Showing posts with label Share News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Share News. Show all posts

India,France sign multimillion nuclear power deal

India and France signed a multibillion agreement Monday to build two nuclear power plant in India as French President Nicolas Sarkozy worked to drum up business for his nation during his four-day visit here.
Areva SA, one of France's main nuclear power companies, will build two European pressurized reactors of 1,650 megawatts each at Jaitapur in the western Indian state of Maharashtra.
Te agreement, valued at about $9.3 billion, was signed in the presence of Sarkozy and Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. 

The deal marked the first two of 20 nuclear reactors India wants to build to meet its soaring energy demand.
Foreign governments have been courting India to try to get a piece of that lucrative market, but there have been concerns that India's recently passed liability law might prove too onerous for international companies to risk entering the market here. 

Indian officials assured France that their liability laws were in keeping with international standards and the security of nuclear operators was ensured, a French official said. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media. 

Sarkozy and Singh later met to discuss regional security, trade and investment.
The talks were also expected to touch on plans for the structural reform of the international monetary system through the Group of 20 countries, currently headed by France.
Sarkozy, who arrived Saturday, is accompanied by his defense, foreign and finance ministers and nearly 60 business leaders. 

No defense agreements are expected during the visit, but Sarkozy is likely to push for French companies to win contracts to supply military hardware.
French companies are negotiating to upgrade 51 Mirage-2000 jet fighters in the Indian air force. India is also in the market to buy 126 fighter jets, a deal worth $11 billion, and about 200 helicopters worth another $4 billion.
According to defense experts, India is expected to spend $80 billion between 2012 and 2022 to upgrade its military. 

Sarkozy's visit also coincides with at least two important meetings with Indian business leaders. The French president is keen to attract Indian companies to invest in France, even as French companies are seeking a slice of India's booming economy. 

Bilateral trade declined in 2009 due to global economic woes, but was on the upswing this year, said Vishnu Prakash, India's external affairs ministry spokesman. The two countries have set a trade target of 12 billion euros ($15.8 billion) for 2012.
Sarkozy is to visit Mumbai, India's financial and entertainment capital, before returning home Tuesday.

Artillery heard on tense Yellow Sea island

YEONPYEONG ISLAND, South Korea – North Korea warned Friday that U.S.-South Korean plans for military maneuvers put the peninsula on the brink of war, and appeared to launch its own artillery drills within earshot of an island it showered with a deadly barrage this week.

The fresh artillery blasts came just after the top U.S. commander in South Korea, Gen. Walter Sharp, toured the country's Yeonpyeong Island in a show of solidarity with Seoul and to survey damage from Tuesday's hail of North Korean artillery fire that killed four people.
An official at the South Korean Joint Chiefs of Staff said about 20 blasts were heard on Yeongpyeong coming from North Korea's mainland some 7 miles (11 kilometers) to the north, and that nothing landed on South Korean territory. The military official spoke on condition of anonymity, citing military policy.

Tensions have soared between the Koreas since the North's strike Tuesday destroyed large parts of this island, killing two civilians as well as two marines in a major escalation of their sporadic skirmishes along the sea border.
The attack — eight months after a torpedo sank a South Korean warship in nearby waters, killing 46 sailors — has also laid bare weaknesses in South Korea's defense 60 years after the Korean War. The incident forced South Korea's beleaguered defense minister to resign Thursday.

The heightened animosity between the Koreas is taking place as the North undergoes a delicate transition of power from leader Kim Jong Il to his young, inexperienced son Kim Jong Un, who is in his late 20s and is expected to eventually succeed his ailing father.

As Washington and Seoul pressed China to use its influence on Pyongyang to ease tensions amid concerns of all-out war, the U.S. prepared to send a nuclear-powered aircraft carrier to South Korean waters for joint military drills starting Sunday.
The North, which sees the drills as a major military provocation, unleashed its anger over the planned exercises in a dispatch earlier Friday.
"The situation on the Korean peninsula is inching closer to the brink of war," the report in the North's official Korean Central News Agency said.
A North Korean official boasted that Pyongyang's military "precisely aimed and hit the enemy artillery base" as punishment for South Korean military drills, and warned of another "shower of dreadful fire," KCNA said.
Reuters/JoYong-Hak
The regime does not recognize the maritime border drawn by the U.N. in 1953, and considers the waters around Yeonpyeong Island its territory. Yeonpyeong Island, home to South Korean military bases as well as a civilian population of about 1,300 people, lies only 7 miles (11 kilometers) from North Korean shores and is not far from the spot where the Cheonan sank in an explosion in March.
Gen. Sharp called Tuesday's attack on Yeonpyeong a clear violation of an armistice signed in 1953 at the end of the three-year Korean War.
"We at United Nations Command will investigate this completely and call on North Korea to stop any future attacks," he said during a visit to the island Friday.
Washington keeps more than 28,000 troops in South Korea to protect the ally from aggression — a legacy of the Korean War that is a sore point for North Korea, which cites the U.S. presence as the main reason behind its need for nuclear weapons.
Dressed in a heavy camouflage jacket, army fatigues and a black beret, he walked down a heavily damaged street strewn with debris from buildings. Around him were charred bicycles and shattered bottles of soju, Korean rice liquor.
Hours later, after Sharp had returned to Seoul, AP photographers at an observation point on the northwest side of Yeonpyeong heard four explosions and saw at least one flash of light on the North Korean mainland.
There were no immediate reports of damage. Only a few dozen residents remain on Yeonpyeong, with most of the population of 1,300 fleeing in the hours and days after the attack as authorities urged them to evacuate.
On Thursday, President Lee Myung-bak ordered reinforcements for the 4,000 troops on Yeonpyeong and four other Yellow Sea islands, as well as top-level weaponry and upgraded rules of engagement.
He also sacked Defense Minister Kim Tae-young amid intense criticism over lapses in the country's response to the attack.
Lee, dressed in a black suit, visited a military hospital in Seongnam near Seoul Friday to pay his respects to the two marines killed in the North Korean attack.
Lee laid a white chrysanthemum, a traditional symbol of grief, on an altar, burned incense and bowed before framed photos of the two young men. Consoling sobbing family members, he vowed to build a stronger defense.
"I will make sure that this precious sacrifice will lay the foundation for the strong security of the Republic of Korea," he wrote in a condolence book, according to his office.
___
Foster Klug reported from Seoul. AP photographer David Guttenfelder on Yeonpyeong and writer Kwang-tae Kim in Seoul contributed to this report.

Kanye West, Kung Fu Panda star at NYC parade

NEW YORK – A high-kicking Kung Fu Panda and a diary-toting Wimpy Kid joined the giant balloon lineup as the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade unfolded Thursday, drawing tens of thousands of spectators to the annual extravaganza on a chilly, overcast morning.
Emily Rowlinson, a tourist from London, squealed and snapped pictures with her cell phone as the massive Smurf balloon floated by a packed sidewalk along the route.
"We don't have anything like this in England," she exclaimed. "We have parades. We don't have any sort of huge, floating beasts. It's very cool."
As millions more watched the live broadcast on television, revelers gathered nationwide for other parades in cities such as Detroit, Chicago and Philadelphia. The parades headline observances across the nation that also feature football and family dinners with too much food on the table.
In his weekly radio and Internet address, President Barack Obama called on Americans to help each other through tough times.
"This is not the hardest Thanksgiving America has ever faced," Obama said. "But as long as many members of our American family are hurting, we've got to look out for one another."
He later telephoned ten U.S. servicemen and women stationed around the world to thank them for their service and sacrifice. He wished them and their families a happy Thanksgiving, before joining his own for the holiday.
The Macy's parade featured an eclectic lineup of entertainers including Kanye West, Gladys Knight and Colombian rocker Juanes. The Broadway casts of "American Idiot" and "Elf" performed, along with marching bands from across the United States.
Perched on her father's shoulders, 16-month-old Stella Laracque wriggled and danced with excitement as SpongeBob SquarePants, Hello Kitty, Shrek and other beloved figures wafted past her.
"She doesn't really know the characters, but she's loving it," said her father, Mike Laracque of Manhattan.

Head of the Presidential Work Unit for Development Monitoring and Control (UKP4)

YEONPYEONG ISLAND, South Korea – South Korea's president ordered more troops to a front-line island and dumped his defense minister Thursday as the country grappled with lapses in its response to a deadly North Korean artillery strike.
In scenes reminiscent of the Korean War 60 years ago, dazed residents of Yeonpyeong island foraged through blackened rubble for pieces of their lives and lugged their possessions down eerily deserted streets strewn with bent metal after Tuesday's hail of artillery. The barrage darkened skies, set off fierce blazes, killed four South Koreans and raised fears of an escalation that could lead to full-scale war.
"It was a sea of fire," resident Lee In-ku said, recalling the flames that rolled through the streets of this island that is home to military bases as well as a fishing community famous for its catches of crab. The spit of land is just seven miles (11 kilometers) from North Korea, but had only six pieces of artillery.
Despite warnings from North Korea that any new provocation would be met with more attacks, Washington and Seoul pushed ahead with plans for military drills starting Sunday involving a nuclear-powered U.S. aircraft carrier in waters south of this week's skirmish.
The exercises will likely anger the North — the regime cited South Korean drills this week as the impetus behind its attack — but the president said the South could little afford to abandon such preparation now.
"We should not ease our sense of crisis in preparation for the possibility of another provocation by North Korea," spokesman Hong Sang-pyo quoted President Lee Myung-bak as saying. "A provocation like this can recur any time."
Washington and Seoul also ratcheted up pressure on China, North Korea's main ally and biggest benefactor, to restrain Pyongyang.
Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao responded by calling on all sides to show "maximum restraint" and pushed again to restart the six-nation talks aimed at persuading North Korea to dismantle its nuclear programs in exchange for aid. Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi, meanwhile, canceled a trip to Seoul this week.
The heightened inter-Korean animosity is taking place as North Korea undergoes a delicate transition of power from leader Kim Jong Il to his son Kim Jong Un, who is in his late 20s and is expected to eventually succeed his ailing father.
On Thursday, Lee accepted his defense minister's offer to resign after lawmakers lashed out at the government, claiming officials were unprepared for Tuesday's attack and that the military response was too slow. Even those in Lee's ruling party demanded the dismissal of Defense Minister Kim Tae-young.
At an emergency meeting in Seoul, Lee ordered reinforcements for about 4,000 troops on tense Yellow Sea islands, top-level weaponry and upgraded rules of engagement that would create a new category of response when civilian areas are targeted.
Skirmishes between the Korean militaries are not uncommon, but North Korea's heavy bombardment of Yeonpyeong Island was the first naval skirmish since the Korean War to kill civilians.
South Korean troops returned fire and scrambled fighter jets in response, but two South Korean marines and two construction workers were killed and at least 18 others wounded. South Korea has said casualties on the North Korean side were likely significant, but none were immediately reported by the secretive regime.
Marine Lt. Col. Joo Jong-wha acknowledged that the island is acutely short of artillery, saying it has only six pieces: the howitzers used in Tuesday's skirmish.
"In artillery, you're supposed to move on after firing to mask your location so that they don't strike right back at you," he told reporters. "But we have too few artillery."
On the streets Yeonpyeong, some spoke of walls of flame, surreal images of blackened skies, massive dust clouds, orange-colored lightning.
"My town was almost burned out," said Noh Myung-san, 56, who was planting trees near a mountain when he heard artillery explosions. "I thought it was an earthquake."
Islanders walked gingerly over potholes and past electric poles pockmarked by artillery shells. Blackened beer bottles lay outside what's left of a supermarket. Coast guard officers patrolled the streets in pairs, passing deserted restaurants, offices and schools.
Cha In-soon, a 55-year-old who runs a coffee shop, was in tears as she pulled a trolley loaded with boxes of grapes. "I lost everything."
Shin Sung-nam, 70, said the attack was worse than anything he'd experienced during the Korean War.
His 17-year-old grandson, Lee Sung-won, said he was taking an exam when the barrage started.
"I just saw something black was coming from the sky and hit the ground," he said.
On the streets of Seoul, people drew comparisons between the attack and the war of the 1950s.
"This is scarier than the Korean War," said Kim Hak-won, 74. "This is the first time I saw a village devastated by bomb shells."
Though North Korea regularly threatens to rain munitions down on its rival, the two Koreas are required to abide by an armistice signed in 1953 at the end of their bitter three-year war.
North Korea does not recognize the maritime line drawn by U.N. forces and blamed South Korean military maneuvers near Yeonpyeong Island this week for the clash, calling them a violation of its territory.
The disputed waters have been the site of three other deadly naval skirmishes since 1999. However, the most costly incident was the sinking of a South Korean warship eight months ago that killed 46 sailors in the worst attack on South Korea's military since the war.
The defense minister also offered to resign following that incident, but the president refused.
Yeonpyeong resident Cheong Hyung-yong, 77, said this time Seoul reacted with too little, too late.
"If only I was young, if only I could fight against the North Koreans," he said. "I wish I could punish the North Koreans right now."
___
Foster Klug reported from Seoul. Kwang-tae Kim, Seulki Kim and Jean H. Lee in Seoul also contributed to this report.

Cabinet ministers’ work improving, presidential assistant says

Head of the Presidential Work Unit for Development Monitoring and Control (UKP4), Kuntoro Mangkusubroto, said Thursday the latest evaluation result of the Cabinet ministers’ performances showed improvement.
Kuntoro told reporters before a plenary Cabinet meeting at the Presidential Office in Jakarta that the number of ministries and state institutions receiving “red marks” on their evaluation results was declining.
He refused, however, to expose how many of these institutions were still considered poor performers and their names.
“I have forgetten the exact details… But, in general, the result of the evaluation in late October was better than in late August.”
Kuntoro said President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono was studying the results of the evaluation.
Yudhoyono said earlier he would make UKP4’s evaluation results as one aspect to consider in determining whether a Cabinet reshuffle was needed.

More money pledged to stop flash floods in Jakarta

The Jakarta council has finally approved an increase of Rp 40 billion (US$ 4.48 million) for an allocation in the draft of next year’s budget, to ramp up efforts to ease flash floods in the northern areas of Jakarta.

The budget will be allocated to build dikes in Marunda, Cilincing, on Jl. RE Martadinata and Kamal Muara and a pumping station in Cilincing, all in North Jakarta.

Council deputy speaker Triwisaksana urged the administration to speed up various flood mitigation projects in anticipation of the rainy season.

“We ask them [the administration] to immediately fix the troubled inundation spots in the city as well as upgrade drainage systems in addition to procuring more portable pumps in 2011,” Triwisaksana was quoted by Jakarta news portal Beritajakarta.com on Wednesday afternoon. He added that other measures, such as new dikes and river dredging, were also necessary.

To finance the projects, the Jakarta administration has allocated Rp 1.76 trillion next year, an increase from Rp 1.36 trillion this year.

Floods strike N. Jakarta once again

Residents in North Jakarta are dealing yet again with floods, which they say are getting worse every year.

“This is the fourth day [of flooding],” resident of Kali Baru subdistrict Fhylis Sudiyanto said on Thursday, as quoted by tempointeraktif.com.

Fhylis said tidal water levels began swelling at 9 a.m, peaking an hour later. Usually the water recedes in the afternoon, he said.

Hundreds of residents in Cilincing subdistrict were also affected by the flooding. In some areas water levels reached one meter high.

Rosini, a Cilincing resident, said even though the area has been flooding for years, it has worsened in the last three years.

House to test Busyro, Bambang for KPK top post

The House of Representatives will carry out a fit-and-proper test on two candidates – Busyro Muqodas and Bambang Widjojanto – nominated to head the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK).

Busyro, the current chairman of Judicial Commission and a PP Muhammadiyah adviser, will sit the test at 2 p.m. today, and Bambang, a human rights activist and former Legal Aid Foundation Board chairman, will take the test at 7:30 p.m.

House of Representatives Commission III deputy chairman Azis Syamsuddin said the two candidates would face a bombardment of questions put to them by legislators to test their knowledge of the law.

The candidates should show that they are well versed in various issues regarding law enforcement and corruption eradication as well as general philosophy as stipulated in the United Nations Convention against Corruption, Azis added.

“They have to prove their knowledge about legislation so that as the commission chief or as an investigator they can maintain their impartiality and accountability in law-enforcement proceedings,” Azis said as quoted by Kompas.com.

The House commission will vote to select the new KPK chief on Thursday.

Busyro or Bambang would fill a position that has been vacant since former KPK chief Antasari Azhar was sentenced to 18 years in prison for masterminding the murder of businessman Nasrudin Zulkarnaen in March, 2009.

The commission is scheduled on Thursday to select two people to lead the KPK, one from the commission’s current leadership, including M Jasin, Haryono, Bibit S Rianto, Chandra M Hamzah, and also one of the two new nominees.

Vatican: Everyone can use condoms to prevent HIV

Using a condom is a lesser evil than transmitting HIV to a sexual partner - even if that means a woman averts a possible pregnancy, the Vatican said Tuesday, signaling a seismic shift in papal teaching as it explained Pope Benedict XVI's comments.

The Vatican has long been criticized for its patent opposition to condom use, particularly in Africa where AIDS is rampant. But the latest interpretation of Benedict's comments about condoms and HIV essentially means the Roman Catholic Church is acknowledging that its long-held, anti-birth control stance against condoms doesn't justify putting someone's life at risk.

"This is a game-changer," said the Rev. James Martin, a Jesuit editor and writer. "By acknowledging that condoms help prevent spread of HIV between people in sexual relationships, the pope has completely changed the Catholic discussion on condoms."

The change came on a day when U.N. AIDS officials announced that the number of new HIV cases has fallen significantly - thanks to condom use - and a U.S. medical journal published a study showing that a daily pill could help prevent spread of the virus among gay men.

"This is a great day in the fight against AIDS ... a major milestone," said Mitchell Warren, head of the AIDS Vaccine Advocacy Coalition

In Africa, AIDS activists, clerics and ordinary Africans alike applauded the pope's revised comments.

"I say hurrah for Pope Benedict," exclaimed Linda-Gail Bekker, chief executive of South Africa's Desmond Tutu HIV Foundation. She said the pope's statement may prompt many people to "adopt a simple lifestyle strategy to protect themselves."

Worldwide, 33 million people live with HIV.

In Sierra Leone, the director of the National AIDS Secretariat predicted condom use would now increase, lowering the number of new infections.

"Once the pope has made a pronouncement, his priests will be in the forefront in advocating for their perceived use of condoms," said Dr. Brima Kargbo.

Vatican spokesman the Rev. Federico Lombardi said Benedict knew full well that his new comments would provoke intense debate. Conservative Catholics have been trying to minimize the scope of what he said since excerpts were published this weekend in the Vatican newspaper.

Lombardi praised Benedict for his "courage" in confronting the problem.

"He did it because he believed that it was a serious, important question in the world of today," Lombardi said, adding that the pope wanted to give his perspective on the need for a greater humanized, responsible sexuality.

Benedict said, in a book released Tuesday, that condom use by people such as male prostitutes was a lesser evil since it indicated they were moving toward a more moral and responsible sexuality by aiming to protect their partner from a deadly infection. On Tuesday, the Vatican expanded the comments to include women.

Benedict received a copy of the book "Light of the World" during an audience Tuesday with the author, Peter Seewald, who conducted several hour-long interviews with the pontiff last summer.

"I hope that this book is useful for the faith of mny people," Benedict said.

The pope's comments in the book implied that he was referring primarily to homosexual sex, when condoms aren't being used as a form of contraception. Questions arose immediately about the pope's intent, though, because the Italian translation of the book used the feminine for prostitute, whereas the original German used the masculine.

Lombardi told reporters Tuesday that he asked the pope whether he intended to refer only to male prostitutes. Benedict replied that it really didn't matter, the important thing was the person in question took into consideration the life of the other Lombardi said.

"I personally asked the pope if there was a serious, important problem in the choice of the masculine over the feminine," Lombardi said. "He told me 'no.' The problem is this ... It's the first step of taking responsibility, of taking into consideration the risk of the life of another with whom you have a relationship."

"This is if you're a man, a woman, or a transsexual. We're at the same point. The point is it's a first step of taking responsibility, of avoiding passing a grave risk onto another," Lombardi said.

The clarification is significant.

UNAIDS estimates that 22.4 million people in Africa are infected with HIV, and that 54 percent - or 12.1 million - are women. Heterosexual transmission of HIV and multiple, heterosexual partners are believed to be a major cause of the high infection rate in Africa.

UNAIDS on Tuesday announced a nearly 20 percent drop in new HIV infections around the world over the past decade - largely due to increased condom use.

Benedict drew the wrath of the United Nations, European governments and AIDS activists last year when he told reporters that Africa's AIDS problem couldn't be resolved by distributing condoms. "On the contrary, it increases t problem," he said then.

In the book, the pope was not justifying or condoning gay sex, condoms as a means of artificial contraception or heterosexual sex outside of a marriage. He reaffirms the Vatican opposition to homosexual acts and artificial contraception and reaffirms the inviolability of marriage between man and woman.

But by broadening the condom comments to also apply to women, the pope is saying that condom use is a lesser evil than passing HIV onto a partner even when pregnancy is possible.

"We're not just talking about an encounter between two men, which has little to do with procreation.We're now introducing relationships that could lead to childbirth," Martin said.

While the lesser evil concept has long been a tenet of moral theology, the pope's comments mark the first time a pope had ever publicly applied the theory to condom use as a way to fight HIV transmission.

Individual bishops and theologians have applied that theory, but it had previously been rejected at the highest levels of the Vatican and theologians have been disciplined for voicing it, Martin said.

Monsignor Jacques Suaudeau, an expert at the Vatican's bioethics advisory board, said the pope was articulating the theological idea that there are degrees of evil.

"Contraception is not the worst evil. The church does not see it as good, but the church does not see it as the worst," he told The Associated Press. "Abortion is far worse. Passing on HIV is criminal. That is absolute irresponsibility."

He said the pope broached the topic because questions about condoms and AIDS persisted and the church's teaching hadn't been clear. There is no official Vatican policy about condoms and HIV, and Vatican officials in the past have insisted that condoms not only don't help fight HIV transmission but make it worse because it gives users a false sense of security.

The late Cardinal Alfonso Lopez Trujillo famously said in 2003 that the HIV virus was small enough that it could "easily pass through" a condom - setting off furious criticism by AIDS activists.

Suaudeau said Benedict deliberately raised the issue in the interviews.

"He was not foolish," Suaudeau said. "It was intentional. He thought that this was a way of bringing up many questions. Why? Because it's true that the church sometimes has not been too clear."

Lombardi said the pope didn't use the technical terminology of "lesser evil" in his remarks in the book because he wanted his words to be understood by the general public. Vatican officials, however, said the concept was what he meant.

"He spoke with caution and courage of a pragmatic way through which missionaries and other ecclesial workers can help to defeat the pandemic of AIDS without approving but also without excluding - in particular cases - the use of a condom," said Luigi Accatoli, a veteran Vatican journalist.

Scientists, meanwhile, reported Tuesday that a pill already used to treat HIV infection turns out to be a powerful weapon in protecting healthy gay men from catching the virus.

Daily doses of Truvada cut the risk of infection by 44 percent when given with condoms, counseling and other prevention services, a global study found.

The results are "a major advance" that can help curb the epidemic in gay men, said Dr. Kevin Fenton, AIDS prevention chief at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. But he warned they may not apply to people exposed to HIV through male-female sex, drug use or other ways. Studies in those groups are under way now.

Rights watchdog calls for thorough investigation into Papua torture video

The Indonesian government should use the newly available video testimony of a torture victim to mount a thorough, impartial and transparent investigation into the case, Human Rights Watch says.

Human Rights Watch's Asia division deputy director Phil Robertson said he lamented that the Indonesian authorities were “sitting on their hands rather than fulfilling their obligations and proactively identifying and prosecuting the soldiers responsible”.
  
Robertson was referring to the torture of Tunaliwor Kiwo, a Papuan farmer, and his neighbor, Telangga Gire, by Indonesian soldiers as depicted in a video that surfaced last month.
The 10 minute video, captured on a cell phone on May 30 shows soldiers kicking Kiwo’s face and chest, burning his face with a cigarette, burning his genitals with a glowing bamboo stick and placing a knife at Gire’s neck.

In a video just made available, Kiwo describes the forms of torture he suffered for three days before he escaped from the soldiers on June 2. Soldiers also tortured Gire, who was eventually released from custody after pleas from his wife and mother.

The government has promised to investigate the case, but claims it cannot identify the perpetrators.

“Kiwo has shown tremendous bravery in coming forward – he deserves justice and protection from retaliation, not another half-hearted army investigation and cover-up,” Robertson said in statement made available to The Jakarta Post on Monday.

Indonesia is a party in the United Nations Convention Against Torture and has strict obligations to investigate and prosecute promptly all incidents of torture occurring on its soil and to ensure that victims and witnesses are protected against all ill-treatment or intimidation as a consequence of filing a complaint or giving evidence, he said.

In the video, Kiwo said he and Gire had been riding a motorcycle from their hometown, Tingginambut, to Mulia, the capital of Puncak Jaya, when soldiers stopped them at a military checkpoint in Kwanggok Nalime, Yogorini. Kiwo said the soldiers seized and hit them, bound their arms with rope, dragged them to the back of the army post, and tied their feet with barbed wire.

He said the soldiers tortured him for three days, beating him with their hands and sticks, crushing his toes with pliers, suffocating him with a plastic bag, burning his genitals and other body parts, cutting his face and head and smearing crushed chilies into his wounds, as well as other forms of abuse.

Kiwo’s videotaped testimony, which has subtitles in English and Indonesian, can be viewed on the Engage Media website.

“The Indonesian government at the highest levels should guarantee that Tunaliwor Kiwo and Telangga Gire will be protected from retaliation and considered witnesses to crimes,” Robertson said. “The testimony of these two men will be critically important in prosecuting the soldiers who tortured them, so protecting them needs to be a top priority.”
The October media coverage of the May 30 torture video prompted President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono to hold a limited Cabinet meeting on Oct. 22, after which the Coordinating Minister for Political, Legal and Security Affairs Djoko Suyanto declared the video showed Indonesian soldiers torturing Papuan villagers.
The video showing Kiwo’s account of his captivity was released while the President was in Papua to promote development.

Police: Gayus had other unauthorized absences


The disappearance of graft defendant Gayus Tambunan after a medical checkup outside the Mobile Brigade Detention Center last week was not the first time he manipulated his detention, police say.
National Police Spokesperson Insp. Gen. Iskandar Hasan said on Thursday that investigators suspect that the former low-level tax official has been free to wander outside his cell at the detention center in Kelapa Dua, Depok, since July.
"It might be possible that he went out each week," Iskandar said.
He said that nine officers were suspected of receiving bribes to allow Gayus to remain outside the detention center last week. One officer, Comr. Iwan Siswanto, was alleged to have received Rp 50 million (US$5,650).

The National Police’s top anticorruption cop, Brig. Gen. Ike Edwin said that the officers were declared suspects two days ago.
Gayus's escape was discovered last Friday, when he used a doctor's visit as an excuse to exit the detention center. The National Police launched a search after receiving news of Gayus’ absence and discovered him on Saturday in his house in Kelapa Gading, North Jakarta.

Gayus is detained at Kelapa Dua with corruption whistle-blower Comr. Gen. Susno Duaji and convicted murderer Wiliardi Wizar. Iskandar declined to comment on whether Susno or Wizar had also abused their detention.


Dina Indrasafitri,
The Jakarta Post

OBAMA and INDONESIA


As Indonesia prepares for the long-awaited visit of US President Barack Obama, it is worth looking at who this man is and how Indonesia ties into his story.
Barack Obama’s extraordinary American journey took him from his high school basketball-playing days in Hawaii to formative college years split between America’s two most alluring cities, Los Angeles and New York. After graduation, he worked as a community organizer in Chicago, spent his late twenties in Boston studying law at Harvard and then returned to Chicago where he would launch a political career that in 2008 landed him in the Oval Office.

     Long before the epic presidential campaign, Barack Obama’s journey took him to Indonesia, where he spent four years of his childhood in central Jakarta.  He was six years old when he arrived. His mother had recently married an Indonesian classmate from the University of Hawaii. He reminisced about his childhood: “The children of farmers, servants and low-level bureaucrats had become my best friends, and together we ran the streets morning and night, hustling odd jobs, catching crickets, battling swift kites with razor sharp lines.” Unable to afford the international school that other foreign children attended, Obama’s mother supplemented her son’s education with lessons from a US correspondence course. Obama fondly recalled: “Five days a week she came into my room at four in the morning, force-fed me breakfast and proceeded to teach me my English lessons for three hours before I left for school and she went to work.” Obama’s election was invigorating to many groups of people around the world. American expatriates and backpackers often view their political leaders back home as being out of touch with the larger world. 

     Having a president with Obama’s background – a Kenyan father and years lived overseas – brought hope of an American foreign policy that would be guided by neither arrogance nor ignorance. Obama’s rise has aroused pride in many Indonesians as well. He has a younger sister that is half Indonesian, but has no Indonesian blood himself. Still, many Indonesians like to claim him as one of their own. It may be too early in his presidency to tell what the unique relationship between Obama and Indonesia will come to signify, but one would hope that Obama’s presidency will mean more for Indonesia than just a few smiles and handshakes during a tour of the old neighborhood.

     Ann Dunham brought her son to Indonesia in 1967.  In Obama’s words, “Before leaving Hawaii she had tried to learn all she could about Indonesia,” that evoked in her “the promise of something new and important, helping her [Indonesian] husband rebuild a country in a charged and challenging place…” Her dreams would never come to fruition. 

     Barack Obama has not been one to forget his mother’s lost dreams. Of the hundreds of universities he could have spent his days as a constitutional law professor, he chose the University of Chicago, the same school his mother was accepted to as a teenager, but deemed too far away by her protective father.
Forty-three years since Obama’s first arrival on Indonesian soil, the president makes his return at a time when many Indonesians are dealing with the devastation and continual threat of multiple natural disasters.

Kevin Lee
Padang, West Sumatra