The Southeast Asian Times
NEWS FOR NORTHERN AUSTRALIA AND SOUTHEAST ASIA
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established 2000
Wednesday, January 16, 2013
GATHERINGS:
An informed guide to happenings throughout the region.
 


Schools must close, says judge
From News Reports:

Jakarta, January 16: Indonesia Chief Justice Mohammad Mahfud insists that all international-standard pilot project schools and international-standard schools must close by April in accordance with a Constitutional Court ruling for their disbandment.
The Education Ministry had been given a four-month deadline to close all the schools, The Jakarta Post quotes him as saying during a news conference in the capital on Sunday.
The Constitutional Court ruled earlier this month that Article 50 (3) of the 2003 National Educational System Law, which governs the implementation of the programme, was unconstitutional and, therefore illegal because the schools provided unequal access to quality education.
Education and Culture Minister Mohammad Nuh had said that he was confident that the ruling was applicable only to public schools.
But the Chief Justice said that all schools in the programme, public or private, had to be shut down. “The article [in the law] does not mention private or state schools,” he said.
The Southeast Asian Times


Malaysia plans construction court

From News Reports:
Putrajaya, January 15: The Malaysia government will create a dedicated construction court in Kuala Lumpur and Shah Alam, the Bernama news agency quotes Chief Justice Arifin Zakaria as saying at the opening of the 2013 legal year.
“Construction cases are unique as they involve technical issues, multiple parties and varying terms of payment,” he told about 400 judges, lawyers and court officials who attended the opening ceremony at the Palace of Justice.
“Thus, a specialised construction court would be beneficial to the industry,” he said.
“By having specialised judges, it will help in the speedy disposal of such cases.”
The chief justice said the new court was among several initiatives to enhance performance and work quality.
The Southeast Asian Times

Churches agree Allah is God for Malay Christians

From News Reports:
Kuala Lumpur, January 14: The Malaysia Council of Churches will continue to use the word “Allah” for “God” in the Malay version of the Bible, says its general secretary Dr Hermen Shastri in statement issued after a three-day Ipoh retreat that ended Thursday.
Malaysian Christians have been using the word in their Malay Bible and devotional life for centuries, says the statement.
“Also, many indigenous communities in our nation have incorporated this word in their everyday language,” it says.
“That being the case, we shall continue this practice, and call on all parties to respect this fundamental right” and “guaranteed Article 11 of the Federal Constitution which addresses freedom of religion.
The Sultan of Selangor Sultan Sharafuddin Idris Shah issued a decree last Tuesday that bars non-Muslims in the State from using “Allah” as a substitute for “God” because, he argued, it was a sacred word exclusive to Muslims.
The Southeast Asian Times

Corridor created for elephants

From News Reports:
Kota Kinabalu, January 13: A corridor has been created between Segaliud Lokan-Deramakot and the Malua Forest Reserve to allow easier access for about 300 pygmy elephants.
The Star newspaper quotes Borneo Conservation Trust conservation and research programme director Raymond
Alfred as saying a 10-month study had found that the riverine forest was the key habitat for elephants in Sabah.
"The movement patterns of the elephants are unique, emphasising the importance of the riverine forest and a logging road as their main migratory path, from one forest compartment to another," he said.
"The research team had also found that the main tree species used by the orang utans (either for food sources or shelter) are pioneer species, or hardy species which are the first to colonise previously disrupted or damaged ecosystems.
"Thus, the restoration programme that is being carried out in this area will also improve the density and diversity of the tree species," said the director.
The Southeast Asian Times


Governor’s help for new embassy sought
From News Reports:
Jakarta, January 11: Australia Ambassador to Indonesia Greg Moriarty is seeking the support of newly-elected Jakarta Governor Joko “Jokowi” Widodo for the construction of a new mega embassy in the mega city, reports The Jakarta Post.
The newspaper says the envoy met with the governor at City Hall on Tuesday as members of the Islamist Hizbut Tahrir, The Party of Liberation, Indonesia, rallied outside to demand the governor reject permission from the United States government to enlarge its embassy in Jakarta.
“We very much look forward to working with him in the future, including plans to build a new Australian Embassy in Jakarta, which will be the largest Australian Embassy anywhere in the world,” the newspaper quotes the ambassador as having told reporters after the meeting.
The new embassy complex would be built on a 40,500-square-metre in Patra Kuningan, South Jakarta – a block from the existing Australian Embassy.
Some of the land was bought from a private company with the rest bought from the city administration.
The embassy announced in September that the joint venture, Leighton Contractors Indonesia and Total Bangun Persada, had won the $241 million contract to build the new complex.
Nine Indonesians were killed and 180 injured when a bomb exploded outside the embassy gates in 2004.
The Southeast Asian Times


Refugee camp becomes a museum

From News Reports:
Batam, January 11: The Batam municipal government in the Riau Islands has reopened the former camp for Vietnamese fleeing Saigon after the city fell to liberation forces to end the American War in Indochina in 1974 as a museum for tourists.
“The renovation is part of maintenance, the Antara news agency quotes Batam City Tourism Board director Yusfa Hendri as saying about the “museum” on Galang Island on Sunday.
“Now many tourists will visit the museum, especially at the weekend or on national holidays,” he said.
The renovation was of structures the then Indonesian government of President Soeharto had built in cooperation with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, UNHCR, in 1975.
These included an administrative office, school and residence.
But the Maria Immaculate Church was among the buildings in need of repair.
The former camp is about 70 kilometres from the downtown of Batam.
The Southeast Asian Times


Veteran Viet Nam diplomat assumes Asean post

From News Reports:
Jakarta, January 10: Veteran Viet Nam diplomat Le Luong Minh, 61, began his five-year term as Association of Southeast Asian Nations, Asean, Secretary General yesterday.
The former deputy foreign minister, who joined the Foreign Service in 1975 and studied at Viet Nam’s Institute of Foreign Affairs as well as the Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, succeeds Thailand’s Surin Pitsuwan.
Le Luong Minh represented Viet Nam at the United Nations for more than eight years and was Security Council chairman in 2008 and 2009.
The Southeast Asian Times


Abu Bakar Ba’asyir publishes book from prison

From News Reports:
Jakarta, January 9: Militant Islamic clergyman Abu Bakar Ba’asyir, 74, published a book from prison on Sunday.
The 176-page publication says: “The rulers have to replace the law of the land, the positive law of the Unitary State of Indonesia, with sharia.”
The clergyman is in the maximum security prison on Nusakambangan Island off the coast of Cilacap, Central Java.
The Indonesian Supreme Court reinstated in February last June the 15-year-jail sentence three judges of the South Jakarta District Court ordered him to serve in June 2011 after they found him guilty of organising acts of terror.
The Jakarta High Court reduced the sentence to nine years in October the same year and the reinstatement of the original sentence followed the Muslim cleric’s appeal against the verdict and punishment and the prosecution’s appeal against its supposed leniency.
Abu Bakar Ba'asyir was accused of planning and persuading people to support a military-style training facility on Jantho Mountain, Aceh, and having collected rupiah 350 million, about US$ 41,000, from two donors, Haryadi Usman, rupiah 150 million, and Syarif Usman rupiah 200 million.
The cleric was originally charged with “mobilising people for acts of terror,”- a charge that carries the death penalty - and the armed robbing of Bank CIMB Niaga, Medan.
Arrested after the discovery of a paramilitary training camp in Aceh, northern Sumatra, in February last year, he denied the charges.
This was the third effort to have Abu Bakar Ba'asyir convicted for “terrorism” since 2000 although he served almost 26 months in jail before he won his appeal in 2006 against his conviction for conspiracy following the Bali bombings of 2002 in which more than 200 people, most of them Australians, died.
The cleric was the rector of the Al-Mukmin Islamic boarding school in Ngruki, Central Java, and members of Detachment 88, the Indonesian police's counterterrorism unit, arrested him at Ciamis, West Java.
The Southeast Asian Times

Look East secretariat sought
From News Reports:
Kuala Lumpur, January 8: The Malaysia government should appoint a secretariat to coordinate policies and programmes following its decision to continue with the Look East policy that former Prime Minister Dr Mahathir Mohammad argues Malaysia-Japan Economic Association secretary-general Mohammad Iqbal Rawther.
The secretariat would help refine and broaden the policy to spearhead the country's aspiration to become a developed nation, The New Straits Times quotes him as saying.
“There is a need to coordinate the policy and programmes under a single entity with a strong secretariat,” he said.
The policy, implemented in 1982, was initially aimed at encouraging Malaysia to embrace the work principles of such countries as Japan and South Korea, and transform the economy from agriculture to industry.
The International Trade and Industry and the Malaysian Investment Development Authority co-hosted a conference dealing with Malaysia’s Look East Policy and titled “A New Dimension” at the Istana Hotel, Kuala Lumpur, in October.
The gathering coincided with the Malaysia-Japan Economic Association and the Japan-Malaysia Economic Association’s 31st Joint Conference.
“The Look East Policy involves the study of policy, research and selection of examples from Japan pertaining to their culture and value system, including discipline, work ethics and patriotism,” said Malaysia Investment Development Authority Chief Executive Officer Noharuddin Nordin.
The Southeast Asian Times

Muslims discuss religious intolerance
From News Reports:
Kuala Lumpur, January 7: The Organisation of Islamic Cooperation was to have held a meeting with eminent lawyers and human-rights specialists in Istanbul yesterday and today to address religious intolerance against Muslims, reports the Bernama news agency.
OIC Secretary-General Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu would open the meeting, the newsagency quotes the organisation as saying in a statement issued last Thursday.
The Council of Islamic Foreign Ministers had decided to hold the meeting at their meeting in Djibouti in November, it said.
Their resolution required the secretary general to create a committee of eminent people to advise OIC member States about international law and to combat discrimination and intolerance against Muslims.
The results of the meeting will be presented at the 12th Islamic Summit in Cairo in February.
The Southeast Asian Times


State funeral for decorated Dayak

From News Reports:
Kuching, January 6: The Malaysian Armed Forces most decorated soldier, Temenggong Kanang anak Langkau, of the Iban Dayak community, Sarawak, will be given a State funeral with military honours in Sarawak today.
The veteran, who was 68, died in the Sarawak General Hospital on Thursday after he collapsed while watching television at residence in Sg Apong.
He fought alongside British, Australian and New Zealand troops in the Konfrontasi campaign of 1962 and in Perak during the “second Malaysian emergency” in 1981.
His last posting was as a Warrant Officer 1 in the 8th battalion Royal Rangers Regiment; he retired in 1982.
He was awarded the Panglima Gagah Berani and Seri Pahlawan Gagah Perkasa medals from the Yang di-Pertuan Agong, Sultan Ahmad Shah, on June, 3, 1981.
The Bernama news agency quotes Defence Minister Dr Ahmad Zahid Hamidi as saying Prime Minister Najib Abdul Razak had given instructions that he be given a State funeral.
The Southeast Asian Times

Leftist flag removed at New Year celebration
From News Reports:
Kuala Lumpur, January 5: Police removed the leftist Sang Saka flag when it was flown near Dataran Merdeka on New Year’s Eve.
Several people also flew the red, white and yellow “Bendera Rakyat” at the stroke of midnight, reports The Star newspaper.
Supporter of the Sang Saka Mohammed Haizal Yatiran, 28, told the newspaper the flag was to recognise the contributions of leftist groups in fighting for then Malaya’s independence.
“People don’t know about this flag, so I guess some got a shock when they saw it and assumed it was a Communist flag. We have absolutely no intention of wanting to change the Jalur Gemilang,” he said.
“I think people don’t know history. They should refer to the true version of events from a historian. Which side of history are they talking about?” he asked.
The All Malaya Council of Joint Action introduced the Sang Saka Malaya in 1947 as the proposed national flag.
The Jalur Gemilang is the official flag of Malaysia.
Police detained two youths for possible violation of Section 9(1) of the Sedition Act after the waving of the red and white Malay Sang Saka flag at the Dataran Merdeka on the eve of Malaysia’s 55th Independence Day celebration, August 30, was submitted to the attorney-general.
Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak described any attempt replace the national the Jalur Gemilang with a new flag as a disgraceful act amounting to treason.
The Southeast Asian Times


Indonesian diaspora seeks own electorate

From News Reports:
Jakarta, January 4: The about 4.4 million Indonesia citizens living abroad have demanded a separate electoral district, reports The Jakarta Post.
Their votes are now pooled for the seven-seat Jakarta II electoral district, which covers Central and South Jakarta, it says.
The proposal for a separate electoral district was raised during the first Congress of the Indonesian Diaspora in Los Angeles earlier this year.
The newspaper quotes Ilhamsyah Abdul Manan, a native of Medan who now lives in Georgia, the United States, as saying last Thursday that Indonesians living abroad had their own interests that differed from those of voters in the Jakarta II district.
“We are facing problems different from those the people in Jakarta deal with,” he said.
Migrant Care representative Wahyu Susilo said the parliamentarians representing the Jakarta II district had never listened to members of the Indonesian diaspora.
“And none of them are members of the House’s Commission I overseeing foreign affairs, nor Commission IX overseeing labour issues,” he said.
“So How can they really represent us, especially migrant workers who account for 80 to 90 percent of Indonesian people living abroad?” he asked.
The Southeast Asian Times

Indonesia seeks China expansion

From News Reports:
Beijing, January 3: Indonesia ambassador to China and Mongolia Imron Cotan has designated 2012 as the year for his country to extend its “footprint” in China, reports the Antara news agency.
“China has cultures as varied as that of Indonesia,” he said.
However, the Indonesian footprint in China was relatively small compared with that of China in Indonesia, he said in Beijing on Monday.
The Southeast Asian Times


East meets West for Christmas

From News Reports:
Atambua, January 2: The number of people crossing the border between Indonesia West Timor and East Timor for family visits during the Christmas –New Year has risen sharply, reports the Antara news agency
About 600 people were crossing the border each day at Mota'ain, about 118 kilometres west of Dili, each day.
The usual figure is about 200.
The United-Nations 13-year integrated peacekeeping mission in newly-independent East Timor ended New Year’s Eve.
The 1,500-strong mission began withdrawing troops in October when East Timor police resumed responsibility for security, following the election of a new president and parliament.
The United Nations organised the 1999 referendum that ended Indonesia’s 24-year occupation of East Timor in which around 183,000 people — then a quarter of the population — died.
The Southeast Asian Times


Peacekeepers farewell East Timor
From News Reports:
Dili, January 1: The United-Nations 13-year integrated peacekeeping mission in newly-independent East Timor ended yesterday.
The 1,500-strong mission began withdrawing troops in October when East Timor police resumed responsibility for security, following the election of a new president and parliament.
The United Nations organised the 1999 referendum that ended Indonesia’s 24-year occupation of East Timor in which around 183,000 people — then a quarter of the population — died.
It oversaw East Timor until 2002 and returned in 2006, when desertion from the armed forces prompted fighting between military factions and police and street violence left at least 37 people dead and tens of thousands displaced.
The violence prompted the resignation of first Prime Minister Mari Alkatiri and the emasculation of his Fretilin government.
Its instigators have never been identified.
The Southeast Asian Times


Read the letters to The Southeast Asian Times...open here


The Southeast Asian Times regrets to inform its readers that the editor, John Loizou, passed away suddenly late Wednesday night.
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Soldiers ordered to halt protest against Thai newspaper
Soldiers gather outside the ASTV Manager headquarters in Bangkok to demand the newspaper apologise to Army chief of staff Prayuth Chan-ocha, 58, for its denunciation of the general
From News Reports:
Bangkok, January 16: Thai army chief of staff Prayuth Chan-ocha, 58, has ordered his soldiers to halt their demonstrations outside the office of the ASTV Manager Daily newspaper office in Bangkok.
About 50 soldiers of the First Army Region rallied outside the media conglomerate’s office on Phra Arthit Road on Friday and 30 on Saturday to demand an apology from the newspaper.
The soldiers objected to the newspaper’s denunciation of the army chief of staff.
General Prayuth Chan-ocha had thanked his men for protecting the dignity of the army but ordered all unit commanders to stop the protest against the newspaper, The Bangkok Post quotes army spokesperson Colonel Sansern Kaewkumnerd as saying.
“The army commander would like all soldiers to stop going to ASTV Manager and to end their action,” he said.
It was also reported that some army personnel had barred reporters of ASTV-Manager and its satellite TV station from reporting from inside military compounds.
General Prayuth Chan-ocha said earlier that the men were standing up for the army and not for him personally.
Senior People's-Alliance-for-Democracy, Yellow Shirt, coordinator Sondhi Limthongkul founded ASTV Manager which has declared Prayuth Chan-ocha a failure for his role in the territorial dispute with Cambodia over the surrounds of the historic Preah Vihear Hindu Temple and the continuing violence in Muslim southern Thailand.
The Bangkok Post quotes First Army Region Lieutenant General Paiboon Khumchaya as saying he gave the soldiers permission to gather at the newspaper offices and denied that the army was threatening the media.
“Those soldiers just wanted to express their opinion. They did not threaten (ASTV Manager)," he said.
The Southeast Asian Times

Exchange of Thai nationalists jailed in Cambodia sought
From News Reports:
Bangkok, January 16: The Justice Ministry will seek to have jailed Thai nationalists - Veera Somkwamkid and Ratree Pipattana-Paiboon. - exchanged for two Cambodian prisoners, reports The Nation newspaper.
It quotes Corrections Department deputy director-general Korbkiat Kasiwiwat as saying that while those detained for espionage were normally not included in a prisoner exchange,- negotiations between diplomats, Justice Ministry representatives, the police, the Office of the Attorney-General and officials of the Criminal Court were continuing.
Justice permanent secretary Kittiphong Kittayarak was chair of the talks, he said.
The deputy director-general said that as Ratree Pipattana-Paiboon had served one-third of her sentence in Cambodia and been given a royal pardon, she was now eligible to return to Thailand.
And although Veera Somkwamkid sentence had been reduced by six months, he had yet to serve a third of his eight-year sentence.
The Cambodia Foreign Ministry has issued a statement saying the Justice Ministry has responded to Prime Minister Hun Sen's instruction to reduce the prison term for Veera Somkwamkid and to provide a royal pardon to Ratree Pipattana-paiboon.
The statement says Thai Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra had asked the Cambodia prime minister to consider pardoning the two imprisoned Thais during the Asean Summit in Phnom Penh in November.
Thailand-Patriots-Network member Veera Somkwamkid and his secretary Ratree Pipapatana-paiboon dropped their appeals against their jail sentences for “collecting information which might damage Cambodia's national security” in December 2011.
Phnom Penh Municipal Court judge Suos Sam Ath sent the former People’s Alliance for Democracy, or Yellow Shirt, coordinator jail for eight years and fined him riel 1.8 million riel, about US$ 454.321, the previous February.
His secretary was sentenced to six years in jail.
The two in jail were arrested together with five other Thai nationals, including Democratic Party member for Bangkok in the House of Representatives Panich Vikitsreth Democrat Panich Vikitsreth while inspecting the border near Sa Kaew province's Ban Nongchan.
The MP and four others were repatriated to Thailand after Phnom Penh Municipal Court judges found them guilty, sentenced them to nine months in jail; fined them rial one million, US$247.5 for trespass and then set them free.
The Southeast Asian Times


Perak squatter families given title to disused railway land
Muniandy Parsuraman, Adnan Khamal and Nadarajah Parsuraman and Chew Kim Meng receive title for railway land on which trains stopped running in 1941 from Perak Menteri Besar, or Chief Minister, Dr Zambry Abdul Kadir, at Simpang Halt, Taiping, on Sunday
From News Reports:
Taiping, January 15: The Perak government has awarded title to more than 94.5hectares of railway land to 643 squatter families in Kuala Sepetang, formerly Port Weld, after the Railway Asset Corporation agreed to surrender it to the State without charge.
Negotiations for the land started two years ago and initially the corporation wanted ringgit 35 million, almost US$11.6million, for it, reports The New Straits Times.
The Perak cabinet had approved tile of the land for the families and other owners of premises, including 12 religious buildings, on January 27, 2010, it says.
The newspaper quotes Perak Menteri Besar, or Chief Minister, Dr Zambry Abdul Kadir as saying while presenting land titles to about some 30 squatters at Simpang Halt on Sunday that more than 60 per cent of the families had now received land titles from the government.
“All squatter families occupying the railway reserve land between Kuala Sepetang and Taiping will be receiving their land titles in stages, which are expected to be completed this year,” he said.
The land has not been used for railway operations since 1941.
A railway from Port Weld to Taiping via passing Jebong and Simpang Halt began service on February 1, 1885.
The Southeast Asian Times

Indonesia government approves limited anti-tobacco regulations
From News Reports:
Jakarta, January 15: President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has signed into law regulations that will require cigarette packets to carry photographic warnings and bans the use of such terms as “mild” and “light” for tobacco products.
But the regulations posted on a government website late Wednesday continue to allow most forms of advertising.
Tobacco companies will have 18 months to implement them, says The Jakarta Post.
The newspaper quotes Coordinating People’s Welfare Minister Agung Laksono as saying the tobacco regulations effective from Monday, December 24, were aimed at protecting consumers from tobacco-related disease.
“Certain groups think the regulations will affect tobacco farmers and industry. I tell you such thinking is not true; it’s baseless,” the minister told a news conference at the Communications and Information Ministry in Jakarta last Friday.
“We just want to regulate smoking so that vulnerable groups, such as underage children, don’t get into the unhealthy habit of smoking cigarettes,” he said of the regulation that includes eight chapters and 65 articles.
The People’s Representative Council’s decision to make the tobacco bill a priority for 2013 at its final plenary session of the year last month prompted immediate objections.
Tobacco-control-commission member Hakim Sorimuda Pohan questioned the seeming rush to deliberate the bill without public consultation.
“Every bill must be proposed with a draft and academic documents,” he said.
“But the tobacco bill has only a name. We don’t know the purpose of the bill,” said the physician and former parliamentarian at a news conference less than two hours after the plenary session.
The Jakarta Post says both the tobacco control commission and the Consumers Protection Foundation worry that the bill will protect the country’s tobacco industry because it was initially proposed by the Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle with the support from the Indonesian Tobacco Society Alliance.
The parliament has previously rejected two bills designed to deal with tobacco.
The World Health Organisation estimates that Indonesia has 57.6 million male smokers — the world’s third-highest total — and 2.3 million female smokers.
About 70 percent are from low-income groups.
The Indonesia government was paid rupiah 77 trillion, about US$7.98 billion, in tobacco taxes last year but the Health Ministry estimates the yearly economic losses and health costs from smoking-associated diseases at rupiah 245.4 trillion.
An estimated 7,000 tobacco farmers rallied outside the Health Ministry in Kuningan, South Jakarta, in July against proposed Tobacco Impact Control legislation that would require cigarette packs in Indonesia to carry a graphic warning on their cover, limit tobacco advertising and regulate smoking in buildings.
About 250 police officers deployed to maintain order.
The Southeast Asian Times


People’s Action Party faces challenge in January 26 by-election
Singapore Democratic Party's chairman Jufrie Mahmood, left, and its secretary Dr Chee Soon Juan, right, speak at news conference in late December. The public has spurned the party’s suggestion that it join with the Singapore Workers Party to campaign for the single-member Punggol East constituency by-election on Saturday, January 26
From News Reports:
Singapore, January 14: Nominations for the single-member Punggol East constituency will close on Wednesday with the minority Singapore Workers Party; the Singapore Democratic Alliance, which stood a candidate in 2011, the Reform Party and Singapore Democratic Party all likely to challenge the candidate for the ruling People’s Action Party for a place in parliament.
The Straits Times suggests that its occasional contributor, former People’s-Action- Party-member and Christian business consultancy I-deo Asia Limited managing director Benjamin Pwee, has also expressed his intention to stand as a candidate.
Three candidates contested the 31,649-strong north-eastern Singapore constituency in the 2011 general election but there will be 1,632 fewer voters this time.
The Singapore Democratic Party’s proposed a joint campaign with the Workers Party for the election has not won the support of the electorate and its secretary Dr Chee Soon Juan argued at news briefing on Saturday night that the public, particularly “net citizens,” had misinterpreted the proposal.
“People must understand that we want to make sure that we avoid a three-cornered fight any way we can,” he said.
The Workers Party, which ended the May 7 selection with six seats in parliament - the best result against the People’s Action Party since Singapore’s independence from Britain, has spurned the Democratic Party proposal and will focus on its own campaign.
The Southeast Asian Times

HIV/AIDS infections jump in Java’s industrial hub Tangerang
From News Reports:
Tangerang, January 14: The Tangerang HIV/AIDS prevention and mitigation agency identified at least 675 new infections in their Banten regency, about 25 kilometres west of Jakarta, between January and September last year.
“The spread of HIV in the regency has reached a worrying level because the majority of infected people are in their most productive years,” The Jakarta Post quotes agency manager Hady Irawan as having told reporters last Wednesday.
The significant increase of infection was within people aged between 24-45, he said.
“These figures are just the tip of the iceberg.
“Not everyone is willing to be tested,” he said.
The statistics did not include data collected between September and December.
The agency figures show that 1,515 people in the regency living with HIV in 2012 – with 214 suffering from fully developed AIDS.
The total of those suffering from fully developed AIDS in 2011 was 146.
The agency had previously suspected the virus was spread through needle sharing by intravenous drug users, but most infections found in the Kosambi district were due to unsafe sex. The district includes the red-light district.
The number of sex workers in the regency was growing by between 500 and 650 each year.
“The problem we now face is lack of officers to identify new HIV infections, said agency manager Hady Irawan.
“We don’t have enough volunteers to support people with HIV.”
The Jakarta Post reports that the capital’s administrators have taken blood samples from 187 street sex workers in a bid to curb the spread of HIV/AIDS in the municipality.
“We take blood samples in separate joint operations with the Public Order Agency to find out whether or not they have contracted HIV,” it quotes communicable diseases prevention unit at the South Tangerang Health Agency director M. Rusmin as saying on Thursday.
The Indonesia Health Ministry had instructed all local offices across the country to take at least 200 blood samples in each region.
The samples would be sent to the ministry’s laboratory for tests.
“Those who tested positive for HIV, we must place them in a quarantine centre for medication and education on HIV/AIDS,” the director said.
The Southeast Asian Times


700 Rohingya Muslims face deportation
Rohingya at a temporary shelter at a rubber plantation near the Thai- Malaysia border 700 Stateless Rohingya Muslims face deportation from southern Thailand
From News Reports:
Bangkok, January 13: Seven-hundred-and-four Rohingya Muslims found in Songkhla province on the Malay Peninsular, about 984 kilometres south of Bangkok after entering Thailand illegally, will be deported to Myanmar, the province’s deputy police chief Colonel Krissakorn Paleetunyawong has told the Reuters news agency.
“These illegal migrants have been handed over to immigration authorities and will be deported back to Burma,” he said.
Police and government officials found 307 Rohingyat - 230 men, 31 women, 22 boys and 24 girls –in a warehouse in Ban Dan Nok, in the province’s Sadao district on the Thai-Malaysian border, on Friday.
Almost 400 Rohingya, including 14 children and 8 women, were found at a rubber plantation at Ban Chaikhuan Thungmaiduan, near the border town of Pedang Besar, Songkhla province, on Thursday.
They had reportedly been at the plantation for about three months.
The Bangkok Post says the Rohingya told police they were waiting to go to Malaysia. There each was to be sold off for baht 60,000, about US$ 1,981, to baht 70,000 to work on fishing boats.
They were apparently the remainder of about 2,000 that Thai and Myanmar traffickers had brought into Thailand on 10-wheeled trucks via Ranong – the Andaman-Sea border port on the west coast of Thailand about 377 kilometres to the north.
“The Rohingyas were en route to Malaysia and the camp we found was used as a holding facility by middlemen paid to facilitate their journey,” The Nation newspaper quotes Lieutenant Colonel Katika Jitbanjong of Padang Besar police station as saying.
The Bangkok Post quotes Songkhla deputy police Chief Colonel Krisakorn Pleethanyawong as saying eight people - four Myanmar nationals, two Rohingya and two Thais – had been detained after the second group of illegal immigrants was discovered.
The eight had been charged with people trafficking, sheltering people illegally and possessions of firearms, he said.
Police would also summon two suspects for questioning, including Padang Besar deputy mayor Prasit Lemlae, who owned the rubber plantation where the Rohingya were found on Thursday.
One-hundred-and-twenty-seven of the Stateless Muslims from Rakhine province on the southwest coast of Myanmar – were arrested in southern Thailand and returned to Ranong after police stopped a convoy of five minivans at a checkpoint in southern Satun province on Monday, December 24, bound for the border crossing to Malaysia at Padang Besar.
The first two vehicles each contained 22 men and boys – the youngest was ten - and the drivers of the other three minivans fled.
Brokers on the Thai-Malaysia border are known to systematically transfer the displaced Muslims south from hidden camps in Thailand with the connivance of officials in both countries.
The Bangkok Post quotes and unidentified Thai intelligence officer as saying at least 3,000 Rohingya travel through Thailand to Malaysia, usually Kelantan, each year.
This figure did not include those who move by land.
Most work as day labourers, mainly at rubber and palm plantations across the region. Many Rohingya have also gone to the Middle East, especially Saudi Arabia. Some have been naturalised in their adopted countries.
In December, the Singapore government refused to allow a Viet Nam cargo vessel to dock with 40 Rohingya who survived a sinking in the Bay of Bengal of Wednesday, December 5 when 200-250 people are thought to have drowned.
The Malaysia government, which hosts an estimated 24,000 Rohingya, later provided the 40 shipwreck survivors with sanctuary.
The United Nations General Assembly approved a consensus a non-binding resolution on Monday, December 24, that expresses “particular concern about the situation of the Rohingya minority in Rakhine state, urges the Myanmar government to take action to bring about an improvement in their situation and to protect all their human rights, including their right to a nationality.”
But Iran parliamentarian Mehrdad Baouj-Lahouti dismissed the non-binding resolutions as ineffective.
The United Nations must abandon double-standards to deal with global human rights violations, he said.
The Rohingya are probably Muslim descendants of Persian, Turkish, Bengali, and Pathan origin, who migrated to Myanmar as early as the 8th century.
The Southeast Asian Times

Spy agency monitoring of new Indonesian bird flu
From News Reports:
Jakarta, January 13: The National Intelligence Agency will monitor the outbreak of a new strain of avian influenza in Indonesia.
“My agency has been closely watching this phenomenon since the beginning,” The Jakarta Post quotes agency director Lieutenant General Marciano Norman as telling reporters at the presidential palace last Thursday.
“We have to stay alert, as the global development of biological weapons is very fast,” he said.
The new strain, identified as H5N1 clade 2.3.2, is reported to have killed tens of thousands of ducks throughout Indonesia.
Although the director quelled speculation that the new strain was a biological attack, he warned: “In the future, a biological attack will be frequently used in wars.
“We are closely monitoring developments. But we can’t jump to conclusions without strong evidence. We are asking relevant agencies to look into the new strain of the virus more closely, and we will support their efforts.”
Coordinating Political, Legal, and Security Affairs Minister Djoko Suyanto told the briefing that that there were possibilities that the new strain of the virus had been “engineered” and several government agencies were investigating it
“We have formed a team to look into it. The team comprises the intelligence agency and the Health Ministry, among others,” he said.
The Jakarta Post reported on Thursday, December 27, that tests at the Yogyakarta Veterinary Centre had found that a new strain of the H5N1 virus had killed thousands of ducks in Yogyakarta, Central Java, and East Java.
The centre’s epidemiologist Putut Djoko Purnomo said: “There have been reports of sudden chicken deaths, but we are still examining if they were caused by the new virus.”
The scientist said Indonesia did not yet have the vaccine for the virus, which was first identified in Nepal in 2010 and then spread by migratory birds to India, China and Japan.
At least six people, including four children, have died from bird flu in Bali since 2005.
The mortality rate among people infected with the H5N1 virus is very high.
The Southeast Asian Times


Casino to appeal Viet Nam court order to pay winner $55.5 million
Vietnamese American Ly Sam, 61, in the Ho Chi Minh People’s Court, District 1, which ordered the owner of the five-star Sheraton Saigon, the Dai Duong Joint Venture Company, to pay him the winning amount of more than dong 1,154 billion, about US$55,542,291.70, shown on the screen of game machine No 13 in the hotel’s Palazzo Club on October 25, 2009. Sam had gambled $300
From News Reports:
Ho Chi Minh City, January 12: The owner of the five-star Sheraton Saigon, the Dai Duong Joint Venture Company, will appeal an order of the People’s Court of District 1, Ho Chi Minh City, that it pay Vietnamese-American Ly Sam, 61, the winning amount of more than dong 1,154 billion, about US$55,542,291.70, shown on the screen of game machine No 13 in the hotel’s Palazzo Club on October 25, 2009.
The sum includes interest of $3.5 million for the unpaid wining amount.
Tuoi Tre, Youth, newspaper quotes the corporation’s lawyer, Vo Ha Duyen, who announced the intention to appeal, as saying the decision would create serious difficulties for the Dai Duong Joint Venture Company.
The suit was very complicated and although the district court had never dealt with one like it before, neither the relevant agencies nor the makers of the game machine had been consulted before the decision which was delivered last Monday.
The lawyer insisted that plaintiff had not provided sufficient evidence for him to be declared the winner and that the maximum prize from the machine No 13 was o $46,000.
But the Dai Duong Joint Venture Company had provided sufficient evidence to show the winning result was invalid and the result of a technical failure in the machine the plaintiff had used.
Presiding judge Mai Xuan Binh and his jurors rejected this argument saying the winning amount had been displayed on the machine’s screen which had not posted an error.
The Ho Chi Minh Tax Office says Ly Sam will owe it $5.5 million in personal income tax if the verdict is upheld.
Tuoi Tre quotes Vietnam Tax Consultants Association Chairwoman Nguyen Thi Cuc as saying the amount would be the highest tax payment yet collected from a Viet Nam casino.
Viet Nam’s first casino opened in Hai Phong City in 1992.
There are now 50 – all out of bounds to Vietnamese – and the Finance put there 2011 revenue at $240million.
The Southeast Asian Times

Former beauty queen jailed for abuse of parliamentary power
From News Reports:
Jakarta, January 12: Two judges of the Jakarta Anti-Corruption Court sent People’s- Representative- Council-member Angelina Patricia Pinkan “Angie” Sondakh, 35, to four-and-a-half-years two jail on Thursday for abuse of authority as a member of parliament’s budget committee and its sports commission.
The judges also ordered the former beauty queen and member of President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono’s Democratic Party to pay a fine of rupiah 250million, about US$ 26,000.
The judges found the Australian-born-and-education parliamentarian guilty of having received almost US$3.5million from the Permai Group - a holding company for Muhammad Nazaruddin, 34, - between 2009 and 2014.
Former Democratic Party treasurer, Muhammad Nazaruddin, was sent to jail for almost five years in April for rigging a government tender for the construction of an athletes village in Palembang, South Sumatra, for the November, 2011 Southeast Asian Games in return for an illegal commission of at least rupiah 4.6 billion, about US$506,000.
He was also ordered to pay a rupiah 200 million, about $21, 776, fine or serve an additional four months in prison.
“It has been proven that [the defendant] received rupiah 2.5 billion and $1.2 million,” said presiding Judge Sudjatmiko as he announced the verdict and sentence. “The money, from the Permai Group, was paid to secure budget allocation at the Education and Culture Ministry.”
The prosecutors had sought a 12-year jail sentence and an order for the defendant to refund the stolen State money.
The defendant, who said: “I have heard the charges and I submit myself to God,” when her trial began, argued in a six-hour emotional closing statement on Thursday, January 3 that there was not sufficient evidence to prove her guilt.
She also pleaded that Corruption Eradication Commission officers not be allowed to seize her residence in Cilandak, South Jakarta,
“It belongs to his fatherless children; please don’t confiscate it,” she said.
The defendant was referring to Adjie Massaid, her late husband and former Democratic Party parliamentarian who died of a heart attack in January 2011.
She also accused businesswoman Mindo “Rosa” Rosalina Manulang — a Nazaruddin confidante — of trading her testimony for money during the trial.
“Rosa once asked me to collect money from names she proposed to me. However, she never mentioned those names during her trial,” she said.
“I am a victim of a conspirator who is hiding behind the mask of justice collaborator.”
The Southeast Asian Times


Visiting diplomats seek stop to robbing of Phuket tourists
Britain’s Ambassador to Thailand Mark Kent introduces Phuket Governor Maitri Inthusut to a website listing scores of incidents in which tourists were robbed and beaten by taxi and tuk-tuk drivers on the resort island
From News Reports:
Phuket, January 11: The British, Canada and Netherlands Ambassadors to Thailand asked Phuket Governor Maitri Inthusut why more had not been done to stop taxi and tuk-tuk drivers from robbing international visitors to the resort island at a meeting on Tuesday.
The trio also asked about the absence of metered taxis in Phuket compared with other of Thailand’s major tourist destinations, including Bangkok and Chiang Mai and why the fares on the island were much higher than elsewhere.
The Phuket Gazette reports that Britain’s Ambassador Mark Kent introduced the governor to the website Phukettuktuks.com, which lists numerous examples of taxi and tuk- tuk drivers cheating and assaulting tourists.
“The police are doing their best, but there is a serious shortage of officers in Phuket,” the governor replied.
Phuket Land Transport Office director Teerayut Prasertpol, who attended the meeting, said: “The PLTO is trying to get metered taxi drivers to charge by the meter, but the drivers do not want to because if they charged only by the meter they would not make enough as a living.”
Canada Ambassador Philip Calvert questioned the Phuket media’s use of pictures of corpses and passports photos in news stories about international visitors.
But the Phuket tourism news portal Phuket Wan says that when its reporters asked the ambassador about the mysterious deaths of Canadians, Noemi Belanger, 26, and her sister Audrey, 20, in their hotel room on Phi Phi island on June 14 last year, the diplomat replied: “'That's an issue that is . . . for reasons of privacy, we tend not to discuss these with the media.”'
The results of autopsies performed in Bangkok and Canada have never been made public and Thai officials say Canadian diplomats restrict the availability of information.
American Jill St Onge, 27, and Norwegian Julie Michelle Bergheim, 22, died mysteriously on Phi Phi in 2009 in circumstances similar to the Belanger sisters.
Their deaths have also never been explained.
About 100 Thai tuk-tuk and taxi drivers blockaded the Kata-Karon beach road about 20 kilometres from Phuket last week protest at the allegedly unfair Russian competition.
Later, all Russian-owned tour counters on Kata-Karon beach were ordered to close earlier this week and the Phuket Labour Office instructed to investigate them for possible breach for foreign-worker regulations.
The action follows complaints from tuk-tuk and taxi drivers at the resort island’s major beach on the west coast about 20 kilometres from Phuket that Russian tour enterprises are offering cheaper transport than their domestic rivals.
The Southeast Asian Times

Prosperous Justice Party bans wives of officials from seeking office
From News Reports:
Jakarta, January 11: The Prosperous Justice Party has banned the wives its members, who are public officials, from nominating for next year’s elections for Indonesia’s parliaments.
“The ban is aimed at avoiding a conflict of interests and dynastic politics,” Prosperous Justice Party President Luthfi Hasan Ishaaq says in a media statement issued on Sunday.
Public officials included minister, governor, district head, mayor and legislator, he said.
“And if husbands have been nominated for parliament, their wives must not be also be nominated.”
The Islamic party has yet to decide a candidate for next year’s presidential election.
The Southeast Asian Times

 
Central Java anti-corruption judge stands trial for corruption
Anti-Corruption Court judge Kartini Marpaung appeared before two judges of the Semarang District Court, central Java, last Tuesday accused of having accepting rupiah 150 million, about US$15,400, to find the speaker of the Legislative Council of Grobogan Regency, southwest central Java, not guilty of corruption. Pontianak Corruption Court judge Heru Kisbandono and the sister of the parliamentarian are also on trial
From News Reports:
Semarang, January 10: The trial of former Anti-Corruption Court judge, Kartini Marpaung, for allegedly accepting rupiah 150 million, about US$15,400, to find the speaker of the Legislative Council of Grobogan Regency, southwest central Java, not guilty of corruption began in the Semarang District Court on Tuesday.
The Jakarta Post quotes prosecutor Pulung Rinandro as having told her fellow judges, Ifa Sudewi, Suyadi and Kalimatul Jumro, that Corruption Eradication Commission investigators caught her as she accepted the money in August last year.
Grobogan Legislative Council speaker Mohammed Yaeni had been accused of embezzlement of money from the regency budget for the maintenance of the legislature’s official cars.
“The money was given to alter Yaeni’s verdict -to either give him a light sentence or even clear him of all charges,” said the prosecutor.
The speaker’s sister, Sri Dartuti, had provided the money.
She, in turn, had sought help from her brother’s friend – former Pontianak Anti-Corruption Court judge Heru Kisbandono – to lobby Kartini Marpaung.
Sri Dartuti and Heru Kisbandono are also on trial.
The prosecutor said the accused former Semarang judge, who was arrested just days before she was due to deliver her verdict, had planned to share the money with at least three other judges, including one who was later chosen to preside at the speaker’s eventual trial.
Speaker Yaeni was sent to jail for 2.5 years and fined rupiah 50 million in the Semarang Anti-Corruption Court on August 28, 2012.
The Jakarta Post says Kartini Marpaung acquitted at least four defendants charged with corruption before her arrest; these included the former regent of Sragen, central Java, Untung Wiyono, who was accused of stealing more than rupiah 11 billion.
She also annulled the verdict against Yanuelva Etliana who had been accused of helping to steal rupiah 39 billion from the Central Java Regional Development Bank.
The hearing was adjourned to next Tuesday and her lawyer Krisdo Pulungan told reporters: “I will ask for the trial to be moved to Jakarta.”
Judicial Commission spokesman Asep Rahmat Fajar warned before the hearing began: “We want the court to consider any possible conflict of interest when choosing judges to hear that trial.”
Former President Megawati Soekarnoputri established the Anti-Corruption Court and its partner, the Corruption Eradication Commission, or KPK, in 2004.
A decision to establish-anti-corruption courts in 33 of Indonesia’s provinces each with six judges was announced in October 2011.
Supreme Court Chairman Harifin A Tumpa as said two of the judges would be attached to the higher court and the remainder to the district court of each of the 33 provinces.
The corruption courts would hold trial hearings with their secretariats at existing district courts.
The Southeast Asian Times

Thai employers dismiss workers rather than pay higher wage
From News Reports:
Bangkok, January 10: Almost 2,500 Thai workers were dismissed within five days of employees in 70 of the country’s 76 provinces becoming entitled to a minimum daily wage of baht 300, about US$9.70, on January 1.
The Bangkok Post reports that Labour Minister Padermchai Sasomsap provided the Social Security Office figure on Tuesday as the Yingluck-Shinawatra Cabinet approved a fiscal package designed to ease the strain of the higher pay on almost 300,000 small- to- medium-sized enterprises.
It was also expected to create about 320,000 jobs.
The Labour Minister quotes the Social Security Office as reporting that 2,479 workers were laid off between January 2 and January 6.
The Labour Minister said 243,141 workers in Bangkok as well as Phuket, Samut Prakan, Samut Sakhon, Pathum Thani, Nakhon Pathom and Nonthaburi provinces had been dismissed between Sunday, April 1 last year – when they became entitled to the higher rate - and the end of December.
Some enterprises were turning to outsourcing to avoid their responsibility for employee welfare.
He warned that workers for subcontractors were also eligible for the minimum daily wage and violators faced up to six months or a baht 100,000 fine or both.
Employers could not change terms of employment without the consent of their employees, he said.
The Bangkok Post reported earlier this week that factory owners had used a memorandum of understanding between the Thai and Cambodia governments to employ labour from their Asean neighbour since the introduction of the higher wage.
The newspaper said that although legal migrant workers are entitled to the minimum wage, Thai factory owners paid them less through deductions for electricity, water and accommodation.
Thai wages are thrice those paid in Cambodia and workers there are now demanding rises.
Finance Minister Kittiratt Na-ranong said the fiscal package included corporate tax exemption for the first baht 300,000 profit, up from baht 150,000, for an estimated 210,000 SMEs with yearly revenue of less than baht 30 million.
And a three-year reduction in the room tax paid by small-to- medium hotels.
The Southeast Asian Times


Special Detachment 88 kill seven Indonesian suspects in three days
A West-Nusa-Tenggara police officer arrives at the site where members of the United-States-and-Australia governments-financed-and-trained Indonesia police “anti-terror “squad, Detachment 88, killed three suspected Islamic militants in the Woja district of Sumbawa Island’s Dompu regency, on Saturday
From News Reports:
Jakarta, January 9: The United-States-and-Australia governments-financed-and-trained Indonesia police “anti-terror “squad, Special Detachment 88, has killed seven suspected Islamic militants at Bima and Dompu on the island of Sumbawa and Makassar, South Sulawesi, in three days.
The Jakarta Post quotes national police spokesman brigadier general Boy Rafli Amar as having conceded last Sunday that no shots had been fired against officers of the squad on Friday and Saturday – when the seven were killed - but alleged the suspects in at least one of location had explosives “ready” to detonate.
Special Detachment 88 was formed in 2003 after the Bali bombings the previous year and the newspaper quotes Victims of Violence Commission chairman Haris Azhar as saying that it appeared the suspected militants were victims of “extrajudicial killings.”
The chairman demanded an independent investigation and warned that animosity toward the anti-terror squad was promoting Islamic militancy.
Five of the suspects were slain on Sumbawa Island where they supposedly fled after three police officers were killed and others wounded in a series of attacks in Poso, Central Sulawesi, on Thursday, December 20.
“We have put the whole of Sumbawa on alert,” the Antara news agency quotes West Nusa Tenggara Police chief brigadier general Mochamad Irawan as saying.
Two of the suspects were killed earlier at the Wahidin Sudirohusodo Hospital in Makassar, South Sulawesi.
Detachment 88 officers shot dead suspected terrorist, Abdul Halid Tumbingoa, 24, a forestry worker and son of a former member of the district Legislative Assembly in Poso during early November.
The Antara news agency reported that villagers had used tree trunks, timber, tyres and stones to block the road that links Poso with eastern, western and north-central Sulawesi, in Kayamanya Kota Poso, Central Sulawesi, to support their demand that the dead man’s body be returned to his family.
The family had denied that the victim was a terrorist.
The young man died in a police raid that began soon after dawn and was part of an action in which suspected terrorist Khalid Tumbingo, 24, was also shot dead and 20 people detained.
Khalid Tumbingo’s supporters later rallied outside the Poso police station to declare: “We’ll never trust the police.”
Brigadier General Dewa Parsana said Abdul Halid Tumbingoa was killed in a fire fight at a state elementary school in Kayamanya, Poso Kota, after he threw explosives at police officers.
National police spokesman Brigadier General Boy Rafli Amar said the police action followed violence in the region and planned terrorist attacks against the provincial capital Palu.
“The raid was based on evidence collected by investigators,” he said.
Earlier another alleged terrorist, Jipo, also known as Ibeng, was killed during a reported shootout in Kalora, the North Poso Pesisir district, Central Sulawesi.
The dead man was believed to have been from eastern Indonesia.
Brigadier General Dewa Parsana said the police found seven explosive devices and seized a firearm in the house.
The Southeast Asian Times

Muslim MP asked to clarify non-Muslim use of the word Allah
From News Reports:
George Town, January 9: About 30 members of the Penang Muslim Network rallied in George Town last Thursday to demand that Pan-Malaysian Islamic Party, Pas, and Malaysia parliamentarian Dr Mujahid Yusof Rawa clarify his view about the use the word “Allah” as a synonym for the Christian “God.”
The New Straits Times quotes network co-ordinator Mohamed Hafiz Mohamed Nordin as saying the member for Parit Buntar had used English to condone non-Muslim use of the word "Allah" in a church dialogue at Butterworth two years ago.
This was done although it deviated from the Pas view, he said.
Now an audio clip from an undisclosed source had arrived to use as evidence against the Pas central committee member.
Religious Affairs Minister Jamil Khir Baharom announced in January, 2010, that the Malaysia Government would appeal High Court Judge Lau Bee Lan’s ruling that the Catholic weekly, The Herald, could use the word “Allah” as a synonym for the Christian “God” in its articles intended to propagate Christianity in its Malay-language editions although the word’s use must be confined to publications intended for Christians.
The appeal would be organised from within the Prime Minister’s Department and the Home Affairs Ministry, he said.
The minister used the statement to advise Muslim and non-governmental organisations to be calm and respect the judge’s decision.
They should be patient and allow the matter to be resolved through the legal process, he said.
The Southeast Asian Times



lThe Southeast Asian Times wishes its readers a Happy
lChristmas and all the best for the New Year with a special lthankyou to its regular and treasured letter writers


.MEDIA CHECK
A new regulation that will apply from Thursday, December 20 will make reporting easier for foreign journalists in Viet Nam...Open here


A Requiem Mass for Vikki Anne Riley, 50, who was a regular contributor to The Southeast Asian Times, was held at St Paul’s Catholic Church, Nightcliff, Darwin, Monday ...Open here


Copy of letter dated 29 May 2012 from Vietnam Womens Union to International Olympic Committee...open here

 

What they're saying open page here

 

A cartoon goes inside the tour bus in Manila on the day that ended with the slaying of eight Hong Kong tourists ...Open page here

 

Bombed by the Americans for Christmas in 1972, Ha Noi Bach Mai hospital is still a war zone...Christina Pas reports...Open page here

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Demand for office space falls
From News Reports:
Ho Chi Minh City, January 16: Demand for office space fell in the last quarter of 2012, reports property consultant Knight Frank.
Rents also fell, it says.
Demand for office space In Ha Noi was slightly higher.
Bloomberg reported in March that the Keangnam Hanoi Landmark Tower, the tallest building in Southeast Asia after the Petronas Towers, Kuala Lumpur, had increased prime office space in the capital by half and threatened to drive rents to a five-year low.
The news agency quoted South Korea’s Keangnam Enterprises Limited’s property manager, Choi Yong-Ho, as saying the tower, which includes a hotel, luxury apartments and mall, was adding 100,000 square metres of office space to the city.
It also quoted Jones Lang LaSalle Incorporated as having forecast the extra space could drive Ha Noi’s office rents down as much as 8 percent in the first half of this year to their lowest since the fourth quarter of 2006.
The State Bank of Vietnam s ordered earlier that all the county’s commercial providers of credit to identify the amount they have loaned for real estate as the number of non-performing loans rise.
State-owned Agribank announced that non-performing loans totalled 6.67 percent of its total lending – much of it for real estate.
The Southeast Asian Times


Bid to dampen Singapore real estate market

From News Reports:
Singapore, January 15: The Singapore government has announced size restrictions for executive condominiums, tighter loan-to-valuations regulations and higher purchaser stamp duty in an effort to further dampen the property market.
It has also introduced for the first vendor stamp duty for industrial property to discourage speculation.
The Southeast Asian Times

Bangladeshis to work Malaysia plantations
From News Reports:
Kuala Lumpur, January 14: The arrival of 10,000 Bangladeshis to work in Malaysian plantations will reduce a critical labour shortage, forecasts Plantation Industries and Commodities Minister Bernard Dompok.
The plantations were short about 26,000 to 30,000 workers and the 10,000 co should “certainly help,” The Star newspaper quotes him as saying.
The Malaysia government froze the importation of Bangladeshi workers about five years ago and Indonesian workers now prefer to work in the own burgeoning oil palm industry.
The Malaysia and Bangladeshi governments signed an agreement in November for the recruitment of 500,000 workers in the Malaysia manufacturing, service, agriculture and construction industries over next five years.
The Southeast Asian Times


Fish farmers demand compensation

From News Reports:
Bandar Lampung, January 13: Hundreds of grouper farmers have demanded compensation from State-owned Panjang port operator, Pelindo, for pollution in Lampung Bay.
Tonnes of grouper and other fish in Lampung Bay have died since December and the farmers – members of the Lampung Grouper Communication Forum – allege that the port operator is responsible for the deaths of their fish cultivated in 100 floating nets off Hanura Beach in Pesawaran regency.
The Jakarta Post says the more-than-100 farmers say red algae bloomed in Lampung Bay after waste was dumped into the sea.
“We are not protesting the coastal dredging, but Pelindo did not coordinate with us before dumping the waste into the sea,” the newspaper quotes forum representative Mulia Bangun Sitepu as saying on Wednesday.
“It should not have dumped the dredging sediment near our floating nets.”
The aqua farming has been a model for several national programmes and the fish are among Lampung’s primary exports.
Forum lawyer Sopian Sitepu estimates the losses to the farmers at rupiah 8 billion, about US$821,352.
“The amount is based only on the value of the dead fish,” he said.
It did not include the loss from having to re-start the breeding of fish or loss of export revenue.
The Southeast Asian Times


Johor plans to limit foreign house purchases

From News Reports:
Johor Baharu, January 12: Spiralling house prices, especially in the Iskandar corridor, has promoted the Johor government to review the procedures and conditions for the purchase of real estate by non-Malaysians.
The Bernama news agency quotes Local Government, Housing, Arts, Culture and Heritage Committee Chairman Ahmad Zahri Jamil as saying the State Economic Planning Unit was studying ways to tighten the rules on foreign ownership.
This was to control prices as Malaysians found it difficult to buy houses.
“The price of property is determined by the market force. However, the prices also reflect on demand and supply or just because of extreme speculation. So, we have to conduct a detailed study," he told reporters.
The Southeast Asian Times


Japan diplomat denies war payment

From News Reports:
Petaling Jaya, January 11: The Japan government never paid the Malaysia government ringgit 207billion, about US$ 68.15, compensation for the country’s victims of the Thai-Burma “Death Railway” in the 1940s, says Second Secretary at the Japan Embassy, Malaysia, Takaharu Suegami.
“All questions arising out of the unhappy events with regard to Malaysia have been fully and finally settled under the San Francisco Treaty which entered into force in 1952,” said the diplomat in a statement issued on Tuesday.
The Second Secretary was responding to former Perak Menteri Besar, or Chief Minister, and secretary of the State’s wing of Pas, the Pan-Malaysian Islamic Party, Nizar Jamaluddin, who was quoted by the Pas newspaper, Harakah Daily, as saying the embassy had confirmed the money was given to the Malaysia Government in 2004.
The report alleged that the money had yet to be distributed to families of the estimated 30,000 Malaysians who were forced labourers in the building of the 415-kilometre railway from Bangkok to Yangon between 1942 and 1946.
Takaharu Suegami said both governments had also signed an agreement on September 21, 1967, whereby Japan agreed to supply services and products to Malaysia totalling ringgit 25million.
The money had been used to build two ships, among other projects, but there had been no transfer of an undisclosed amount of it, he said.
“Malaysia agreed that any question from the events of the Second World War that might affect our good bilateral relations would be fully and finally settled with the agreement.
“All the supply in accordance with the agreement was completed by May 6, 1972,” he said.
The Southeast Asian Times


Haj fund investigated

From News Reports:
Jakarta, January 10: Corruption Eradication Commission officers are investing the Religious Affairs Ministry‘s management of the rupiah 80 trillion, about US$8.29 billion, haj pilgrimage fund, reports The Jakarta Post.
The newspaper quotes commission spokesperson Johan Budi as saying on Sunday that the investigation was the result of Financial Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre allegation of irregularities in the management of the savings of prospective pilgrims during the last eight years,.
Earlier commission deputy chairman Bambang Widjojanto said that if the allegation was supported by sufficient evidence, investigators could ask for detailed information of suspicious transactions including details of the bank accounts of any individuals or officials implicated.
Religious Affairs Minister Suryadharma Ali said that he would resign if evidence was found to support the allegations of irregularities.
The Southeast Asian Times


AirAsia offers 10,000 free tickets

From News Reports:
Kuala Lumpur, January 9: Budget carrier AirAsia is offering 10,000 free return tickets to Sabah and Sarawak from peninsular Malaysia for travel between January 14 and February 4.
The offer is part of the 1Malaysia Integration Programme with AirAsia that Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak launched last Saturday, says the airline in a statement.
AirAsia chief executive officer Aireen Omar said the programme was the airline’s way of giving back to the rakyat for their support.
The Southeast Asian Times


Cambodians replace Thai workers

From News Reports:
Bangkok, January 8: Factory owners have used a memorandum of understanding between the Thai and Cambodia governments to employ labour from their Asean neighbour since Thai workers in 70 of the country’s 76 provinces became entitled to a minimum daily wage of baht 300, about US$9.70, from the beginning of the year, reports The Bangkok Post.
One-hundred and-fifty four Cambodians - 118 men and 36 women - with work permit documents crossed the border in Sa Kaew Province’s Aranyaprathet district on Monday of last week, it says.
The newspaper quotes Sa Kaew Provincial Immigration Division deputy superintendent Lieutenant -Colonel Benchapol Rawdsawat as saying four employers had sent vehicles to collect the Cambodian workers.
The newspaper says that although legal migrant workers are entitled to the minimum wage, Thai factory owners pay them less through deductions for electricity, water and accommodation.
Thai wages are thrice those paid in Cambodia and workers there are demanding rises.
Workers in Bangkok as well as Phuket, Samut Prakan, Samut Sakhon, Pathum Thani, Nakhon Pathom and Nonthaburi provinces became eligible for the new rate on Sunday, April 1 last year.
The Southeast Asian Times


Bali visitors exceed target
From News Reports:
Denpasar, January 7: About 2.88 million foreign tourists and five million domestic tourists visited Bali in 2012.
The number of international visitors had exceeded the provincial government’s target of 2.8 million, the Bali Daily quotes Bali tourism office director Ida Bagus Kade Subhiksu as saying on Wednesday.
The target for 2013 was 3.1 million, he said.
Australia provided the most tourists followed by Chinese, Japanese, Malaysians and South Koreans.
The Southeast Asian Times


Cashless payments suggested to combat corruption

From News Reports:
Jakarta, January 6: The Financial Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre has suggested limiting cash transactions to a maximum of rupiah 100 million, about US$10,350, to help prevent stealing from the State.
“Many of those the Corruption Eradication Commission arrested used cash in their transactions,” centre director Muhammad Yusuf told a news conference in Jakarta on Wednesday.
“There will be no more durian boxes if we limit the use of cash payments,” he said.
Corruption Eradication Commission investigators arrested a businesswoman and two officials from the Manpower and Transmigration Ministry in 2011 after found rupiah 1.5 billion in a cardboard box that had contained durian, says The Jakarta Post.
The money was bribes collected from a housing project in West Papua.
The commission also confiscated rupiah 100 million in a brown envelope, wrapped in a newspaper In 2010.
The money was confiscated from a street vendor in Bandung who allegedly received it from someone just before the investigators arrested a West Java Supreme Audit Agency official and two Bekasi municipality officers for accepting bribes.
The Southeast Asian Times


Bribery accusation investigated

From News Reports:
Ha Noi, January 5: Deputy Prime Minister Nguyen Xuan Phuc has ordered investigation of Vietnam Communist Party, Ha Noi, Inspection Committee chairman Tran Trong Duc’s allegation that public-service candidates had to pay at least dong 100 million, aboutUS$4,755, in bribes to secure a job, reports Thanh Nien, Youth, newspaper.
The assertion needed immediate because it had caused public and media consternation, newspaper quotes the deputy prime minister as saying last Monday.
The Inspection Committee chairman made his allegation that it was impossible to pass a public service recruitment test in the capital without paying off the people in charge of hiring at a meeting of the Ha Noi People’s Council on Tuesday, December 7.
The Southeast Asian Times


Cooperative creates diversified economy

From News Reports:
Kuah, January 4: The cooperative Koperasi Komuniti Kampung Kilim that 80 fishermen of Kampung Kilim, Langkawi, created in 2010 has enabled them to develop a successful diversified economy, says The Star newspaper.
Their enterprises include that manage tour boats in Kilim Geoforest Park and management of the Kilim Jetty and the rents it provides, it says.
The cooperative also owns floating seafood restaurants and souvenir shops.
The newspaper quotes cooperative chairman Ahmad Nizar Hanapiah as saying efforts to develop the economy of the village began in 2000 and the creation of the cooperative was done at the recommendation of the Langkawi Development Authority.
The fishermen previously earned between ringgit 600, about US$197.60, and ringgit 800 each month but that had risen to ringgit 1,800 since the establishment of the cooperative.
Cooperative members who own boats can earn at least ringgit 2,000 and up to ringgit 10,000 during the holiday season.
“There are no unemployed youngsters in the village,” said the chairman.
“Many of them are not highly educated, but have learnt English by participating in tour boat activities.”
There were also youths who could converse in Arabic due to the rising number of Arab visitors.
The Southeast Asian Times

Asbestos victims appeal Tokyo judgement
From News Reports:
Tokyo, January 3: Three-hundred-and-thirty-seven plaintiffs lodged an appeal in the Tokyo High Court on Tuesday, December 18 against a lower court decision to exclude self-employed workers from State compensation for damage to their health from exposure asbestos.
The Japan Press Weekly quotes their lawyer, Onodera Toshitaka, as saying an utmost effort to achieve an early settlement would be made because 60 percent of the plaintiffs had already died.
A law and a fund to guarantee relief to asbestos victims was required, he said.
A Tokyo District Court judge ordered the Japan government to pay about yen 1.06 billion in compensation for asbestos-induced ill-health to 170 of the 337 victims, on Wednesday, December 5.
But he refused to acknowledge that individual makers of asbestos products had been responsible and rejected the claim of self-employed builders because the Industrial Safety and Health Act excluded them from legal protection.
The 337 plaintiffs were the bereaved families and construction workers suffering from such diseases as lung cancer following exposure to asbestos at building sites in Tokyo.
They had sought compensation from the State and 42 building-products makers.
The judge acknowledged that the government had failed to take preventive measures such as the wearing protective masks until 1981 despite knowing the health risks of asbestos as early as 1972.
Such measures could have lessened the consequences, he said.
The Japan government appealed Osaka District Court judge’s decision ordering it to pay damages to 26 people for failing to impose measures against asbestos exposure in 2010.
The judge ordered that 26 former factory workers, their families, and residents living near the factory in southern Osaka Prefecture be paid 435 million yen in damages on May 19, 2010.
Twenty-nine former factory workers, their family members, as well as neighbours of the factory in Osaka’s Sennan district launched the action.
Claims of neighbouring residents were denied.
The judgement was the first for asbestos compensation in Japan.
The Southeast Asian Times


Religious Affairs officers rob newly weds

From News Reports:
Jakarta, January 2: Religious Affairs Ministry inspector general M. Jasin disclosed last Wednesday that employees of the Indonesia Religious Affairs Office steal an estimated rupiah 1.2 trillion, about US$124 million, each year from the registration of marriages.
The former Corruption Eradication Commission deputy chairman revealed that although the official administrative fee for the registration was rupiah 30,000, newly-weds were regularly asked for rupiah 500,000, The Jakarta Post quotes him as saying.
“There are 2.5 million weddings a year. That’s not including divorces. If we multiply the rupiah 2.5 million by rupiah 500,000, we have rupiah 1.2 trillion,” he told reporters after signing a document to mark the collaboration between the ministry and the Financial Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre in Jakarta.
The practice was systematic, he said.
“Apart from contributing the official administrative fees to the Religious Affairs Office, the registration administrators usually contribute a portion of the money to their superiors. The superiors then give some of it to people higher up.”
The Southeast Asian Times


Swift farming reviewed

From News Reports:
Ho Chi Minh City, January 1: The People’s Committee of Ho Chi Minh City’s Can Gio District reviewed a three-year pilot scheme for raising swifts in domestic households last Friday.
Sài Gòn Gi?i Phóng, Liberated Saigon, newspaper says 10 households are raising the birds in Tam Thon Hiep Commune.
It says two of six house owners who have invested over the three years, regularly harvest the bird’s nests
Agriculture and Rural Development deputy chairman Nguyen Phuoc Trung cautioned that although revenue from the enterprise had been healthy the committee should not allow haphazard investment in raising the birds but focus on better management for future sustainable development.
In Malaysia, The Bernama newsagency reports that guidelines for the farming of swifts in Sabah will apply from today although it will take two years to implement the regulations.
The Southeast Asian Times