Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Crusty, dusty and rusty describes the Mars of today.

JAKARTA FEBRUARY 25, 2008

Crusty, dusty and rusty describes the Mars of today.

A handout of the European Space Agency ESA shows a visualisation of Mars, created from spacecraft imagery. Sudden, tremendous gushes of water from underground most likely carved out unusual fan-shaped geological formations with steps like a staircase long ago on the surface of Mars, scientists said on Wednesday. REUTERS/Ho/European Space Agency

(RACHMAD YULIADI NASIR, rbacakoran at yahoo dot com)

INDEPENDENT-Surface features of the Red Planet, however, hint at a watery past where torrents of groundwater carved out deep canyons, formed sweeping fans of sediment and cemented together huge fault lines.

"Groundwater probably played a major role in shaping many of the things we see on the Martian surface," said George Postma, a sedimentologist at UtrechtUniversity in the Netherlands.

Postma collaborated with Virginia Tech's Erin Kraal and others to recreate Mars' fan-like sediment deposits with a scale model. The group detailed their findings in a recent issue of the journal Nature.

A separate new study by Allan Treiman, a scientist at the Lunar and Planetary Institute in Houston, details the role of groundwater in depositing minerals in rocky Martian crevices.

Rapid release

Scientists think a massive ocean once covered one-third of Mars, and recent photographs suggest that pockets of water may still be hidden beneath the planet's surface. Water is crucial for life as we know it, so signs of underground water now — and more extensive amounts of water in the past — both suggest Mars was or might still be habitable, at least to microorganisms.

Postma said such reservoirs of water probably carved out canyons, rapidly depositing step-like layers of sediment in Martian impact craters across the planet.

"When we examined photographs of mars. we saw that some deltas had steps of material," Postma told. He noted that such formations are seen on Earth only where water rapidly deposits delta sediment, such as parts of the Sahara Desert's Lake Chad.

"Based on our models these structures might have been caused by catastrophic events that filled the craters in one go," he said. Instead of taking millions of years to form, Postma said the fans probably formed in decades.

Ancient torrents of water spilling out of Martian ground with the output of the Mississippi River, for example, could have formed some of the dozen step-like sediment fans the researchers observed in about 13 years.

"Another puzzling feature is that you don't see a drainage network along the crater's side," Postma said — yet another clue that fans' formations were rapid and not the product of rainy runoff. "Craters are thought to be very porous, so the water can sink through. Another possibility is that the water just evaporated into the Martian atmosphere."

Mineral cement

In Valles Marineris, where about 2,500 miles (4,000 kilometers) of 6-mile-deep (10-kilometers) chasms dwarfing the Grand Canyon stretch over Mars, Treiman thinks he has located more evidence of groundwater at work.

"Groundwater is a crucial reservoir in Mars's global water cycle and plays an important role in ... alteration of bedrock," Treiman writes in his study, detailed yesterday in the journal Nature Geoscience.

The Valles marineris canyons formed when massive slabs of rock both lifted up and sunk, creating fault lines in the process. Spacecraft imagery of the landscape shows the crevices as ridges, which Treiman thinks were filled with mineral-rich groundwater between 3.5 billion and 1.8 billion years ago.

"This interpretation implies that liquid water was stable at or near Mars's surface when the fault zones were cemented," Treiman said, noting that only a "warm wet" climate on Mars could have made the deposits possible.

"The presence of liquid water is important in current ideas of Mars's history," Treiman said, "and central to Mars's potential for life."

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Sunday, February 24, 2008

Indonesia to consider buying F-16 fighter planes from US

JAKARTA FEBRUARY 24, 2008

Indonesia to consider buying F-16 fighter planes from US

(RACHMAD YULIADI NASIR, rbacakoran at yahoo dot com)

INDEPENDENT-
The Indonesian Air Force will consider a US government offer to sell multi-role Block 52 F-16 Fighting Falcon and heavy transport 130-J Hercules planes to Indonesia, a spokesman said.

"We will consider buying the planes under our procurement plan for 2010-2014," Vice Air Marshal Soenaryo, chief of the Air Force`s Material Maintenance Command, said here Friday.

Speaking after accompanying Air Force Chief of Staff Air Marshal Soebandrio at a meeting with visiting US Under Secretary of the Air Force for Internatinal Affairs Bruce S Lemkin, Soenaryo said the F-26 fighter planes were needed to increase the Air Force`s capacity and deterrent capability as many of its combat aircraft were approaching the end of their service time.

Also, procurment of F-16s would fit in with the Air Force`s plan to reduce the variety of its aircraft to economize on maintenance and servicing costs in the 2008-2019 period, he said.

The multi-role F-16 Fighting Falcons could replace the force`s F-5E Tiger fighters which had been in service for almost 25 years.

"We will possibly build up an F-16 squadron gradually in the 2010-2014 budget years. The interest to acquire the aircraft must first be thoroughly considered at Air Force Headquarters level with due account being taken of the limited amount of state funds available. After approval has been obtained at Air Force Headquarters level, we will submit the plan to the Defense Ministry for acquisition," Soenaryo said.

Apart from discussing the US offer to supply F-16 aircraft, the Air Force chief and Lemkin also agreed at their meeting to intensify cooperation between the two countries` air forces in the fields of education, training and spare parts supply.


www.the-independent-news.blogspot.com

BIOFUELS

JAKARTA FEBRUARY 24, 2008

Biofuels

(RACHMAD YULIADI NASIR, rbacakoran at yahoo dot com)
INDEPENDENT-What are biofuels? Biofuels are any kind of fuel made from living things, or from the waste they produce.

This is a very long and diverse list, including:

  • wood, wood chippings and straw
  • pellets or liquids made from wood
  • biogas (methane) from animals' excrement
  • ethanol, diesel or other liquid fuels made from processing plant material or waste oil

In recent years, the term "biofuel" has come to mean the last category - ethanol and diesel, made from crops including corn, sugarcane and rapeseed.

Rudolph Diesel. Image: Science Photo Library
Rudolph Diesel: biofuel pioneer
Bio-ethanol, an alcohol, is usually mixed with petrol, while biodiesel is either used on its own or in a mixture.

Pioneers such as Henry Ford and Rudolph Diesel designed cars and engines to run on biofuels. Before World War II, the UK and Germany both sold biofuels mixed with petrol or diesel made from crude oil; the availability of cheap oil later ensured market dominance.

Ethanol for fuel is made through fermentation, the same process which produces it in wine and beer. Biodiesel is made through a variety of chemical processes.

There is interest in trying biobutanol, another alcohol, in aviation fuel.

Are biofuels climate-friendly?

In principle, biofuels are a way of reducing greenhouse gas emissions compared to conventional transport fuels.

Burning the fuels releases carbon dioxide; but growing the plants absorbs a comparable amount of the gas from the atmosphere.

However, energy is used in farming and processing the crops, and this can make biofuels as polluting as petroleum-based fuels, depending on what is grown and how it is treated.

A recent UK government publication declared that biofuels reduced emissions "by 50-60% compared to fossil fuels".

Where are biofuels used?

Production of ethanol doubled globally between 2000 and 2005, with biodiesel output quadrupling.

Farmer spraying a sugar beet crop (Image: BBC)

Brazil leads the world in production and use, making about 16 billion litres per year of ethanol from its sugarcane industry.

Sixty percent of new cars can run on a fuel mix which includes 85% ethanol.

The European Union has a target for 2010 that 5.75% of transport fuels should come from biological sources, but the target is unlikely to be met.

The British government's Renewable Transport Fuel Obligation requires 5% of the fuel sold at the pump by 2010 to be biofuel.

In the US, the Renewable Fuels Standard aims to double the use of biofuels in transport by 2012.

What are the downsides?

From the environmental point of the view, the big issue is biodiversity.

With much of the western world's farmland already consisting of identikit fields of monocultured crops, the fear is that a major adoption of biofuels will reduce habitat for animals and wild plants still further.

Asian countries may be tempted to replace rainforest with more palm oil plantations, critics say.

If increased proportions of food crops such as corn or soy are used for fuel, that may push prices up, affecting food supplies for less prosperous citizens.

The mixed picture regarding the climate benefit of biofuels leads some observers to say that the priority should be reducing energy use; initiatives on biofuels detract attention from this, they say, and are more of a financial help to politically important farming lobbies than a serious attempt to cut greenhouse gas emissions.

There are few problems technically; engines can generally cope with the new fuels.

But current technologies limit production, because only certain parts of specific plants can be used.

The big hope is the so-called second-generation of biofuels, which will process the cellulose found in many plants. This should lead to far more efficient production using a much greater range of plants and plant waste.

www.the-independent-news.blogspot.com


Airline in first biofuel flight

JAKARTA FEBRUARY 24, 2008


Airline in first biofuel flight

Virgin 747

(RACHMAD YULIADI NASIR, rbacakoran at yahoo dot com)
INDEPENDENT-
The first flight by a commercial airline to be powered partly by biofuel is to take off from Heathrow airport.

Billed as a green fuel breakthrough, the Virgin Atlantic flight to Amsterdam will not have any passengers on board.

Earlier this month, Airbus used the world's largest passenger jet, the A380 to flight test another alternative fuel - a synthetic mix of gas-to-liquid.

Many environmentalists argue that cultivating biofuel is not sustainable and will lead to reduced land for food.

Virgin's Boeing 747 will have one of its four engines connected to an independent tank filled with biofuel, which is derived from plants.

It's not necessarily going to be the silver bullet for the long term future but it will prove that a fuel like this can fly at 30,000 feet
Sir Richard Branson, Virgin Atlantic president

This reduces risk to the flight because there are three other engines which can power the plane using conventional fuel if there is a problem.

The three-hour Airbus flight from Filton near Bristol to Toulouse on 1 February was part of an ongoing research programme.

'Gimmick'

Virgin has so far refused to say what its biofuel is made from.

One problem with flying planes using biofuel is that it is more likely to freeze at high altitude.

The technology is still being manufactured by companies GE and Boeing, but Virgin believes within 10 years airlines could routinely be flying on plant power.

Kenneth Richter, of Friends of the Earth, said the flight was a "gimmick", distracting from real solutions to climate change.


"If you look at the latest scientific research it clearly shows biofuels do very little to reduce emissions. At the same time we are very concerned about the impact of the large scale increase in biofuel production on the environment and food prices worldwide," he said.

"What we need to do is stop this mad expansion of aviation at the moment it is the fastest growing source of greenhouse gases in the UK and we need to stop subsidising the industry."

But Virgin Atlantic president Sir Richard Branson told BBC News 24 that using technology to develop greener fuel options will lower emissions and allow for other global warming issues to be tackled.

"It's not necessarily going to be the silver bullet for the long term future but it will prove that a fuel like this can fly at 30,000 feet," he said of the move which challenges the convention that biofuels freeze above 15,000 feet.

A spokesman said the airline will reveal the specific biofuel after the flight but stressed that it was one which did not compete with staple food resources.

www.the-independent-news.blogspot.com




Rare gold coin goes for $300,000 at auction

JAKARTA FEBRUARY 24, 2008

Rare gold coin goes for $300,000 at auction



(RACHMAD YULIADI NASIR, rbacakoran at yahoo dot com)
INDEPENDENT-
About 1,400 rare gold coins issued in Japan before World War Two have gone up for auction in Tokyo.

On Sunday, about 130 people, including antique dealers and coin collectors, took part in the last of the gold coin auctions that have been held by the Finance Ministry since 2006. About 30,000 rare coins have so far been auctioned off.

An old "2-yen golden coin" of 1880 went for about 32 million yen, or about 300,000 US dollars, far more than expected. It is believed that only about 10 "2-yen golden coins" still exist.

An old "20-yen gold coin" of 1876 was bought for 17 million yen, or 160,000 dollars.

The director general of the Japan Numismatic Dealers' Association, Kazuo Fukuo, says this may be the last time so many gold coins are up in a single auction.

Mr Fukuo says some very rare coins have been auctioned off at very high prices, probably because no one is sure if there will be more opportunities in future to get popular coins.

All earnings from the auctions will go to the national budget.

www.the-independent-news.blogspot.com



Japanese companies looking to invest in Vietnam

JAKARTA FEBRUARY 24, 2008

Japanese companies looking to invest in Vietnam




(RACHMAD YULIADI NASIR, rbacakoran at yahoo dot com)
INDEPENDENT-
A growing number of Japanese manufacturers are now looking to expand their business activities in Vietnam, where labor costs are about 50 percent lower than China.

Towards the end of last year, the Japan External Trade Organization, or JETRO, surveyed about 1,000 Japanese manufacturers operating in Asia.

62 percent of respondents said they are planning to expand business activities in the next 1 to 2 years, up 4 percentage points from the previous year.

By country, 92 percent of the companies doing business in Vietnam said they had plans to expand, up 10 points from a year before. Respondents in India came in a close second at 90 percent.

Meanwhile, the number of manufacturers planning to do so in China fell for the 4th consecutive year to 65 percent, down 2 points from the previous survey.

The drop is attributed to rising wages in China and companies taking stock of their local investments.

JETRO says many Japanese makers are targeting Vietnam as a production base, and have plans to expand their business activities there over the next decade.

www.the-independent-news.blogspot.com




Police in US arrest Miura for wife's murder in 1981

JAKARTA FEBRUARY 24, 2008

Police in US arrest Miura for wife's murder in 1981




(RACHMAD YULIADI NASIR, rbacakoran at yahoo dot com)
INDEPENDENT-
A Japanese man acquitted of murder charges in Japan for the fatal shooting of his wife in Los Angeles 27 years ago has been arrested by US police in Saipan.

Police in Saipan arrested former company president Kazuyoshi Miura at the airport on Friday at the request of the Los Angeles Police Department. He was about to leave for Japan.

They say Mr Miura was arrested on suspicion of murdering his wife Kazumi in 1981 to collect on her life insurance policy.

The 1981 murder received wide media coverage in Japan. In 1994, the Tokyo District Court found Miura guilty and sentenced him to life in prison. The Tokyo High Court acquitted him, a decision that the Supreme Court let stand in 2003.

In a separate trial in 1987, he was sentenced to a 6-year prison term for an earlier attempt to murder his wife.

Staff at the Japanese Foreign Ministry's Saipan office requested Saipan police to put them into contact with Mr Miura but he reportedly refused to meet the official.

Saipan police add that they plan to transfer Mr Miura to Los Angeles Police Department custody, but they say they cannot comment on when he will be transferred.

www.the-independent-news.blogspot.com


clinton denounces obama tactics

JAKARTA FEBRUARY 24, 2008

Clinton denounces Obama tactics

Hillary Clinton, 23 February 2008
Mrs Clinton's outburst comes ahead of key primaries in Ohio and Texas


(RACHMAD YULIADI NASIR, rbacakoran at yahoo dot com)
INDEPENDENT-US presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton has made her fiercest denunciation so far of Barack Obama, her rival for the Democratic Party nomination.

Mrs Clinton accused the Illinois senator of producing a misleading leaflet on her health care policy.

"Shame on you, Barack Obama!" the New York senator said at a rally in Ohio, which holds its primary in 10 days.

But Mr Obama said he stood by the leaflet, saying he was puzzled by what he called his rival's change in tone.

"Enough with the speeches and the big rallies and then using tactics that are right out of Karl Rove's playbook," said the former first lady ahead of Ohio's crucial primary early next month.

Both the Ohio and the Texas primaries, both being held on 4 March, are being seen as must-wins for Mrs Clinton.

'Sharper elbows'

Mr Obama, who has won 11 consecutive primaries and caucuses in recent weeks, is now seen as the Democratic front-runner.

But Mrs Clinton's campaign has struggled to find an effective way to cope with her rival's extraordinary momentum and has decided to "go negative", says the BBC's Kevin Connolly in Washington.

She and her advisers have clearly calculated that the state of the race now calls for sharper elbows and a sharper tone, our correspondent adds.

Barack Obama (left) and Hillary Clinton during debate in Austin, 21-02-08
Barack Obama has pulled ahead of Hillary Clinton in recent primaries
Mr Obama now has at least 1,353 of the 2,025 delegates he needs to secure the Democratic nomination at the party's convention in August, according to an Associated Press projection.

Mrs Clinton has 1,264 delegates. Texas and Ohio have a combined total of 334 delegates up for grabs.

Correspondents say the blue-collar vote will be crucial in both contests, and the Clinton campaign has already begun targeting lower-income workers in its ads.

But in his drive to become the first black US president, Mr Obama has recently gained support from some powerful unions, including the Teamsters and the Service Employees International Union.

Pacific delegates

Meanwhile, John McCain was given a further boost by the Pacific islands of Northern Marianas which chose its nine Republican delegates on Saturday.

The islands are among three US Pacific territories each sending nine delegates to the Republican convention in Minnesota this September, and delegates have praised the former Vietnam prisoner for his knowledge of their islands.

Republicans in American Samoa also announced that all nine of their delegates would support Mr McCain.

Guam Republicans take their decision on 8 March.

The latest results give the Arizona senator a total of 976 delegates, according to the Associated Press, and he needs 1,191 delegates to secure the Republican nomination.

His rival, former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee, trails far behind with 254 delegates.

www.the-independent-news.blogspot.com



Turkey continues offensive against Kurdish militants

JAKARTA FEBRUARY 24, 2008

Turkey continues offensive against Kurdish militants


(RACHMAD YULIADI NASIR, rbacakoran at yahoo dot com)
INDEPENDENT-Turkey's winter military offensive against Kurdish militants continues in the deep mountains of northern Iraq.

Turkish ground forces launched a cross-border operation on Thursday to attack strongholds of the Kurdistan Workers Party, which is seeking independence. The number of Turkish troops involved is reported to be up to 10,000.

The Turkish military says the death toll on both sides as of Saturday has exceeded 80.

Turkey deployed 100,000 troops along the border area last May, under domestic pressure to take action against the militants believed responsible for staging terror attacks on Turkey after the Iraq war.

The United States, which wanted to focus on stabilizing security in Iraq, had opposed any military action by Turkey.

Turkey is believed to have obtained prior US approval for the latest operations by promising cooperation in the NATO-led fight against the Taliban in Afghanistan.

Turkey's military says it wants to complete the operation by early March before militants become active again following the spring snowmelt.


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Thursday, February 14, 2008

INDONESIA AND SINGAPORE`S DEFENCE COOPERATION AGREEMENT CANCELLED

JAKARTA FEBRUARY 14, 2008

Indonesia and Singapore’s Defense Cooperation Agreement Cancelled

(RACHMAD YULIADI NASIR, rbacakoran at yahoo dot com)
INDEPENDENT-
The Defense Cooperation Agreement (DCA) between Indonesia and Singapore has been cancelled. Defense Minister Juwono Sudarsono said the agreement that was signed in Bali was invalid along with Singapore’s assumption that the extradition is not logical. “Because the two matters are related,” said Juwono after a closed cabinet meeting at the Defense Department yesterday (4/2).

According to Juwono, the cabinet meeting did not discuss the DCA at all because it was not a priority. Singapore’s objection, said Juwono, was clearly seen when Singapore’s mentor Minister Lee Kuan Yew came to Indonesia last July. “Yes, they dropped the DCA when Lee came,” he said.

Juwono explained that when Lee was in Indonesia, he said that the extradition was not logical. Lee’s statement was interpreted by Indonesia that the agreement is off. In diplomatic terms, he said, DCA and the extradition were put aside.

Late last year, Juwono said he would reformulate the DCA in 2008. Juwono now stated that reformulating the DCA can be done if it is separated from the extradition agreement. But since the two are strongly related, the reformulation is impossible.

The DCA of the two countries was rejected since it was signed in Tampaksiring Palace, Bali at the end of last February. Almost all factions in the House’s Defense Commission considered that cooperation means a loss to the Republic of Indonesia.

The House also refused the theory that the DCA be exchanged with the extradition agreement. The exchange was considered as weakening Indonesia’s position in the DCA. The House believed that pursuing corruptors who were in Singapore can still be accomplished without the extradition agreement.


www.the-independent-news.blogspot.com

CONTINUATION OF CLIMATE CHANGE CONFERENCE : UN ESTABLISHES WORLD LEADER`S GROUP

JAKARTA FEBRUARY 14, 2008

Continuation of Climate Change Conference:UN Establishes World Leader`s Group

(RACHMAD YULIADI NASIR, rbacakoran at yahoo dot com)
INDEPENDENT-
Indonesia has recommended the establishment of a world leaders' group as a concrete follow up to the United Nation Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) in Bali in December 2007.

The group will comprise the presidents of Indonesia, Poland and Denmark, the Secretary General of the United Nations Ban Ki-moon, UNFCC Executive Secretary Yvo de Boer and other world leaders.

"The UN Secretary General has agreed with my views and recommendation of establishing a high-level contact group," President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono told reporters at the presidential office yesterday (13/2).

At 9.00am WIB (Indonesian Western Time) Ban Ki-moon called Yudhoyono, discussing two international issues, climate change and the progress of situation in Burma.

Ban Ki-moon, said Yudhoyono, gave Indonesia an honorary award for the success of the conference that resulted the Bali Road Map.

At the Bali Conference, said Yudhoyono, developed countries' obligations explicitly intersected those of developing countries.

"Technology transfer, mitigation, financing, reforestation and adaptation are already becoming more concrete," he said.

The Bali Road Map became a starting point for the conferences in Warsaw, Poland and Copenhagen, Denmark.

"Heading towards the new post-Kyoto Protocol in 2012," said Yudhoyono.

In the near future, Yudhoyono will assign respective ministers to consider about what can be done in line with the cooperation framework that has been discussed with Ban Ki-mooon.

In the mean time, Ari Muhammad, WWF Indonesia's Climate Change Program Coordinator, said that the House of Representatives (DPR) must supervise budget use in order to deal with climate change.

Infrastructure development and agriculture, he said, should be directed to overcome global warming, which impacts on climate change.

"This can help alleviating the minimum budget for overcoming climate change adaptation," he said during a discussion with environmental reporters.

The failure of the Environment State Ministry in socializing climate change over 10 years, he went on, was caused by the lack of response from other sectors.

In addition, climate change problems are very much related to leadership from the provincial to regency/city levels.

"Governors and regents must integrate development in many sectors (in terms of climate change)," said Ari.

The power of civilians must also move simultaneously and must not only be centered in one location.


www.the-independent-news.blogspot.com

REINADO`S GROUP DENIES ATTACKING HORTA

JAKARTA FEBRUARY 14, 2008


Reinado's Group Denies Attacking Horta

(RACHMAD YULIADI NASIR, rbacakoran at yahoo dot com)
INDEPENDENT-
Yesterday (13/2) A subordinate of Major Alfredo Alves Reinado has denied reports about the attacks on Timor Leste's President Jose Ramos Horta and Prime Minister Xanana Gusmao.

According to Sergeant First Class Eduarde Jorge, Reinado's subordinate, his commander came to Ramos Horta's residence in Metiaut area, the suburb of capital Dili, at Horta's invitation.

“He was called by President Horta at around 10pm,” said Jorge when contacted by Tempo via cellphone yesterday.

Then, said Jorge, Reinado went from his shelter in Same, Matufahi, along with four subordinates.

He was instead surprised as to how the shooting could happen and also denied that the group was the one that raided Xanana's group.

Sergeant First Class Brata, another of Reinado's subordinate, said that his group never intended to attack either Horta or Xanana.

“If we had wanted to, we would have done so during the presidential election. We want our country be safe and prosperous,” he said.

Not long after the bloody incident on Monday (12/2), Xanana disputed that Horta invited Reinado to come to his house.

During the incident, Xanana survived but Horta was shot in his stomach and chest.

Up until yesterday, the recipient of the 1996 Nobel Peace Prize was still being treated in the Royal Darwin Hospital, Darwin, Australia.

The investigation into the case is still ongoing.

Attorney General Longuinhos Monteiro issued warrants for 18 suspects and it is possible that this number will increase.

However, he refused to describe the suspects' identity.

There is a possibility that government officials were also involved.

“We're investigating the two cars (used by the attackers). We suspect that there were government officials involved,” said Monteiro.

A Tempo source said that one car belonged to Finance Director Jose Duardo and the other to a child of a minister.

There has not been any confirmation from the respective parties.
Yesterday evening Reinado's body was buried at his family home in Marconi Complex, Alor, Dili.


www.the-independent-news.blogspot.com

TEMPO MAGAZINE APOLOGIZES

JAKARTA FEBRUARY 14, 2008


TEMPO Magazine Apologizes




(RACHMAD YULIADI NASIR, rbacakoran at yahoo dot com)
INDEPENDENT-Tempo Magazine’s Editor-in-Chief, Toriq Hadad, conveyed his apologies to Christian people regarding the cover of the magazine’s February4-10, 2008, edition.

A drawing depicteing Suharto and his family was the cover of Tempo magazine special edition entitled “After He Left.”

“We didn’t intend to hurt Christian people’s feelings. We were only inspired by the composition of Leonardo da Vinci’s painting, not the concept and the context of the event inscribed in the Bible,” said Toriq.

According to Toriq, there was no intention to harass or belittle any religion.

“For everything that is discomforting as regards the cover, I on behalf of the Tempo institution apologize,” he said.

The apology will also be published in Tempo magazine next week.

In the special edition, Tempo magazine depicted Suharto surrounded by his six children.

The drawing composition was similar to the layout in “The Last Supper” by Leonardo da Vinci which portrays Jesus Christ and his disciples.

In addition to protests via email and short messages, yesterday afternoon (5/2) many people representing Christian followers came to Tempo’s office in Jakarta in order to have a dialogue.

Among those who came were Hermawi F. Taslim (Head of Republic of Indonesia Catholic Students Association Alumni Forum PMKRI), Roy Rening (Head of the Religious Freedom Defender’s Legal Team), Paskalis Pieter (Deputy Chairman of the Religious Freedom Legal Team), Natalis Situmorang (General Chairperson of the Catholic Youth Group), Osbin Samosir (Head of the Catholic Scholars Union) and Barnabas (Head of the North Sumatra Traveling Catholics).

“We come in the spirit of brotherhood. But we would also
like to show that our existence isn’t separated from this nation’s community,” said Hermawi, who is also one of the National Awakening Party’s Leadership Council chairpersons.

Tempo very much appreciated Hernawi and the others’ coming to deliver their opinions and having a dialogue.

“Tempo magazine will also convey apology publicly in Koran Tempo tomorrow (today) and a week later in the magazine,” said Hermawi after the dialogue.

Readers in several areas also conveyed objections regarding Tempo special edition’s cover.

http://www.the-independent-news.blogspot.com



Wednesday, February 13, 2008

EXXONMOBIL WILL NEVER ROB VENEZUELA AGAIN

JAKARTA FEBRUARY 14, 2008

ExxonMobil will never rob Venezuela again

(RACHMAD YULIADI NASIR, rbacakoran at yahoo dot com)
INDEPENDENT-Caracas - President Hugo Chavez warned Sunday that oil giant ExxonMobil, with which Venezuela is engaged in a legal fight linked to nationalization of key oil fields, would never again "rob" his country.

Chavez, in his weekly "Hello Mr. President" television and radio program, called the clash with ExxonMobil "the tip of an iceberg that is economic war."

ExxonMobil said Thursday it had won international court orders freezing 12 billion dollars in the worldwide assets of Venezuela's state oil firm, Petroleos de Venezuela (PDVSA), as it seeks compensation related to the nationalization push.

ExxonMobil, one of the world's largest oil companies, said it had won court orders in London, the Netherlands and Netherlands Antilles freezing PDVSA assets in those jurisdictions of up to 12 billion dollars.


A New York court has also frozen 300 million dollars worth of the state oil firm's assets.


Friday Venezuela's Energy Minister Rafael Ramirez denied any such freeze had taken place.

"Never again will they rob us, these ExxonMobil bandits, they are imperialist thieves, white-collar criminals, corruptors of governments, they supported the invasion of Iraq ... and they continue to support the genocide in Iraq," Chavez said.

"I have read analyses saying this is the tip of the iceberg, other businesses are coming after Venezuela.

"Well, I tell the US empire because it is the master, keep it up, and you will see that we will not send a drop of oil to the US empire," Chavez said, repeating a threat he has made regularly for years.

www.the-independent-news.blogspot.com

BMW TO DEMONSTRATE HYDROGEN POWER IN SINGAPORE

JAKARTA FEBRUARY 14, 2008

BMW TO DEMONSTRATE HYDROGEN POWER IN SINGAPORE

(RACHMAD YULIADI NASIR, rbacakoran at yahoo dot com)
INDEPENDENT-Singapore
- BMW is ready to introduce its hydrogen-fuelled 7 Series limousine in Singapore but it won't be for sale, the carmaker said on Wednesday.

The car, called the Hydrogen 7, will be part of a BMW Clean Energy Exhibition to be held in the city-state next month.

Representing 20 years of research and development, the Munich-based carmaker has developed the first emission-free liquid hydrogen-powered luxury saloon suitable for everyday use, according to BMW.

The cars due to arrive in Singapore are part of a world tour which is currently in Australia.

The Hydrogen 7 has two fuel tanks, one for petrol and another for liqud hydrogen, BMW said. When operated only on hydrogen fuel, the car emits water vapour.


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CHINA TO AVOID PAST MISTAKES IN CONTROLLING FOOD PRINCES

JAKARTA FEBRUARY 14, 2008












China to avoid past mistakes in controlling food prices

(RACHMAD YULIADI NASIR, rbacakoran at yahoo dot com)

INDEPENDENT-Hong Kong - Rocketing food prices in China have sown deep concern among the communist leadership, ever wary of social unrest, as they fumble to control inflation without repeating past mistakes, analysts say.

Overall inflation in China is running at a 10-year high -- around 6.9 percent in November year-on-year, official statistics show.

Inflation is now being driven almost exclusively by increases in the price of food, in particular the staple meat, pork, which has spiked 60 percent year-on-year.

Prices have faced even greater upward pressure in recent weeks, as severe weather has crippled the country's transport system at the time demand is greatest, over Lunar New Year, the major annual holiday when millions of people return to home.

A report by Credit Suisse said 10 percent of China's farming land has been affected by the extreme cold, and one percent could see a complete loss of crops and vegetables.

Price increases have been seen in food items ranging from cooking oil to apple juice, as China's growth and global demand creates what economists have dubbed "agflation" referring specifically to rises in prices of agricultural commodities.

Analysts say authorities in Beijing are becoming increasingly concerned about the prospect of food prices getting out of hand, but add that the problem is not yet approaching the levels that led to widespread popular dissatisfaction almost a decade ago.

"They (the central government) are increasingly nervous about it," said Andy Rothman, Shanghai-based China Macro-Strategist for CLSA. "But it is a long, long way from the inflation problems before 1989."

In January, the National Development and Reform Commission announced tightened supervision of prices for grain, edible oils, meat, poultry, eggs, feed and other items in both wholesale and retail markets.

This followed the announcement in late December that from January 1 the government would slap taxes ranging from 5-25 percent on exports of a range of products including wheat, corn, rice and soybeans to try and ensure stable food supplies at home.

The actions appeared to be stoked by memories of the widespread protests that resulted from the government's clumsy handling of food price controls that led to inflation of around 50 percent in the summer of 1988.

Public anger about inflation prompted the demonstrations that the following summer morphed into anti-government protests and the death at the hands of the army of hundreds, possibly thousands, of unarmed civilans in central Beijing.

"Most of the price rises were for staple foods, thereby causing the maximum economic pain to the maximum number of people," Joe Studwell wrote in his 2002 book "The China Dream".

Vincent Chan, head of China research for Credit Suisse, cited another change in recent months, saying people were now expecting price rises, an often self-fulfilling situation that leads to even higher market prices.

"If you look at the statistics, then China's inflation problem is simply a food inflation problem," he said. "In the past, we have not really had a problem of inflation expectation (but) this year we have already seen that. And that normally means that prices will rise."

CLSA's Rothman said pork price inflation is only a short-term problem, and predicted prices will start to fall back later this year.

"This is a supply problem. In 2006, pork prices had a 10-year low. There was not any incentive for farmers to raise more pigs. This was made worse by blue-ear disease which stopped supply when demand was rising," he told AFP.

Rothman said although demand had risen by 5-7 percent over the past few years, no sudden jump had provoked the current huge increases and that China's position as the world's biggest producer of pork meant it would be able to control supply.

The other major factor in Chinese inflation, cooking oil, was more complicated, he said, as 60 percent is imported.

"The major contributor to the rise is US ethanol policy and there is little the Chinese can do about that," he said.

Subsidies in the United States have seen a major switch in land use to grow crops for fuel, rather than food, prompting worldwide increases in some staple foods.

The UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation said in its annual Food Outlook report that the United States will increase its maize crop specifically for ethanol use by 50 percent this year, at the expense of acreage for other food crops, in particular wheat.

Wheat stocks are at their lowest level for 25 years, according to the FAO.

Maize, or corn, is the main crop used in grain-based ethanol. The Chinese government has said they will not grow crops for energy use.

Rothman said the price control announcements had been overplayed as CLSA had surveyed seven of the 12 companies the government had reportedly said would be subject to possible restrictions and found that none had received specific instructions.

"I think what they (Chinese authorities) are doing is what governments always do -- try and talk down inflation expectations," he said. "I think it is a clever move, whereas introducing price controls would be pretty stupid."

Nevertheless, the FAO said in October that China was expected to slash its exports of cereals from 7.7 million tonnes in 2006/7 to 6.2 in 2007/8. At the same time it would probably increase imports tonnes to 10.1 million tonnes from 9.3 million.

Both imports and exports could be expected in increase in the wake of the recent weather disaster that could have an adverse medium-term impact on domestic output and supply.

China imported 32.2 million tonnes of oilcrops, including corn and soybeans, in 2006/7, which the FAO said was expected to rise to 37.3 million tonnes in 2007/8, with exports expected to fall to 1.3 million tonnes from 1.5 million.

Rothman said there had been anecdotal evidence of subsidies to poor rural areas, which are the hardest hit by any price fluctuations, which if accurate could indicate the government's willingness to take action to keep a lid on food prices and prevent any hint of social unease.


www.the-independent-news.blogspot.com

RAMOS HORTA IN SERIOUS CONDITION AFTER SHOOTING

JAKARTA FEBRUARY 14, 2008











Ramos Horta in serious condition after shooting
(RACHMAD YULIADI NASIR, rbacakoran at yahoo dot com)
INDEPENDENT-Dili-East Timor President Jose Ramos-Horta was in a serious condition Monday after he was shot by rebel soldiers in coordinated attacks aimed at assassinating the nation's top leaders.

The 58-year-old Nobel peace laureate was injured in a dawn gunbattle at his residence on the outskirts of the capital of Dili which also left rebel leader Alfredo Reinado dead, said Deputy Prime Minister Jose Luis Guterres.

Gunmen also targetted the home of Prime Minister Xanana Gusmao in the attacks, which plunged the nation into a fresh crisis following 2006 unrest in which international forces deployed to restore calm.

"I understand that the condition of Jose Ramos-Horta is very serious but stable," said Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd, adding that the leader was about to be airlifted to Australia for emergency treatment on bullet wounds.

Rudd told reporters in Canberra his government would send "substantial" reinforcements to the 800-strong Australian troop contingent already deployed in East Timor to help stabilize the situation.

"This government will stand resolutely with the democratically-elected government of East Timor at this time of crisis," said Rudd.

Guterres said that two carloads of people went to the president's house at around 6:00 am (2100 GMT Sunday) and "assaulted him, but after rapid reaction by security his attackers fled away."

Timorese Foreign Minister Zacarias da Costa said Ramos-Horta had undergone exploratory surgery at an Australian military hospital in Dili to locate bullets, one of which hit him in the back and passed through to his stomach.

Gunmen attacked the house of Prime Minister Gusmao shortly after Ramos-Horta came under assault, Guterres also told CNN.

"The attack was on the president's residence around 6:00 and at around 7:30 they ambushed the prime minister," he said.

A neighbour of Gusmao, Leandro Isa'ac, said "rounds of automatic fire were fired against Xanana's residence".

Gusmao and his Australian wife Kirsty Sword live at Balibar, in the foothills south of Dili, with their three young sons.

Addressing a press briefing, Gusmao said that the situation was now under control.

"Even though the state has been attacked by an armed group and the president was wounded, the state is in control of stability ... The current situation is proceeding normally and is under control," Gusmao said.

East Timor rebel leader Reinado was shot dead at Ramos-Horta's residence, Guterres said.

"Major Reinado was killed and at the same time one of the presidential guards was injured," Guterres said, adding that security forces were hunting for more of the attackers.

Reinado emerged as a key figure in the 2006 unrest and was arrested on charges of illegal weapons distribution, desertion and attempted murder. He had however escaped from jail and eluded security forces since then.

Indonesia said it was concerned over the development and a senior military official said forces had tightened security along its border to prevent the rebels escaping.

Indonesian Foreign Minister Hassan Wirayuda said the attack "once again showed that the security situation in East Timor continues to be disturbed."

He said that with the death of Reinado, "hopefully the rebellion will weaken and it is our hope that his followers surrender so that the problem of security disturbances in this neighbour of ours can soon be overcome."

Reinado had emerged to lead a ragtag bunch of rebels who were demanding that they be reinstated in the army after being sacked in 2006 following their desertion.

Factions within the security forces clashed on Dili's streets, leading to at least 37 deaths and forcing East Timor's government to call for international peacekeepers to be deployed to restore stability.

More than 150,000 people were forced from their homes and the majority remain in camps at night, still too concerned about the fragile security situation to return home, or with no homes to return to.

Ramos-Horta was elected president in peaceful elections last year after serving as foreign minister and prime minister, while Gusmao was elected as prime minister after serving as president.

The International Crisis Group warned last month that East Timor risked descending into violence again if its government and the UN failed to quickly reform the security forces, which it said remained vulnerable to political influence.

Thursday, February 7, 2008

BIRD FLU CLAIMS TWO MORE VICTIMS IN RI

JAKARTA FEBRUARY 8, 2008


BIRD FLU CLAIMS TWO MORE VICTIMS IN RI


(RACHMAD YULIADI NASIR, rbacakoran at yahoo dot com)

INDEPENDENT-Two more Indonesians have been infected with H5N1, the bird flu virus. One of them died last Saturday in Jakarta, a Health Ministry official said.
The victims were two women -- Su (29) of Tangerang city, and Sa (38) of West Jakarta, the ministry's spokesperson, S. Sulityowati, said Monday.
"The Health Ministry's Research and Development Agency and the Eijkman Molecular Biology Institute's laboratory confirmed on Monday that the two victims were infected with the bird flu virus," Sulistyowati said.
She said Su, a housewife in Gondrong village, Cipondoh subdistrict, Tangerang city, began to feel ill on Jan. 22 with fever and shortness of breath.
Su was admitted to the Usada Insani hospital on Jan. 28 and was referred to Persahabatan Hospital in East Jakarta the following day.
She died at 7:30 p.m. on Feb. 2.
Sa, a female resident of Kalideres village, Jakarta, fell ill on Jan. 24 with coughing, fever, flu and a sore throat.
She was admitted to the MH Thamrin Hospital in Tangerang on Jan. 26 and began to be treated at the Usada Insani hospital on Jan. 29.
Sa was later moved to Persahabatan Hospital in East Jakarta. As of Monday she is breathing with the support of a ventilator.
To date there have been 126 bird flu cases in Indonesia, of which 103 have ended in the patient's death, a fatality rate of 81.7 percent.

JAKARTA MUST IMPROVE DRAINAGE SYSTEM: EXPERT

JAKARTA FEBRUARY 8, 2008
JAKARTA MUST IMPROVE DRAINAGE SYSTEM: EXPERT
(RACHMAD YULIADI NASIR,rbacakoran at yahoo dot com)
INDEPENDENT-Jakarta would be able to sustain many hours of local rain if it had a proper drainage network, a planning expert said Friday.
Basah Hernowo, the director of forestry and water resource conservation at the National Development Planning Board (Bappenas), said floods that inundated the capital Friday were a direct result of the city's clogged drainage system.
"On Friday, Jakarta only experienced local rain and the rainwater could have receded quickly if it was channeled properly. The floods indicate that parts of the city's micro drainage system is blocked and some canals are not functioning properly," Basah told The Jakarta Post on Friday.
"We were flooded even though it was only local rain. What if it was combined with floods from Bogor and Puncak? I'm afraid the city's drainage system won't be able to channel rainwater quickly enough," Basah said.
On Friday, parts of Jakarta became flooded when heavy rain that started Thursday night continued Friday morning.
Basah said Jakarta had become more vulnerable to flooding as it could not handle downpours that lasted more than 12 hours.

WOMEN DIES OF BIRD FLU, LIFTING INDONESIA`S TOLL TO 102

JAKARTA FEBRUARY 8, 2008
WOMEN DIES OF BIRD FLU, LIFTING INDONESIA`S TOLL TO 102
(RACHMAD YULIADI NASIR, rbacakoran at yahoo dot com)
INDEPENDENT-A woman from Indonesia's bustling capital died of bird flu, lifting the toll in the country hardest hit by the disease to 102, a Health Ministry official said Friday.
The 31-year-old woman died in the hospital late Thursday, two weeks after she became sick, said Ningrum of the ministry's bird flu center.
Indonesia has regularly tallied human deaths from bird flu since the virus began ravaging poultry stocks across Asia in 2003.
Almost all cases have originated from sick poultry, but experts fear the virus may mutate into a strain that can pass more easily from person to person, possibly infecting millions around the world.

SOEKARNO-HATTA INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT CLOSED DUE TO HEAVY RAIN

JAKARTA FEBRUARY 8, 2008


SOEKARNO-HATTA INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT CLOSED DUE TO HEAVY RAIN


(RACHMAD YULIADI NASIR,rbacakoran at yahoo dot com)
INDEPENDENT-Indonesia was forced to temporarily close its main international airport Friday because of poor visibility during torrential downpours, an official said. More than 60 planes were delayed or diverted.
Hariyanto, a spokesman for the Soekarno-Hatta International Airport, said he hoped the facility would reopen by early afternoon. Runways were not flooded, but visibility was less than 300 meters -- compared to the minimum standard of 500 meters, hesaid.
Forty-three flights were delayed and 21 diverted to other airports, Hariyanto said.
Indonesia was pounded by rain late Thursday and early Friday, bringing traffic to a standstill in much of the capital, Jakarta.
The rain was expected to continue until nightfall, Ahmad Zakir, a spokesman for the meteorological and geophysics agency, told El Shinta radio.
Citywide floods last occurred in February 2007 in Jakarta, much of which is below sea level. Environmentalists have blamed the flooding on garbage-clogged rivers, rampant overdevelopment and the deforestation of hills south of the city.

OBAMA TELLS FRECH MAGAZINE HE WOULD SEEK A SUMMIT OF MUSLIM NATION IF U.S.PRESIDENT

JAKARTA FEBRUARY 8, 2008
OBAMA TELLS FRECH MAGAZINE HE WOULD SEEK A SUMMIT OF MUSLIM NATION IF U.S. PRESIDENT
(RACHMAD YULIADI NASIR, rbacakoran at yahoo dot com)
INDEPENDENT-U.S. presidential hopeful Barack Obama said in an interview with a French magazine published Thursday that if he wins he wants to organize a summit of Muslim nations for frank talks on bridging the divide between Muslims and the West.
His priority, he told Paris Match, would be ending the war in Iraq, removing one to two brigades per month with all troops out around 2009.
Obama also wants to set aright the U.S. image in the Muslim world, organizing a summit "with all the heads of state to discuss frankly how to bridge the gap growing each day between Muslims and the West."
He said he would like to ask Muslim heads of state to join the war against terrorism.
"We must also listen to their concerns," he added.
Obama also told Paris Match he wanted direct talks with countries like Iran and Syria.
"We won't be able to stabilize the region if we don't talk to our enemies," Obama was quoted as saying. His remarks were translated into French.
Obama, a senator from Illinois, is vying with Hillary Clinton for the Democratic nomination for the presidency ahead of the November vote.
Obama has worked to correct the misconception that he himself is a Muslim, emphasizing that he attends a Christian church. His father and stepfather were Muslim and he spent part of his childhood in Indonesia, the most populous Muslim country.

NU CALLS FOR UNITY AMONG NATION`S LEADERS

JAKARTA FEBRUARY 8, 2008


NU CALLS FOR UNITY AMONG NATION`S LEADERS


(RACHMAD YULIADI NASIR, rbacakoran at yahoo dot com)
INDEPENDENT-Indonesia's largest Muslim organization, Nahdlatul Ulama (NU), has called on the country's leaders to unite to solve its problems.
"NU has invited them all because we think if they understand and help each other, half of the nation's problems can be solved. The most difficult thing is actually not to manage the people but to manage the leaders," NU chairman Hasyim Muzadi said in hisspeech during the commemoration of the organization's 82nd anniversary at the Bung Karno Stadium in Senayan, Central Jakarta, on Sunday.
The anniversary was attended by President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and First Lady Kristiani Herawati, Vice President Jusuf Kalla and wife Mufida Kalla, People's Consultative Assembly Speaker Hidayat Nurwahid, Constitutional Court chairman Jimly Asshiddiqie, Supreme Audit Agency chairman Anwar Nasution, Muhammadiyah chairman Din Syamsudin and some Cabinet ministers.
Speaking before 100,000 NU members, Hasyim said that NU "wants to uplift the country's dignity in facing all these challenges by making our ulema and pesantren (Islamic boarding schools) to be our main factors in working together with the country'sother elements," he said.
President Yudhoyono said that as the largest Muslimorganization, the NU already had a strategic position.
"The NU community has to stay as a pioneer in development and be a role model for the nation," he said.

OVERSEAS AMERICANS TO NOMINATE CANDIDATE FOR 2008 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS

JAKARTA FEBRUARI 8, 2008


OVERSEAS AMERICANS TO NOMINATE CANDIDATE FOR 2008 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS


(RACHMAD YULIADI NASIR, rbacakoran at yahoo dot com)
INDEPENDENT-Democrats living overseas will vote Tuesday in the 2008 U.S. presidential race, with the first ballots to be cast at the stroke of midnight in Indonesia, where Barack Obama lived as a child.
Over the next week, Americans in more than 30 nations will line up so their voices can be heard in the global primary, according to Democrats Abroad, an official branch of the party representing expatriates.
Others will cast ballots for the first time ever by Internet - an option Republicans remain unable to offer members - while others stick to more traditional means, mail or fax.
The Super Tuesday campaign kicks off in Indonesia, where Obama lived with his mother from the age of 6 until 10.
Two hundred Democrats are registered to vote in the predominantly Muslim nation, said Arian Ardie, chair of the Democrats Abroad Indonesia.
Many are expected to gather at the J.W. Marriott Hotel in the capital, where Obama's sister, Maya Soetoro-Ng, and Hillary Clinton's daughter, Chelsea, will speak to them by telephone.
Some 6 million Americans living abroad are eligible to vote in U.S. elections, but in the past only a fraction have done so, in part because their only option was to mail absentee ballot request forms to the last U.S. county of residence.
Republicans Abroad has operated independently of theRepublican Party since 2003, and therefore cannot hold in-person or Internet votes abroad.

DEFEAT FOR ISLAMIC PARTIES IN 2009 LIKELY: ANALYST

JAKARTA FEBRUARY 8, 2008
DEFEAT FOR ISLAMIC PARTIES IN 2009 LIKELY: ANALYST
(RACHMAD YULIADI NASIR, rbacakoran at yahoo dot com)
INDEPENDENT-The weak leadership of Islamic parties and their ignorance of the principles of pluralism will lead them to defeat in the 2009 Legislative Election, said a political analyst.
Greg Fealy, a researcher from the School of Pacific and Asian Studies at the Australian National University, said weak leadership could be seen in almost all Islamic parties, including the National Awakening Party (PKB), Prosperous Justice Party (PKS), United Development Party (PPP) and National Mandate Party (PAN).
Fealy was speaking at a public lecture jointly held by the Indonesian Institute of Sciences (LIPI) and Islamic Publishing House Mizan.
Yudi Latif from the Reform Institute and LIPI's senior political observer Syamsuddin Haris were also speakers at the event and Mizan launched Jejak Kafilah, the Indonesian translation of Fealy's Joining Caravan.
Fealy said PPP's chairman, Suryadharma Ali, was not regarded as an influential figure among the party's members themselves.
"This definitely will hinder the party from gaining many voters in the upcoming election," he said.
Fealy said the leadership problem was long-standing. He said PKB's patron Abdurrahman "Gus Dur" Wahid had always tended to take a dominant position in the party's decision-making processes.
"This is not good because this may be harmful to the democracy within the party itself," he said.
Fealy said PAN was another figure-centered party which relied too much on its current leader Sutrisno Bachir.
"The party will face an uncertain future as soon as Bachir retires."
Syamsuddin said PKS faced a similar problem because it leaned toward exclusivity, which would make it difficult to attract voters.
He cited the party's support of the anti-pornography bill with its massive rallies and demands for the government to approve it.
"PKS regards the bill as supporting Islamic values and fails to understand that a large segment of public sees it as curtailing freedom of expression in society," he said.
The Reform Institute's political analyst Yudi said despite dire predictions by his peers, Islamic parties would still have a chance to duplicate their strong showing in the 2004 election.
In 2004, Islamic parties took 38 percent of the vote in the legislative polls, up from 36 percent in 1999 legislative election.
"PKS could reach a higher percentage from its 2004 election result of 7.3 percent, if they can make use of the swing voters," Yudi said.
He said swing voters, who do not prioritize ideology, are the prime sources of new voters for all the Islamic parties.
Without them, the parties would simply be recycling voters and never gain a clear lead," he added.

GOVERMENT CIVIL SERVANT`S VACATION LEAVE FOR 2008

JAKARTA FEBRUARY 8, 2008
GOVERMENT CIVIL SERVANT`S VACATION LEAVE FOR 2008
(RACHMAD YULIADI NASIR, rbacakoran at yahoo dot com)
INDEPENDENT- State Minister for Administrative Reform Taufik Effendy announced Tuesday the government had revised its decree on national holidays and joint-leave days for 2008. Joint-leave days are non-public holidays which have been decreed non-work days for civil servants. They usually fall on weekdays immediately after or before national holidays.
Effendy said a joint-decree by the State Ministry for Administrative Reform, the Manpower and Transmigration Ministry and the Religious Affairs Ministry had reduced the number of national joint-leave days from eight to five days, while the number of national holidays would remain 14 days.
"Civil servants therefore only have four more joint-leave days this year as we already had one on January 11, one day after the Islamic New Year," Taufik said Tuesday.
The previous decree stated joint-leave days were Jan. 11, Feb. 8, May 2 and 19, Sept. 29 and 30, Oct. 3 and Dec. 26.
"We reduced the number of joint-leave days by making Feb. 8, May 2 and May 19 regular work-days," said Effendy.
Effendy said the reduction of joint-leave days was part of an effort to increase productivity and efficiency among government employees.
The decree is a nonbinding for private enterprises, but allows them to arrange their holiday schedules in line with the new government schedule.
The minister also announced forthcoming legislative debate on four laws on public service. The bills, which aim to reform the bureaucracy, are scheduled to be passed by 2009.