The Southeast Asian Times
NEWS FOR NORTHERN AUSTRALIA AND SOUTHEAST ASIA
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established 2000
Friday, September 3, 2010
GATHERINGS:
An informed guide to happenings throughout the region.
 

Posters against palm oil displayed at Adelaide zoo
From News Reports:
Adelaide, September 3: Visitors to Adelaide Zoo are greeted with huge posters claiming that oil palm plantations are killing the orang utan and contributing to global warming.
The posters – erected by the so-called Palm Oil Action Group – are plastered on the wall of an orang utan enclosure at the zoo.
In one poster, the activists allege that there are only between 45,000 and 60,000 orang utans left in Borneo and that the primate will be extinct within 20 years “at the present killing rate of 50 orang utans per week”.
Another poster claims that the orang utans are being killed by oil palm plantation workers clearing land with guns, machetes, wooden stacks and fires.
Yet another poster asks for the global community to apply pressure on governments and private land companies to put a stop to this “orang utan killings” and halt the destruction of forests.
In March, Swiss food and beverage company Nestle stopped buying directly from the Sinar Mas Group following its own investigation into damage caused to rain forests and peat fields in Southeast Asia by palm oil plantations.
But Nestle spokesperson Ferhat Soygenis said the company could not guarantee that palm oil sourced from other suppliers was sustainable.
The Southeast Asian Times

Anwar Ibrahim’s daughter plans newspaper
From News Reports:
Petaling Jaya, September 2: Lembah Pantai MP and daughter of Anwar Ibrahim, Nurul Izzah Anwar, 30, has submitted an application to publish a daily newspaper to be titled, Utusan Rakyat.
The Star newspaper says a letter of intent was sent to the Home Ministry on Monday.
It asks Home Minister Hishammuddin Tun Hussein’s to help quicken the application process.
The Southeast Asian Times

Indonesia, Singapore agree sea boundary
From News Reports:
Jakarta, September 1: The Indonesian and Singapore governments have signed a charter that fixes the boundary of the two countries south of Singapore.
Indonesian and Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa and his Singapore counterpart George Yong-Boon Yeo signed the charter agreement, reports the Antara news agency. The agreement is the result of eight rounds of negotiations between the two
countries that began in 2005, it says.
It became effective on Monday.
The sea boundary agreed o is the continuation of the boundary agreed between Indonesia and Singapore o on May 25, 1973.
The basis for the agreement is the 1982 Law of the Sea Convention.
The news service says negotiations of a sea boundary between Indonesia and East Timor have failed.
The Southeast Asian Times


Seminar discusses Thailand in time of change

From News Reports:
Phuket, August 31: Thailand’s Economic Advisory Council has held a seminar at the Phuket City Hotel entitled, “Reforming the Country at a Time of Change,”
Former Prime Minister and now advisor the ruling Democratic Party Chuan Leekpai told participants that the country’s political crisis stemmed not from flaws in the democratic system, but from the self-serving actions of some individuals.
Change was a continual process and not confined to any particular period; over the years the country's various crises had had many causes, both internal and external, the Phuket Gazette quoted him as saying.
The 1997 financial crisis had internal causes but the difficulties of 2008 and 2009 stemmed from global factors.
But the democratic system had not caused the conflict, and it was necessary to define this as a conflict arising from individuals, not from the system, he said.
The Southeast Asian Times


Two Chinese to miss collecting Filipino awards

From News Reports:
Manila, August 30: Two of three Chinese winners of the yearly Ramon Magsaysay Awards have cancelled their journeys to Manila to receive the awards today, reports The Philippine Inquirer.
But a third Chinese winner, photojournalist Huo Daishan, is already in the country and is participating in the series of lectures and meetings that have been arranged by the Ramon Magsaysay Award Foundation, it says.
The two who will not be collecting their awards are farmer and village elder Fu Qiping, 62, from Zhejiang province, and a deputy minister in the Environmental Ministry Pan Yue, 50.
Both were to be given Magsaysay Awards for “their exemplary vision and zeal as public servants.
Earlier, China’s deputy Prime Minister Li Keqiang “postponed indefinitely” an official three-day visit to Manila scheduled for this week.
Philippines Foreign Affairs Ministry Ed Malaya said the postponement was made before the slaying of eight Hong Kong tourists during a bus siege in Manila last week.
“The visit was postponed in view of the natural disasters that have recently beset China which resulted in many casualties and destruction,” he said.
But China’s Foreign Ministry spokesman Jiang Yu had announced the cancellation of the planned visit of a senior Philippine delegation that was to have travelled to Hong Kong and Beijing last Thursday saying the Philippine government should first complete its investigation of the hostage deaths.
The eight Hong Kong tourists were slain during a 12-hour siege aboard a bus at the Quirino Grandstand in Manila’s historical Rizal Park.
Autopsies showed five of the eight died from bullet wounds mostly in the head and neck.
Fifteen of the hostages, including three Filipinos and two British nationals, were either freed or escaped.
Former policeman, Ronaldo Mendoza, 55, who armed himself with an M16 United States army rifle, to seize the bust was reportedly the father of three children and was due to retire next year.
Named as one of the country’s ten top police officers in 1986, he was among five Manila policemen dismissed after they were found to have extorted money from a hotel chef whom they allegedly forced to take shabu, the Filipino parlance for a mixture of methamphetamine and caffeine.
The Southeast Asian Times

15,000 expected to tally for religious pluralism
From News Reports:
Bekasi, August 29: About 15,000 people are likely to attend a Huria-Kristen-Batak-Protestan-organised rally for religious pluralism in the Bekasi stadium today, reports The Jakarta Post.
The rally has been organised in response to Muslim attacks against Christians in Greater Jakarta.
Thousands supported a similar rally near National Monument Park in Central Jakarta earlier this month.
“We urge the government to guarantee the rights of its citizens to establish houses of worship, regardless of their religions,” the newspaper quotes Huria-Kristen-Batak-Protestan minister Palti Panjaitan as saying.
Hundreds of Islam Defender Front supporters attacked members of the Batak Protestant congregation – the pastor’s church in Pondok Indah Timur, the Mustika Jaya district, Bekasi, - earlier this month.
Lawyer for the church Sahara Pangaribuan said the congregation had been granted a permit from local residents to conduct their prayer group.”
In June, about 200 Islamists, including members of the Islam Defender Front; the Bekasi Movement against Apostates and the Islamic Ummah Forum, attended a two-day conference in Bekasi to discuss the “Christianisation” of the city.
In May, a Christian school was attacked by a group of people after a former student allegedly posted a picture showing him putting Koran in a toilet on the school's blog.
Later, the Bekasi municipal administration decided to tear down a 17-metre Tiga Mojang, or three ladies, statue in the Kota Harapan Indah residential complex after Islamists called the newly-erected statue as obscene and symbolising the Christian Trinity.
In January, more than 100 Christians held their services in a village hall in the Jejalen sub district after fellow residents blocked the road to their church, which is still under construction.
The protesters had demanded they stop holding any religious activities until they had obtained a building permit for the church.
The Batak Protestant congregation bought 1,000-square-metres of land to build its own church in 2007.
Earlier, about 1,000 people attacked a Catholic church being built in the Harapan Indah residential complex, Bekasi, leaving a motorcycle, a guard post and at least two makeshift offices severely damaged.
In the Riau Islands police halted the building of two churches because the say they will stoke conflicts.
The German Rhenish Missionary Society’s Dr Ludwig Ingwer Nommensen founded the Batak church in Tarutung, North Sumatra, in the 1880s. It became the first independent self-governing Christian organisation of the Dutch East Indies in 1930 and now has Indonesia’s major protestant congregation.
Rapid industrial development in Bekasi, located in the outskirts of Jakarta, has made it a more culturally and religiously diverse city,
The Southeast Asian Times

Criminology lecturer spurns Indonesian award

From News Reports:
Bandung, August 28: Padjadjaran University Criminology lecturer Yesmil Anwar has rejected the Satya Lencana Karya Satya award for 20 years of service because of his disappointment at President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono’s response to Malaysia’s arrest of three Indonesian fisheries officers.
“I'm disappointed by the very weak stance on the part of the president,” tempointeraktif.com quotes him as saying.
Yesmil was scheduled to receive the presidential award for his dedicated work as a civil servant and lecturer for 26 years on Independence Day, August 17, together with the 40 other lecturers at the university's Bandung campus.
“What was done by the Malaysian government was humiliating, but our president did nothing,” he said.
“If the problem of demarcation and dignity is not settled in an elegant way, Indonesia will be considered as a nation without any sovereignty, he said.
The exchange of seven “Malaysian fish thieves” for the three officers particularly angered the lecturer.
“Sovereignty is a kind of a fixed price and not negotiable,” he said.
The Southeast Asian Times


New stamp honours Hindu temple

From News Reports:
Kuala Lumpur, The Sri Maha Mari Amman temple, Malaysia’s oldest functioning Hindu temple, has become the first to be depicted on a postage stamp.
The stamp commemorates the temple’s sixth consecration ceremony, reports the Bernama news agency.
The ceremony is held once every 12 years.
The agency quotes temple information officer Vivekananda as saying the ceremony would celebrate the completion of the temple’s upgrade and energise its worshippers.
“The funds for the upgrading are collected through donations from the public and from the temple’s savings account,” he said yesterday.
Founded in 1873, the temple originally stood near the Kuala Lumpur railway station but was transferred to Jalan Tun H.S. Lee in 1885.
The Southeast Asian Times

Vo Nguyen Giap celebrates his 100th birthday
Ha Noi, August26: Viet Nam’s legendary military commander Vo Nguyen Giap celebrated his 100th birthday yesterday.
General Giap, who was born to farmers at An Xa, Quan Ninh Province on August 25, 1910, is recognised as a principle architect of the “People’s War” that defeated first the French colonialists and then the American imperialists.
French-educated, he worked as a school teacher in Ha Noi and through his study of military doctrine, including the Prussian soldier and military theorist, Carl Philipp Gottlieb von Clausewitz, and Napoleon, especially the latter’s use of artillery, became a military strategist of genius.
The veteran revolutionary was the Viet Nam People’s Army commander for 30 years and was associated with the historic defeat of the French at Dien Bien Phu on May 7, 1954.
He was also the commander of the liberation forces when they captured Saigon, no Ho Chi Minh City, on April 30, 1957.
The Viet Nam Communist Party and Ho Chi Minh emphasised the importance of a comprehensive and long-lasting people’s war of resistance and General Giap is credited as a major organiser of its success.
It was his idea to build what became the Ho Chi Minh trial and argued that the greatest tactical error of his enemies was that their wars were unjust.
A man who lived a simple life –he travelled to his home village by train and revisited the Dien Bien Phu battlefield by commercial flight - General Giap said: “If there was no good and clear-sighted collective leadership, the people and the heroic army, we - the commanders – cannot make victories ourselves no matter how good we are.”
The Southeast Asian Times

Prime Minister wants alleged prayers for chief minister investigated
From News Reports:
Pekan, August 25: Malaysia’s Prime Minister Najib Razak wants the Penang Islamic Religious Council and police to investigate allegations that the name of Penang Chief Minister Lim Guan Eng was invoked instead of the Yang di-Pertuan Agong’s during Friday prayers in several mosques in Penang.
“I want a full investigation and for the persons to be identified,” The Star newspaper quotes him as saying.
“Any sermon must be approved by the religious council,” he said after presenting aid and contributions at the United Malay National Organisation’s headquarters in Pekan. “Reading a sermon written by the cleric himself is prohibited.
“This allegation must be investigated and people found to have violated the rules must be penalised,” the prime minister said.
The Bernama reports that Home Minister Hishammuddin Hussein has received three complaints following Friday prayers.
“There are those who say that the Friday sermon has been misunderstood ... wrongly reported,” he said.
“So, we need to know the facts.”
Complains have been lodged
Three worshippers at the Kubang Buaya Mosque have lodged complaints at the Butterworth police station.
The trio claimed that the name of the king and the Penang governor had been omitted while those of the chief minister and his “fellow leaders in the Penang state government” had been included in the sermon.
A second complaint was also lodged at the Tasek Gelugor police station.
The Southeast Asian Times


Chinese-language talk-show host removed

From News Reports:
Kuala Lumpur, August 24: The host of Chinese-language radio station 988's morning show, Jamaluddin Ibrahim, has been taken off the air.
Broadcaster Star RFM director Linda Ngiam, which operates the station, issued a statement saying the company received a letter from the government's telecommunications watchdog “"regarding certain contents aired over the radio station that it deemed to be offensive.”
Star RFM's statement did not explain the government’s complaint and representative for the Malaysian government's Communications and Multimedia Commission declined to elaborate.
News portal Malaysiakini said Jamaluddin had invited a guest last Friday to talk about racial discrimination. The guest reportedly accused government officials of having manipulated racial issues to undermine multiethnic harmony.
Malaysiakini reported that at least two other personnel from the station had also been suspended amid a company investigation.
Jamaluddin's two-hour morning show was aired on weekdays and encouraged listeners to call in and discuss issues facing Chinese Malaysians.
The Southeast Asian Times

Don’t pray for corrupt, Indonesians reminded
From News Reports:
Jakarta, August 23: Nahdlatul Ulama general chairman Aqil Siroj has reminded Muslims not to pray for the dead who have found to have been corrupt.
“This is part of the efforts made by the ulemas, or scholars, to help fight corruption,” the Antara news agency quotes him as saying.
The decision was the result of a meeting of Nahdlatul Ulama – one of the world’s major Sunni Muslim organizations - clerics - in the Pondok Gede hajj dormitory in Jakarta in 2002.
“This is the result of the discussions and consultations of the ulemas but this is not binding like a law,” he said. “We just present it as it is. With regard to its implementation it is up to the government apparatus.”
The decision sprang from the Prophet Muhammad’s reluctance to conduct prayers over the body of his fellow as he still had to pay debts to someone or owed a right to someone.
The Southeast Asian Times

Japanese high school students petition for peace in Geneva
From News Reports:
Geneva, August 22: Six high school students from Nagasaki presented United Nations Disarmament Conference deputy director Jarmo Sareva petitions of about 75,000 signatures of people calling for the elimination of nuclear weapons.
Before presenting the signatures collected in Japan and other countries, Masanori Aoki, 17, one of the six high school messengers of peace, said young people should convey the message that after Hiroshima and Nagasaki there should never be a third city targeted with an atomic bomb.
It is the 13th time that Japanese high school messengers of peace have visited a United Nations office since 1998.
The Southeast Asian Times

President’s wife, son feature for Independence Day
From News Reports:
Jakarta, August 21: Books that feature the wife and eldest son of President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono have been distributed to guests at Independence Day celebrations at the State Palace, Jakarta.
The books Sekarang Kita Makin Percaya Diri or We Are Increasingly Self-Confident, which is based on an interview with president’s eldest son, Agus Harimurti Yudhoyono, and Batikku, Pengabdian Cinta Tak Berkata or My Batik, A Silent Devotion of Love, that features his wife, Ani Yudhoyono.
Guests also received Richard Green’s book Words That Shook the World that has a picture of Yudhoyono and US President Barack Obama on the cover.
Presidential spokesman Julian Aldrin Pasha told tempointeraktif.com: “The gifts were to enliven the event.
“As long as the gifts don’t cause any negative feelings regarding the Independence Day celebration, I don't think there's anything wrong with it.”
In June, a song president wrote for an environmental conference in Oslo, Norway, was preformed at the State Palace for World Environment Day,
Titled “To Oslo” and Sung by Indonesian-born German Idol Sandi Sandoro its words include:
There far away in a corner of the world
I come with my friends full of hope
All God's servants be united to save nature.
This world of ours
the garden of life, forests and oceans
under the blue sky
come as one all nations of the world.
The Norwegian government announced a US$1 billion grant to Indonesia as part of the effort to save the latter’s forests and peat lands during the conference.
The Southeast Asian Times

New film identifies discriminatory laws against women

From News Reports:

Jakarta, August 20: Indonesia’s Violence against Women Commission or Komnas Perempuan has shown a documentary that shows how regional laws discriminate against women.
“The movie is a visual interpretation of Komnas Perempuan's monitoring of discriminatory bylaws in the name of religion, morality and the desire of the majority,” its Commissioner for Community Participation Andi Yentriyani explained to The Jakarta Post before screening.
Titled “Atas Nama” or In the Name Of, the documentary features testimonies of people who fall victims to the bylaws, including the family of a woman who was detained for allegedly practicing prostitution in Tangerang, Banten; Ahmadiyah Islam followers and women in Aceh.
The commission says it has identified at least 154 bylaws that discriminate against women.
The Southeast Asian Times

Ipoh business warned to
fly the
national flag

From News Reports
Ipoh, August 19: All businesses in the predominantly Chinese city must fly the State flag on the Sultan of Perak Azlan Shah’s birthday on April 19 and the national flag the Jalur Gemilang on Malaysia’s Independence Day on Tuesday, August 31 if they want their licences renewed, warns Ipoh Mayor Roshidi Hashim.
“If the businesses don’t fly the flags on both these days, they will be considered to have violated the new condition for their licences,” he told reporters after presenting the Jalur Gemilang to Ipoh City Council managers.
The decision was part of the council’s effort to inculcate patriotism in the citizen’s residents, particularly the business community.
Proprietors should take the initiative to buy their own Jalur Gemilang and not wait for the national flag to be distributed free to them.
The Southeast Asian Times


Life, death
and magic on display in Canberra

Canberra, August 18: The National Gallery of Australia opened an exhibition titled, Life, Death and Magic: 2000 Years of Southeast Asian Ancestral Art that will continue until Sunday, October 31.
The exhibition includes valuable displays of Indonesian ancestral art on loan from the Museum Nasional Indonesia.
“This is not the first time Museum Nasional Indonesia has worked together with the National Gallery of Australia,” said Museum Nasional Indonesia director Retno Sulistianingsih.
The National Gallery of Australia is known for its collection of Southeast Asian textiles and has acquired new animist sculptures from the region particularly for this display, the first major exhibition of ancestral art from Southeast Asia to be held in Australia.
In addition to work from Indonesia, it features work from the Philippines, East Timor, Brunei, Malaysia, Laos, Cambodia, Viet Nam and China.
The Southeast Asian Times


2,000 police deployed for Indonesia's Independence Day

From News Reports:
Jakarta, August 17: At least 2,000 extra police will be deployed for the celebration of Indonesia's Independence Day, today, at the State Palace, Jakarta.
“This is the number of personnel to be deployed by the Jakarta Police... it doesn't involve security officers from other institutions,” Jakarta Police spokesman Senior Commander Boy Rafli Amar told tempointeraktif.com.
The policeman said all people entering the palace and its compound would be inspected as protection against possible “terrorists.”
National Police chief General Bambang Hendarso Danuri has warned that “terrorists” have threatened to disrupt the ceremony for Indonesia's 65th Independence Day and targeted two hotels and three embassies.
The Southeast Asian Times


Aquino orders radio stations to play Filipino music

From News Reports:
Manila, August 16: President Benigno Aquino wants his mother’s executive order 255 that makes it compulsory for radio stations to play original Filipino music and songs enforced.
Speaking during the oath-taking ceremonies of Organisasyon ng Pilipinong Mang-aawit officers and trustees – the country’s major organisation for professional singers at the Malacañang Palace, the president also pledged that his administration would strengthen the campaign for the protection of intellectual property rights, particularly the effort against illegal downloading of music via the internet.
Filipino music and songs contributed 4.25 percent to the country’s Gross Domestic Product, he said.
The Philippine Inquirer quotes the president as having suggested the creation of an organisation that would promote the welfare of singers, artists and other personnel involved in the domestic music industry.
“For a country that is developing like us that has so many problems, the arts for man’s sake really deserve all the support we can have,” he said.
Earlier the president said that funds from the Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corporation and the Philippine Charity Sweepstakes Office as well as the President’s Social Fund could be used to assist ageing and ailing Filipino artists.
President Corazon Aquino issued the executive order which requires radio stations with musical format programmess to broadcast a minimum of four original Filipino musical compositions in every hour of air time.
The directive imposes a fine of peso100, about $2.21, for each violation and suspension or cancellation of the radio station’s registration for repeated violations.
The order was mostly ignored during the presidency’s Presidents Fidel V; Ramos, Joseph “Erap” Estrada, and Gloria Macapagal Arroyo.
The Southeast Asian Times


Johor sultan freezes honours, titles

From News Reports:
Johor Baru, August 14: The newly-installed Sultan of Johor, Ibrahim Ismail, has the ordered the bestowing of State honours and titles after it was discovered they were being sold, reports The Star newspaper.
The newspaper quotes anonymous palace informants as saying the Sultan had told the Johor Royal Court Council there would be no investiture ceremony this year as he had yet to complete a year as ruler.
“Sultan Ibrahim also ordered the Council to stringently vet all people shortlisted for any state award in future before they can be considered,” the informant reportedly said.
“His Majesty wants all nominees for awards to undergo an interview by the council as well as scrutiny by the police and the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission.
Ibrahim Ismail was installed as Johor’s 25th sultan last January.
Johor Baru police have won an order to detain an unidentified titled Malaysian while they investigate allegations that he attempted to sell a royal title.
The Southeast Asian Times


First organs “donated” without written permission

From News Reports:
Tokyo, August 13: Organs taken from a brain-dead young man have been transplanted into patients at several of the city’s hospitals after his family gave its consent in accordance with the revised organ transplant law, reports the Kyodo News agency.
The transfers were the first since the first since the changes became effective on Saturday, July 17, it says.
The man’s family had agreed to the donation without his written consent because he had previously voiced such wishes, says the Japan Organ Transplant Network.
Previously, the organ transplant law, which dates from 1997, required the written permission of the prospective “donor.”
The change to the law enables organs to be harvested with the consent of the family unless the person gave instructions to the contrary.
The Southeast Asian Times


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Jamaah Ahmadiyah must go, religious minister tells parliament
Jamaah Ahmadiyah followers participate in the first day of evening prayers for Ramadan at their mosque on Jalan Balikpapan, Central Jakarta. Police have foiled an effort to torch the building
From News Reports:
Jakarta, September 3: The Indonesian government must dissolve Jamaah Ahmadiyah because it has the potential to become more troublesome, Religious Affairs Minister Suryadharma Ali has reportedly told the House of Representative.
The minister based his demand on a ministerial decree that says Jamaah Ahmadiyah must not be allowed to spread because it deviates from Islamic teaching; tempointeraktif.com quotes the minister as saying.
“If that is what is called freedom of worship then that freedom has gone too far,” the news portal reported the minister as saying.
The basic right of other Muslims “is the right that must be protected when one group says the Prophet Muhammad is not the last prophet.”
The Jakarta Post says the minister reiterated his earlier statement that the group had violated a 2008 joint ministerial decree on Ahmadiyah, which stated that members of the faith could not propagate their teachings.
The decree said Jamaah Ahmadiyah followers could continue practice their faith through prayers and visits to mosques.
It is based on a 1965 law on the prevention of blasphemy.
Last month, President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono s instructed Indonesia’s national police to ensure there was no violence in support of calls to disband Jamaah Ahmadiyah in the Kuningan regency, West Java.
Political, Legal and Security Affairs Minister Djoko Suyanto said after a meeting with the president that he had been instructed to ensure that any anarchy, anywhere by anybody was strictly dealt with.
The instruction followed battles between members of more than five Muslim organisations from outside the Kuningan regency and Jemaah Ahmadiyah followers living in Manis Lor about 40 kilometers south of Cirebon and home to about 3,000 Jamaah Ahmadiyah faithful.
The Islamists, who demand the disbandment Jemaah Ahmadiyah, forced their way into a compound, destroyed houses and stoned police.
The Jemaah Ahmadiyah followers fought back with sticks and at least three people were injured.
Former religious affairs minister Maftuh Basyuni, home minister Mardiyanto and Attorney General Hendarman Supandji signed a joint decree which prohibits followers of Jemaah Ahmadiyah from seeking converts in June, 2008 but stopped short of banning their religion.
The decree also ordered Indonesia’s estimated 200,000 Ahmadiyah followers to turn to the beliefs of “mainstream Islam.”
Indonesia’s highest Muslim authority, the Indonesian Ulema Council, found that the Sufi-orientated Jemaah Ahmadiyya was defiant and should be banned.
Jemaah Ahmadiyya was founded in what is now Pakistan in the late 19th century and arrived in Indonesia in the 1920s.
Its opponents argued that it was devised by British colonialists to divide Muslims.
It was registered with the Justice and Human Rights Affairs Ministry on March 13, 1953 – just seven years after Indonesia became independent.
The Southeast Asian Times

Yudhoyono attempts to dampen irritation with Malaysia
From News Reports:
Jakarta, September 3: President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has emphasised the historical, cultural, political and economic links between the peoples of the Malay archipelago in an effort to dampen his people’s irritation with Malaysia’s detention of three Indonesian fisheries officers.
The irritation has become so acute that nationalists are volunteering for war; venerable university lecturers have refused State awards in protest at the government’s failure to assert Indonesia’s sovereignty and Malaysians in Indonesia are in danger of attack.
“We have the responsibility to nurture and continue this brotherhood,” the president said in a televised speech delivered from military headquarters in Jakarta
“At least two million of our fellow countrymen works in Malaysia, about 13,000 Indonesian students are studying in Malaysia and about 6,000 Malaysian student study in Indonesia,” he said.
“Malaysian tourists are the third largest coming into the country, and Malaysia has 285 investment projects in Indonesia in the last five years worth US$1.2 billion.”
The president also demanded an immediate start to the definition of sea boundaries with Malaysia.
“I boldly underline that negotiation process which is to be resumed by both governments would produce a real achievement,” he said.
“I care about the emotions you feel,” the president said.
“But we have to avoid violence because it often begets more violence.
“Indonesia will keep pushing Malaysia to negotiate borders as border disputes are a major source of tension.”
But the response to the speech among Indonesians has been mixed.
The rich media conglomerates welcomed it and the Antara news agency quoted House of Representatives Speaker Marzuki Alie as saying: “The speech was appropriate. The problem is his ministers, who are not synergistic, no coordination. His ministers talk all they like, turning the people against Yudhoyono.”
But the country’s antagonism to its Asean neighbour and former British colony with is reputation for mistreating Indonesian maids and guest workers has its antecedents in the nationalism of the country’s first president Soekarno and appeals for diplomacy rather than assertion of sovereignty is likely to fall on millions of deaf ears.
The detention of the Indonesian fisheries officer followed the arrest of seven Malaysian fishermen allegedly poaching off Middle Rocks at the eastern opening to the Singapore Straits.
Both Singapore and Malaysia claimed the two uninhabited rocks but the International Court of Justice ruled that they belonged to Malaysia in 2008.
In February, Malaysia’s Defence Minister Dr Ahmad Zahid Hamidi announced that the two governments had agreed rules of engagement at sea.
The rules include patrols in the disputed Ambalat zone in the Celebes Sea.
Association-of-Southeast-Asian-Nations neighbours Malaysia and Indonesia, which fought an undeclared war over the future of Borneo from 1962 to 1966, began sparring over the oil-rich waters of the Celebes Sea in June 2008.
During the hostilities members of the Betawi Brotherhood Forum rallied outside the Malaysian Embassy in Jakarta to support Indonesia’s claims to the waters off the coast of Indonesian’s East Kalimantan Province and the southeast of the Malaysian Sate of Sabah, Borneo Island.
The brotherhood portrays itself as representative of the indigenous population of Jakarta – it draws its support from the urban poor and unemployed and first emerged after violence between Betawi and Maduranese youths in east Jakarta in July 2001.
Its members say they are ready to go to war with Malaysia to defend their country’s rights to the oil-rich waters of the Celebes Sea.
The Southeast Asian Times

Indonesians volunteer for war against Malaysia
An Indonesian protester outside the Malaysian embassy, Jakarta
From News Reports:
Jakarta, September 2: More than 230 volunteers from the young to a man, 81, have registered with the so called Ganyang Malaysia, Crush Malaysia, command in preparation for war with Indonesia’s Asean neighbour Malaysia, reports temponteraktif com.
“We answer to the call of duty,” the news portal quotes command coordinator Sonny P.Sasono saying at the place of registration, the Proclamation Monument, central Jakarta.
“Why does the government always looks weak when dealing with Malaysia?” he asked. Registrations would remain open until Idul Fitri which is likely to be declared for next Friday.
The volunteers would undergo military training to prepare themselves for war, he said.
The Bernama news agency reports that the residence of an unidentified Malaysian engineer, 60, has been stoned at an oil palm plantation in Ketapang, West Kalimantan.
Five young men wearing headbands carrying the message “Ganyang Malaysia” were responsible for the assault as pat of a "sweeping" hunt for Malaysians, it says.
The news agency quotes the engineer as saying he was almost hit by a stone when he opened his front door to check the noise.
The Indonesian police had prevented further violence.
The man, who had sent his wife home to Malaysia, was alone.
The Jakarta Post reports that the House of Representatives foreign affairs committee has met with senior defence and other government officials to discuss the continuing dispute.
The newspaper says Foreign Affairs Minister Marty Natalegawa told the committee that his office was finalising a diplomatic note to protest Malaysia’s detention of three Indonesian fisheries officers.
The arrests followed the arrest of seven Malaysian fishermen allegedly poaching.
House-of-Representatives-member Yories Raweyai sought an official protest to Malaysia late last month.
“Malaysia’s actions show a lack of respect for Indonesia,” he said..
The Malaysian government deported the three Indonesian Maritime-Affairs-and-Fisheries Ministry officers following their arrest about six days earlier.
Seven Malaysian fishermen the Indonesians had detained in apparent retaliation were also freed.
The Indonesian fisheries officers reportedly abducted the seven fishermen off Middle Rocks at the eastern opening to the Singapore Straits.
Both Singapore and Malaysia claimed the two uninhabited rocks but the International Court of Justice ruled that they belonged to Malaysia in 2008.
The detained Indonesian officers were aboard a patrol boat when they reportedly met with 15 Malaysian fishermen who allegedly strayed into Indonesian waters.
The Bernama news agency says the fishermen had sailed from Kota Tinggi.
In February, Malaysia’s Defence Minister Dr Ahmad Zahid Hamidi announced that the two governments had agreed rules of engagement at sea.
The rules include patrols in the disputed Ambalat zone in the Celebes Sea.
Association-of-Southeast-Asian-Nations neighbours Malaysia and Indonesia, which fought an undeclared war over the future of Borneo from 1962 to 1966, began sparring over the oil-rich waters of the Celebes Sea in June 2008.
Both countries have awarded major contracts to international companies for either production or exploration of the waters off the coast of Indonesian’s East Kalimantan Province and the southeast of the Malaysian Sate of Sabah, Borneo Island.
Indonesia awarded Italy's ENI a production sharing contract in 1999.
The dispute originated with the publication of a Malaysian map published in 1979 that placed the disputed territory within Malaysian waters.
During last year’s hostilities members of the Betawi Brotherhood Forum rallied outside the Malaysian Embassy in Jakarta to support Indonesia’s claims to the waters off the coast of Indonesian’s East Kalimantan Province and the southeast of the Malaysian Sate of Sabah, Borneo Island.
The brotherhood portrays itself as representative of the indigenous population of Jakarta – it draws its support from the urban poor and unemployed and first emerged after violence between Betawi and Maduranese youths in east Jakarta in July 2001.
Its members say they are ready to go to war with Malaysia to defend their country’s rights to the oil-rich waters of the Celebes Sea.
The Southeast Asian Times

$2.4 billion sought in damages for Timor Sea oil spill
From News Reports:
Perth, September 2: The Indonesian government wants US$2.4 billion in compensation from Thai-owned rig operator PTTEP Australasia for the alleged damage done in the country’s waters following the spill from the Montara well about 250 kilometres off the Kimberley coast of Western Australia and 100 kilometres from Timor on Friday, August 21 last year.
Transport Minister Freddy Numberi, who is overseeing the claim, has confirmed the figure saying it was presented during talks at the company’s Australian headquarters in Perth last week.
“Our calculation includes potential damage to the coral reef in the affected area,” Dow Jones Newswires quoted him as saying.
PTTEP executives had responded with a request for detailed scientific evidence to support the Indonesian claim.
“PTTEP has joined hands with Australian authorities concerned to closely follow the environmental situation,” says a company statement.
But the spill was limited to the surrounds of the damaged Montara well.
“The result of these studies will be released to the public when completed,” the statement says.
In July, Indonesia’s President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono reiterated his demand that the Australian subsidiary of a Thai oil company pay compensation for the damage done to the Timor-Sea fishery.
“We have to do our duty by demanding settlement of claims to the company responsible for the oil spill,” he told a plenary session of his Cabinet.
The Jakarta Post newspaper reported that Australian Foreign Minister Stephen Smith and Indonesian Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa had agreed that their countries would cooperate to ensure that rig operator was held responsible for the spill.
The Indonesian foreign minister said the spill damaged 38 percent of his country’s part of the Timor Sea as shallow-water fish and whales died and seaweed farms were destroyed.
Both the Indonesian and Australian government had communicated with the Thai government about the spill, he said.
A 1996 Indonesia - Australia signed memorandum of understanding to deal with oil pollution had been used as the legal basis for communications during the spill.
In May, West Timor Care Foundation advisor Christine Mason lodged a complaint with the Australian Commission of Inquiry into the 74-day spill of oil, gas and condensate on behalf of eastern Indonesia’s 200,000 fishermen.
The spill followed an explosion aboard the West Atlas rig.
Sixty-nine workers were evacuated almost immediately to Darwin, about 690 kilometres to the east, when the exploratory hole “blew” and the subsequent fire that engulfed prevented the plugging of the leak until Tuesday, November 3.
West Timor Care Foundation chairman Ferdi Tanoni said the complaint had been lodged with the inquiry because the Indonesian government was not giving the damage the attention it deserved.
“The foundation has decided to file the charges by themselves because of the complicated procedure between the central government, local authorities and the National Team for Sea Oil Spill Emergency Responses,” he said.
The foundation had also presented the inquiry with a report about ecological and economic losses suffered by the societies of West Timor, Rote Ndao, Savu, Sumba, Flores, Lembata and Alor.
In addition, an Independent Team for the Timor Sea would be formed from experts in oceanology, international laws, geology, fisheries, environment and economy to support the complaint.
Mr Tanoni estimates that the spill fouled about 38.15 percent of Indonesia’s portion of the Timor Sea.
It would take decades to clean up, he said.
Thousands of fish of many species had been found dead and the catch of the traditional fishermen had dropped dramatically.
In March Counsel Assisting the Inquiry Tom Howe asserted that the failure to test a concrete casing was a major cause of the “blow out.”.
PTTEP Australasia and West Atlas drilling – in a submission to the inquiry - identified a missing 34 centimetre pressure cap and concrete that failed to set properly as a major cause of the spill in now estimated to have totalled 3,500 tonnes.
The management of both PTTEP and the West Atlas drilling unit, which is owned by Norway's Sea Drill Limited, say instructions for the cap to be installed were given in March when work on the exploratory well stopped.
Both managements believed the work had been done.
The slick, first estimated at eight nautical miles long and about 30 metres wide, was in a part of the Timor Sea described as a probable super highway linking the Indian and Pacific Oceans for marine life.
The West Atlas rig was built in Singapore in 2007.
The Southeast Asian Times

Thousands of evacuees fall ill after fleeing volcano
Mount Sinabung, north Sumatra, erupts after it was dormant for more than 400 years
From News Reports:
Medan, September 1: More than 2,470 of the about 30,000 evacuees from rumbling Mount Sinabung, north Sumatra, are reported to have suffered from a variety of illnesses, including throat inflammation, diarrhea and eye irritation.
“The illnesses are possibly caused by cold temperatures and thick ashes in villages where the evacuees are temporarily accommodated,” Karo regency health office director Diana Elita Ginting told kompas.com.
Two had been admitted to hospital vomiting blood and with a high fever, she said.
Mount Sinabung, which had been dormant for more than four centuries, erupted for the second day in succession on Monday, spewing white clouds of smoke and ash more than 2,000 metres into the air.
Thousands of people living along the slopes of the mount have been evacuated to emergency shelters, mosques and churches.
Rumah Berastagi village evacuation coordinator Naksir Purba, 51, said that the quick spread of the illnesses was caused by the unhealthy e environment where the evacuees lived.
Evacuation centers were mostly dirty as the evacuees left garbage anywhere, including the gutters, the coordinator said.
Difficulties to obtain potable water made conditions worse.
The Southeast Asian Times

Briton, Thai wife charged with Red Shirt violence
From News Reports:
Bangkok, September 1: Police have charged Briton Keith Bush, 49, and his Thai wife, Alisa, 33, with attempted arson, illegal assembly and inciting violence at an anti-government protest on May 19 following the dispersal of the red shirt rally in Bangkok.
The duo, who are allegedly linked to United Front for Democracy against Dictatorship, or Red Shirt, violence in Chiang Mai in May, were arrest at Suvarnabhumi airport.
Keith Bush was returning from the the United Arab Emirates and his wife had gone to the airport to meet him.
The Chiang Mai provincial court issued warrants for their arrest after they were allegedly caught by surveillance cameras trying to set fire to government property.
Last month, a Pathumwan District Court magistrate ordered the release of Irish-Australian Connor David Purcell, 30, after the Red Shirt supporter admitted to violating emergency rule.
The magistrate had sentenced him to 45 days in jail for his part in the March-to-May protests in Bangkok but took into account the two months he had already served in remand.
In July, Briton Jeff Savage, 49, was quickly deported from Thailand after he pleaded guilty before a magistrate of the Pathumwan Municipal Court, Bangkok, to violating the state of emergency.
The Southeast Asian Times


Ruling Democratic Party easily wins Bangkok election
Key People’s-Alliance-for-Democracy, or Yellow Shirt, coordinator Sondhi Limthongkul surrendered to police in Bangkok last week to answer charges that followed the blockades of Bangkok’s Suvarnabhumi and Don Mueang airports in November, 2008. He and 58 of the alliance’s cadres were allowed to go free without having to apply for bail. The alliances political arm, the New Politics Party, did not win a single seat in Bangkok municipal elections at the weekend
From News Reports:
Bangkok, August 31: The ruling Democrat Party has won more seats than both the Puea Thai Party or Thai for Thai Party and the political arm of the People’s Alliance for Democracy, the New Politics Party, which failed to win a single seat, in Sunday’s municipal elections.
But voter turnout was estimated at just 42 percent.
But Democratic Party advisor Ong-art Klampaibul cautioned people against assuming the results would portend a decisive victory for the party in a national election.
“This election does not reflect what would happen in the next general election,” said Mr Ong-art, who also serves as the Prime Minister’s Office minister.
“Voters in the council elections made their decisions based on individual candidates, while in general elections, voters tend to cast ballots for particular parties.”
City clerk and Bangkok Electoral Commission office director Charoenrat Chutikarn said poor weather and not an ineffective commission campaign, was to blame for the low turnout.
The Democrats won a by-election for Constituency 6 in Bangkok's outer eastern suburbs, last month.
Fifty-nine key People's Alliance for Democracy cadres have surrendered to police to answer charges that followed the blockades of Bangkok’s Suvarnabhumi and Don Mueang airports in November, 2008.
Police have summonsed 79 of the alliance’s cadres.
Those to surrender before they were freed without having to apply for bail included Sondhi Limthongkul.
The media magnate told reporters that he was turning himself in to answer terrorism and other charges.
“All the PAD leaders find the charges unacceptable and will fight the charges according to due process of law,” he said.
Airports of Thailand president Serirat Prasutanond has told Civil Court judges that alliance’s rally was held on the landside access point of Suvarnabhumi airport and had not inflicted any damage on the airport property.
In April, Sondhi Limthongkul was admitted to hospital after he was wounded in an ambush while enroute to his newspaper and television office.
The Southeast Asian Times

Displaced Semarang residents demand higher compensation
From News Reports:
Semarang, August 31: Dozens of residents of Kalirejo in the Semarang Regency, Central Java, have blockaded the construction of a toll road to Surakarta saying the compensation paid for their land was inadequate.
The Jakarta Post says the residents raised a 15-metre tall bamboo barrier and built a bamboo hut on the highway to stop vehicles entering and leaving the construction site.
The newspaper says residents have been in dispute with the contractor since 2008 and were evicted from their houses on July 30 last year.
“We will stay in the hut until they deliver decent compensation,” it quotes protester Budiono, 38, as saying.
The protestor told the newspaper that before his forced eviction he had a two-story house on a 125 square metre plot.
He had asked for rupiah 965 million, about US$107,103, in compensation from the contractor but had been paid only rupiah 288 million.
The Southeast Asian Times

Indonesian seafarers riot at Darwin detention centre
Indonesian seafarers riot at a detention centre in Darwin, Australia's Northern Territory
From News Reports:
Darwin, August 30: Indonesian seafarers awaiting trial for people trafficking have rioted at an immigration detention centre at the Coonawarra Naval Base, Darwin, apparently in protest at the time it takes for them to go before an Australian judge.
Immigration Department spokesperson Sandi Logan said the protest erupted about 4am when two Indonesians climbed a tree at the centre and refused to come down.
They were joined by other Indonesians and the situation escalated about 8am, when the rioters set fire to rubbish and mattresses they had stacked in the grounds of the centre.
More than a dozen men gathered on the roof of one building brandished two-metre-long poles, which they used to stop security guards.
The men also jumped between the roofs of demountable buildings at the centre, and one man threw a chair from the roof.
The riot continued for more than seven hours.
There are 151 Indonesian detainees at the centre, which is holding 487 people.
There are 97 Indonesian detainees in the compound where the violence erupted.
The fire caused a huge plume of black smoke to rise above Darwin's outskirts.
People trafficking carries a minimum of five years jail in Australia.
The Southeast Asian Times

Playboy editor banned from leaving after judges order him jailed
From News Reports:
Jakarta, August 30: The Immigration office has been formally asked to ban chief editor of Playboy, Indonesia, Erwin Arnada, from leaving the country after Supreme Court judges granted a prosecution appeal and found him guilty of public indecency and sentenced him to two years jail last Monday.
Kompas.com quotes senior prosecutor Muhammad Yusuf as saying the travel ban was needed to prevent the editor from fleeing Indonesia.
“We requested the travel ban to the immigration office on August 26,” he said.
But the editor, whose office was relocated to Bali following a series of Islamist protests, had not appeared when prosecutors went to his house in Jakarta to execute the Supreme Court’s verdict.
Force would be used if he did not answer a second summons, the prosecutor said.
The editor has posted a message on his Twitter account saying he was he was in Jakarta and would not flee.
South Jakarta District Court judges had found the editor not guilty in 2007.
The Southeast Asian Times

China’s Deputy Prime Minister cancels Manila visit
China's Deputy Prime Minister, Li Keqiang, has cancels a three-day official visit to the Manila this week
From News Reports:
Manila, August 29: China’s deputy Prime Minister Li Keqiang is reported to have cancelled an official three-day visit to Manila scheduled for the first week in September.
But GMA NewsTV quotes Foreign Affairs Ministry Ed Malaya as saying the postponement was made before the slaying of eight Hong Kong tourists during a bus siege in Manila last week.
“The visit was postponed in view of the natural disasters that have recently beset China which resulted in many casualties and destruction,” the spokesperson said.
But China’s Foreign Ministry spokesman Jiang Yu had announced the cancellation of the planned visit of a senior Philippine delegation that was to have travelled to Hong Kong and Beijing last Thursday saying the Philippine government should first complete its investigation of the hostage deaths.
The Philippine Inquirers says China’s embassy in Manila had sent emails to the media objecting to the draping of a Philippine flag over the coffin of hostage-taker, senior inspector Rolando Mendoza at his funeral.
The flag has since been removed.
The eight Hong Kong tourists were slain during a 12-hour siege aboard a bus at the Quirino Grandstand in Manila’s historical Rizal Park.
Autopsies performed on five of the eight victims showed they died from bullet wounds mostly in the head and neck.
But a police spokesman said further investigations were required to determine if the victims had been shot by the hostage taker disgraced senior police inspector Ronaldo Mendoza.
Fifteen of the hostages, including three Filipinos and two British nationals, were either freed or escaped.
The former policeman, 55, who armed himself with an M16 United States army rifle, to seize the bust was reportedly the father of three children and was due to retire next year.
Named as one of the country’s ten top police officers in 1986, he was among five Manila policemen dismissed after they were found to have extorted money from a hotel chef whom they allegedly forced to eat shabu, the Filipino parlance for a mixture of methamphetamine and caffeine.
The Southeast Asian Times

Indonesian who murdered Japanese jailed for 20 years
From News Reports:
Denpasar, August 29: Three judges of the Denpasar District Court have sentenced building worker Mawardi, 31, to 20 years in jail for the rape and murder of Japanese Hiromi Shimada, 41, last December.
Presiding judge Gusti Bagus Komang Wijaya said the murder had hurt Bali's image as a tourist destination.
The police arrested Mawardi and fellow building worker, Abdurrahman, 20, after the woman, who had visited Bali for 10 years, was found dead in her rented Kuta residence at Jalan Sadasari, 17, Kuta.
Her ankles were bound and she had suffered numerous stab wounds.
The police chief said a knife and a used condom had been retrieved and autopsy results suggested the woman, who had twice married on Bali and arrived for her last visit on November 30, had been raped.
Bank transfers indicating that the victim regularly received money from her grandmother in Japan.
These ranged from rupiah15 million, about US$1,500, to rupiah 20 million.
In May, the Denpasar District Court judges sentenced David Goltar Wicaksono, 26, to 20 years in jail after he was found guilty of robbing, raping and murdering Japanese tourist Rika Sano, 33, at Kuta beach on September 25 last year.
Prosecutor Edi Artha Wijaya had sought a life sentence.
The judges were told that the defendant first tried to rape the victim’s friend, Mayumi Someya, 30, who escaped to her hotel.
While Someya was reporting the attack to police, the young man went to the hotel posing as a policeman and lured Ms Sano to an isolated thicket where he hit her on the head with a piece of timber and then raped her as she died.
He then returned to her hotel room and stole her property.
The police found the semi-naked body of the young woman from Kanagawa Prefecture, south of Tokyo, three days later.
David Goltar Wicaksono was arrested in Malang, East Java, in October and returned to Denpasar to stand trial.
Many single women are among the Japanese who visit Bali and who rank second after Australian tourists.
The Southeast Asian Times


Singapore allows condemned trafficker extra time
Malaysians rally outside the Singapore High Commission, Kuala Lumpur, in an effort to spare the life of drug trafficker Yong Vui Kong, 22, who has been sentenced to death in Singapore
From News Reports:
Singapore, August 28: The Singapore Prisons Department has given condemned Malaysian drug trafficker Yong Vui Kong, 22, more time to seek presidential clemency. Malaysia’s Bernama news agency reports the young’s man’s lawyer, Ravi, has been told of the extension to a date to be fixed by letter.
Thursday had been the last day for the young man to petition for clemency after which he could have been hanged at any time.
Yong Vui Kong from Sabah was convicted on January 7 last year for trafficking 47grams of diamorphine and the Singapore High Court refused him a judicial review of his bid for clemency.
His lawyer is now appealing the High Court’s ruling in the Court of Appeal and the extension has been granted to allow the appeal to be settled.
Singapore’s Misuse of Drugs Act makes hanging mandatory for the offence.
Malaysia’s deputy Foreign Minister Kohilan Pillay has revealed that the country’s foreign ministry has written to Singapore’s President, Sellapan Ramanathan Nathan, seeking clemency.
“Yong’s family had also written to the President of Singapore,” he said.
Yong Vui Kong was arrested on June 13, 2007 and was 18 when he committed the offence.
The deputy foreign minister said that the government of Guangzhou, China, had commuted to life in prison the sentence of death passed upon former Universiti Malaysia Sabah student from Kelantan Umi Azlim Mohammad Lazim found guilty of trafficking 2.983kg of heroin at Shantao airport.
She had been sentenced to death on May 15, 2007 at the age of 23.
More than 100,000 people have signed an online petition organised in Malaysia to save Yong Vui Kong.
The petition’s organisers say the condemned young man grew up in poverty and had taken on odd jobs at the early age of 10.
He was now a devote Buddhist.
Malaysia’s Deputy Information, Communication and Culture Minister, Joseph Salang, has said that the government would also request clemency for Jabing Kho and Galing Kujat, both 26, who have been sentenced to death in Singapore for the murder of a Chinese national on February 17, 2008.
They had been robbing the victim.
Malaysia’s National Agency for the Protection and Placement of Migrant
Workers chairman Mohammad Jumhur Hidayat has announced that 19 Indonesians have been deported after the Appeals Court ruled against their execution.
“The Indonesian Embassy data reveals there are 177 Indonesian nationals facing capital punishment, 70 of them sentenced to death,” kompas.com quoted the chairman as saying.,
“The Malaysian court however has turned down appeals filed by two Indonesians, Tarmizi Yakup and Bustaman bin Buchori,” he said.
“We are helping them seek clemency from the king.”
The Southeast Asian Times

Young detainee will breastfeed her baby in hospital
From News Reports:
Manila, August 28: Morong Regional Court Judge Gina F. Cenit-Escoto has ruled that Morong 43 member Carina Judilyn Oliveros, 26, can be freed from detention to breastfeed her infant son in the Philippine General Hospital for the next three months.
The order will have Ms Oliveros pay stay in the hospital at her own expense and with three police escorts.
Her lawyers had sought six months.
Allowing the new mother to breastfeed her infant would substantially serve the purpose of her lawyer’s petition to have her released for humanitarian reasons, the judge said.
The order would also avoid any harm and danger that the child may suffer during incarceration.
Officers of the police Camp Bagong Diwa, detention centre, Taguig City, southern Metro Manila, must submit written reports dealing with the young woman’s status to the court every other Friday from Friday, September 10. hospital.
Free the 43 Health Workers Alliance spokesperson Carlos Montemayor said that although the decision not to grant Ms Oliveros the extra three months was a disappointment, it was now hoped that another of the Morong 43, Mercy Castro, would not have to suffer the same ordeal when she gives birth in October.
“This welcome development is clearly the result of the unwavering perseverance of the detainees, their families and supporters of the detainees, their families and supporters to further the call to free the Morong 43,” he said.
“We continue to challenge President Noynoy Aquino to prove that he is sincere in upholding justice and democracy by releasing the Morong 43 and all political prisoners in the country.”
Twenty-three armed men, who arrived in three vehicles, took mother and son from the Philippine General Hospital to the detention centre earlier this month after Judge Cenit-Escoto originally ruled against her application.
The men, members of the Jail Management and Penology Bureau, took her handcuffed and in a wheelchair while her mother was settling the bill.
The Morong 43, now 38 after five supposedly admitted they were members of the New People’s Army and turned State witnesses, include 26 women and two physicians who were arrested at a guest house owned by Consultant to the Philippine General Hospital and professor emeritus of the University of the Philippines College of Medicine Dr Melecia Velmonte in Morong, Rizal Province, on February 6 this year.
The military held them in detention for almost three months before they were transferred to the Taguig City Jail.
Both Carina Judilyn Oliveros and Mercy Castro are health workers from Central Luzon.
The Southeast Asian Times

Philippines suspends four SWAT team members
China’s Ambassador to the Philippines Liu Jianchao and an unidentified survivor of the Manila bus siege at the Ninoy Aquino International airport where family members of the woman survivor who were killed during the siege were loaded abaord a chartered Cathay Pacific aircraft
From News Reports:
Manila, August 27: Four police officers have been suspended after eight Hong Kong tourists were slain during a 12-hour siege aboard a bus at the Quirino Grandstand in Manila’s historical Rizal Park.
National police spokesman Senior Superintendent Agrimero Cruz told reporters in Manila that the suspended officers had led the 200-strong Special Weapons and Tactics (SWAT) team in attempting to storm the bus.
They had been suspended to ensure they “did not exert undue influence” in a police investigation into the affair, he said.
The policeman in charge of the hostage rescue, Chief Superintendent Rodolfo Magtibay, has been ordered to take leave.
Autopsies performed on five of the eight victims showed they died from bullet wounds mostly in the head and neck.
But the police spokesman said further investigations were required to determine if the victims had been shot by the hostage taker disgraced senior police inspector Ronaldo Mendoza.
The Southeast Asian Times

Police name suspect after Maluku reporter’s slaying
From News Reports:
Ambon, August 27: Police have identified a suspect in the slaying of Sun TV and RCTI Ambon reporter Ridwan Salamun, 28, in Kota Tua, Maluku.
The villager has been identified only as I.R.
The Jakarta Post quotes national police spokesman Senior Commander Ketut Untung Yoga Ana said that Maluku as saying the suspect had been one of 14 witnesses who had been questioned.
Ridwan Salamun, the father of a three-year-old son, was killed while reporting a fight between youths from the Banda Ali complex and Mangun hamlet, Fiditan, Tual, about 8.30 a.m. Saturday.
Some of the combatants set upon him with machetes as he was shooting pictures and he subsequently died of his wounds on his way to hospital.
The communal battle was reportedly sparked after residents of Banda Ali warned a youth from Mangun who passed the complex on a noisy motorbike while they were holding their fasting-month evening prayers.
Three houses were damaged.
About 100 members of Indonesia’s elite anti-terrorist squad were deployed to the boundary that divides the two communities.
The reporter, who celebrated his 28th birthday last Thursday, was himself a resident of Banda Ali.
He worked for Ambon TV from 2006 to 2008 and when that station closed, the Jakarta-based TPI as a stringer in 2009 and to RCTI in 2010.
He was more recently appointed as a contributor to SUN-TV, which like RCTI and TPI, is a subsidiary of the MNC Group.
He was stationed in Tual and southeast Maluku.
SUN TV news network president director Arief Suditomo told kompas.com that the dead man had “suffered from hack wounds on his neck and his back.”
Independent Journalist Alliance, Makasar chapter, Chairperson Ana Rusli has demanded the police investigate the death.
“The State has failed to provide safety for journalists who fight for the people and human rights,” said the chairperson.
Journalists rallied out Maluku police headquarters to demand an investigation as did about 70 journalists in Denpasar, Bali.
Earlier this week, journalists of Tangerang’s Journalists Working Group gathered outside the Tangerang Metro police headquarters in a show of solidarity for the slain reporters. They also distributed a written statement which expressed their concern about the killing and their protest against use of violence against the press.
“We demand that the police fully investigate the case and take stern measures against the suspects,” said their chairman Andre Somanegara.
In Jayapura, journalists have agreed to boycott any news related to the West Papua police in protest in what they say is the absence of an investigation of the mysterious death of a Merauke reporter, Ardiansyah Matrais, 31.
“So long as Ardiansyah's death is still a mystery, we will never cover news from the Papua police, even when we are invited to,” said Jayapura Independence Journalists Association secretary Cunding Levi.
TV reporter Ardiansyah has been found floating dead in the Gudang Arang River, the Merauke Regency, West Papua, his hands handcuffed behind his back.
Merauke newspaper Koran Rajawali editor Jojo, as saying that in journalists in the regency had received text messaged threatening them with death because of their reporting of the forthcoming regional election.
The Southeast Asian Times

Malaysia to launch indigenous land-rights inquiry
From News Reports:
Kuala Lumpur, August 27: Malaysia’s Human Rights Commission will hold a public inquiry into indigenous rights, reports The Star newspaper.
The newspaper quotes Commissioner Jannie Lasimbang as saying that although non-governmental organisations often received complaints about land ownership and use settlement was arduous.
These had included objections to the construction of dams in Sabah and Sarawak that were affecting the lives of the indigenous people.
“The inquiry would bring about public awareness of issues and human rights violations,” she said.
The Commissioner told a news conference held after a meeting with NGOs to discuss economic, social and cultural rights issues that Sabah had 39 indigenous; Sarawak 35 and peninsula Malaysia eight.
Commissioner James Nayagam conceded that the reported abuse of Penan women had spurred the need for the inquiry.
“A lot of things had ‘allegedly happened’ but we need to confirm them,” he said.
“A national inquiry could bring together experts and the presentation of facts and research, not assumptions.”
“With the findings, individuals can take action against those responsible for wrongdoings,” he said.
In Miri, Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak announced that Native Customary Rights landowners in Sarawak will soon have their land surveyed and gazetted to guarantee their ownership.
Ringgit 20million had been approved for the perimeter surveys, he said.
The Southeast Asian Times

Philippine president acknowledges “inadequacies” after slaughter
Hong Kong national, Amy Ng Yau Woon Leung whose husband and two daughters were killed, her son shot and left fighting for his life in a Manila hospital, is helped from the tourist bus that was held hostage by disgraced senior inspector Rolando Mendoza. "No, I'm not blaming the Chinese government but the Philippine government. I really can't accept how they could do such a thing," she told the Hong Kong media
From News Reports:
Manila, August 26: Philippines President Benigno Aquino acknowledged “inadequacies” in the police response to a twelve-hour siege aboard a bus at the Quirino Grandstand in Manila’s historical Rizal Park that left eight Hong Kong tourists dead.
Fifteen of the hostages, including three Filipinos and two British nationals, were either freed or escaped during the siege.
The president had also declared yesterday a day of mourning in solidarity with the people of Hong Kong to “share their sorrow,” said his spokesman Edwin Lacierda.
The president also met with China’s ambassador, Liu Jianchao, and telephoned Hong Kong chief minister Donald Tsang to brief them about the investigation of the siege and how it ended.
The need for the “redefinition of limitations” was among the lessons learned from the shooting, the president said.
“What were the limitations imposed on the media, I think none.”
The media’s intensive coverage “provided a wealth of information” to Mendoza, whom he noted was watching television on the bus and listening to the radio “throughout the whole time.”
“And each time he got a new piece of information that obviously factored into his equations and it didn’t help our security forces any,” he said.
Philippine Interior Secretary Jessie Robredo echoed the president’s view of the failed negotiations with disgraced former senior policeman Rolando Mendoza, 55, that ended in slaughter.
“Had we been better prepared, better equipped, better trained, maybe the response would have been quicker despite the difficulty.
“All the inadequacies happened at the same time.”
Of the 25 people originally on the bus, 13 of the Hong Kong tourists and four Filipinos survived. Nine of the survivors had been freed before the shooting began.
Two of the freed hostages were British nationals.
Britain's Foreign Office said Tuesday that two of the hostages who were released were Survivor Amy Ng mourned the deaths of her husband Ken Leung, whom she said confronted the disgruntled policeman and daughters Doris, 21, and Jessie, 14.
Her son, Jason, is still in hospital with serious head wounds.
“I thought I would fight for survival so I could take care of my children, but two of them have already died,” she said.
The former policeman, who armed himself with an M16 United States army rifle, to seize the bust was reportedly the father of three children and was due to retire next year.
Named as one of the country’s ten top police officers in 1986, he was among five Manila policemen dismissed after they were found to have extorted money from a hotel chef whom they allegedly forced to eat shabu, the Filipino parlance for a mixture of methamphetamine and caffeine.
Hong Kong Travel Industry Council executive director Joseph Tung said the passengers aboard the Hong Thai travel agency-chartered bus were aged four to 72 and were scheduled to return to Hong Kong late Monday night.
Philippine Tourism Secretary Alberto Lim said the crisis would likely damage the industry.
About 140,000 Hong Kong tourists visit the Philippines each year.
The Southeast Asian Times

MP wants Indonesia to lodge protest with Malaysia
From News Reports:
Jakarta, August 26: House-of-Representatives-member Yories Raweyai wants the Foreign Ministry to issue an official protest to Malaysia following last week’s arrest of Fishery Ministry officers off the Riau Islands.
“Malaysia’s actions show a lack of respect for Indonesia,” he told reporters.
Police in Jakarta have tightened security at the Malaysian embassy in Kuningan, West Jakarta, following an hour-long demonstration by members of the nationalist Benteng Demokrasi Rakyat outside the building in south Jakarta.
The demonstrators had threatened to “sweep” Malaysians from Jalan Diponegoro, Jakarta, if Indonesian police did not release their comrades who were arrested at the rally.
In response,
The Bernama news agency reports that Malaysia's Ambassador to Indonesia, Munshe Afzaruddin Syed Hassan, has complained to the Indonesian foreign ministry that the protesters damaged embassy property.
“If they want to stage a demonstration outside the embassy, by all means, go ahead, because they have every right to do so, but they must not destroy the embassy's property,” he said.
The Malaysian government deported the three Indonesian Maritime-Affairs-and-Fisheries Ministry officers following their arrest about six days earlier.
Seven Malaysian fishermen the Indonesians had detained in apparent retaliation were also freed.
The Indonesian fisheries officers reportedly abducted the seven fishermen off Middle Rocks at the eastern opening to the Singapore Straits.
Both Singapore and Malaysia claimed the two uninhabited rocks but the International Court of Justice ruled that they belonged to Malaysia in 2008.
Talks between foreign ministers Anifah Aman, Malaysia, and Dr Marty Natalegawa, Indonesia, are credited with having secured the release of the ten.
The detained Indonesian officers were aboard a patrol boat when they reportedly met with 15 Malaysian fishermen who allegedly strayed into Indonesian waters.
The Bernama news agency says the fishermen had left Kota Tinggi.
In February, Malaysia’s Defence Minister Dr Ahmad Zahid Hamidi announced that the two governments had agreed rules of engagement at sea.
The rules include patrols in the disputed Ambalat zone in the Celebes Sea.
Association-of-Southeast-Asian-Nations neighbours Malaysia and Indonesia, which fought an undeclared war over the future of Borneo from 1962 to 1966, began sparring over the oil-rich waters of the Celebes Sea in June 2008.
Both countries have awarded major contracts to international companies for either production or exploration of the waters off the coast of Indonesian’s East Kalimantan Province and the southeast of the Malaysian Sate of Sabah, Borneo Island.
Indonesia awarded Italy's ENI a production sharing contract in 1999.
The dispute originated with the publication of a Malaysian map published in 1979 that placed the disputed territory within Malaysian waters.
During last year’s hostilities members of the Betawi Brotherhood Forum rallied outside the Malaysian Embassy in Jakarta to support Indonesia’s claims to the waters off the coast of Indonesian’s East Kalimantan Province and the southeast of the Malaysian Sate of Sabah, Borneo Island.
The brotherhood portrays itself as representative of the indigenous population of Jakarta – it draws its support from the urban poor and unemployed and first emerged after violence between Betawi and Maduranese youths in east Jakarta in July 2001.
Its members say they are ready to go to war with Malaysia to defend their country’s rights to the oil-rich waters of the Celebes Sea.
The Southeast Asian Times

Armed men snatch Morong 43 mother from hospital

From News Reports:
Manila, Twenty armed men, who arrived in three vehicles, have taken Morong 43 member Carina Judilyn Oliveros, 26, and her infant son from the Philippine General Hospital to jail in Bicutan, Taguig City.
The men, members of the Jail Management and Penology Bureau, took her handcuffed and in a wheelchair while her mother was settling the bill.
The news Bulatlat.com reports the young mother was taken from the hospital after Judge Gina Cenat Escoto of the Morong Regional Trial Court rejected to her temporary release for humanitarian reasons.
“They handcuffed me but they did not want the public to see it. I told them,” quoted her as saying ‘Don’t cover the handcuffs.’
“As I was being brought out of the room, I shouted repeatedly ‘Free the 43!’ “The people looked at us. They have probably seen my picture at the posters outside the hospital,” she said.
Ms Oliveros, who is determined to breastfeed her first child, now has him in the detention cell she shareswith 22 other women

Armed guards used a wheelchair and handcuffs to return Judilyn Oliveros, 26, and her newborn son to jail from the Philippine General Hospital after Judge Gina Cenat Escoto of the Morong Regional Trial Court rejected to her temporary release for humanitarian reasons. Members of the so-called Morong 43 has now started fasting in support of their demand to be freed from detention where they have been held for seven months without trial

detainees, all members of the Morong 43.
The 43 have since issued a media statement saying they would begin fasting in support of their demand for release.
The workers, who include 26 women and two physicians, were arrested as supposed members of the New Peoples Army at a guest house owned by Consultant to the Philippine General Hospital and professor emeritus of the University of the Philippines College of Medicine Dr Melecia Velmonte in Morong, Rizal Province, on February 6 this year.
The military held them in detention for almost three months before they were transferred to the Taguig City Jail.
A second detainee Mercy Castro, 27, gave birth to her second child in October.
Both women are health workers from Central Luzon.
In June, supporters of the Morong 43 gathered outside the residence of President-elect Benigno Aquino to appeal for their release.
The Southeast Asian Times

Eight tourists confirmed dead in Manila bus siege
From News Reports:
Manila, August 25: Disgraced former senior policeman Rolando Mendoza, 55, shot eight tourists dead before a sniper’s bullet felled him to end a twelve-hour siege aboard a bus at the Quirino Grandstand in Manila’s historical Rizal Park.
Another seven tourists were reportedly admitted to hospital with unspecified wounds.
The former policeman, who had demanded the return of his benefits and salary, had free nine hostages, including children, during the day.
The Filipino bus driver escaped from the bus only moments before police commandos stormed the vehicle.
“I shot two Chinese. I will finish them all if they do not stop,” Ronaldo Mendoza told a local radio station as the police assault was about to get under way.
Philippine President Benigno Aquino, who confirmed the death toll, defended the police assault saying negotiators had initially believed Mendoza would surrender but the situation later deteriorated.
The former policeman, who armed himself with an M16 United States army rifle, to seize the bust was reportedly the father of three children and was due to retire next year.
Named as one of the country’s ten top police officers in 1986, he was among five Manila policemen dismissed after they were found to have extorted money from a hotel chef whom they allegedly forced to eat shabu, the Filipino parlance for a mixture of methamphetamine and caffeine.
Hong Kong Travel Industry Council executive director Joseph Tung said the passengers aboard the Hong Thai travel agency-chartered bus were aged four to 72 and were scheduled to return to Hong Kong late Monday night.
The Xinhua news agency says China’s foreign minister, Yang Jiechi, has telephoned his Philippine counterpart Alberto Romulo to express Beijing's shock and demand a thorough investigation of the slayings.
The Southeast Asian Times

Manila bus siege ends as police commandos storm aboard
Police commandos storm a chartered tourist bus with disgraced senior inspector Rolando Mendoza and 15 hostages aboard in heavy rain at Manila's historic Rizal Park about 9pm last night
From News Reports:
Manila, August 24: Disgraced former senior policeman Rolando Mendoza, 55, was apparently dead together with an unknown number of his hostages after commandos stormed a tourist bus in central Manila about 9pm last night.
The hostage-taker had been among five Manila policemen dismissed after they were found to have extorted money from a hotel chef whom they allegedly forced to eat shabu, the Filipino parlance for a mixture of methamphetamine and caffeine.
Armed with an M16 United States army rifle, the former policeman, reportedly the father of three children and due to retire next year, took the hostages aboard the bus at the Quirino Grandstand in historical Rizal Park about 10am yesterday and demanded the return of his benefits and salary.
He had freed eight of 25 tourists he had taken hostage by yesterday afternoon but shooting started after his brother, Gregorio Mendoza, who is also a police officer, complained to reporters that the police had wanted to implicate him in the hostage-taking.
Police decided to storm the bus when the Filipino driver escaped and shouted that everyone on board had been killed.
Six of the estimated 15 hostages, most of them Chinese nationals, were shown crawling out of the bus after police assault teams attacked.
Others were carried motionless from the bus, but the police did not say how many people had been killed or wounded.
A man shown slumped and apparently lifeless by the main door of the bus was identified as the gunman.
“We have never had anything like this before. We are very much concerned,” Agence France Presse quoted Hong Kong Travel Industry Council executive director Joseph Tung as saying.
“We hope the tour members will be released as soon as possible.”
Executive director Tung said the passengers aboard the Hong Thai travel agency-chartered bus were aged four to 72 and were scheduled to return to Hong Kong late yesterday.
“We have heard nothing like that so far,” he said.
The Southeast Asian Times


Ambon police hunt killer of young TV reporter
From News Reports:
Ambon, August 24: Police are hunting the men who killed Sun TV and RCTI Ambon reporter Ridwan Salamun in Kota Tua, Ambon, reports the Antara news service.
The news agency quotes Maluku regional police commander Brigadier General Totoy Herawan Indra as saying: "We will investigate after collecting evidence and finding witnesses, we will go after the suspects.”
The commander called on all Maluku citizens and especially the young reporter’s family, who include his widow Nurfi Saoda Toisuta, and three -year old son, Rizky Zaky, not to retaliate to the killing.
Antara says Ridwan Salamun was killed while reporting a fight between youths from the Banda Ali complex and Mangun hamlet, Fiditan, Tual, about 8.30 am Saturday.
Some of the combatants set upon him with machetes as he was shooting pictures and he subsequently died of his wounds, the news agency says.
The communal battle was reportedly sparked after residents of Banda Ali warned a youth from Mangun who passed the complex on a noisy motorbike while they were holding their fasting-month evening prayers.
Three houses were damaged.
About 100 members of Indonesia’s elite anti-terrorist squad had been deployed to the boundary that divides the two communities. Ridwan, who celebrated his 28th birthday last Thursday, was himself a resident of Banda Ali.
He worked for Ambon TV from 2006 to 2008 and when that station closed, the Jakarta-based TPI as a stringer in 2009 and to RCTI in 2010.
He was more recently appointed as a contributor to SUN-TV, which like RCTI and TPI, is a subsidiary of the MNC Group.
He was stationed in Tual and southeast Maluku.
SUN TV news network president director Arief Suditomo told kompas.com that the dead man had “suffered from hack wounds on his neck and his back,” and died on his way to hospital.
Independent Journalist Alliance, Makasar chapter, Chairperson Ana Rusli has demanded the police investigate the death.
“The State has failed to provide safety for journalists who fight for the people and human rights,” said the chairperson.
Journalists rallied out Maluku police headquarters to demand an investigation as did about 70 journalists in Denpasar, Bali.
The Southeast Asian Times



A cartoon shows a judge sitting in the dock instead of on the bench.
He was the second judge in six years to have been found guilty of breach of the Indonesian Corruption Act
...Open page here



What they're saying 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


Published by Pas Loizou Press Darwin Northern Territory Australia
PASLOIZOUPRESSDARWIN@bigpond.com

Oz $ buys
Updated daily.
Prices indicative only

US...0.8998
Brunei...1.
2070
C
ambodia...3,731.22
China..Yuan
6.0585
East Timor..
0.8896
Euro...0.7038
Hong Kong..6.9218
Indonesia Rupiah
.8,122.33
Japan..
75.6925
Laos...7,348.29
Malaysia Ringgit...2.8208
Myanmar..5.7665
Papua NewGuinea
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Philippines Peso..
.40.6090
Singapore dollar..
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Thailand...Baht...28.0412
Viet Nam
Dong...17,533.53

Pirate attack surge in South China sea
From News Reports:
Kuala Lumpur, September 3: Pirate attacks in the South China Sea shipping lane have surged, says International Maritime Bureau Piracy Reporting Centre director Noel Choong.
There have been eight attacks off Indonesia's Mangkai Island in the past two weeks, he says.
“It appears one or more groups of pirates are operating in the area.
“Pirates are armed with guns and machetes and robbed vessels of cash and crew valuables.”
“Mangkai Island lies on a busy sea passage running along the east coast of the Malaysian peninsula. It is a major route for ships heading between East Asian nations and the Pacific Ocean.
The Southeast Asian Times


Another $12 million to clean up Da Nang airport

From News Reports:
Da Nang, September 2: President Barack Obama had approved another US$12 million to clean Agent Orange from the surrounds of Da Nang airport, American Samoa’s non-voting delegate to the House of Representatives, Eni Faleomavaega, announced during a three-day visit to Viet Nam.
The Viet Nam veteran’s visit was to help the cooperative effort to mitigate the effects of the defoliant in Viet Nam.
The Obama administration allocated $3 million for the Da Nang cleanup last year.
The airport was used as a military base during the American War in Viet Nam and drums of the chemical were abandoned there.
The Southeast Asian Times


Thousands donate to mega church

From News Reports:
Singapore, September 1: Supporters have donated S$21 million to the mega church New Creation in just 24 hours, reports The Straits Times.
The newspaper says church founder Joseph Prince announced the figure during services.
“You people, you are amazing,' he told the packed auditorium. Twenty-one million in 24 hours. Amazing.”
An estimated 22,000 people attended the service and the mass collection was the church’s third in three years.
The Southeast Asian Times

Bank credit for East Kalimantan up 26 percent
From News Reports:
Samarinda, August 31: The amount of bank credit distributed in East Kalimantan to June 30was rupiah 28.135 trillion or an increase of 26.39 percent against the same six months of last year, reports the Antara news agency.
“The amount of credits by conventional banks in East Kalimantan was rupiah 28.135 trillion but with all the credits, including those provided by banks outside East Kalimantan, the total was rupiah 44.960 trillion,” the news agency quotes Deputy Bank Indonesia manager, Samarinda, Gentur Wibisono as saying.
The money was loaned for agriculture, mining, industry, construction, transport, trade, social and business services.
The Southeast Asian Times

US missing at Asean meet
From News Reports:
Ha Noi, August 30: The United States government was not represented at the 42nd meeting of the Asean Economic Council in Da Nang last week although ministers from China, Japan and India attended.
Agence France Presse quotes Asean secretary general Surin Pitsuwan as saying “we are disappointed” the US could not attend the annual economic discussions but he described Washington's commitment to the region as “quite strong.”

The Southeast Asian Times

Executives barred from Singapore casinos

From News Reports:
Singapore, August 29: Second Chance Properties has banned its senior executives and finance personnel from visiting Singapore’s two casinos after Far Ocean Sea Products managing director Henry Quek lost S$26 million at the gaming tables, reports The Straits Times.
Seven employees will have to apply for exclusion from World Sentosa and Marina Bay Sands while employed at Second Chance says the newspaper.
It quotes chief executive Mohamed Salleh Marican as saying the ban was a matter of corporate governance.
The memory of a manager who stole S$190,000 worth of gold ten years ago after losing heavily in stocks had reminded him that it was “better to be safe than sorry.”
Earlier this month, it was reported that an unidentified Singaporean, 50, who lost about US$208,000,000 in a three-day gambling spree, planned to sue the casino that loaned him the money to lose.
Legal documents claim the unidentified casino loaned the money without proper checks in three installments during March and April.
The documents say the casino had continued with their loans although the higher-roller had exceeded his credit limit.
In June, the organiser of the first conference held at Marina Bay Sands Casino, the Inter-Pacific Bar Association 2010, counter sued the Las Vegas Sands Corporation’s after its Singapore subsidiary sued the association for US$214,000.
The association had withheld payment for the event saying the power failed during a speech by the Chief Justice of New South Wales James Jacob Spigelman and delegates complained of unfinished rooms.
In its counter-claim, lodged with the High Court, the association says the Marina Bay Sands Casino made many promises in an effort to convince it to hold its yearly conference there.
Instead, its reputation was damaged when water leaked into the rooms of some delegates; there were intermittent power failures and guests were locked in their rooms.
The plaintiff’s are seeking aggravated damages.
Singapore’s founding Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew was a keynote speaker at the Inter-Pacific Bar Association conference held from May 2 to 5 and the law firm he founded, Lee & Lee, was one of the sponsors.
The Southeast Asian Times

Wealth divide an obstacle
for Asean

From News Reports: Da Nang, August 28: The widening gap between Asean’s rich and poor countries was a major obstacle to the association’s development, Viet Nam’s Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung has told the 42nd meeting of its Economic Council in Da Nang.
This was especially true in the context of accelerating economic integration, he said.
Asean wants to establish a single market and manufacturing base of about 600 million people by 2015..
The discrepancy between Asean’s rich and poor members “is quite wide” and could undermine efforts to create the single market, its secretary general Surin Pitsuwan told reporters.
“A house divided by such a gap is not stable,” he said.
Asean statistics show that GDP per capita within the ten member countries ranges from a yearly US$419 in Myanmar to more than $36,000 in Singapore.
The Southeast Asian Times

Peugeot to make an Asean car

From News Reports:
Kuala Lumpur, August 27: Peugeot is working on a new Asean Car, to be made in Malaysia for the domestic market and also for regional export, reports The Star newspaper.
The car is scheduled for launch in 2012, it says.
It says the Asean Car could either be a subcompact or compact although discussions about the type to be introduced are still at the preliminary stage.
Peugeot deputy managing director Nicolas Wertans announced in January that it would make Malaysia the regional production hub for right-hand drive models.
The Southeast Asian Times

Displaced villagers seek compensation
From News Report:
Phuket, August 26: Villagers in Patong whose modest residences were destroyed by a backhoe last week are seeking baht 10 million in compensation from the development company that ordered the demolition work, reports the Phuket Gazette.
The newspaper says the compensation request was lodged at a meeting with Kathu Police Superintendent Arayaphan Pukbuakhao and Patong Mayor Pian Keesin who has ordered municipal workers to provide food for the displaced villagers.
The backhoe took less than an hour to do its early-morning work.
The 10-million-baht compensation averages about baht 145,000 baht for each of the families that had occupied the long-disputed plot of land.
Most of the residents were immigrant street vendors.
The Southeast Asian Times

Two men accused of attempted illegal
timber sa
le
From News Reports:
Kuala Terengganua, August 25: Two men have been charged with forging documents for the sale of reserve timber worth ringgit 114million.
Wan Lateff Wan Embong, 54, was charged with forging a document purportedly “an agreement for the sale of standing trees” worth ringgit 102 million between Tuanku Mizan and International Ship Industry on a 5,113 hectare site in the Tembat forest reserve area in the Hulu Terengganu district.
He was also charged with forging a document purportedly an agreement between Tuanku Nur Zahirah and International Ship Industry for the sale of trees worth ringgit 12 million on a site covering 568 hectares.
The offences were alleged to have committed the offences between September 30 and October 5 last year.
The other accused, former private college lecturer Tengku Nikman Tengku Mahmud, 56, from Kajang, Selangor, was charged with abetment.
Both men pleaded not guilty before Judge Bakri Abdul Majid who allowed them bail.
The Southeast Asian Times



Former people’s committee chairman jailed

From News Reports:
Ho Chi Minh City, August 24: Former Hoc Mon District People's Committee chairman Nguyen Van Khoe has been sentenced to 26 years in jail for the acceptance of bribes totalling VND1.4-billion, about US$71,942, and abuse of power in the approval of two infrastructure projects.
Ho Chi Minh Supreme Court judges also found Nguyen Van Khoe guilty of abusing his official capacity to influence others and appropriate property, reports the flagship publication of the Viet Nam Youth Union, Thanh Nien.
They found that the former people’s committee chairman had received bribes from former Thanh Phat company director Tran Thi Ha and her deputy Ha Van Hoa to approve a housing estate and an industrial zone in the district’s Dong Thanh Commune in late 2002 and early 2003, it says.
The former chairman had also asked them for cash and gifts worth a total of $15,000 and VND780 million, about $40,082, to bribe other officials to secure the approval, despite Thinh Phat not having the money to pay them.
Former Dong Thanh People’s Committee chairman Tran Van Te was sentenced to 13 years in prison for the acceptance of bribes and abuse of power.
Former Hoc Mon District Planning and Investment overseer Duong Minh Trung was sent to jail for seven years and Dong Thanh Commune People’s Committee member, Nguyen Van Do, went to jail for three years for abuse of power.
Developers, go-betweens and Vietnam Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development officials were also jailed for up to 20 years.
The Southeast Asian Times


China to build PNG centre

From News Reports:
Port Moresby, August 23: China’s economic and commercial office third secretary, Zhao Chunfeng, and National Planning and Monitoring deputy secretary Jacob Mera have signed an agreement that will have Chinese companies design and build an international convention centre in Port Moresby.
Work is expected to begin next January, reports The Nation newspaper.
“The centre will be built adjacent to the Parliament House at Waigani,” the newspaper quotes deputy secretary Mera as saying.
In November last year, Papua New Guinea and China have signed five agreements intended to enhance social and economic development.
The agreements, concluded at talks between China’s deputy premier Li Keqiang and senior government ministers led by deputy prime minister Sir Puka Temu, will have the Export and Import Bank of China provide the Papua New Guinea Finance Ministry with preferential loans of up to kina 313 million;
In July last year, Papua New Guinea’s Defence Force Chief Peter Ilau and China’s Defence Minister Liang Guanglie agreed to further expand military exchanges and cooperation.
The Southeast Asian Times


Malaysian Chinese want race quota dropped

From News Reports
Kuala Lumpur, August 22: The Malaysian Chinese Association-organised Chinese Economic Congress wants the 30 percent Bumiputera preference quota gradually removed.
Malays want it maintained.
The congress argues that removal of the preference would promote good governance and greater transparency.
Malays are now Malaysia’s majority population and their support is essential to the survival of the Barisan Nasional government.
The Southeast Asian Times


Singaporean loser sues casino

From News Reports:
Singapore, August 21: An unidentified Singaporean, 50, who lost about US$208,000,000 in a three-day gambling spree, plans to sue the casino that loaned him the money to lose, reports China Press.
The news service cites legal documents that claim the unidentified casino loaned the money without proper checks in three installments during March and April.
The documents say the casino had continued with their loans although the higher-roller had exceeded his credit limit.
In June, the organiser of the first conference held at Marina Bay Sands Casino, the Inter-Pacific Bar Association 2010, counter sued the Las Vegas Sands Corporation’s after its Singapore subsidiary sued the association for US$214,000.
The association had withheld payment for the event saying the power failed during a speech by the Chief Justice of New South Wales James Jacob Spigelman and delegates complained of unfinished rooms.
In its counter-claim, lodged with the High Court, the association says the Marina Bay Sands Casino made many promises in an effort to convince it to hold its yearly conference there.
Instead, its reputation was damaged when water leaked into the rooms of some delegates; there were intermittent power failures and guests were locked in their rooms.
The plaintiff’s are seeking aggravated damages.
Singapore’s founding Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew was a keynote speaker at the Inter-Pacific Bar Association conference held from May 2 to 5 and the law firm he founded, Lee & Lee, was one of the sponsors.
The Southeast Asian Times


Philippines anticipates Guam work bonanza

From News Reports:
Manila, August 20: Labour Secretary Rosalinda D. Baldoz estimates that about 1,000 skilled construction workers will be needed on Guam for the transfer of United States military facilities from Okinawa, Japan, to its Pacific trust territory.
The Labour Secretary uses a report from Saipan-based Labour Attaché Carmelina Velasquez to make the estimate.
The attaché says contracts for the construction of the first major project of the transfer, a naval hospital worth US$700 million, will be awarded before the end of September.
The Labour Secretary says in a statement that construction will continue until 2020 with a project requiring about 7,000 to 10,000 workers beginning each year.
A Filipino contractor on Guam has told the Philippine Overseas Labour Office that easily half of the required manpower can be sourced from the Philippines, the statement says.
The Labour Secretary says the US military is assessing the island of Tinian in the Northern Marianas to train groups of 200 marines or more because of a shortage of suitable land on Guam.
In February, Annual Pacific Island Local Government conference executive director Dean Alegado said more than 1,500 Filipino contractors were expected to bid for contracts in the United States military’s US$15-billion building programme on the island.
In July, Guam governor Felix Camacho told reporters in Manila that Filipino workers could be among the 10,000 to 15,000 needed to build the new military bases.
Skilled workers would be needed to meet job demands that could not be met by the islanders, he said.
“It is not exclusive but the likelihood is that most will be from the Philippines,” he told reporters
Chinese workers would not be hired.
The Japan Press Weekly says the Japanese government has agreed to pay US$6 billion to have United States marines transferred from Okinawa to Guam.
The agreement will have Japan pay 60 percent of the total cost for the relocation, including $2.8 billion in cash.
The agreement says conditions of the transfer include Japan's financial contribution; infrastructure on Guam and replacement facilities on Okinawa.
The Southeast Asian Times


Farmers accept MSG maker’s compensation offer

From News Reports:
Ha Noi, August 19: Farmers in Ho Chi Minh City and Ba Ria - Vung Tau Province have agreed to drop their legal demands against Taiwanese MSG maker and polluter, Vedan, provided it pays them their promised compensation, reports the flagship publication of the Vietnam National Youth Federation, Thanh Nien.
The newspaper says Vedan has agreed to compensate farmers of the Can Gio district in mangrove wetlands 40 kilometres southeast of Ho Chi Minh a total of VND45.7 billion, about US$2.39 million for the damage it has done to the Thi Vai River during the past 14 years.
The newspaper says Can Gio District Farmers Association representative signed an agreement to postpone litigation if Vedan pays 50 percent of the sums promised within the next week.
The agreement provides for the second tranche to be paid by January 14, 2011 with the Bangkok Bank Public Co Ltd as guarantee.
Farmers in southern Ba Ria -Vung Tau Province signed a similar agreement [for VND53.6 billion, about US$2.8 million, the same day, says the newspaper.
Farmers in southern Dong Nai Province - where the pollution has done the most damage - have yet to respond to the company’s offer of almost VND120 billion, about $6.29 million.
The Southeast Asian Times


Singapore’s budget hotels face prosecution

From News Reports:
Singapore, August 18: Dragon-Hotel-Mosque-Street- Chinatown, licensee Teo Eng Heng, 41, has been charged with two counts of allowing prostitutes to use a hotel room for their work on two occasions in February and April this year.
Last week, the general manager of the Hotel 81 - the biggest budget hotel chain in Singapore with about 30 hotels, Chu Poh Yong, 41, was accused of allowing prostitutes to operate at two outlets.
In April, Siah Chen Long, the licensee of the Shing Hotel, Little India, was charged with allowing non-Singaporean prostitutes to work from his premises.
Hearings against all three are pending.
The Southeast Asian Times


Jakarta told not to encourage beggars

From News Reports:
Jakarta, August 17: The Jakarta public order agency has asked the public not to give money to street beggars and encourage more into the capital city ahead of the Idul Fitri holiday.
“We expect people in Jakarta who happen to be on streets to avoid giving money to the beggars,” agency director Effendi Anas told a news conference.
The public could donate money for the poor through places of worship; their neighbou rhood unit or charity organizations but not in the streets, he said.
Jakarta has always undergoes a sharp increase in the number of beggars during Ramadan, many of them coming from West and Central Java.
The Southeast Asian Times


Police seize fake notes in East Java

From News Reports:
Kediri, August 16: Police in Kediri, East Java, have confiscated counterfeit foreign currencies with a nominal value of rupiah 1 trillion, reports the Antara news agency.
It quotes Adjunct Senior Commissioner Hasudungan Ritonga as saying four suspects had also been arrested.
“We received a tip from local people about a plan by a fake-money-dealer gang who were about to make a transaction with fake foreign currencies,” he said.
“It led us to tail and arrest them.”
The suspects were named as Budi, 50 of the Cianjur district West Java; Acep Supandi. 50, also of Cianjur; Bambang Supriheriyanto, 45, of Magelang and Rusendi, 47, of Cimahi.
The Southeast Asian Times


Kelantan launches Syariah currency

From News Reports:
Kota Baru, August 14: The Malaysian state Kelantan has launched a Syariah currency with the introduction of the gold dinar and silver dirham to be used as legal tender with bank notes.
Mentri Besar, or chief minister, Nik Abdul Aziz Nik Mat said it was intended to expand the use of the currency for all transactions, including the paying of civil servants.
The chief minister said 1,000 traders as well Lembaga Tabung Haji – the major share holder in Bank Islam Malaysia and Bank Islam Malaysia had agreed to use the gold dinar and the dirham silver currency in their transactions.
“There is no reason why transactions in syariah currency cannot be practised in the state as it was widely used thousands of years before the fall of the Ottoman Empire,” the Bernama news agency quotes him as saying.
The Kelantan Mentri Besar Incorporated’s subsidiary, Kelantan Gold Trade, will manage the currency.
All the new coins worth about US$631,328.50 are reported to have been sold.
Islamic law specifies that the dinar must total 4.25 grams of gold and the dirham 3.0 grams of pure silver.

The Southeast Asian Times

Malaysians pay more for garlic

From News Reports:
Kuala Lumpur, August 13: The heavy floods in northwest China have Malaysians paying almost ringgit 10, about US$3.13, and more for a kilo of garlic, reports The Star newspaper.
The wholesale price for garlic has risen from between ringgit 33.50 per kilo to ringgit 8.50 per kilo, it says.
The newspaper quotes Malaysia Foodstuff Import and Export Association president Chuah Poh Khiong as saying the floods, particularly in garlic growing provinces like Henan and Shandong, had caused the price rise.
“Malaysia imports 100 percent of its garlic from China,” he said and accounts about 77 percent of global production.
The shortage had sparked a global bidding war for garlic.
“Importers are paying $3,000 for a tonne of garlic now compared with $800 tonne last year are getting worried,” he said.
The Southeast Asian Times


Tobacco officials accused of accepting bribes

From News Reports:
Bangkok, August 11: The United States Justice Department has accused Thailand Tobacco Monopoly officials of accepting bribes of more than US$1.93 million from American companies to ensure Brazilian-grown tobacco is sold in Thailand.
The accusations was made after came after the Universal Corp of Richmond, Virginia, and Alliance One International of Morrisville, North Carolina, agreed to pay almost $30 million to settle charges that they bribed foreign officials to get lucrative overseas tobacco sales contracts.
Universal was accused of bribing officials in Thailand, Malawi and Mozambique, while Alliance One was accused of bribing officials in Thailand, China, Greece, Indonesia and Kyrgyzstan.
The Southeast Asian Times


Mudflow victims demand money

From News Reports:
Surabaya, August 11: Hundreds of Lapindo mudflow victims have rallied outside the office of the East Java governor to demand that the payments for their losses be paid.
“In the previous meeting - on Friday, June 4 - the governor promised us that he will urge the central government to give us compensation,” rally coordinator Susatyo told tempointeraktif.com.
“But it's an empty promise.”
Fellow protester Bambang Kuswanto said the mudflow had made houses unsafe.
The protesters want compensation of rupiah 1.5 million, about US$160 per square metre for buildings and rupiah 1 million per square metre for land.
The mudflow had displaced more than 50,000 people have been displaced at Sidoarjo, about 20 kilometers south of Surabaya, since May 2006.
The Southeast Asian Times


Ha Noi luxury villa market tumbles

From News Reports:
Ha Noi, August 10: The Ha Noi market for up market villas and townhouses was down 20 percent against two months ago, the Vietnam News Agency quotes retail website www.batdongsan.com.vn managing director Le Xuan Truong as saying.
The number of investors looking for new property has declined by 50 percent.
“The market is now in a bad situation,” the director said.
“It cannot get worse.”
Vinh Gia Construction Investment JSC director Ngo The Vinh said his company had not completed a single residential agreement in the last month.
The Southeast Asian Times

425,000 debtors banned from travelling
From News Reports:
Kuala Lumpur, August 9: Almost 425, 000 Malaysians who have not paid their tax or education loans or are bankrupt have been banned from the leaving the country.
They include titled Malaysians and the youngest is just 25.
The Southeast Asian Times


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