Sunny | 1 Dec 2008 15:55
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Religious Differences & Pluralism

 

Religious Differences & Pluralism

November 29th, 2008, in Opinion, by Ross

Ross on the bigotry of teachers of religion in Islamic schools, ideological jilbabs, and Dewi Persik.

Schools Run by Nutters

The Jakarta Post recently gave front page attention to a survey (by an Islamic college, Pusat Pengkajian Islam dan Masyarakat (PPIM)) of Muslim “religious teachers” which indicates that a large percentage of them are benighted savages.

This in itself may come as no surprise but what is particularly disturbing is the fact that a clear majority of these ignoramuses are affiliated to the so-called “moderate, main-stream” Muslim bodies, the NU (44.9% ) and Muhammadiyah (23.8%).

While their enthusiasm for cutting off thieves’ hands is a matter of taste, their notion that stoning ought to be applicable to people convicted of “other crimes” is abominable. (One hopes they will go easy on parking violations and smokers!)

I’m no softy pinko and I’m all for tough penalties, but we know how primitive Aceh is, beatings administered by cowards in masks to guys who play cards for small change or teeny-boppers who get caught canoodling - are we really looking at a situation whereby thousands, millions, maybe, of young Muslims all over Indonesia are indoctrinated into this kind of garbage by semi-educated goat-beards?

Over 21% of the nutters think anybody smart enough to convert out of Islam should be murdered. An incredible 85.6% abuse their positions to tell kids not to go to ‘Western’ festivals - i.e. if a young Muslim lad wants to go to his Christian pal’s Christmas party, he’s affronting his own religion. Sounds to me that there is a degree of insecurity in these pesantren senior common rooms - do they think the joyful festivities might seem more appealing than sonorous ululations?

Again, much the same percentage says it is impermissible even to learn about other religions! How asinine (and in this case hopefully self-defeating - if you tell a teen he’s not allowed to know about something, he’s likely to get into it PDQ).

These morons, 73.1% of those surveyed, object to having churches or other faiths’ houses of worship in their neighbourhoods. Insecurity again! Bet they’d be the first to whine if Brits or Aussies object to a cacophany of mosques being erected in Sydney or Birmingham.

Yet 75% urge students to urge their contemporaries to convert to Islam. How they’d manage to demolish tenets of other faiths if they may not first make themselves aware of their target’s current beliefs is a fascinating point which may be too complex for neanderthal imams to take on board.

When I worked in the West, I had numerous Muslim colleagues, exemplary in their prayers and other religious obligations but happy to join in the office Xmas knees-up. Thus I had a very open mind towards Islam when I came here. I find it harder and harder to maintain this, despite the many normal,sensible Muslims I meet and with whom I agree on a great many issues. Moderate Muslims abound, but they are not calling the shots.

The bad guys evidently have the whip-hand in education and politically, well, recall my post about the mayor of Tangerang, a man of mediaeval mentality, who nevertheless got the entire spectrum of “moderate” and even “nationalist” parties to back his bid for re-election. Now we read of the PDI-P and the PKS playing footsie, despite the candour with which the latter’s leading lights admit their long-term goal of suffocating Indonesia under a giant ideological jilbab.

It’s just too grim to contemplate, especially for those who never want to leave these islands.

Okay, that’s today’s rail - but just as a playful idea, how about we give the sharia gang something to keep them busy.

The PKS has supplied a number for the public (and that surely includes expats) to nominate women whose activities are an inspiration to Indonesia. It was in 24/11 Jakarta Post - 0856 7007 699 - and I’m strongly tempted to sms the name of a truly inspirational Indonesian female, the delightful Dewi Perssik! I doubt if they’ll go by the democratic method of total smses received, but it would be great if she got more than anybody else. On the other hand, guess the PKS wouldn’t let on!


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Sunny | 1 Dec 2008 22:22
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Mumbai's night of terror

 
Nov 28, 2008
 
Mumbai's night of terror
By Raja Murthy

MUMBAI - The unprecedented night of horror in India's financial capital began at about 9.30 pm for two Germans, Rita and Thomas, part of a Lufthansa in-flight crew finishing dinner at Leopold Cafe in Colaba in south Mumbai.

Barely five hours earlier, Asia Times Online published an article ( Closing time for India's Iranian cafes) mentioning the restaurant as a favorite of Western tourists, and this popularity caused it to be among the first of 12 terrorist targets on Wednesday night that killed more than 80 people and injured nearly 300, and the figures are rising.

Apart from the cafe, groups of militants armed with automatic weapons and grenades burst into luxury hotels, a hospital and a railway station, spewing death. As of publication time, many tourists were being held hostage in the Taj Mahal hotel, a 105-year-old landmark, and the five-star Trident Oberoi.

"I saw the terrorist firing his machine gun at people sitting at the next table," Rita said, "and then thought the gun would turn around to me." But the terrorist, in his mid-30s, swung the gun away from her, momentarily distracted by his accomplice waiting in the mezzanine floor and firing randomly at diners.

Her life had been saved in that split second. Police said they had killed four gunmen and arrested nine. A group identifying itself as the Deccan Mujahideen said it was responsible, per emails sent to news organizations. Virtually nothing is known of this group. "Deccan" is an area of India and "Mujahideen" is the plural form of a Muslim participating in jihad. Security officials believe it unlikely an unknown group could carry out such a precise and heavily-armed attack.

It is more likely to be the work of the Indian Mujahideen, an Islamist group that has claimed responsibility for other attacks in India. On Thursday morning, speaking from inside the Oberoi where foreigners are being held hostage, a man identified as Sahadullah told India TV he belonged to an Indian Islamist group seeking to end the persecution of Indian Muslims: "We want all mujahideens held in India released and only after that we will release the people."

No one knows how the terrorists arrived in the city. One theory is that they came from the sea in an explosives-laden boat. But there is no doubt about their agenda.

Rita, Thomas and Jesper, the latter the owner of a shipping company from Denmark, fell to the floor with other diners at the Leopold, some on top of each other. "We thought if we lay down and kept still, the gunman would think we are dead," said Rita, a blonde stewardess serving on Lufthansa Flight 764 from Mumbai to Munich.

As the machinegun-wielding murderer ran up to join his accomplice upstairs, the trio fled into an already panic-stricken street, over a dead body and leaving their bags, money, cell phones and unpaid dinner bill behind. But the night of terror for Rita and her friends was only beginning, as it was for a city of 13 million not unused to terrorist strikes but never in such prolonged horror.

The trio were staying at the Oberoi Hotel in Nariman Point, a rare case of victims caught in two of the dozen terrorist-hit areas in Mumbai on the fateful night. Hemant Karkare, chief of the city's anti-terrorism squad, was among three senior police officials killed in a police counter-attack against the terrorists holding hostages as the Oberoi and Taj Mahal. By 10.30pm outside the Oberoi, by the Arabian Sea on Marine Drive, it was surreally quiet, with roads dark and deserted, in contrast to the usual daytime office bustle in one of the city's busiest and most expensive office areas.

I reached the Oberoi minutes after seeing the news flash on TV, even as gunmen were holed up inside the hotel and police cordons were being thrown around the white-painted building. I recalled the Marriott in Islamabad, which terrorists struck on September 20, setting it alight. Would the Oberoi and Taj suffer the same devastating fate? No one nearby, including police constables, had any clear idea of what was happening, except that gun shots had been fired and there were multiple explosions.

Small groups of bystanders joined fleeing uniformed hotel staff running into the night. Sporadic gunfire and explosions could be heard from the Taj Mahal about two kilometers away. Oberoi hotel guests periodically raced out, crouching and escorted by poorly armed policemen. Sunil (name changed on request), a Marine Commando Special Forces Officer, residing nearby, had heard the first explosion outside the Oberoi.

An explosives specialist, Sunil said that he gauged by the sound that it involved low-grade explosives of about 10 kilograms, of the kind that can be packed into a fire extinguisher and set off with a mobile phone ring as a trigger.

Other explosions were grenade attacks, the first of many across Mumbai. "The explosion in the Air India building in the 1993 bomb blast attacks was so loud the ground shook," remembers officer Sunil. "First you feel the building shake and then you hear the loud explosion."

At this point security men asked us to move away from the area, particularly since I was wearing a white shirt and could be a sitting target at night for bullets.

It was a terrible feeling of deja vu for officer Sunil, who, like me, had similarly raced out into the streets in Churchgate on midday on Friday, March 12, 1993, to see a sea of glass shards amid dead, bleeding and dying bodies strewn around the Air India building, just a stone's throw the Oberoi. In that incident, a series of 13 blasts killed up to 250 people, with 700 injured. Fifteen years later, Mumbai has suffered more serial terrorist strikes. In the intervening years, the city has been the victim of bomb attacks, but it has never seen anything like the carnage of Wednesday night - it was pure and simple urban warfare.

Mumbai has been attacked six times since 1993. The last major attack was in in 2006 when 200 people were killed in attacks on the rail transit system.

"This is a high-risk zone," said officer Sunil. "There could be delayed explosions." His prediction was correct; within 30 minutes, with gunfire and explosions had turned Mumbai into Baghdad.

A black-suited Oberoi banquet manager was standing in a dark, nearly deserted lane opposite the outwardly silent hotel, staring up at the few lighted room windows. His hotel would be nearly empty of guests by the morning.

The still surreal silence was broken occasionally by a rush of feet fleeing the hotel, or policemen crouching into firing positions near the hotel's perimeter, or warning onlookers to go away. "Fortunately, we had only one function tonight, in one banquet room out of the nine we have," the banquet manager said. "Otherwise, the causalities might have been higher." He said the hotel had about 45% occupancy.

"Two masked armed gunmen randomly fired from the ramp in the lobby," the Oberoi shopping mall manager standing nearby reported on his cell phone to a senior. "The Kandahar [restaurant[ is badly damaged, sir. No word of causalities." A pattern was emerging. Two-member teams of gunmen had fanned out across Mumbai, randomly firing into crowds and hurling grenades out of backpacks.

Most of the targets were tourist-oriented, including railway stations and hospitals. Reports emerged of terrorists looking in particular for American and British guests at the Oberoi and Taj Mahal, two luxury landmarks and rated by Forbes and Conde Nast among the world's best business hotels. In a sense, Mumbai and India's economy was under attack.

A young food and beverage trainee attending a roof-top party at the Oberoi had just escaped into the street, still panting, and reported seeing a Japanese guest shot in the hip. "Another guest said he had seen a man being shot dead before his eyes," he said. "We heard there is another explosion in Mazgaon Docks. We live near there and have to go."

By 11.30 pm, when I met Thomas, Rita and Jesper near the Air India building facing the Arabian Sea, Marine Drive had turned into a Hollywood disaster movie set: ambulances, police vehicles, satellite TV vans, trucks of heavily armed soldiers rumbling into the zone and reporters screaming into their cell phones. Thomas and Rita were desperately trying to contact three missing crew members, not yet sure whether one of them had escaped alive out of the Leopold Cafe.

Soldiers were moving into the Oberoi, seven grenade explosions rocked the Taj Mahal, India's first-ever five-star hotel, with its famous sea-facing dome on fire. Like other hotel guests, the Lufthansa crew were stranded outside for the night. Shipping company owner Jesper had experienced bullets flying near his head when he served as solder in a United Nations peacekeeping mission in Yugoslavia 13 years ago.

"We were caught in the crossfire between Bosnians and Serbs," Jesper remembered. "But tonight was more terrifying because I had no gun to defend myself. Soldiers firing on soldiers in a war is easier to understand than civilians firing at other civilians." "This is my first visit to Mumbai and I like it," said Rita, who nearly lost her life in the Leopold Cafe and escaped being killed in the Oberoi in a night of terror that she and Mumbai will never forget. "But I don't want to come back here again."

Lufthansa eventually picked up Rita, Thomas and Jesper in the morning and moved them to the Hyatt Residency near the airport. Flights out of Mumbai were expected to be full on Thursday. But Mumbai has so far refused to heed chief minister Vilasrao Deshmukh's advice to stay indoors. Office attendance is expected to be down, but suburban trains are running and the city is attempting to come out to work. For stoic, terrorist-battered Mumbai, work and life go on.

(Copyright 2008 Asia Times Online (Holdings) Ltd. All rights reserved. Please contact us about sales, syndication and republishing )
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Sunny | 1 Dec 2008 22:52
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Muslims split on mosque proposal

 

Muslims split on mosque proposal

  • Barney Zwartz
  • December 1, 2008

AUSTRALIAN Muslims are deeply divided over a plan by the nation's most senior cleric to allow men and women to pray in the same hall, which conservative Sydney Muslims have vowed to fight.

A quartet of leaders has met several times to oppose the plan by the Mufti of Australia, Sheikh Fehmi Naji el-Imam, to return to the worship endorsed by the Prophet Muhammad 1400 years ago, with men and women in the same prayer space.

"There's been a huge backlash, even though he's partially right," said Keysar Trad, president of the Sydney-based Islamic Friendship Association, one of the quartet.

Sheikh Fehmi — who announced his bold plan 10 days ago in response to complaints by women at a Melbourne conference — was unrepentant yesterday, saying the Sydney leaders should not start trouble based on a misunderstanding.

His announcement followed a report by the Islamic Women's Welfare Council of Victoria claiming some imams had condoned domestic violence, polygamy, rape within marriage and exploitation of women.

Yesterday, Sheikh Fehmi said: "Some people have misunderstood and talked as if I said women should be side by side with men, but that wasn't the practice of the Prophet. Women came to pray, but formed their own line," he said.

"No imams should stop women coming into the mosque to pray, but the practice should be exactly as it was in the Prophet's time, no more, no less.

"The women are happy about what I suggested. If so, people should not be starting trouble without knowing what has been said and what is going to be done. Anyone who wants to know what we intend can ask us, and we will tell them about it."

In an online article on Friday, Mr Trad accused the Mufti of a "knee-jerk capitulation".

He told The Age women usually had less space than men in mosques but this was because men, if they lived within two kilometres of a mosque, had to attend five times a day to pray. There was no such requirement for women.

Mr Trad said he had been meeting with Australian National Imams' Council chairman Abdul Moez Alnafti and two senior scholars — but not Sheikh Taj al-Din al-Hilali who is overseas — to respond to issues arising at the conference at the National Centre for Excellence in Islamic Studies.

He said Sydney Muslims were incensed about the Islamic Women's Council report, which sensationalised isolated incidents. They were also upset at Sheikh Fehmi's response to the report.

"His first response, where he said the women must be writing about stories they have heard as though they are fact, was one most people could identify with, but his second was a complete turn around."

(The next day Sheikh Fehmi acknowledged that some imams had made mistakes and that the women should be heard.)

The president of the Australian Federation of Islamic Councils, Ikebal Patel, said he supported Sheikh Fehmi's call to allow women in the same prayer hall, though still separate. He said the main problem for the growing Muslim population was the difficulty in building new mosques because of community opposition. In overcrowded mosques women's accommodation was sometimes substandard.

The Australian National Imams Council did not return calls.

KEY POINTS

■ Mufti wants men and women to pray in the same space.

■ Opponents say there's been a "huge backlash".

■ Mufti claims he's been misunderstood.

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Sunny | 1 Dec 2008 18:22
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Jeffry Polnaja Kelilingi 72 Negara di Tiga Benua dengan Sepeda Motor

 

30/11/08 21:23

Jeffry Polnaja Kelilingi 72 Negara di Tiga Benua dengan Sepeda Motor



Jakarta (ANTARA News) - Pengelana dunia dengan sepeda motor asal Bandung, Jeffrey Polnaja mencatat sejarah setelah berkeliling di lebih 72 negara di tiga benua yakni Asia, Afrika dan Eropa sejak 23 April 2006 lalu.

Jeffry malah berencana untuk melanjutkan misinya di tahap kedua dengan mengelilingi kawasan Amerika Utara, Amerika Selatan dan Australia pada awal tahun 2009 mendatang.

"Setelah saya bertemu deru dan debu jalanan, saya sangat gembira bertemu kawan-kawan di Tanah Air," kata Jeffry yang akrab di panggil "Bro JJ" saat diterima Menegpora Adhyaksa Dault di Kantor Menegpora Jakarta, Minggu.
Dalam acara penyambutan itu hadir juga pendiri Perhimpunan Penggemar Mobil Kuno Indonesia (PPMKI) Solihin GP, dan Ketua "Ride for Peace" Fahmi Idris serta Ketua PP IMI, Juliari Batubara.

Sebelumnya JJ juga disambut Mantan Kapolri Jend.(Purn) Roesmanhadi dari Organisasi Motor Besar di Bandara Soekarno Hatta.

JJ menyatakan rasa terima kasihnya kepada semua pihak yang mendukung misi dirinya mengelilingi dunia dengan mengendarai sepeda motor untuk misi damai "ride for peace".

"Sukses ini adalah sukses kita semua," kata JJ yang mengendarai sepeda motor jenis BMW 651150 buatan tahun 2004.

JJ sempat mengatakan bahwa banyak pengalaman yang didapatnya setelah menempuh 72 negara dalam waktu 2,5 tahun itu. "Salah satu yang berkesan adalah menempuh daerah konflik di negara Afganistan. Setelah tahu saya dari Indonesia, masyarakat setempat langsung ramah," katanya.

Perjalanan ini menghabiskan dana sekitar 300 ribu dolar AS.

Sementara Menegpora Adhyaksa Dault menyatakan bahwa perjalanan keliling dunia oleh Jeffry ini menunjukkan perbuatan kebangsaan untuk Indonesia. Jeffry akan tanda tangan di Menara Pemuda yang akan dibuat di Taman Mini Indonesia Indah. "Tanda tangan Jefry akan ada di Menara Pemuda itu," katanya.

Sedang Ketua PP IMI, Jualiari Batubara mengatakan, salut atas usaha Jeffry yang berhasil merealisasikan dengan baik keliling dunia dengan sepeda motor ini.

"Kami akan memberikan penghargaan "Lifetime Achievement Award" untuk Jeffry atas usahanya selama ini," katanya.

Perjalanan Jeffrey dimulai 23 April 2006 dari Jakarta menuju Singapura dan melanjutkan perjalananya ke sejumlah negara Asia seperti Malaysia, Thailand, Kamboja, Laos, Vietnam, China, Nepal, Butan, Banglades, India, Pakistan, dan Afganistan,

Selanjutnya, dia menyeberang ke negara Timur Tengah, yakni Iran, Uni Emirat Arab, Qatar, Oman, Arab Saudi, Jordania, Lebanon, Mesir, Libya, Tunisia, Algeria, Maroko, dan daratan Eropa seperti Spanyol, Portugal, Perancis, Monako, Swiss, Hongaria, Yugoslavia, dan Yunani.

Jeffrey melanjutkan perjalanan ke Vatikan, San Marino, Slovenia, Austria, dan berakhir Jerman.

Selanjutnya JJ akan beristirahat di Indonesia selama beberapa bulan sebelum bertolak ke negara-negara di Amerika, serta Australia, dan kembali ke Indonesia dalam tahapan kedua.
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Sunny | 1 Dec 2008 21:18
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Politics and pirates

 27 November - 3 December 2008
Issue No. 924
Published in Cairo by AL-AHRAM established in 1875
 
 

Politics and pirates

Resolving Somalia's piracy problem will take political as much as military intervention, Dina Ezzat reports

For Egypt, other Arab states overlooking the Red Sea and the Arab League, the answer to the Somali piracy problem goes beyond sending NATO war brigades to the shores of the East Africa Arab state beset by civil war for near two decades. As proposed by a meeting that convened at the Egyptian Foreign Ministry over the weekend, the answer is surgical and legally sanctioned military intervention combined with a firm diplomatic initiative that brings together regional and concerned international players to turn Somalia from a failed state to a state that has a strong -- or at least acting -- central government.

The eight-hour meeting was preoccupied with one main question: how to target piracy off Somali shores without opening the door to opportunistic international intervention in the Arab- African state. The question was not wholly answered. Participants acknowledged as indispensable a role for foreign forces in confronting a worsening piracy problem. Arab and African countries, it was recognised, cannot do so alone. Counter-piracy action is sanctioned by two relevant UN Security Council resolutions, but what precisely should be done?

"What we are working on is a formula that does not overlook the international role, but that does not marginalise Arab interests," said Ahmed Bin Helli, Arab League assistant secretary-general. According to Bin Helli who represented the Arab organisation in the meeting, the crucial issue is coordination between concerned Arab and non-Arab countries. Bin Helli argued the need for a coordination body to be discussed and formed.

According to Assistant Foreign Minister Wafa Bassim, committees formed by the meeting would consider this and also a series of political and economic measures to be taken in parallel with prompt military and intelligence action aimed to liquidate piracy. The underlying issue, argued Bassim, is the absence of an effective central government in Somalia. Helping this Arab-African country to get back on its feet is crucial to combating piracy off its shores, she argued.

Somalia has been without an effective central government since President Siad Barre was overthrown in 1991. Fighting between warlords and the failure of international intervention have left Somalia in a permanent state of civil war, combined with famine, illicit trade and human rights violations. The country is effectively divided. Officials in its different regions complain about a lack of resources and inadequate security. They publicly acknowledge the need for military and intelligence assistance to combat piracy.

NATO has already four ships on patrol off Somali shores. Other countries have also sent war brigades to the region. Meanwhile, Ethiopia has had troops stationed around the Somali capital for the past two years, supposedly to enable a transitional government to take control of the country after having freed Mogadishu from the Union of Islamic Courts that ruled the centre of Somalia in what was a brief interruption of otherwise endless bloodletting. Several regional and international players opposed the Islamic Courts, whose leaders declared their commitment to applying Islamic Sharia law. Links between the Islamic Courts and Al-Qaeda were rumoured. And neighbouring Arab countries, worried by the expanding influence of political Islam, were not opposed to US-supported Ethiopian intervention against the Islamic Courts even in the face of the incapacity of the transitional government, created by a reconciliation deal that has little public support, to maintain the level of stability that the Islamic Courts had brought to Somalia.

All Arab countries overlooking the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden are concerned about what the weekend meeting suggested could be the "huge impact" of piracy on area trade. They are particularly worried about three things: oil tanks, arms shipments, and the laundering of millions of dollars paid in ransom to pirates. According to security estimates given at the meeting, if piracy off the shores of Somalia goes unchecked for a few more months the entire area could turn into a launching pad for terrorist attacks that could destabilise security across the Horn of Africa and beyond.

Egypt, officials say, is already keeping a very close eye on the situation in and around Somalia for fear of Islamist terrorist attacks that could be initiated against economic targets. Officials add that the negative impact of piracy on shipping through the Suez Canal is already worrying and that terrorist attacks that would hit tourism and deny state coffers foreign currency at a time of international economic crisis could not be tolerated. Regarding Suez, "we are already witnessing the signs of decline and we are expecting worse times," according to one official who asked for his name to be withheld.

Arab League Secretary-General Amr Moussa called Monday for the composition of a joint Arab maritime force to patrol the international waters off Somalia's shores in order to curtail the piracy problem. The Arab force, Moussa told reporters, could act "in coordination" with already existing international forces to bring the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden zone back to lawfulness.

According to Ambassador Samir Hosni, head of the Arab-African Department at the Arab League, Moussa's ideas will be discussed in Arab and Arab-African meetings that will take place next month and early next year in the capitals of Yemen and Djibouti. "We know that this is not a proposal that could be picked up or implemented overnight, but we know that this is a proposal that is worth looking into seriously," Hosni said. In addition to maritime patrols, the need for aerial support for the patrols has been underlined.

On Tuesday, a Yemeni freighter was the latest commercial vessel to be attacked in the pirate- plagued Gulf of Aden. According to Hosni, more attacks are to be expected until security is brought to Somalia and around the Horn of Africa. "Stabilising Somalia is a priority," he said. He added that all attempts to bring stability are bound to hit an impasse if they do not accommodate all Somali factions.

Hosni also suggested the need to work on ending rifts within the transitional Somali government. "We cannot expect much of a government that has internal disputes and whose head is quarrelling with the head of the state, especially if we are talking about Somalia," he said. He added: "We need to put the pirates in a corner, but we also need to corner internal Somali disputes."

Egyptian diplomats say that Cairo has recently intensified its attempts to promote Somali reconciliation but has not been successful. "The fact of the matter is that particular factions are supported by different regional players whose interest has been to keep Somalia a failed state," said one diplomat. Ethiopia and Eritrea are known to be fighting an internal battle on the Somali scene. The entry of Ethiopian troops into neighbouring Somalia in 2006 was clearly designed to curtail what Addis Ababa perceived as the growing influence of Asmara in Somalia through its ties with the Islamic Courts. Today, elements of the Islamic Courts are fighting hard against the presence of Ethiopian troops.

Ambassador Hosni suggested that the time has perhaps come to consider an Arab-African presence in Somalia to replace Ethiopian troops. "This is the time for close Arab-African coordination, but we have to be clear about where we are going because we do not wish to introduce new obstacles to the meagre stability that the Somali people could have," he said.

Piracy off the coast of Somalia has been a problem for several years. However, last month a Chatham House report warned that piracy "more than doubled in 2008", with over 60 ships attacked this year alone and with "pirates regularly demanding and receiving million- dollar ransom payments" thereafter "becoming more aggressive and assertive". The report warned that ransom money could fund terrorism and is "already helping to pay for the war in Somalia".

Piracy is also having an impact on an already tragic humanitarian situation in Somalia. According to the Chatham House report, "the high level of piracy is making aid deliveries to drought-stricken Somalia ever more difficult and costly". The World Food Programme, whose deliveries are now secured by NATO ships, has often been unable to receive assistance due to the threat of piracy.

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Sunny | 1 Dec 2008 21:24
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The curse of neo-totalitarianism (RALAT - Judul)

 27 November - 3 December 2008
Issue No. 924
Published in Cairo by AL-AHRAM established in 1875
 
 

The curse of neo-totalitarianism

As dangerous as terrorism, the rise of autocratic dictatorship is a grave threat to world peace, writes Ayman El-Amir*

The post-11 September global scene is undergoing a transformation to a new phase of confrontation marked by the rise of autocracy in countries that were believed to be on the path to democracy. The new trend appears as an innocuous series of constitutional amendments designed to adapt these countries to modern standards of political life. In effect, it is a consecration of the 20th century "president-for-life" syndrome, complimented by camouflaged hereditary succession under a pseudo-democratic republican regime. Coupled with the global war on terror, the trend is bound to create not only more intense domestic conflict but also to fuel a new and more lethal transnational brand of terrorism.

It may be a fact of life that the world is already smarting from implacable acts of domestic and international terrorism. However, the Bush administration's short-sighted strategy of separating terrorism from its root causes lent legitimacy to the suppression of fundamental human rights by indigenous dictators as much as it sanctioned Israeli murderous campaigns against the Palestinian resistance. Autocratic Arab regimes assumed the guise of fighting terror to enact or prolong draconian emergency laws that they have used to rule unopposed. In addition, they also contrived constitutional amendments that would ensure their uninterrupted hold on power. These amendments, proposed governments under the thumb of presidents, are usually rubber-stamped by an automatic parliamentary majority whose ascendancy to representative office is usually the result of cooked elections engineered by government manipulation. Constitutional legitimacy becomes the respectable codename for dictatorial rule that leaves no space for the rotation of power.

The practice has become rampant. Most recently the Algerian parliament voted to remove statutory limitations that restricted the presidency to two five-year terms in office. The sitting president, Abdel-Aziz Bouteflika, who was first elected in 1999, was at the end of his second and final term. He is now free to run and be re-elected for any number of terms.

In neighbouring Tunisia, where the former president Habib Bourguiba was proclaimed president-for-life in 1975, the constitution was amended in 2002 to lift the legal restriction, introduced by an earlier amendment in 1988, that limited the number of presidential terms to three five-year terms and to raise the cut off age for eligibility of presidential candidates from 70 to 75 years. The 72-year-old current President Zein Al-Abidine Bin Ali came to power by ousting Bourguiba in a 1987 palace coup and has ruled ever since.

In Libya, Colonel Muammar Gaddafi who has shunned the designation of "president" for the obscure term "leader" is scheduled to celebrate the 40th anniversary of his ascendancy to power in September next year. Yemeni President Ali Abdallah Saleh has marked his 30th year in office, while constitutions and political practice in both Egypt and Syria prescribe no limitation for the number of terms a president can serve. After the death of Syrian president Hafez Al-Assad in 2000, his son, now President Bashar Al-Assad, only became eligible to be elected president by referendum when a constitutional amendment was passed, lowering the minimum eligibility age from 40 to 34 years. The precedent prompted stirrings and much speculation in both Egypt and Libya that hereditary succession is a real possibility.

What appears to be a drive for lifetime presidencies is not exclusively endemic to the Arab Middle East. The Russian parliament has recently approved an amendment proposed by President Dmitri Medvedev to increase the term of the presidency from four to six years. An additional provision that the change would apply only to future presidents gave credence to speculation that the amendment was particularly designed to return former president, now prime minister, Vladimir Putin to two six-year terms starting as early as next year and lasting until 2021. Following his two terms as president, Putin was constitutionally barred from serving a third consecutive term -- a condition that has now been broken by Medvedev's presidential interlude.

As the phenomenon gains momentum, with varying degrees of resistance in most parts of the world, countries where the transition to democracy has been stymied may begin to experience violent instability. Dictators who come to power under unusual circumstances tend to experience the delusion of being "men of destiny" and assume the mantra of "the father of the nation". A dictator's coterie, whose fortunes are linked to the ruler's continuity in power, feed him with the megalomaniac sense that his perpetuity in power is the salvation of the nation. They also fabricate a multitude of enemies that he has to ward off in order to protect the nation. Problems abound, fuelling the sense that a sitting president has to continue in power until all problems are resolved, or until he passes from life.

The hidden truth could be more mundane. Behind a dictator's delusion of grandeur, the frenzy of self-adulation, cult of personality and exaggerated self- confidence lies a deep-seated fear that some day, someone will unseat him and open up a Pandora's box of vile crimes that should remain sealed for as long as he is alive. This may explain why some presidents are trying to engineer hereditary succession, so that the box may remain in family hands. It is also why that, as much and they flaunt democratic reform, dictators regard the introduction of true democracy as an act of suicide that they will never commit.

Decades of repression and human rights violations in a fast- developing and open world pose challenges to dictators to which their only response is more repression. For one thing, it is the only way they can govern; for another, it is because the hoax of democratic reform has been oversold. As both resistance and repression escalate, violence becomes the only option left for desperate people. Under such tense and unstable circumstances indigenous militants who have gone all over the world to perpetrate international acts of terrorism may start coming home to roost.

In 2003, special rapporteurs, representatives, experts and chairpersons of working groups set up by the then UN Commission on Human Rights expressed profound concern at the multiplication of policies, legislation and practices increasingly being adopted by many countries in the name of fighting terrorism. They expressed the view that these measures negatively affect the enjoyment of virtually every human right and drew attention to the dangers inherent in the indiscriminate use of the term "terrorism". Predictably, fears that governments, the police and special security courts would be able to act beyond the limits of accountability are now a fact of life in most countries under autocratic rule, Myanmar a prime example.

Repressive regimes that borrow their legitimacy from the fake sacred mission of improving the lot of their population, even if it comes at the temporary cost of suspending human rights and fundamental freedoms, are doomed. The preamble of the UN Charter called, 62 years ago, for "Better standards of life in larger freedom". If autocratic rulers believe that China provided an example of better standards of life under repression, they are misled. While China has its own unique circumstances that could not be emulated elsewhere, the fact is that economic liberalisation is leading the way to larger political freedom in the country. The Chinese "miracle" was not achieved under circumstances of corruption, fraudulent elections, monopoly of power, cronyism, misrepresentation of reality by paid government propagandists posing as free journalists, and plunder of the wealth of the nation by a privileged few.

No one is predicting that the problem of terrorism will come to an end anytime soon. More likely, terrorism and totalitarianism will become a revolving door phenomenon, with each one chasing the other and blindly fuelling it. The time has come for the UN Security Council to declare totalitarianism as much as terrorism a threat to international peace and security and provide a credible mechanism to fighting both.

* The writer is former Al-Ahram correspondent in Washington, DC. He also served as director of United Nations Radio and Television in New York.

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Sunny | 1 Dec 2008 22:37
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Smuggler surge not our fault: minister

 

Smuggler surge not our fault: minister

Paul Maley | December 01, 2008

Article from:  The Australian

INDONESIAN people smugglers are back in business, with the federal Government conceding there has been a spike in activities - the result, it says, of people smugglers changing tactics to avoid detection.

Immigration Minister Chris Evans said yesterday the Government would be increasing its support for Indonesian authorities in an effort to stamp out the surge. But he denied the spike was due to Labor's softening of refugee policy, a move experts on the ground say has encouraged people-smuggling outfits.

The International Organisation for Migration chief-of-mission in Indonesia, Steve Cook, told The Australian the smugglers had tracked the policy changes and there had been a dramatic surge in smuggling in the past 12 months.

"People smugglers have clearly noted that there has been a change in policy and they're testing the envelope," he said.

"Up until about a year ago there was very little people-smuggling activity. Over the last year there's been a considerable up-kick. There have been boat arrivals in Australia, there's been interceptions here. There are rumours of a lot of organising going on."

Mr Cook's on-the-ground assessment puts him at odds with Senator Evans, who said the spike was being driven by a change in tactics, not policy.

"It's fair to say that there's been increased activity and that means we've had increased number of disruptions and we've had three successful arrivals via Indonesia in the last three months," Senator Evans said. "They have adapted their tactics to overcome what has been a fairly successful activity on behalf on the Indonesian Government."

Senator Evans said people smugglers were moving "further up the supply chain", recruiting customers in third countries, such as Pakistan. This meant they tended to be in Indonesia for a briefer period of time, making it harder for Indonesian or Australian authorities to detect their presence and interdict their boats.

Senator Evans emphasised the increased activity did not mean Australia was about to be swamped with boats.

Mr Cook also warned of a dangerous shift in tactics, with people smugglers increasingly favouring smaller, more fragile boats in an attempt to avoid detection. Senator Evans predicted this would cost lives.

Since September four boats have been intercepted by Australian authorities off the western and northwestern coasts; however, many more have been interdicted by Indonesian authorities. Most of the passengers have been from the Middle East, although the latest boatload was comprised of Sri Lankans.

Since coming to office, Labor has implemented a series of changes to the way Australia deals with unauthorised arrivals, most notably the dismantling of the Howard-era "Pacific Solution" of offshore processing for illegal arrivals. Other changes include the abolition of temporary protection visas for refugees and expanding the appeals process for people lodging claims from outside Australia's migration zone.

Opposition spokeswoman for immigration Sharman Stone accused the Government of being too interested in cultivating a reputation for compassion, when in fact the systems for processing unauthorised arrivals remained effectively unchanged. This sent the wrong message to the smugglers, Dr Stone said.

"(Senator Evans) should be making it loud and clear ... that it is business as usual as far as Australia is concerned in relation to border protection," Dr Stone said.

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Sunny | 1 Dec 2008 22:43
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Iran filmfest to doff cap to Paul Newman

 
 
 

December 1, 2008


Iran filmfest to doff cap to Paul Newman
Tehran Times Art Desk

TEHRAN -- Iran’s 27th Fajr International Film Festival will commemorate the late American actor Paul Newman, the secretariat of the festival announced in a press release on Sunday.

Several films in which Newman starred will go on display during the festival, which will be held from February 1 to 11, 2009 at various Tehran theaters.

Born in 1925 in Cleveland, Ohio, Paul Newman acted in more than 80 films. He produced ten films and was the director of six movies. He was one of the few actors who successfully made the transition from 1950s cinema to that of the 1960s and 1970s.

He went on to become one of the top box office draws of the 1960s, starring in such classic films as “The Hustler”, “The Prize”, “Hud”, “Cool Hand Luke”, and “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid”. He also produced and directed many high quality films, including “Rachel, Rachel” for which he received an Oscar nomination for best picture. Nominated nine times for best actor, he finally took one home an Oscar for his performance as an aging pool shark in “The Color of Money”.

A caring and supremely generous man, he is the founder of “Newman’s Own”, a successful line of food products that has earned in excess of $100 million, every penny of which the philanthropic movie icon has donated to charity.

On September 26, 2008, Newman died at his longtime home in Westport, Connecticut, of complications arising from lung cancer.

Photo: Paul Newman provides the voice -- and eye color -- for the wise Doc Hudson in Disney/Pixar’s blockbuster movie “Cars”. (Motor Trend

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Sunny | 1 Dec 2008 23:51
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Jumlah Penderita HIV/AIDS Di Jakarta Masih Tertinggi

 
Edisi 01 Desember 2008
 

Jumlah Penderita HIV/AIDS Di Jakarta Masih Tertinggi

"Yang tidak terdeteksi bisa 100 kali lebih banyak."

JAKARTA -- Jumlah penderita HIV/AIDS di Jakarta saat ini mencapai 4.288 orang. Jumlah ini naik dibanding tahun lalu, yang hanya 2.849 orang. "Angka ini paling tinggi secara nasional," kata juru bicara Dinas Kesehatan Pemerintah Provinsi DKI Jakarta, Tini Suryanti, kemarin.

Jumlah itu, menurut Tini, berdasarkan jumlah kasus yang tercatat di institusi kesehatan. "Sedangkan yang tidak terdeteksi bisa 100 kali lebih banyak," katanya. Hal ini karena HIV/AIDS memiliki dampak sosial yang menyebabkan penderitanya takut dikucilkan oleh masyarakat.

Jakarta Barat menjadi wilayah yang memiliki penderita HIV/AIDS paling banyak. Faktor itu antara lain dipengaruhi oleh banyaknya tempat hiburan di sana.

Untuk mendeteksi jumlah penderita HIV/AIDS, Dinas Kesehatan menerapkan Xero Survey terhadap pekerja seks. Sebab, para pekerja seks inilah yang rawan tertular dan menularkan penyakit ini. Sayang, survei ini tidak bisa dilakukan secara optimal. "Sekarang pekerja seks menyebar. Kalau dulu ada lokalisasi-lokalisasi sehingga lebih mudah dideteksi," ujarnya.

Untuk kepentingan survei itu, Dinas Kesehatan harus bisa bekerja sama dengan Dinas Sosial. Sebab, Dinas Sosiallah yang kerap menertibkan dan merazia pekerja seks. "Pengambilan sampel darah dilakukan saat ada penertiban pekerja seks itu," katanya.

Peningkatan jumlah penderita HIV/AIDS juga terjadi di Bogor. Berdasarkan data Dinas Kesehatan Kota Bogor, angka kematian penderita HIV/AIDS hingga Oktober 2008 mencapai 50 orang. Angka ini menempatkan Bogor sebagai rawan HIV/AIDS tertinggi ketiga di Jawa Barat, setelah Bandung dan Bekasi.

"Tujuh puluh persen penderita terinfeksi lewat jarum suntik," kata Kepala Dinas Kesehatan Kota Bogor Dr Triwanda Elan.

Kepala Suku Dinas Kesehatan Masyarakat Jakarta Barat Ida Bagus Nyoman Banjar setuju dengan pendapat itu. Berdasarkan hasil survei, dari 175 orang pengguna narkoba jarum suntik, 126 orang positif. Berarti 72 persen pengguna narkoba positif terkena HIV/AIDS. Ranking kedua, waria. Dari 100 waria yang disurvei, 20 orang positif terkena HIV.

Menurut Ida Bagus, saat ini pemerintah tengah mensosialisasi Program Metadon Substituti untuk meminimalisasi penularan HIV/AIDS lewat jarum suntik. Program ini menawarkan pemakaian narkoba yang berbeda dari narkoba suntik menjadi narkoba minum. "Di Jakarta Barat, sudah ada terapi ini di Cengkareng dan Tambora," kata Ida Bagus. Rencananya, pemerintah juga akan membuka tempat terapi serupa di Grogol Petamburan.

Perubahan perilaku dari suntik menjadi oral bisa dijadikan alternatif terapi penyembuhan. "Kalau dengan minum, pemakai bisa bertahan beberapa hari lebih lama dari suntik," katanya. Sehingga pengobatan ini bisa dilakukan dalam jangka panjang. Suseno | Sofian | Rina Widiastuti | Diki Sudrajat

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Sunny | 2 Dec 2008 00:17
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Menakar Kebutuhan Air

Refleksi:  Indonesia lain dari Venezuela. Di Indonesia, katanya masyarakat dilatih untuk meniru kehidupan di gurun pasir, konsumsi air harus sesuai dengan keadaan. Mungkin bisa saja benar bisikan cerita tsb, maka olehkarena itu sekalipun  telah menjadi ritual kebanjiran air bah tahunan di berbagai tempat,  bukan berarti air bersih  cukup terjamin untuk konsumsi penduduk. Hal ini tentunya tidak lain dari pada  kepentingan untuk konsumsi air bersih tidak mendapat prioritas dari pihak penguasa negara, oleh sebab itu misalnya  di Jakarta, tempat berkeiaman para petinggi negara,  seenaknya dipompa "ground water", akibatnya kota Jakarta tiap tahun turun  beberapa centimeter.  Menurut para  ahli diperkirakan  bahwa apabila bila tidak diambil inisiatif pencegahan yang drastis, maka bebera tahun mendatang sebagian besar kota Jakarta akan cemplung good bye di bawah permukaan air.
 
 

Menakar Kebutuhan Air

Di Venezuela, air ditempatkan pada dasar piramida kebutuhan gizi seimbang.

Spanduk itu menunjukkan dengan jelas bahwa di tenda sederhana itu terbaring beberapa mahasiswa yang melakukan aksi mogok makan. Alasannya beragam, salah satunya yang pernah mencuat adalah kenaikan harga BBM.

Tapi, mestipun mogok makan, gerakan kelompok anak itu tak dibarengi mogok minum. Rupanya mereka sadar betul tentang dampak buruk jika tubuh kekurangan air. Secara medis, memang manusia lebih tahan tidak makan ketimbang tidak minum. Seseorang hanya kuat hidup satu minggu tanpa air.

Kisah perang dunia II membenarkan teori tersebut. Kala itu, ada tentara angkatan laut Amerika yang mampu bertahan selama tiga bulan di laut lepas dengan rakit tanpa makan. "Dia hanya minum dari cadangan air, setelah kapalnya kandas karena ditembak militer Jerman," tutur konsultan ginjal hipertensi Rumah Sakit Cipto Mangunkusumo, Dr Imam Effendi, dalam seminar bertajuk "Air untuk Kesehatan, Kebugaran, dan Kualitas Kehidupan" di Bogor baru-baru ini.

Menurut Imam, peran air tak sesederhana sebagai penghilang dahaga. H2O sangat fungsional untuk menjaga metabolisme tubuh. Jika tubuh kekurangan air, sirkulasi oksigen ke seluruh sel tubuh terhambat dan fatal bagi kesehatan. Adapun kekurangan air terjadi karena masukan dan pengeluaran air yang tidak berimbang. Pengeluaran air tubuh terjadi melalui urine, feses, keringat, dan pernapasan.

Profesor Hardinsyah, Ketua Umum Perhimpunan Peminat Gizi dan Pangan Indonesia, mengatakan pendarahan berlebihan saat menstruasi atau melahirkan, diare, demam, dan keringat juga menjadi faktor pengeluaran air dari tubuh.

Lazimnya, seorang remaja dan dewasa setiap harinya membutuhkan enam hingga delapan gelas air. Sebagian besar pemenuhan kebutuhan air tubuh diperoleh sekitar 70 persen dari minuman, sisanya dari makanan. Ketika masih muda, hormon bekerja dengan baik dan fungsi organ pun sempurna. "Jadi saat umur 20-an tidak mengapa minum tiga liter air," kata Imam. Tapi kalau sudah usia 70-an ke atas, sangat tidak dianjurkan. "Yang uzur cukup 1 sampai 1,5 liter saja," ia menambahkan.

Penelitian Hardinsyah mengenai kebiasaan minum remaja dan dewasa di Bandung dan Jakarta Utara baru-baru ini mencatat bahwa 51,2 persen remaja memiliki pengetahuan rendah tentang pentingnya air minum, sedangkan orang dewasa 26,3 persen. Lalu, sekitar separuh keluarga (45,3 persen) bermasalah dalam pemenuhan kebutuhan air minum.

"Kadang tidak disadari bahwa di daerah tropis pengeluaran keringat akan lebih banyak, dan input air juga mesti seimbang," ujarnya.

Sebagian masyarakat belum menyadari bahwa kandungan air, kata peneliti Danone asal Prancis, Liliana Jimenez, mengandung mineral silika yang bermanfaat untuk pertumbuhan tulang, jaringan ikat, dan kulit. Lalu, air itu mendorong alumunium atau racun ke luar tubuh. "Mineral silika lebih banyak terkandung di air pegunungan dibanding yang ada di bawah tanah," paparnya.

Di Venezuela, air sudah masuk ke dalam piramida gizi seimbang. Pada susunannya, air minum diletakkan di basis piramida. Sedangkan kelompok karbohidrat, seperti nasi, mi, pasta, dan roti, diletakkan di atasnya. "Untuk piramida orang tua, delapan gelas menjadi basis dari susunan gizi seimbang," ujar Dosen Departemen Gizi Masyarakat Fakultas Ekologi Manusia Institut Pertanian Bogor, Profesor Soekirman.

Minuman berkarbonasi, minuman ringan, dan suplemen air beroksigen tetap tidak bisa menggantikan air putih. "Pengaruh oksigen di air tidak mempengaruhi apa-apa. Jika Anda buka tutup botolnya, maka oksigen akan keluar," kata Liliana. Begitu pula suplemen air yang mengandung elektrolit yang dapat merusak ginjal bila pemakaian tidak semestinya.

Ginjal merupakan salah satu organ penting dalam menjaga keseimbangan air. Saat tubuh kekurangan air, maka akan terjadi dehidrasi, dan bila tubuh mengasup air berlebih maka terjadi sindrom kelebihan air. Jika dua ginjal dalam tubuh tidak dapat mengompensasi air, hal itu dapat menimbulkan penyakit hati, mulai dari jantung hingga otak. Dua ginjal mampu menyaring air hingga satu drum atau sekitar 200 liter, masing-masing 100 liter.

Pada akhirnya, air adalah politik, budaya, keamanan, dan ideologi sebuah bangsa. Air bersih juga menyangkut persoalan hidup ratusan juta manusia di Indonesia. Ketersediaan air dalam jumlah cukup dan kualitas baik tentu berbanding lurus dengan tingkat gizi masyarakat. Ke depan, diperlukan semangat konservasi air dari operator dan regulator guna memenuhi kebutuhan anak cucu terhadap air bersih di masa mendatang. HERU TRIYONO

Dampak Kurang Minum

1. Dehidrasi ringan: haus, bibir kering, tenggorokan kering, kulit kering, sakit kepala.

2. Dehidrasi sedang: pusing, denyut nadi meningkat, tekanan darah menurun, lemah, urine kental, dan volume urine sedikit.

3. Dehidrasi berat: Keram otot, lidah bengkak, sirkulasi darah memburuk, sangat lemah, penurunan fungsi ginjal, dan pingsan.

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