 15 additional ticket booths will be built at the port, supplementing the four currently in operation.

"The new booths will include five for passengers, eight for motorists and two for motorcyclists," he said.

To deal with heavy congestion at the port's entrance as well as with overflow from thousands of trucks, the operator has also prepared two large parking lots.

"Trucks will not be allowed to cross three days before and three days after Idul Fitri," Teja said, adding mandatory security checks on all vehicles would inevitably cause long delays.

The Cilegon municipality has constructed an integrated bus terminal near the port to ease congestion.

However, Cilegon Mayor Tb. Aat Syafaat said the operational permit for the new terminal had not yet been approved.

"The municipal administration has spent huge sums of money from its annual budget. I'm wondering why several parties are opposing the operation of the terminal," he said, adding the terminal construction was also approved by Banten Governor Ratu Atut Chosiyah.

Critics claim the terminal will exacerbate congestion instead of easing it, with the Cilegon Police among those recommending the terminal not be used out of concerns about traffic jams.

City secretary Edi Eriadi said the terminal would be given a test run during the holiday season, with preparations already underway for its successful operation.

"We don't accept the claim that the terminal will create more traffic problems. It was built to help smooth traffic, as we explained in a presentation to the Transportation Ministry," he said.

Unfinished dock confuses fishermen

Saturday, September 13, 2008
Multa Fidrus


A fishermen association at Cituis port in Sukadiri, Tangerang regency, has questioned regency officials about a maintenance and repair facility the administration has left half finished and idle.

Supposedly managed by a public institution called UPDT Pangkalan Pendaratan Ikan Cituis, the facility absorbed more than Rp 3 billion (US$326,000) in funds from the regency's 2007 budget.

"The facility was supposed to start operating in May this year, but as of today there are no indications when it might start. Our fishermen are eager to see it up and running," Jauhari, the chair of the Cituis fishermen association said Friday.

He said no one was available to address why construction has stopped and the facility neglected.

The docking facility has been built right next to the campus of the Seafarer Education and Training Center (BP2IP).

None of the UPDT officials could be found at the facility, except Rusdi, a local fisherman and the facility caretaker.

When The Jakarta Post visited the facility on Friday, a number of imported docking machines were lying untouched in a room and the facility's storage room stood empty.

"Since the main building was completed in February, there's been no activity here. It's just me taking care of the building day and night," Rusdi said.

"Officials from the administration only came once," he said.

Rusdi added local fishermen still have to take their boats to Indramayu in West Java or Pekalongan in Central Java to get them repaired if they have engine problems.

Drug dealers shot, one dies

Friday, September 12, 2008
Indah Setiawati and Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta


A Nigerian national allegedly involved in an international drug ring died after police shot him in the back in Bekasi, West Java, dawn on Thursday.

Police narcotics directorate head Sr. Comr. Arman Depari said the man, Oliver Uchechukwu Osondu aka Today Taouray, 32, was brought to a nearby hospital, but he died on the way.

"He tried to fight police officers and attempted to run. When an officer fired a warning shot, he ignored it and kept running,' Arman told reporters.

He said police found 100 grams of heroin at his house on Jl. Mutiara Gading, East Bekasi.
Oliver was formerly convicted of drug offenses and arrested in 2001 by city police officers.

"At that time, he was sentenced to five years in prison under the name of Benjamin Musakoro," Arman said.

He said Oliver was believed to have links with an international drug ring because the heroin might be delivered from an area known as the Golden Crescent -- Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iraq -- or the Golden Triangle -- Laos, Myanmar and Thailand.

Police also arrested another Nigerian national who was allegedly a dealer. They made the arrest after detaining his courier on Jl. Sabang, Central Jakarta, on Wednesday.

Police got a tip-off from neighboring residents that people often did drug transactions on the street.

The alleged courier, identified as Mardiah, led police to her boss, Victor Thembo Macoba, who tried to escape.

"We were forced to shoot him in the leg," Arman said.

Arman said both shot Nigerians did not have a gun.

Police found 58.8 grams of crystal methamphetamine, known as shabu-shabu, in Mardiah's hand and 59.6 grams from a raid at Victor's house on Jl. Jomas, Meruya Utara, West Jakarta.

Victor told police that he got the shabu-shabu from a fellow Nigerian named Ricardo Mabuakor alias Steff, who was still at large.

In Tangerang, security officers seized 99.05 grams of shabu-shabu smuggled through a postal delivery package in a cargo warehouse at the Soekarno-Hatta International Airport.

"The drug was found by airport security officers who were conducting routine checks in the cargo warehouse on Wednesday," Eko Darmanto, chief of intelligence at airport's Customs and Excise Office, said on Thursday.

According to Eko, the drug was sent from Jakarta by a man identified as LL to Jessica, a receiver in Makassar, South Sulawesi.

Three candidates slated in Tangerang mayoral election

Tuesday, September 09, 2008
Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang


The Tangerang municipal elections commission (KPUD) confirmed Monday only three pairs of candidates would be running in the mayoral election scheduled Oct. 26.

The three candidate pairs are incumbent mayor Wahidin Halim with running mate Arief Wismansyah, Muhamad Bonie Mudfijar with Diedy Faried Wadji, and Ismet Sadeli Hasan with Mahfudz Abdullah.

Wahidin is backed by several major parties including the Golkar Party, the Indonesian Democratic Party for Struggle (PDI-P), the Democratic Party (PD), the United Development Party (PPP), the National Mandate Party (PAN), the Star Crescent (PBB), the Reform Star Party (PBR) and the National Awakening Party (PKB).

Bonie and Diedy are backed by the Prosperous Justice Party (PKS). Ismet and Mahfudz have put themselves up as independent candidates.

The three candidate pairs arrived at the KPUD office Monday morning to learn their order on the ballot.

In an open plenary meeting held by the KPUD, Wahidin-Arief was nominated to appear first on the ballot, Bonie-Diedy second and Ismet-Mahfudz third.

The candidates will have police escort until election day to assure security.

"Each candidate and running mate will be escorted by at least two police officers, so 12 officers will be assigned to safeguard them all," KPUD chair Imron Khamami said.

The candidates, he added, are not allowed to begin campaigning until the official campaign period begins next month.

"If any pair withdraws its candidacy, they will be fined as much as Rp 20 billion (US$2.13 million)," he said.

The elections oversight agency (Panwasda) has found the candidates have already committed violations, but it has yet to take any action because they are still waiting for their operating funds from the administration.

"The most glaring violation is the placement of banners promoting the candidates and their running mates. There should be no banners or other promotional materials on the streets until the campaign season starts," Panwasda chair Syafril Elain told The Jakarta Post.

"We are planning to take them all down, but it's postponed because we don't have the money yet."

Merak Port to adopt electronic ticketing

Monday, September 08, 2008
Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Banten


An electronic ticketing (or e-ticketing) pilot project will begin at Merak Port in Cilegon, Banten, in a bid to prevent revenue loss from fraud, the national water-crossing transportation operator PT ASDP Ferry Indonesia has said.

"We will start the tryout of the e-ticketing system 15 days before the Idul Fitri celebration," Teja Suparna, PT ASDP Ferry Indonesia Merak's branch manager, told The Jakarta Post on Saturday.

He said the e-ticketing system aimed to minimize company revenue loss by between 5 and 10 percent at least and to help eliminate illegal fees at crossing ports.

"E-ticketing is an automatic system, just like the ticketing system used by turnpike operators. It's quicker and more accurate," he said, adding the new system would also help improve the company's service to the public.

Teja said Merak Port had started introducing the new system to users, in particular vehicle owners, by placing posters near the entrance and inside the port.

To prepare for the exodus of travelers during the Idul Fitri holidays, PT ASDP Merak will open eight ticket booths for vehicles, with ticketing machines placed in each ticket booth.

"So far, we have completed four gates," he said, adding all of the gates were expected to be functioning properly 15 days before the first day of Idul Fitri.

He said a one-hectare parking lot at the port could take up to 250 to 300 large vehicles such as trucks and buses.

During the exodus period ASDP Merak will operate 24 ferries, Teja said.

Banten Police are also making safety preparations for the Idul Fitri holiday.

"We will operate a fleet of seven patrol vessels and three rubber boats to monitor the Sunda strait during the Idul Fitri holidays," Banten Water Police director Adj. Sr. Comr. Alex Fauzi said.
He said anticipation of possible accidents and evacuations from the Sunda strait would mostly focus on the tourist resorts in Cilegon and Pandeglang.

Banten Traffic Police director Adj. Sr. Comr. Istiono said about 2,500 officers would be deployed to secure land transportation lanes, especially at the points in Banten prone to traffic accidents.
"We will also establish at least 27 first-aid stations for passing motorists," Istiono said.

He said the police had asked PT Marga Mandala Sakti, operator of the Tangerang-Merak turnpike, to repair damaged parts of the toll road between kilometer 47 and kilometer 98.

"The toll road operator has promised to complete the repair works by 10 days before Idul Fitri," he said, adding the police had yet to identify the borders of road repairs for motorists.
Idul Fitri this year falls on October 1 and 2.

The road between Serang and Cikande is damaged and without traffic signs at several points, making it a high-accident area, especially during holiday periods.

Istiono said that to ease traffic at the crossing point, the police would not allow trucks to cross the Sunda strait for the four days before and after the Idul Fitri holiday.

"Trucks that still operate during that period will be confined at rest areas on the sides of the turnpike," he said.

'WFP biscuits improve students' health'

Friday, August 29, 2008


As they have done every day for the past four years, school children at state elementary school SDN Belendung in Tangerang ate nutritional biscuits Wednesday distributed by the World Food Program (WFP).

According to teachers, there has been an overall improvement in the health of the school's 267 students since the start of the food program back in 2004.

"Thank God, by consuming the WFP's biscuits every day since 2004, the health, intelligence and weight of our students have improved, on average," Yati Nurhayati, a teacher at SDN Belendung, said Wednesday.

Students and teachers were also taught to reuse biscuit containers for a variety of uses, such as for files, for carrying books, and in the creation of handicrafts, she added.

"I just hope the WFP's school program will continue," Yati said.

Students of SDN Belendung, located near Soekarno-Hatta International Airport, are among the 500,000 children across Indonesia who have received nutritional supplements through the WFP's school food program.

"We hope to see more students improve their health through the Indonesia program, organized in cooperation with Pizza Hut Indonesia," said Bradley Busetto, WFP Indonesia deputy country director, during a visit to the school Wednesday.

The WFP's hunger relief program, sponsored by the Indonesian government, the private sector and through individual donations, focuses on improving children's health through integrated health service posts (posyandu) and food programs at schools across the country, he added. --JP/Multa Fidrus

Banten on software piracy

Wednesday, August 27, 2008
Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Banten


Commercial users of pirated computer software will soon face sterner measures from the Banten police.

"We are warning all private companies to replace illegal software with legal versions," police chief Sr. Comr. Rumiah Kartorejo told a press conference Tuesday.

Police have allotted a two-month window for companies to replace pirated software before raids are conducted.

"It's difficult to stop the distribution of pirated software, but the enforcement of intellectual property rights can help reduce demand," Rumiah added.

Representatives of the Jakarta police held a workshop Tuesday to familiarize members of the province's business community with the Intellectual Property Rights Law, later signing a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with the Business Software Alliance (BSA) at police headquarters.

According to the MoU, BSA will begin providing the police with technical assistance and data to help support investigations.

BSA representative Donny A. Sheyoputera said the alliance fully supported police efforts to enforce the law and to protect intellectual property rights.

"To assist industrial firms and end-users ... we are offering a computer software certification program or Piagam HKI, which is supported by the National Police," he added.

By joining the program, companies will receive proof of their software's legality, as well as support and recognition from the National Police, in addition to seeing improvements in work performance, Donny said.

BSA has recorded several cases of pirated software use -- either by end-users or commercial retailers -- discovered by the police, with only a few suspects prosecuted in criminal court, he added.

Over the past six months, the police in Jakarta, Tangerang, Batam and Yogyakarta have been enforcing regulations against the use of pirated software more vigorously.

According to BSA's annual reports, as well as a survey conducted by the International Data Center, 87 percent of computer software installed in Indonesia in 2005 was illegal.

Enforcement efforts managed to lower that figure to 85 percent in 2006 and 84 percent in 2007.
The use of pirated software in Indonesia has so far cost the state Rp 3.8 trillion (US$411 million) in losses, Donny said.

"If Indonesia manages to reduce the use of pirated software by 10 percent in the next four years, the absorption of skilled workers into the information technology sector will soar," he said, adding the growth of the software industry will increase state income from taxes, inviting more foreign investment.

In its attempt to improve enforcement against illegal software, BSA, in cooperation with the US Commercial Service, held a workshop for prosecutors and police, training 120 officers on the detection and prevention of pirated software use.

Banten administration warns officials against corruption

Monday, August 25, 2008
Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Banten


The Banten administration on Saturday warned its officials they risked being implicated in corruption cases by not adhering to the law and following procedures.

"I always remind officials to enact their authorities in line with the procedures and carry out all tasks according to the regulations, but some of them fail to do so ... they end up dealing with corruption investigations," Banten deputy governor Masduki said Saturday.

Masduki made the remark after prosecutors named three officials of the Banten Health Agency and two businesses as suspects in the alleged embezzlement of Rp 22 billion in state funds allocated for the construction of Balaraja General Hospital in Tangerang municipality.

The suspects are Djaja Budihardja, head of the provincial health agency, M. Natsir, the agency's commitment maker, Dimas Widiyatmo, head of the hospital project, contractor John Chaidir, director of PT Glindingmas Wahana Nusa and Ade Siswanto, project consultant and supervisor of PT Cipta Sarana.

Tangerang prosecutors have not arrested any of the suspects, who would be charged for violating the Anti-corruption Law, which carries a maximum punishment of 20 years in prison.

Chief prosecutor Agus Sutoto said the investigators were trying to find out if more people were involved in the case.

"The team plans to question Tangerang regency administration assistant Mas Iman Kusnadar and TB Chaeri Wardana, younger brother of Banten Governor Ratu Atut Chosiah as witnesses in the graft case," he said Saturday.

The Banten provincial administration in 2005 spent Rp 6 billion to acquire six hectares of land for the hospital and disbursed Rp 14 billion for construction work in 2006.

The Health Ministry disbursed Rp 2 billion early this year to procure health equipment.

However, the construction of the hospital has been neglected since 2007. Tangerang regent Ismet Iskandar said his administration planned to take over construction work.

Masduki said the administration would not replace the implicated officials.

"It's a long legal process. We'll wait and see whether they are guilty as charged."

Banten provincial administration secretary Muhadi called on officials "to take precautions and to be careful so they would not be implicated in any corruption cases".

Tangerang shoe workers strike for holiday bonus

Friday, August 22, 2008
Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang


Some 7,000 workers from PT Hardaya Aneka Shoe Industry (HASI), a former Nike supplier, began striking Thursday in Tangerang to protest company policy on Idul Fitri allowances (THR).

"The management has announced this year all workers will receive less money for THR," Agus Widodo, the chair of HASI's workers union (SPN), told The Jakarta Post.

He said workers received 241 percent of their monthly salary for THR last year but this year they were told to expect just 100 percent.

The strike paralyzed production when HASI's 7,000 workers sat down inside the factory compound in Jatiuwung district, Tangerang municipality.

The sit-down turned violent after factory security banned TV reporters from covering the strike.

"Security banned journalists from covering our action. They are our friends, our defenders," one worker shouted in a speech.

The workers then mobbed and attacked some 25 security officers at the factory.

Police officers arrived later and managed to de-escalate the situation. Police immediately evacuated the security officers, already black and blue from the crowd's beating.

Company representatives Agus Widodo, Sugeng and Fredy said the company had earlier asserted management would not change its THR policy.

The strike was likely triggered by possible massive lay-offs due to an expected September termination of Nike's order contract.

Nike Corporation, an American athletic apparel company, had sent a termination letter July 6, 2007, to Siti Hartati Murdaya, president director of PT Central Cipta Murdaya, HASI's holding company, the workers said.

The letter said Nike intended to end cooperation with them and PT Naga Sakti Parama Shoes Industry (NASA).

The termination letter then led to 13,000 workers from NASA and HASI, which manufacture shoes exclusively for Nike in Tangerang, to rally at the Jakarta Stock Exchange building on July 16 last year to demand Nike restore contracts with the companies.

Agus said the massive lay-off might not take place because the company had secured new contracts with buyers such as Hitech of Taiwan and Armor and Columbia from the United States.

Ciputat residents protest Ahmadiyah

Thursday, August 21, 2008
Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang


Hundreds of residents grouped under the Ciputat Muslim Community Forum (FMMC) sealed a mosque belonging to the beleaguered Islamic sect Ahmadiyah in Ciputat, Tangerang, on Wednesday.

The residents said they sealed the Baitul Qoyyum mosque on Jl. Raya Bukit in Serua subdistrict because Ahmadiyah members had failed to abide by a joint ministerial decree released in June.

The decree banned the group from proselytizing, while allowing it to continue activities that were confined to its mosques.

"Jamaah Ahmadiyah still holds religious activities as usual and has continued the physical construction of the mosque even though none of the Muslims living in the subdistrict agree with their presence here," FMMC coordinator Subhan Basuni said.

The residents' attempt to seal the mosque was prevented by the police. Later, on the mosque's fence, the group tried to place a banner reading, "This mosque is closed for all activities because it caused a disturbance to the beliefs of Muslims in Ciputat."

When residents insisted on putting the banner in place, police officers gave in on the condition that everyone left immediately afterward.

"We just wanted to set up the banner because based on Islamic beliefs, the presence of the mosque and the religious activity of Ahmadis has caused a disturbance to the residents of Serua and Serua Indah subdistricts," Basuni said.

Ciputat district chief Chaerul Saleh called on Ahmadis to cease their activities and refrain from spreading their teachings among locals. Ahmadiyah members in Ciputat have reached 250, he added.

"I call on residents to exercise patience and avoid any kind of negative reaction," he said.

Dozens of police officers were deployed to guard the mosque in anticipation of escalated tensions.
A number of Ahmadiyah members who were inside the mosque did not come out, but looked on and watched the protest.

Ciputat overpass fails to ease traffic jams around market area

Saturday, August 16, 2008
Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang


The newly constructed Ciputat overpass, in use since late last month, has failed to alleviate traffic jams near the Ciputat market, an official said.

Weekday market traffic remains chaotic because public minivans and city buses loiter in the road waiting for passengers.

Street vendors have taken over the pedestrian walkway in front of the market making the situation worse.

Ciputat district chief Chaerul Saleh said the overpass, which was expected to solve traffic problems around the market, had failed to do the job.

He said unruly public transportation drivers and street vendors were to blame for the daily turmoil.

"A bus terminal would be the only way to remedy the chaotic situation at the Ciputat market so the administration must accelerate the terminal construction plan because people need it right away," he said.

The head of the Tangerang regency transportation agency Deden Sugandhi said the regency administration faced problems trying to acquire land for the bus terminal.

He said the administration has been planning to build a bus terminal on four hectares of land in Cipayung subdistrict but it has managed to buy only 9,000 square meters of land since 2005.

"The price of land around the Ciputat market has skyrocketed but the administration's land procurement department continues to negotiate with residents in the hope they will lower their land prices," he said.

Earlier, he said, the administration had proposed to build an intercity bus terminal in Ciputat but, since the location was to be too close to the existing intercity terminal in Lebak Bulus, South Jakarta, the Transportation Ministry refused the regency's proposal.

The construction of the overpass began in May last year and cost the government Rp 94.9 billion. To build it, the government evicted dozens of traders near the market.

In 2005, the traders formed a group and asked for advocacy assistance from Indonesian Environmental Forum (Walhi). In a press release from June that year, the traders and Walhi stated the overpass would not solve the traffic problem.

"The congestion is due to the absence of a terminal, the unruly public transportation drivers and street vendors, the high number of public minivans and bad management of the market," the release stated.

Elephantiasis endemic in 60 villages

Friday, August 15, 2008
Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang


There have been 242 cases of elephantiasis reported in Tangerang regency over the past eight years, the regency's health agency has said.

"As of this year, we have declared elephantiasis endemic in 60 villages in 16 districts and will be providing mass treatment at no cost in the villages on November 12, to coincide with National Health Day," Yuli Sunar Dewanti, the head of communicable diseases and environmental sanitation at the agency, told The Jakarta Post on Thursday.

The actual number of people living with elephantiasis in the regency may have doubled from that identified thus far, as detection of the disease can be quite difficult, she added.

"Last year, we discovered up to 81 cases of elephantiasis, but as of June this year we could only identify 18 new cases," she said.

The new cases were discovered recently, after the agency took blood samples from residents in several villages, Yuli added. Most of those afflicted were between the ages of 20 and 45.

Lymphatic filariasis had begun to cause swelling and disfigurement of patients' arms, legs, thighs and genitals, she said.

The disease has been on the rise in the regency over the last three years, with eight cases in 2005, 37 in 2006, and 81 last year, Yuli added.

The health agency has thus far declared 16 of the regency's 36 districts disease-prone, including Ciputat, Pondok Aren, Teluknaga, Cikupa, Rajeg, Pamulang, Balaraja, Sepatan, East Sepatan, Cisauk, Cisoka, Mekar Baru, Legok, Pasar Kemis and Curug districts.

The agency earlier began a mass treatment program for the disease in several areas where it is believed to be endemic, only to halt activities due to lack of funding.

Fifteen of the 18 cases were discovered in Pamulang district alone.

Head of the Pamulang community health center Unna Ramadona said the patients had been given intensive treatment, including diethylcarbamazine citrate (DEC) and albendazole pills, to be consumed regularly over the course of five years.

"Although elephantiasis is not life-threatening, it can permanently damage a person's kidneys or lymphatic system," Unna added.

Hundreds refuse church in Pamulang

Thursday, August 14, 2008
Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang


Hundreds of residents rallied on Wednesday against the construction of the Bernades Church in Pondok Cabe Udik subdistrict, Tangerang regency.

"There are a total of 130 churches in the subdistrict and a new church will be built. Of course, this figure is not fitting and conducive for a subdistrict like Pondok Cabe Udik," said Nana Suwardi, one of the protesters.

Residents said they had received information that the construction would consist of not just the church building, but also a large complex sitting on a two-hectare plot of land.

A large church like Bernades should be built downtown, not among residential kampongs in Pondok Ceb Udik, Nana said.

"We have objected twice to the Tangerang regency's Religious Affairs Office, but the officials have told us that the church's construction plans were approved by locals."

He said the officials even showed a list of signatures collected from the residents who agreed with the church's construction plans.

Nana said no locals had been approached for their agreement to the construction plans.

He said residents' signatures must have been forged to pave the way for the construction.

On Nov. 3, 2007, locals attended a meeting at Situ Gintung restaurant organized by Forum Taaruf Umat Beragama.

"We were asked to put our signatures on a blank piece of paper provided by the organizer, but we were told that it was just to document our presence at the meeting," he said.

According to the protesters, the first stone of the church was supposed to be laid at the site on Wednesday, but construction was canceled due to the protests.

No one involved in the church's construction was available to comment on the protest at the construction site.

Catholic priest Rev. Romo Puryanto, who was present at the Nov. 3 meeting, said there were 7,798 Catholics living in Pamulang so the district needed a Catholic church.

"The construction plans to build a Catholic church in the area fulfill all of the requirements. We will only build one Catholic church in Pamulang district," he said in a Forum Taaruf Umat Beragama statement.

Pamulang district chief Achmad Taufik said his administration conducted a series of meetings with several community leaders in response to residents' objection to the church.

Pondok Cabe Udik subdistrict chief Saderi A. Sairi, Pamulang religious office affairs chief M.
Fuadi, Forum Taaruf cleric M. Kahfi, Pamulang Indonesian Ulema Council (MUI) member KH.
M. Saidih, and Pondok Cabe Udik MUI member H. Nana were present at the meetings, Achmad said.

"They said to leave it up to the religious affairs minister and the home affairs minister. The did not raise any objections to the construction of the church in Pamulang."

Illegal taxis still present, but useful: Airport operator

Saturday, August 09, 2008
Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang


Airport operator PT Angkasa Pura II has yet to eliminate illegal taxis operating at Soekarno-Hatta International Airport.

"We have frequently filed complaints to the airport operator concerning the presence of illegal taxis, but to no avail," Darmin, an authorized taxi driver who regularly picks up fares at the airport, told The Jakarta Post at Terminal II on Thursday.

The operator's failure to crack down on illegal taxis has cost authorized taxi drivers business, as they now have to wait longer to pick up passengers.

Taxis must purchase official stickers, placed on their windshields and rear windows, to be authorized for operation at the airport. Although the majority of illegal taxis are private minivans, official drivers have also objected to fellow taxi drivers operating without stickers.

Darmin said airport security officers were aware of the illegal taxis, but did nothing to stop them, adding it was no secret informal taxi drivers had the backing of individuals inside Angkasa.

"You often see security officers make a show of stopping them with their clubs, only to let them pass," he added.

Salim, 50, another taxi driver, said operators of illegal taxis did not use meters, with many passengers complaining the fees were higher than those in metered taxis.

Authorized drivers are hoping the airport operator will deal with the problem aggressively.

Some passengers find the illegal taxis useful, PT Angkasa Pura spokesman Trisno Heryadi said.

Airport authorities have to consider the problem from a humanitarian perspective, as passengers with limited means rely on informal taxis and ojek (motorcycle taxi) to meet their transportation needs, he added.

"A taxi cannot accommodate seven or more passengers. Your choice is between taking two taxis and paying twice as much or taking a minivan that offers the same service as a single taxi, at the same price, but which can take up to 10 passengers," he told the Post.

Rita Zahara, 37, a resident of East Ciputat district, agreed illegal airport taxis were helpful.

"I arrived at the airport on December 28 after performing a pilgrimage to Mecca. My husband, my son, nieces and sisters came to pick me up at Terminal II. None of the official taxis we hailed was willing to take us using the meter," she said.

Instead, drivers asked her and her family to pay between Rp 200,000 and 300,000 to go from the airport to Ciputat. The metered fare is only Rp 150,000.

"An Isuzu Panther minivan driver approached us at the terminal entrance and was willing to take us for Rp 150,000," she added.

Schools closed to make way for business center

Friday, August 08, 2008
Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang


Schools are the latest neighborhood residents to be evicted from the future site of Tangerang's business center, following the relocation of the Cikokol market a few months back.

The Tangerang municipal administration is sacrificing education in the name of business interests with its plan to relocate two schools to make way for the business center on Jl. Sudirman, Cikokol, critics say.

The two state elementary schools, SDN Sukasari No.4 and SDN Sukasari No.5, will be relocated despite strong objections from teachers and parents.

"The administration informed us of its plan to relocate the schools last year, but we don't know when it will actually happen," Qomaruddin, the principal of SDN 4, said Wednesday.

School officials have no choice but to leave the decision to the whims of the administration, as only it can authorize the relocation, Qomaruddin added.

Developer PT Panca Karya Griyatama will build the Rp 1.5 trillion Mega City business center on seven hectares of land formerly occupied by the Cikokol traditional market. The center will include a large shopping mall, office buildings and apartment complexes.

Head of the municipal development planning board Dadang Durrahman said the two schools would be relocated by the end of the year.

"They will be moved to Babakan subdistrict, near the public library, which is only 500 meters from their present location," he added.

A number of parents expressed their dissatisfaction with the plan, saying the administration had been swayed by business interests.

"It's hard to believe the administration of Wahidin Halim (the incumbent mayor), which has been so committed to improving education standards, is letting developers run the schools out just to put up a shopping mall," said Nani, a parent of an SDN 4 student.

Although teachers and parents reject the administration's plans, they hope the schools will be relocated sooner rather than later, as scholastic activities have been disrupted for nearly a year because of the project, she added.

Edy Ham, a councilor at the municipal legislative council said his organization had yet to receive word about the relocation plan.

"If relocation is unavoidable, the administration should ask the developer to move the schools to an equally strategic location, so as not to inconvenience students and their parents -- because right now, the present position is very strategic," he added.

Thursday, August 7, 2008

Racketeering triggered transportation strike

Multa Fidrus , The Jakarta Post , Tangerang | Thu, 08/07/2008 10:09 AM | City

Fed up with racketeers, public minivan transportation drivers along the Cileduk-Pondok Kacang route commenced striking Tuesday.

The drivers said they would continue the strike until the Tangerang municipal transportation agency and the police undertook stern measures to stop the extortionists, who daily threaten drivers with violence.

Illegal fees had become exorbitant, ranging from Rp 5,000 to Rp 25,000 a day, the drivers said, adding the racketeers do not hesitate to resort to violence when refused.

"We can no longer stand being extorted each day like milked cows. We have to endure violence at the hands of these hoodlums," Rojali, 35, one of the striking drivers, told The Jakarta Post at the Cileduk intersection Wednesday.

In protest, drivers parked their minivans at various intersections, leaving hundreds of passengers along the route stranded each day since Tuesday.

Cileduk chief detective First Insp. Erizal said the police had arrested one suspected member of the racket identified as Sodik, alias Bontai, following a police report filed by the drivers.

Officers picked up Bontai at his home in Pondok Serut village in the Pondok Aren district Tuesday and were still looking for his accomplices, Erizal added.

The police will charge the suspect with violating article 368 of the criminal code, on violence. The article carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison.

The Association of Public Transportation Drivers (SPAU) urged local transportation agencies to improve their systems for issuing public transportation minivan permits so that such minivans can operate and properly serve recommended routes.

"The transportation agency and the police must coordinate their efforts to stop hoodlums from demanding money from drivers along their routes," SPAU chairman Saiful Milah said.

Based on the SPAU's calculations, drivers and transportation companies had to spend up to Rp 18 billion on racketeering fees, he added.

In Tangerang regency, the head of the regency transportation agency Deden Sugandhi said illegal fees were collected on many of the regency's streets, involving unauthorized officers who used agency uniforms.

"Racketeering on the part of these unauthorized officers has really embarrassed the regency administration, especially the transportation agency," Deden said, adding he had frequently received reports from community members about such fees.

The impostors collected between Rp 2,000 and Rp 5,000 from each passing driver, particularly after midnight at several spots in the Pamulang and Cisauk districts.

In response to complaints, Deden conducted an undercover investigation, disguised as a pickup truck driver.

In total, he arrested six men stationed at separate spots posing as officers and demanding a Rp 5,000 fee, he said.

Wednesday, August 6, 2008

Wahidin Halim tenders resignation

Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang Wed, 08/06/2008 10:15 AM City

Tangerang Mayor Wahidin Halim has officially resigned from his position, in order to seek re-election in the upcoming mayoral election.

Jakarta administration assistant Affandi Permana has also resigned, in order to run as a candidate in the regency election in Ciamis, West Java.

Both politicians resigned to comply with a 2004 law on regional administrations that obliges officials seeking election to leave office.

"Wahidin Halim's resignation letter was approved by Home Affairs Minister Madriyanto on August 2. Wahidin Halim relinquished his role as head of the administration on that date," administration spokesman Saiful Rochman said Tuesday.

Control of the administration has been given to deputy mayor Deddy Safei, until a new mayor is sworn on September 6.

Wanted: pedestrian crosswalks at Serpong

Multa Fidrus , The Jakarta Post , Tangerang Wed, 08/06/2008 10:19 AM City

Every day, dozens of students in Serpong, Tangerang, have to brave oncoming traffic just to get across the street.

Despite being one of the busiest roads in the city, Jl. Raya Serpong -- near the Alam Sutra, Bumi Serpong Damai and Vila Melati Mas housing complexes -- has no pedestrian walkways.

Instead, pedestrians have to dodge and weave through the thousands of vehicles that use the 12-kilometer-road every hour.

The street has only two pedestrian bridges.

"There is an urgent need for a pedestrian crossing along Jl. Raya Serpong due to the movement of such large numbers of people along with the high volume of traffic in the area. It's too risky for pedestrians to cross the road," Tangerang traffic police chief Insp. Ristanto said Tuesday.

The police have conducted a study on traffic density in the area, finding a pedestrian crosses the street nearly every second, he added.

"We've sent a letter to the Banten provincial public works agency three times to ask them to build pedestrian bridges, but the response is always that no budget exists for such construction," Ristanto said.

The absence of such bridges causes traffic congestion at certain points, such as at the Plaza Serpong and WTC Matahari shopping centers, as well near the Gading Serpong housing complex, the Ashobirin Hospital and the Pratama Abadi Industry building, he added.

Risanto said pedestrians crossing the street often disrupted traffic because passing vehicles had to slow down or stop, delaying vehicles behind them.

"At some spots, there are no signs warning motorists to reduce their speed and allow pedestrians to cross," he said, adding warning signs could help protect pedestrians.

Many multinational companies have opened offices in Serpong, accelerating economic growth in the area and attracting more visitors and foot traffic.

Tangerang regent Ismet Iskandar said his administration was not responsible for public facility construction along the road.

"Jl. Raya Serpong is a provincial road controlled by the Banten provincial administration, so we don't have the authority to build public facilities or to make improvements there," he added.

Tuesday, August 5, 2008

300 jobless after permit revocation

Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang, Tue, 08/05/2008 10:16 AM City

As many as 300 employees of financial firm PT Graha Finesa Berjangka (GFB) lost their jobs after the firm's business permit was revoked by the Futures Exchange Supervisory Board (Bappebti).

"We will soon file complaints with President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono because such unfair revocation of our business permit, without warning, has cost some 300 employees their jobs," Hafidz, the company director, said in Karawaci on Monday.

The revocation of GFB's business permit was unfounded because there is no evidence the company has violated the regulations Bappebti claims it has, he added.

Hafidz said Bappebti accused the company of committing violations in its promotional campaigns, in failing to report customer transactions to PT Bursa Berjangka Jakarta (BBJ) and PT Kliring Berjangka Indonesia (KBI) and in using funds for activities unrelated to customers.

Bappebti also accused the company of having violated standard operation procedures.

"All the accusations are false because we have always reported customer transactions, of any kind, to the PT BBJ and PT KBI," Hafidz said.

Tangerang tap water gets private investment

Multa Fidrus , The Jakarta Post , Tangerang Tue, 08/05/2008 10:16 AM City

The central government signed a memorandum of understanding Monday with a private company investing Rp 520 billion in tap water provision for five districts in Tangerang regency.

"Due to limited sources of clean water across the country, the government needs to begin collaborating with private investors. This is a creative solution," Public Works Minister Djoko Kirmanto said in Tangerang.

The collaboration with a private company would not be detrimental to the existing tap water utility PDAM Tirta Kerta Raharja, which has supplied clean water to Tangerang locals thus far, he added.

"With a new competitor, PDAM must work harder from now on," Djoko said.

The quality and volume of Java's rivers, including the Cisadane river in Tangerang, has drastically declined, he added.

Djoko said Tangerang regency was a model of collaboration between government and private investors in the provision of clean water. President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has given a target date of December 2009 for completion of the project, he added.

"If the water provision project with Acuatico Pte Ltd is successful, collaboration of this kind will be further developed in other regions across the country," he said.

Singapore-based Acuatico will build a tap water installation plant to supply clean water for industries and residents living in Sepatan, Pasar Kemis, Cikupa, Balaraja and Jayanti districts.

Acuatico is expected to provide 3,400 liters of water per second for households and 10,000 liters per second for industries.

Acuatico director Fatah Topobroto said investment in the water production came solely from the company's own capital, not from state or regional budgets.

Construction for the project consists of intake installations, a water treatment plant, pipelines and installation of meters in consumers' homes.

The collaboration grew out of an infrastructure summit initiated by several ministers in the United Cabinet, with the aim of developing regional infrastructure, such as roads, schools, bridges and tap water facilities.

Tangerang regent Ismet Iskandar said the supply of clean water in Tangerang was still inadequate.

"We are very grateful the central government has paid attention to the regency," he added.

Ismet said he hoped the government would continue monitoring the project's implementation.

Acuatico first entered Indonesia's tap water market in January 2007, acquiring 95 percent of the shares in PT Aetra Air Jakarta, formerly PT Thames PAM Jaya.

The 2004 Law on Water Resources first opened the possibility of private investment in water provision, sparking protests from organizations arguing water provision should be in the hands of publicly controlled entities.

In 2005, at least 17 organizations requested the Supreme Court perform a judicial review of the water resources law. The court refused the request in July of that same year.

Monday, August 4, 2008

Tiring Passport Queue at Immigration Office



TIRING WAIT: Thousands of will-be migrant workers wait in line for passport at Cikokol Immigration Office in Tangerang. Many of them fell asleep because of feeling tired of standing in line to get a passport bookfrom the office. Multa Fidrus/JP


Migrant workers face delays


Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang

Thousands of migrant workers could not leave the country to start new jobs due to long delays in passport processing at the special immigration unit in Cikokol, Tangerang municipality.

The delays forced some migrant worker agencies (PJTKI) to postpone departures to several Middle Eastern countries, throwing workers' jobs into further uncertainty.

Migrants workers claimed they had been waiting for their passports at the office since Friday.
Yanti, a would-be migrant worker, said she was confused by immigration officers' request that she be photographed a second time.

"The officers took my picture last week, but claimed they lost my file, which was being processed under the new system," the 22-year-old worker from Sukabumi, West Java, told The Jakarta Post on Thursday.

The delay means she and her friends will have to pay more to the PJTKI to cover the cost of accommodations, she added.

Darsih, 19, another migrant worker, from East Nusa Tenggara, said she had been scheduled to leave for Saudi Arabia on Tuesday, but was still waiting in line for her passport Thursday.

"I've been waiting here since Friday, but don't know how long I have to wait before my passport gets printed," she added.

Immigration officers, seen busily attending to their duties before the new system took effect Monday, appeared confused and at a standstill, while passport application forms piled up around them.

Several officers said they could nothing as they waited to transition to the new system.

Head of the Cikokol immigration office Tamsil Yakub said the directorate of immigration implemented the new system, called the Travel Document Publication System of the Republic of Indonesia (SPSPRI), to replace the older, outdated Biometrics-Based Integrated Photo System (SPTBB).

"SPTBB was based on finger print recognition. We could process passports as soon as the applications were submitted," he said, adding the process used to be on a first come, first served basis.

"The new system is based on facial recognition, requiring applicants to wait in line longer. Also, our existing equipment could not support the new system," he added.

Passport processing at the office will be delayed until the new system is fully integrated.
Tamsil refused to answer when things would get better for the workers, saying the journalists should have been grateful he was willing to meet them.

Monday, July 28, 2008

Jewelry smuggling attempt foiled at airport



Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang

Custom and Excise officers have foiled a smuggling attempt of expensive jewelries worth billionsof Rupiah from Hong Kong into the country through the Soekarno-Hatta International Airport.

“We seized as many as 77 pieces of luxirious jewelries decorated with pearl, pure diamond, gold and giok stones comprising earings, bracelets, necklaces and rings from a passenger,” Eko Darmanto, chief of intelligence at airport Customs and Excise Office said Monday.

He said the 40-years old Indonesian woman identified as IJ arrived at the airport from Hong Kong with Garuda GA863 on July 26.

“Based passenger’s profile analyses, officers became suspicious of the woman who appreared to be nervous when she passed by the check point at the terminal,” he said.

Officers then asked the woman to open both her cabin and hand bags and found the jewelries hidden in her hand bag.

“The value of the jewelries exceeded the minimum limit of free obligation of items a passenger has to report in the declaration form,” he said, adding that the woman did not report the jewleries through the custom declaration.

He said officers were still examining the purity and the real value of the jewelries to find out how much the woman had to pay to the state for the import.

“For the time being, we alleged that the jewelries worth more than Rp 5 billion,” he said, adding that the woman had testified that the jewelries she took from Hong Kong belonged to several colleagues of her.

Factories stay shut on weekend

Multa Fidrus , The Jakarta Post , Tangerang Mon, 07/28/2008 11:01 AM City

Factories in Tangerang regency remained closed on Saturday, despite government regulations requiring manufacturers to shift at least two workdays a month to the weekend.

None of the 500 manufacturers operating in the regency has implemented the regulation, which was supposed to take effect on July 21 in an attempt to reduce electricity consumption by 10 to 20 percent.

Masruri, human resources manager of PT Surya Toto, a tile and toilet producer located on Jl. Raya Serpong, said only 150 out of a total of 3,200 workers came in to work on Saturday.

"Only employees who work at the incineration section come in on Saturdays," he told The Jakarta Post.

He said although the company supported the new regulation, it would not implement it because the factory uses its own power generator.

"Moreover, we have also been informed by state-owned power company PT PLN we were not included in the power rationing list," he said.

It was a similar story at the factory of PT Hardaya Aneka Shoe Industry (HASI), a supplier for American athletic apparel company Nike.

Agus Widodo, chairman of HASI's worker union, said workers had yet to receive notice from the company management about a change in working hours.

"Everything is the same as usual here. On Saturdays, workers only work for five hours, from 7 a.m. to 12 noon, or from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m.," he told the Post.

He said the factory, which employs 7,000 workers, produced on average 15,000 pairs of shoes each day between Monday and Friday, and 10,000 pairs on Saturday.

Hery Rumawatine, chairman of the regency's Indonesian Employers Association (Apindo), said Apindo was still trying to raise awareness among manufacturers about the government regulation.

"We postponed the implementation of the regulation to July 31, pending a memo from Manpower and Transmigration Minister Erman Suparno, because the shift in workdays involves overtime payments," he told the Post.

He said Apindo supported the regulation but it was difficult to implement because of the additional costs to manufacturers of operating on weekends.

Amir Hamzah, head of the external division of the national oil and gas Upstream Regulatory Body (BP Migas), said Friday the supply of gas from BP West Java to Jakarta had normalized on July 24.

He said supplies had resumed after BP West Java completed maintenance works scheduled to end on July 25, but it managed to finish the work two days earlier than scheduled.

PLN's Jakarta and Tangerang office announced Friday it had canceled plans for a rotating blackout in the capital because of "cooperative big consumers".
It said offices and retail centers also managed to lower their energy consumption, thus keeping the firm from having to cut power.

Modern fresh food markets do well in housing suburbs




CLEANUP ON AISLE ONE: Industry and Trade minister Mari Elka Pengesti talks to traders witnessed by Tangerang deputy regent Rano Karno (above). Customers browse the fresh vegetable section at Pasar Modern in the Bumi Serpong Damai City housing complex in Tangerang. The market is one of the first in the country to adopt a clean traditional market concept. (JP/Multa Fidrus)

Multa Fidrus , The Jakarta Post , Tangerang Sat, 07/26/2008 11:25 AM City

It's hardly surprising when people turn their backs on the traditional market given its notorious reputation for being a muddy, cramped and smelly place.

But the traditional market in the Bumi Serpong Damai (BSD) self-contained housing area in Serpong, Tangerang, called a "modern market" is an exception to the rule.

There, the market stays dry and orderly, luring customers from the middle-income housing areas to stop by and shop for their groceries.

"I don't just come here to shop for all my family's needs. I frequently bring along my children and husband, particularly during holidays, because they also enjoy spending time here," Ika Setiani, who lives in a nearby housing estate, told The Jakarta Post last weekend.

The 37-year-old mother of two said the traditional market served the residents and gave small traders nearby the opportunity to make a living.

Being far from business and trade centers, housing clusters and self-contained residential areas on the outskirts of Jakarta have tried to cater to all their residents' needs.

Malls and the shopping centers came first. Years later, several developers in Tangerang built traditional markets, offering their residents an alternative place to buy fresh groceries at lower prices.

A basic commodity trader, Tie Lin, 50, said that although most of her customers drove their own cars to the market, they still enjoyed haggling even though it was not something they were good at.

"Buyers have the right to bargain and we have the right to put our prices up or down," she said.
The modern market, which is located on a 2.6-hectare property near the Serpong-Pondoh Indah turnpike, opened to public in July 2004.

It has 303 spaces in its main area for traditional traders, 320 kiosks facing that area and 100 shops near the market area.

Every evening, there are 100 cafes in tents set up in the parking lot serving a variety of local favorites.

Muhammad Ridwan, marketing manager of Serpong City Paradise, has installed a modern market inside their area. He said the existence of the market supported other housing areas and several nearby villages because the regular traditional markets were located far away.

"We adopted the concept of a modern market from various models," he said on Wednesday.

The market has 100 kiosks and 56 lots, and was opened last June. All of the kiosks and lots were sold out before the opening.

To attract more visitors, the sogo jongkok and fruit wholesalers with lower prices set up stalls every Saturday and Sunday.

Sogo jongkok is a local term for non-permanent market where street vendors sell second-hand or even counterfeited branded items.

Property developer Summarecon opened Gading Serpong's traditional market, Sinpasa Modern Market, in September 2004.

"The market concept is adopted from Pasar Mandiri, a modern market we built in Kelapa Gading, East Jakarta, in 1985." said Cut Meutia, corporate public relation manager of Summarecon.

The Simpasa Modern Market is located right next to Summarecon Mall Serpong so that visitors are given more opportunity to purchase what they need after shopping at the mall.

The market has 142 kiosks offering basic commodities and 137 lots for vegetables, fruits, fish and meat. It opens from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. every day.

"In their contract, all traders agree to abide by the regulations we apply in order to keep the market clean and comfortable," Meutia said.

She said traders were also obliged to provide fresh merchandise and sell them to buyers at affordable prices. Visitors are also given the opportunity to bargain any transactions they make.

"The strategy we use to keep the market crowded each day is maintaining comfort and good sanitation," Meutia said.

Diana Natalie, 40, who manages a restaurant at the BSD traditional market, said customers could wait in line while market management supervised traders to sustain cleanliness.

"Look at the traders in this (BSD) market. They are perfect examples of traditional traders who abide by the rules. The market stays clean and neat at all the time," she said.

Diana said she was surprised to hear that within a year her food business would be making over Rp 8 million (US$851) a day.

"It's not just BSD residents who shop here. Most of my customers come from Pamulang, Bintaro, Pondok Indah (other housing areas in South Jakarta) and Gading Serpong," she said.

Thursday, July 24, 2008

Kuei Pin Yeo: Dedicated educator who is committed to creating high-quality young musicians



Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang



The Jakarta International Summer Music Festival (JISMF) was in fact not merely an assembly of diverse and outstanding groups of talented young musicians, music teachers and visiting international artists as it was expected to be.
More than that, the two-week event had also given a significant transformation to the characteristic of students at Jakarta Musical School (SMJ) in fact.

“What makes me very impressed and proud of the festival was that silent students turned to be talkative and those who where shy and scared appeared to be self confident through the festival,” pianist Kuei Pin Yeo told The Jakarta Post in an interview at SMJ campus in Bumi Serpong Damai (BSD) satellite city on Tuesday.

Yeo, artistic and music director as well as the initiator of JISMF said the festival held from June 21 to July 5 was merely expected to give talented young musicians an opportunity to learn from noted musicians and teachers from several other countries who have had experience in musical creativity.

The school invited Andrew Massey and Lisa Laskowich from the U.S. ; Pamela Wedgwood from the U.K. ; Arten Konstantinov and Gleb Dontzov from Russia ; Ichiro Kato from Japan ; Leanne Nicholls from Australia ; Olivia Skwara from Poland including Yeo’s husband who is Indonesian director of strings Jap Tji Kien.

They guided the participants in intensive but pleasant musical activities comprising individual lessons, master classes, workshops, chamber music, musical theater workshops, improvisations, choir, music appreciation, concerts and orchestral activities.

The event also introduced improvisation workshops and musical theater to the participants. Dozens of participants from various regions were taught how to design and create their own works through this workshop.

Students also learned from videos featuring musical theater shows from Broadway, such as The Producers, Chicago , Rent, Wicked and The Lion King. The participants will learn how to play roles for musical theater.

The musical productions put together from the training were be staged in the JISMF Gala Concert at the closing of the festival at the Jakarta Art Building in Central Jakarta .

SMJ which now has four learning centers besides the main campus in BSD is managed by the Jakarta Music Foundation, which was established by Kuei Pin Yoe in 1983.

As a dedicated educator whose unceasing efforts to bring world-class music education to Indonesia , Yeo also established the International Music Conservatory of Indonesia in early this year.

She is committed to producing high-quality young musicians who are well prepared in music performance and skills.

“Only this (dedication) what I can give back to the country where I was born, grew up and spend the rest of life” she said, adding that she Thanks to God because she always gets a balance in developing musical education in the country and performing at international concert stages.

Yoe was born in Jakarta in 1954. It was her mother who had mostly played important role in supports to her musical talent with high discipline to exercise.

Being the only girl in a family of four children, her parents supported her love for music and her decision to use music as a platform to realize her visions and duties as a musician and educator.
“I clearly remember when I was five years old. My parents bought a used piano for me and I began to seriously learn the music when I turned seven,” said Yoe who aspired to become a civil engineer.

Yeo managed to attribute her conviction in maximizing her potential to her parents, who encouraged her to achieve the highest possible degree and she could prove it since elementary school.

After graduating from senior high, she was registered as a technical engineering student the Trisakti University .

Just a few months later, she left Trisakti because scholarship offer from the Manhattan University summoned her to study music in the USA .

She spent nine years of musical studies at the Manhattan School of Music in New York . When she retuned to the country, she became the first Indonesian to obtain a doctorate in Music (piano performance).

Yeo who can fluently speak in Mandarin and English, believes that striving is always the best for the better.

Her concerts have drawn praise in Europe , America and Asia . The New York Times, on the occasion of her Carnegie Hall recital debut, hailed her as both a polished technician and responsive musician, and even praised for her elegantly detailed, immaculate and musically direct interpretation.

According to Yeo, music begins to have a good prospect in the country since the mindset of most Indonesian people had also begun to shift forward.

“Most parents used to insist on their children to study the subjects the parents wanted but now many parents began to understand and even support children’s choice to study based on their talents.”

“I wish Indonesia could have a good standard of music and we could be proud of the achievement in musical scene and one day we could have a good orchestra like those in the developed countries,” she said.

She said good orchestra could not be established and survive without the attention of the government because orchestra needs a permanent place for exercise and concerts. It also needs spectators.

“To provide a permanent building for exercising, concerts and familiarize people with the classical music is the role of the Culture and Tourism Ministry. I am very concerned because skyscrapers continue to grow in the capital but not an orchestra building,” she said.Her marriage with Jap Tji Kien in 1983 has given them a couple of children Anthony Jaya, 22 and Stephanie Jaya, 18

Int'l NGOs condemn forced evictions

Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang, Friday, July 18, 2008

International NGOs have recently spoken out against the eviction of families from their homes near Lake Setu Antap, Tangerang.

"We condemn the forced eviction, on Apr. 30, of 35 families living around Setu Antap," Bret Thiele, rights litigation program coordinator of the Geneva-based Center on Housing Rights and Evictions (COHRE), said in a July 8 letter to Tangerang regent Ismet Iskandar.

COHRE urged the Tangerang administration to ensure adequate compensation for loss of home and livelihood for the evicted residents, as well to provide housing for the families.

Representatives from the organization will come to Indonesia to meet with regent Ismet Iskandar and discuss the matter in mid-August, Thiele said in his letter.

A similar letter was sent to Raquel Ronik, special rapporteur for the UN High Commission for Human Rights; President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono; Banten Governor Ratu Atut Chosiyah; Ifdhal Kasim, chairman of the National Commission for Human Rights, and to the Jakarta Legal Aid Institute, Thiele added.

On Apr. 30, the Tangerang regency administration evicted 250 residents living around Lake Setu Antap.

Public order officers, escorted by some 400 police officers and the military, dismantled the residents' houses, despite a brief sit-in staged by locals and backed by a number of activists from the Anti-violence Students Association.

In the initial eviction order, signed by regent Ismet Iskandar in April 2007, the administration stated the land around the lake had been bought by a woman named Darnelis. Residents later found out Darnelis had died and her heirs had inherited the land.

Ismet then issued another eviction order on Apr. 17, 2008, stating the eviction was aimed at restoring the lake's use as a water catchment area.

Despite being forcibly evicted, some families continue fighting for their rights to the state land, occupying partly demolished houses around the lake or nearby tents.

"We won't leave our home, even though it has been demolished, because this is the state's land.
We have been living here for 20 years. We don't want to move for the benefit of a private owner," Bambang Setiabudi, a member of one of the eight families squatting on the lake bank, said Thursday.

Bambang now lives in a tent near the lake with his two children, his house having been completely demolished.

Darwis, another resident, said he and seven other neighbors -- Ustad Rais, Faturahman, Fatoni, Rokim, Muhlis, Parno and Bambang Setiaudi -- had frequently received threats for occupying the land.

"The most recent threat we received was from the South Jakarta Police. We were summoned to police headquarters, following a report filed by Sarmidi Purba," he said. "Sarmidi Purba is a lawyer for the late Darnelis."

Ismet Iskandar said there was no private developer interested in the land.

"The eviction was in line with the ongoing river and lake revitalization program funded by the central government. The lake was never sold to a property developer," Iskander said.

Earlier, regency councilors asked Ismet where he received the funds from to evict the Setu Antap residents. Councilors said they could not identify any eviction program in the 2008 regency budget.

"The regent asked for two weeks to prepare his answer to this question," said council deputy speaker Arif Wahyudi, of the Prosperous Justice Party (PKS).

Human skeleton found in house

Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang, Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Residents of a housing complex in Kunciran believe that a human skeleton found buried in a house is the former owner of the house, Siti Khoiriah.

The human skeleton, now at Tangerang Public Hospital, was still dressed in female Muslim clothing complete with a veil when found.

Sarah, Siti's niece, Tuesday said she recognized the clothing.

"Yes, I recognize the clothing and the veil. They belonged to my aunt," Sarah told reporters after taking a look at the skeleton in the public hospital.

The skeleton was first found by Sachrudin, a worker who was digging a water way in the house Monday afternoon. The house was sold to a Bintaro resident two months ago, neighbors said.

"I just saw a human foot-like bone, but when I dug deeper, I found a human skeleton in an upside-down position," Sachrudin said.

News about the discovery spread and drew curiosity from neighbors, who then swarmed to the house to see what had happened.

Neighbor Rusnaidi, 45, said the last time he saw Siti was last year.

"To the best of my knowledge, Angga, the son of the Siti, was the last person to leave the house," he said.

Neighbors said Angga sold the house because he needed money to get married.

Rusnaidi said the last time he met and talked with Angga, 24, was about three months ago. He also happened to see Angga in Gondrong subdistrict a few days ago, but he did not get the chance to talk to him.

"When I met him in April I asked where his mother was. Angga told me his mother lived in a rented house in Cipete subdistrict."

Rusnaidi said he told Angga that he would like to see his mother, but Angga prevented him, saying that his mother was still very sick and always ran amok when people visited.

He said that before her disappearance, Siti lived in the house with Angga and her other niece Ani.
In the neighborhood, Siti was known to suffer from a mental illness. She frequently shouted alone without cause and threw things out of the house.

"Angga seldom talked to neighbors here. We suspected he was embarrassed of his sick mother," Rusnaidi said.

Cipondoh Police chief Insp. Sukarna dismissed neighbors' suspicion.

"We are still working hard to investigate the case. We don't even know yet whether the skull belonged to a man or a woman," he said.

Sukarna said police were looking for Angga for questioning.

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Airport cops take urine tests after drug bust

Multa Fidrus and Indah Setiawati, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang, Jakarta
Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Urine tests have been ordered for all 383 officers stationed at Soekarno-Hatta International Airport following the weekend arrest of three airport officers for the alleged possession of narcotics.

"All officers at the airport are required to submit to a urine test, without exception, including myself," airport police chief Sr. Comr. Guntur Setyanto said Monday.

He said the tests were being administered at Jakarta Police Headquarters beginning Monday morning.

Three airport police officers, identified only by the initials W, IR and D, were arrested by West Jakarta Police over the weekend for the alleged possession and use of crystal methamphetamine.
Authorities believe the three officers stole the crystal methamphetamine from drug shipments intercepted by the airport's customs and excise office.

"Long before the arrests were made, I had already ordered internal affairs to look at all the officers. I suspected that some officers were using the drug evidence," Guntur said.

He said he would wait for the West Jakarta Police to complete their investigation before deciding what action to take against the three officers.

"If the officers are found guilty, I will take stern measures. These measures will be imposed on the officers based on the decisions made at a hearing of the police's ethics board," he said.

Jakarta Police chief Insp. Gen. Adang Firman said Monday that any officers found guilty of possessing or using drugs would be fired and brought up on criminal charges.

"This is in line with police regulations. The possession and use of drugs is strictly prohibited for police," he said.

Three months ago, the National Police arrested the head of the North Bogor Police sub-precinct, Adj. Comr. Endang Rudianes, and two civilians as they used crystal methamphetamine, or shabu-shabu, in the officer's office.

Saturday, July 12, 2008

Foreign airline complains of kites near airport runways

Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang, Friday, July 11, 2008

PT Angkasa Pura II, operator of Soekarno-Hatta International Airport, on Thursday urged the government to help enforce a kite-flying ban, following complaints by a foreign airline of kites being flown near the runways.

"We received complaints from Japan Airlines because one of the airline's pilots was distracted by a kite when the plane was landing," Angkasa Pura spokesman Trisno Heryadi told The Jakarta Post.

He said local residents continued to flout the ban, despite measures by airport security officers to confiscate kites.

Trisno said Angkasa Pura had asked for police assistance to enforce the ban, but police officers said there was no legal basis to act on because the kite flyers "are not criminals" despite their obvious transgressions.

"We have also asked for assistance from the Tangerang Public Order Agency to help keep local residents in check, but they are running scared because residents threatened them with machetes," he said.

The airport operator has been forced to switch the usage of its runways every afternoon since June 30 because of this problem.

Every day after 3:30 p.m., the airport's left runway is used for taking off and the right runway for landing, to ensure airline safety, an official said Wednesday.

The left runway is normally used for landing and the right runway for taking off.

The Tangerang municipal administration passed the 2004 bylaw prohibiting residents from flying kites within 18 kilometers of the airport, following complaints by pilots about the safety risks posed by the kites.

Theoretically, violators face three months in jail or a fine of up to Rp 3 million.

A 1992 aviation safety law also stipulates those who endanger the safety of flights face up to 6 months in jail term or a fine amounting to Rp 16 million.

However, both regulations have proved toothless without support from law enforcement agencies.

M. Farriedh, head of Angkasa Pura's security division, said airport security had confiscated as many as 483 kites between May 5 and June 30, with residents undeterred in their quest to break the law.

"Today we seized only three kites, yesterday it was 13. Most kite flyers tie the kites to trees and watch them from a distance," he said.

"However, we will continue operations to monitor the problem around the runways until we can get to the root of the problem and create a system to curb the activity."

He said airport security had met with airport police, airport administration and the Tangerang Public Order Agency to discuss the problem on Thursday, but the meeting ended without any concrete decisions.

Air Force evicts residents

Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang, Thursday, July 10, 2008

Some 300 Air Force soldiers on Wednesday evicted families from 39 houses at the Air Force housing complex in Neglasari, Tangerang, near Soekarno-Hatta International Airport.

Those evicted were families of retired Air Force officers, who are required to vacate their official residences once they are no longer active. Another 41 houses have yet to be reclaimed, with active officers waiting in line to move to the complex and occupy the houses.

The soldiers, who began evicting occupants at 8 a.m., were met with resistance and protests.
"We are very disappointed with the forcible eviction because we have no idea where we will live now," Nini, one of those evicted, said.

She said she had lived in the house in the complex for more than 15 years, but was now forced to leave with no compensation at all.

However, Col. Mulyo Handoko, chief of operations at Halim Perdana Kusumah Air Base, who led the eviction, said the proceedings were carried out to uphold existing regulations.

"We have been very tolerant and now we are just doing our duty by removing the old occupants," he said.

He said all retired officers were required to leave their official houses because the houses were reserved for active officers.

The evicted occupants had previously filed a legal challenge to the decision at the Tangerang and East Jakarta district courts.

"The actions we are taking are in line with legal procedures. The old occupants have to leave the houses because the lawsuits they filed with the Tangerang District Court and East Jakarta District Court have been turned down," Mulyo said.

Busway, airport brace for blackouts

Mustaqim Adamrah and Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta, Tangerang
Wednesday, July 09, 2008

Busway operator TransJakarta's service will face possible disruptions during power blackouts scheduled from July 11 to July 25, says the company's operational head Rene Nunumete.

He said Tuesday the company had experienced "numerous blackouts" that left busway shelters without lights, functioning ticketing machines or sliding doors.

"Rotating blackouts apply to everyone. There's been no special treatment for public service facilities like the busways," he told reporters, adding that he has yet to receive an official announcement from state electricity firm PLN.

"Our service is affected every time PLN cuts the power supply to busway shelters."

Rene said TransJakarta would not equip busway shelters with generators needed to cope with the rotating blackouts.

"We'll use paper tickets during future blackouts, as usual," he said.

Paper tickets are in use on Corridor 4 (Pulo Gadung in East Jakarta Dukuh Atas in Central Jakarta), Corridor 5 (Kampung Melayu in East Jakarta to Ancol in North Jakarta), Corridor 6 (Ragunan in South Jakarta to Kuningan in South Jakarta) and Corridor 7 (Kampung Rambutan in East Jakarta to Kampung Melayu).

PLN Jakarta distribution manager Budi Nugroho announced last Friday the blackouts would occur every day at alternating periods, 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. and 3 to 10 p.m., in Jakarta and Tangerang.

PLN Jakarta operational director Azwar Lubis on Tuesday said PLN would try to maintain power supply for public service facilities, like hospitals and the busway.

Jakarta administrative secretary Muhayat said he would meet PLN Jakarta officials today to learn the exact schedules and locations of the blackouts.

Electricity consumption in Jakarta can reach between 4,500 megawatts (MW) and 5,000 MW during peak hours, usually between 11 a.m. and 2 p.m.

Budi said PLN had to schedule the rotating blackouts as gas supply to two of its power stations -- a 900 MW plant in Tanjung Priok and a 750 MW plant in Muara Karang, both in North Jakarta -- has been temporarily terminated.

Both stations receive gas from multinational energy giant BP, which will halt gas supply in two weeks for routine maintenance of its central flow station located offshore West Java, including the installation of a low-pressure flare tip.

Airport operator PT Angkasa Pura II's branch office head at Soekarno-Hatta International Airport, Haryanto, said he had asked PLN not to cut power supply to the airport as it was one of "the country's places of vital interest".

He said his office had prepared two generators for use in the event of possible power cuts.
"They're only able to supply 30 percent of the airport's electricity demand."

A complete schedule of blackouts and list of affected areas can be found at www.plnjaya.co.id

Water price hike too high: Council

Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang, Wednesday, July 09, 2008

Members of the Tangerang regency legislative council have asked the regency's tap water company to review its plan to increase the price of tap water by up to 30 percent, given the recent fuel price increase.

"An increase in the price of tap water will certainly increase the burden on residents. We therefore urge the water utility to review its plan to increase water prices," Burhanundin, speaker of commission C at the council, said Tuesday.

He said he understood the company, PDAM Tirta Kerta Raharja (TKR), needed to raise water prices to meet increasing operational costs, but that the increase should not be as high as 30 percent.

"The water company must also take a look at the reality of people's purchasing power. Most of the consumers are on a low income," Burhanundin, a member of the Indonesian United Party faction, said.

Another commission member, Dahyat Tunggara, said any increase, however low, would be a burden for residents.

"The increase should not be as high as 30 percent. We think any plan to increase water prices should be approved by the council even though we realize an increase in the price of water is inevitable," he said.

Neither the government's 2005 regulation on PDAM management nor the home minister's 2007 regulation gives the council any involvement in technical arrangements to set water prices.

PDAM TKR president director Maryoso said the company had yet to finalize the new water rates because his staff had not completed studies on appropriate price ranges.

"The increase in the price of water has been triggered by an increase in our operational costs because of the recent fuel price rise," he said.

He said the new water rates were likely to come into effect in October. The new rate will apply for households and industry; for consumers from social groups there will be no increase.

"We are considering increasing the price of tap water from Rp 2,100 to Rp 2,520 per cubic meter for households and from Rp 3,500 to Rp 4,500 per cubic meter for industries," he said.

He said the company also planned to increase the price of partly processed water usually sold to third parties such as Bumi Serpong Damai city, Gading Serpong housing estate and Jakarta water utility.

Maryoso said he would keep the council informed about the company's plans to increase water rates, but would not seek the council's approval.

"There is no need to ask for the council's approval to increase tap water prices," he said.

PDAM TKR produces tap water from the Cisadane river to meet the needs of 90,000 customers. One-third of its customers live in Tangerang regency and the other 60,000 are residents of Tangerang municipality.

The company is still unable to supply water to 60,000 new customers currently on a waiting list because of limited production capacity and infrastructure.

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

Plywood plant accused of polluting water

Multa Fidrus, The Jakarta Post, Tangerang, Tuesday, July 08, 2008

Dozens of residents Monday rallied to protest a plywood factory belonging to PT Sumber Griya Sentosa in Sentul Village, Tangerang, for allegedly polluting the area's ground water.

"Water in our wells has turned brownish and smelly. We believe this is because of the factory," said Lastri, a resident.

The residents, mostly housewives and children, protested at the factory's gate. They shouted, asking for the factory to be relocated. However, none of the factory management staff members appeared to meet with the protesters.

Lastri said she and other residents living around the factory could no longer consume the ground water from their wells because the water had turned dirty and smelly.

"We are also afraid of using the water for washing and bathing," she said.

The factory should never have been built in the populated residential area, she said, as it frequently causes problems. Locals want the local administration to pay attention and to tell the company to relocate the factory.

Since the factory was built in the area, residents have frequently faced difficulty getting ground water for their daily needs because the wells have dried up at times, said Mimin, another resident.

"I can't remember how many times I have had to deepen my well to get water since the factory began operating here several years ago," she said.

Factory staff members were not willing to comment when they were asked to respond to the protest.

"Our bosses are not here today and we are not authorized to speak to the press," said staff member, who requested anonymity.


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Keladi Tikus Obat Kanker

Keladi Tikus Obat Kanker

Kanker Bukan Lagi Ancaman

Penyakit kanker sudah tidak lagi jadi ancaman yang mematikan bagi kehidupan manusia sebaba para penderita kanker kini memiliki harapan hidup yang lebih lama dengan ditemukannya tanaman “Keladio Tikus” (Typhonium Flagelliforme/ Rodent Tuber) sebagai tanaman obat yang dapat menghentikan dan mengobati berbagai penyakit kanker dan berbagai penyakit berat lainnya.

Tanaman sejenis talas dengan tinggi maksimal 25 sampai 30 cm ini hanya tumbuh di semak yang tidak terkena sinar matahari langsung. “Tanaman ini sangat banyak ditemukan di Pulau Jawa,” kata Patoppoi Pasau, orang pertama yang menemukan tanaman itu di Indonesia.

Tanaman obat ini telah diteliti sejak tahun 1995 oleh Prof Chris Teo K.H, yang juga pendiri Cancer Care Penang dari Universiti Sains Malaysia. Lembaga perawatan kanker yang didirikan tahun 1995 itu telah membantu ribuan pasien dari Malaysia, Amerika, Inggris, Australia, Selandia Baru, Singapura, dan berbagai negara di dunia.

Di Indonesia, tanaman ini pertama ditemukan oleh Patoppoi di Pekalongan, Jawa Tengah. Ketika itu, istri Patoppoi mengidap kanker payudara stadium III dan harus dioperasi 14 Januari 1998. Setelah kanker ganas tersebut diangkat melalui operasi, istri Patoppoi harus menjalani kemoterapi (suntikan kimia untuk membunuh sel, Red) untuk menghentikan penyebaran sel-sel kanker tersebut.

“Sebelum menjalani kemoterapi, dokter mengatakan agar kami menyiapkan wig (rambut palsu) karena kemoterapi akan mengakibatkan kerontokan rambut, selain kerusakan kulit dan hilangnya nafsu makan,” jelas Patoppoi.
Selama mendampingi istrinya menjalani kemoterapi, Patoppoi terus berusaha mencari pengobatan alternatif sampai akhirnya dia mendapatkan informasi mengenai penggunaan teh Lin Qi di Malaysia untuk mengobati kanker.

“Saat itu juga saya langsung terbang ke Malaysiauntuk membeli teh tersebut,”ujar Patoppoi yang juga ahli biologi.

Ketika sedang berada di sebuah toko obat di Malaysia , secara tidak sengaja dia melihat dan membaca buku mengenai pengobatan kanker yang berjudul Cancer, Yet They Live karangan Dr Chris K.H. Teo terbitan 1996.

“Setelah saya baca sekilas, langsung saja saya beli buku tersebut. Begitu menemukan buku itu, saya malah tidak jadi membeli teh Lin Qi, tapi langsung pulang ke Indonesia ,” kenang Patoppoi sambil tersenyum.

Di buku itulah Patoppoi membaca khasiat typhonium flagelliforme itu. Berdasarkan pengetahuannya di bidang biologi, pensiunan pejabat Departemen Pertanian ini langsung menyelidiki dan mencari tanaman tersebut. Setelah menghubungi beberapa koleganya di berbagai tempat, familinya di Pekalongan Jawa Tengah, balas menghubunginya.

Ternyata, mereka menemukan tanaman itu di sana. Setelah mendapatkan tanaman tersebut dan mempelajarinya lagi, Patoppoi menghubungi Dr. Teo di Malaysia untuk menanyakan kebenaran tanaman yang ditemukannya itu.

Selang beberapa hari, Dr Teo menghubungi Patoppoi dan menjelaskan bahwa tanaman tersebut memang benar Rodent Tuber. “Dr Teo mengatakan agar tidak ragu lagi untuk menggunakannya sebagai obat,” lanjut Patoppoi.

Akhirnya, dengan tekad bulat dan do’a untuk kesembuhan, Patoppoi mulai memproses tanaman tersebut sesuai dengan langkah-langkah pada buku tersebut untuk diminum sebagai obat.

Kemudian Patoppoi menghubungi putranya, Boni Patoppoi di Buduran, Sidoarjo untuk ikut mencarikan tanaman tersebut. “Setelah melihat ciri-ciri tanaman tersebut, saya mulai mencari di pinggir sungai depan rumah dan langsung saya dapatkan tanaman tersebut tumbuh liar di pinggir sungai,” kata Boni yang mendampingi ayahnya saat itu.

Selama mengkonsumsi sari tanaman tersebut, isteri Patoppoi mengalami penurunan efek samping kemoterapi yang dijalaninya. Rambutnya berhenti rontok, kulitnya tidak rusak dan mual-mual hilang. “Bahkan nafsu makan ibu saya pun kembali normal,” lanjut Boni.

Setelah tiga bulan meminum obat tersebut, isteri Patoppoi menjalani pemeriksaan kankernya. “Hasil pemeriksaan negatif, dan itu sungguh mengejutkan kami dan dokter-dokter di Jakarta ,” kata Patoppoi.

Para dokter itu kemudian menanyakan kepada Patoppoi, apa yang diberikan pada isterinya. “Malah mereka ragu, apakah mereka telah salah memberikan dosis kemoterapi kepada kami,” lanjut Patoppoi.

Setelah diterangkan mengenai kisah tanaman Rodent Tuber, para dokter pun mendukung Pengobatan tersebut dan menyarankan agar mengembangkannya. Apalagi melihat keadaan isterinya yang tidak mengalami efek samping kemoterapi yang sangat keras tersebut. Dan pemeriksaan yang seharusnya tiga bulan sekali diundur menjadi enam bulan sekali.

”Tetapi karena sesuatu hal, para dokter tersebut tidak mau mendukung secara terang-terangan penggunaan tanaman sebagai pengobatan alternatif,” sambung Boni sambil tertawa.

Setelah beberapa lama tidak berhubungan, berdasarkan peningkatan keadaan isterinya, pada bulan April 1998, Patoppoi kemudian menghubungi Dr.Teo melalui fax untuk menginformasik an bahwa tanaman tersebut banyak terdapat di Jawa dan mengajak Dr. Teo untuk menyebarkan penggunaan tanaman ini di Indonesia .

Kemudian Dr . Teo langsung membalas fax kami, tetapi mereka tidak tahu apa yang harus mereka perbuat, karena jarak yang jauh,” sambung Patoppoi. Meskipun Patoppoi mengusulkan agar buku mereka diterjemahkan dalam bahasa Indonesia dan disebar-luaskan di Indonesia.

Dr. Teo menganjurkan agar kedua belah pihak bekerja sama dan berkonsentrasi dalam usaha nyata membantu penderita kanker di Indonesia. Kemudian, pada akhir Januari 2000 saat Jawa Pos mengulas habis mengenai meninggalnya Wing Wiryanto, salah satu wartawan handal Jawa Pos, Patoppoi sempat tercengang.

Data-data rinci mengenai gejala, penderitaan, pengobatan yang diulas di Jawa Pos, ternyata sama dengan salah satu pengalaman pengobatan penderita kanker usus yang dijelaskan di buku tersebut.

Dan eksperimen pengobatan tersebut berhasil menyembuhkan pasien tersebut. “Lalu saya langsung menulis di kolom Pembaca Menulis di Jawa Pos,” ujar Boni. Dan tanggapan yang diterimanya benar-benar diluar dugaan. Dalam sehari, bisa sekitar 30 telepon yang masuk. “Sampai saat ini, sudah ada sekitar 300 orang yang datang ke sini,” lanjut Boni yang beralamat di Jl. KH. Khamdani, Buduran Sidoarjo.

Pasien pertama yang berhasil adalah penderita Kanker Mulut Rahim stadium dini. Setelah diperiksa, dokter mengatakan harus dioperasi. Tetapi karena belum memiliki biaya dan sambil menunggu rumahnya laku dijual untuk biaya operasi, mereka datang setelah membaca Jawa Pos.

Setelah diberi tanaman dan cara meminumnya, tidak lama kemudian pasien tersebut datang lagi dan melaporkan bahwa dia tidak perlu dioperasi, karena hasil pemeriksaan mengatakan negatif.
Berdasarkan animo masyarakat sekitar yang sangat tinggi, Patoppoi berusaha untuk menemui Dr. Teo secara langsung. Atas bantuan Direktur Jenderal Pengawasan Obat dan Makanan Departemen Kesehatan, Sampurno, Patoppoi dapat menemui Dr. Teo di Penang. Di kantor Pusat Cancer Care Penang, Malaysia , Patoppoi mendapat penerangan lebih lanjut mengenai riset tanaman yang saat ditemukan memiliki nama Indonesia .

Ternyata saat Patoppoi mendapat buku “Cancer, Yet They Live” edisi revisi tahun 1999, fax yang dikirimnya di masukkan dalam buku tersebut, serta pengalaman isterinya dalam usahanya berperang melawan kanker. Dari pembicaraan mereka, Dr. Teo merekomendasi agar Patoppoi mendirikan perwakilan Cancer Care di Jakarta dan Surabaya.

Maka secara resmi, Patoppoi dan putranya diangkat sebagai perwakilan lembaga sosial Cancer Care Indonesia , yang juga disebutkan dalam buletin bulanan Cancer Care, yaitu di Jl. Kayu Putih 4 No. 5, Jakarta , telp. 021-4894745, dan di Buduran, Sidoarjo.

Cancer Care Malaysia telah mengembangkan bentuk pengobatan tersebut secara lebih canggih. Mereka telah memproduksi ekstrak Keladi Tikus dalam bentuk pil dan teh bubuk yang dikombinasikan dengan berbagai tananaman lainnya dengan dosis tertentu. Sumber (Milis Alumni Smandel)

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