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Tag: Indonesia

  • A market slaughtering dogs was a top tourist attraction. Then a video was leaked

    A market slaughtering dogs was a top tourist attraction. Then a video was leaked

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    The Tomohon Extreme Market was once a top tourist attraction in the Indonesian province of North Sulawesi — a live animal market filled with everything from fileted pythons to skewered bats and rats.

    But the market drew international condemnation in 2018 after animal activists shot videos of dogs and cats being brutally beaten and blowtorched alive.

    Activists urged major travel companies to stop recommending the market as a tourism site, said Lola Webber, Humane Society International’s director of campaigns.

    Companies like Tripadvisor swiftly complied, she said.

    But banning the dog and cat meat trade — part of a long-held tradition among the local Minahasa people — was significantly harder, she said.

    “We were told by many for many years, you’ll never change North Sulawesi, you’ll never change Tomohon. it is impossible,” Webber said.

    They were wrong.

    A ‘huge win’

    After the ban went into effect, 25 dogs and three cats were rescued. They were taken to a sanctuary run by Animal Friends Manado Indonesia for quarantine, after which they will hopefully be placed in their “forever homes, either within Indonesia or internationally,” said Humane Society International’s Lola Webber

    Source: Humane Society International

    “It’s an enormous victory for animal protection and literally the thousands and thousands of dogs and cats that are spared from Tomohon market every month,” she said.

    The traders were given a “small grant” to stop participating in the trade, she told CNBC Travel, while the coalition of activists lobbied the government about the disease risks of live animal markets, which ranges from viruses like Covid-19 to rabies.

    Rabies is endemic in much of Indonesia, including the island of Sulawesi, according to the World Health Organization.

    Next steps

    The ban of dog and cat meat in the Tomohon market is a step in the right direction, but problems with the trade don’t end there, said Michael Patching, chairperson of Impetus Animal Welfare.

    One issue is an influx of stray animals, he said. “Bali dealt with this issue by poisoning stray dogs, which ended up being just as bad, if not worse, than those that have been subjected to the dog meat trade.”

    A live dog can cost up to $40, and one that has already been killed is priced from $2.30 to $4 per kilogram, said Frank Delano Manus of Animal Friends Manado Indonesia.

    Source: Humane Society International

    To combat this, the Dog Meat Free Indonesia coalition is supporting programs to spay, neuter and vaccinate dogs and cats in Indonesia, said Webber.

    She said she hopes to use the Tomohon market ban as a precedent to work with government, market management, meat traders and the public in other provinces where dog meat is eaten too.

    Polling suggests only 5% of Indonesia’s population has ever tried it, said Webber. Yet there are hot spots where it’s eaten, like Java’s Surakarta (or Solo) and North Sulawesi, the latter being a predominantly Christian enclave in a Muslim-majority nation. (Like pigs, dogs are viewed as being unclean, and therefore not suitable for consumption, in the Muslim faith.)

    A timeline of Indonesia’s dog meat trade

    • 2017: Bali cracks down on dog meat vendors
    • 2019: The regency of Karanganyar in central Java bans the dog trade
    • 2022: The city of Medan and the capital city of Jakarta ban dog meat
    • Today: Bans exist in 22 cities and regencies

    In those areas, activists raise public awareness of the cruelty of the trade and the trafficking that goes along with it, which often involves the theft of family pets.

    “We’ve interviewed so many people who’ve had their dogs and cats stolen,” Webber said.

    Poor governance

    Many activists who spoke to CNBC Travel said poor governance is the biggest hurdle to ending the dog and cat meat trade.

    Frank Delano Manus, an animal rights advocate at Animal Friends Manado Indonesia, said 95% of North Sulawesi’s exotic animal meat is sent from neighboring provinces — without government checks or quarantine regulations.

    Indonesian officials did not immediately respond to CNBC’s request for comment.

    When his organization tried to ban the sale of snake and bat meat when the pandemic hit in 2020, it received a “flat response” from the government, he said.

    “When people ask me what’s the number one problem in Indonesia, I always say it’s the lack of law enforcement,” Manus told CNBC.

    Indonesia has a huge pet-loving community, said Webber, which includes the dog meat traders. “Every trader has a pet, at least one pet dog.”

    Source: Humane Society International

    The sale of dog meat is illegal other parts of Asia, including Singapore, Philippines, Thailand, Hong Kong and Taiwan. But the industry lives on in places like China and South Korea — and Vietnam.

    “While all the focus has been on South Korea, Indonesia and other countries, Vietnam’s dog and cat meat trade has continued to thrive,” said Rahul Sehgal, director of international advocacy at the Soi Dog Foundation, adding that “millions of signatures” on online petitions have not made a difference.

    Rescued animals being transported by members of the Humane Society International to a care and rehabilitation center on July 21, 2023, in North Sulawesi, Indonesia.

    Source: Humane Society International

    “In Vietnam, every third shop is a pet grooming salon, every fifth shop is a pet supply store, but every twentieth shop is a slaughterhouse or a restaurant that is selling dog or cat meat,” he told CNBC, adding that it’s eaten for cultural, superstitious and medicinal purposes.

    “Just like how the Chinese use rhino horns or tiger bones for traditional medicine, cat bones are said to cure a host of illnesses like asthma,” he said. “But there is no scientific basis to this.”

    An opening for more travelers

    Though Tomohon Extreme Market was once marketed as a tourist attraction — and in some places, it still is — the dog and cat meat ban may bring in more travelers to North Sulawesi.

    In a Tripadvisor post on March 5, a user discusses reading about Sulawesi’s dog meat trade.

    The post states: “Well the next trip was going to be to Sulawesi, Indonesia … I don’t care what you eat, but torture should not be a part of it. Therefore I cannot in good conscience travel there.”

    A screenshot of a post on Tripadvisor in a forum discussing Sulawesi.

    Screen shot from Tripadvisor

    Negative media attention frustrated the dog meat traders, Webber said.

    “People would see it, and feel very strongly about it,” she said. “International tourists, national tourists, and locals themselves didn’t want to see that degree of brutality.”

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  • Indonesia bans e-commerce transactions on social media in major blow to TikTok | CNN Business

    Indonesia bans e-commerce transactions on social media in major blow to TikTok | CNN Business

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    Jakarta
    Reuters
     — 

    Indonesia has banned e-commerce transactions on social media platforms, the trade minister said on Wednesday, in a blow to short video app TikTok, which is doubling down on Southeast Asia’s biggest economy to boost its e-commerce business.

    The government said the move, which takes effect immediately, is aimed at protecting offline merchants and marketplaces, adding that predatory pricing on social media platforms is threatening small and medium-sized enterprises.

    The move comes just three months after TikTok pledged to invest billion of dollars in Southeast Asia, mainly in Indonesia, over the next few years in a major push to build its e-commerce platform TikTok Shop.

    TikTok, owned by China’s ByteDance, has 125 million active monthly users in Indonesia and has been looking to translate the large user base into a major e-commerce revenue source.

    A TikTok Indonesia spokesperson said it would pursue a constructive path forward and was “deeply concerned” with the announcement, “particularly how it would impact the livelihoods of the 6 million” local sellers active on TikTok Shop.

    Indonesia Trade Minister Zulkifli Hasan on Wednesday told reporters that the regulation is intended to ensure “fair and just” business competition, adding that it was also intended to ensure data protection of users.

    He warned of letting social media become an e-commerce platform, shop and bank all at the same time.

    The new regulation also requires e-commerce platforms in Indonesia to set a minimum price of $100 for certain items that are directly purchased from abroad, according to the regulation document reviewed by Reuters, and that all products offered should meet local standards.

    Zulkifli said TikTok had one week to comply with the regulation or face the threat of closure. Indonesia Deputy Trade Minister Jerry Sambuaga earlier this month named TikTok’s live streaming features as an example of people selling goods on social media.

    Research firm BMI said TikTok would be the only business affected by the transaction ban and the move was unlikely to harm the digital marketplace industry’s growth.

    Indonesia’s e-commerce market is dominated by the likes of homegrown tech firm GoTo’s Tokopedia, Sea’s Shopee and Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba’s Lazada.

    E-commerce transactions in Indonesia amounted to nearly $52 billion last year and of that, 5% took place on TikTok, according to data from consultancy Momentum Works.

    Indonesia is among the few markets where TikTok has launched TikTok Shop, as it seeks to leverage its large user base in the country.

    Its 125 million active monthly users in Indonesia is almost on par with its user figures for Europe and behind US users of more than 150 million. TikTok launched an online shopping service in the United States earlier this month.

    Reactions from retailers were mixed.

    Fahmi Ridho, a vendor selling clothes on TikTok, said the platform was a way for stores to recover from the blow dealt by the Covid-19 pandemic.

    “Sales don’t have to be necessarily through [brick and mortar] shops, you can do it online or wherever,” he said “Everything will still have a portion.”

    But Edri, who goes by one name only and sells clothes at a major wholesale market in Jakarta, agreed with the regulation and stressed that there should be limits on items sold online.

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  • Southeast Asia moves closer to economic unity with new regional payments system

    Southeast Asia moves closer to economic unity with new regional payments system

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    Indonesian President Joko Widodo makes a speech during the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Foreign Minister’s Meeting in Jakarta, Indonesia on July 14, 2023.

    Murat Gok | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images

    A new regional cross-border payment system recently implemented by Southeast Asian nations could deepen financial integration among participants, bringing the ASEAN bloc closer to its goal of economic cohesion.

    The program, which allows residents to pay for goods and services in local currencies using a QR code, is now active in Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand and Singapore. The Philippines is expected to join soon.

    That’s according to each country’s respective central bank.

    The move comes after the five Southeast Asian countries signed an official agreement late last year. At the recent ASEAN summit in May, leaders also reiterated their commitment to the project, pledging to work on a road map to expand regional payment links to all ten ASEAN members.

    The scheme is aimed at supporting and facilitating cross-border trade settlements, investment, remittance and other economic activities with the goal of implementing an inclusive financial ecosystem around Southeast Asia.

    Analysts say retail industries will particularly benefit amid an expected rise in consumer spending, which could in turn strengthen tourism.

    Regional connectivity is considered crucial to reduce the region’s reliance on external currencies like the U.S. dollar for cross-border transactions, particularly among businesses. The greenback’s strength in recent years has resulted in weaker ASEAN currencies, which hurts those economies since the majority of the bloc’s members are net energy and food importers. 

    “The system will forgo the U.S. dollar or the Chinese renminbi as intermediary,” said Nico Han, a Southeast Asia analyst at Diplomat Risk Intelligence, the consulting and analysis division of current affairs magazine The Diplomat.

    A unified cross-border digital payment system will “foster a sense of regionalism and ASEAN-centrality in managing international affairs,” he added. “This move becomes even more crucial in light of escalating tensions among major global powers.”

    How it works

    By connecting QR code payment systems, funds can be sent from one digital wallet to another.

    These digital wallets effectively act as bank accounts but they can also be linked to accounts with formal financial institutions.

    For instance, Malaysian tourists in Singapore can make a payment with Malaysian ringgit funds in their Malaysian digital wallet when making a transaction. Or, a Malaysian worker in Singapore can send Singapore dollar funds in a Singaporean digital wallet to a recipient’s wallet in Malaysia. 

    Fees and exchange rates will be determined by mutual agreement between the central banks themselves.

    For now, a region-wide system like this doesn’t exist in other parts of the world but down the road, the Bank of International Settlements, based in Switzerland, hopes to connect retail payment systems across the world using QR codes and mobile phone numbers.

    “The ASEAN central banks’ effort is innovative and novel,” said Satoru Yamadera, advisor at the Asian Development Bank’s Economic Research and Development Impact Department.

    “In other regions like Europe, retail payment connection via credit and debit cards is more popular while China is well-known for advanced QR code payment, but they are not connected like the ASEAN QR codes,” he continued.

    Economic benefits

    QR payments don’t impose fees on cardholders and merchants. They also boast of better conversion rates than those set by private payment processors like Visa or American Express.

    Micro enterprises as well as small- and medium-sized businesses, or SMBs will emerge as winners from regional payment connectivity, experts say. According to the Asian Development Bank, such companies account for over 90% of businesses in Southeast Asia.

    “SMBs can avoid the expenses associated with maintaining a physical point-of-sale system or paying interchange fees to card companies,” explained Han from Diplomat Risk Intelligence.

    Marginalized individuals from low-income backgrounds also stand to benefit. As the payment system works via digital wallets and doesn’t require a traditional bank account, it can be used by the unbanked population.

    “The system has the potential to improve financial literacy and wellbeing for the underbanked population,” Han noted.

    Chinese tourist numbers in Thailand are down but they are spending more, hospitality company says

    ASEAN’s new system will also enable merchants and consumers to build a robust payment history, and provide valuable data for credit scoring, said Nicholas Lee, lead Asia tech analyst at Global Counsel, a public policy advisory firm.

    “That’s particularly advantageous for unbanked and underbanked segments of the population, who traditionally lack access to such credit assessment data.”

    Moreover, “increased non-cash transactions would allow policymakers to capture transaction data and trade flow more effectively, assuming these data are accessible,” said Lee.

    “This, in turn, could lead to better economic forecasting and policymaking.”

    Currency pressure ahead

    While strengthening payment connectivity within the region has the potential to reduce payment friction and accelerate digital transition, it could inadvertently put pressure on certain currencies, particularly the Singapore dollar.

    “The potential scenario of the [Singapore dollar] emerging as a de facto reserve currency within the region poses a challenge that ASEAN states will need to confront,” said Lee.

    We see the biggest opportunities in Indonesia, says Dubai-based supply chain firm

    “With the [Singapore dollar’s] strength and stability, both international and regional businesses may opt to hold more of their working capital in [Singapore dollars], relying on the new payment network for efficient currency conversion,” he explained. 

    If that happens, it could weaken the purchasing power of other currencies in the region and result in higher imported inflation if central banks don’t intervene.

    In such a scenario, authorities may feel the need to impose capital restrictions in order to protect their respective currencies, which could undermine the very purpose of establishing a regional payment network.

    Regulations pose another challenge.

    Central banks will have to address security and fraud issues, plus undertake the task of educating the public to embrace the new payment system, said Han.

    “These factors can collectively contribute to a time-consuming process,” he warned.

    This kind of coordinated action will require strong political will from regional leaders and it remains to be seen if ASEAN members can come together to successfully implement such an ambitious venture.

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  • Russia will monitor Saudi-hosted Ukraine peace talks

    Russia will monitor Saudi-hosted Ukraine peace talks

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    Russia said Monday it will closely follow talks on Ukraine set to take place in Saudi Arabia early next month.

    Saudi Arabia is planning to host peace talks including Ukraine, Western nations and selected major developing countries in August, the Wall Street Journal reported Saturday.

    Russia — which launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, and continues to pound Ukraine with missile attacks — was not invited to the talks, but Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said Moscow will “follow this meeting,” reported Russian state-owned media outlet RIA Novosti on Monday.

    “It remains to be fully understood what goals are set and what, in fact, the organizers plan to talk about,” said Peskov, adding that any attempts to promote a peaceful settlement are “worthy of a positive assessment.” Russian President Vladimir Putin recently said there could be no cease-fire while Ukrainian forces are “on the offensive.”

    The upcoming Saudi-hosted talks, which could bring together officials from up to 30 countries, are set to take place in Jeddah on August 5 and 6.

    The U.K., South Africa, Poland and the EU have all confirmed attendance, and U.S. National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan is also expected to attend, the Wall Street Journal said. India and Brazil have also been invited.

    Earlier this summer, leaders and senior officials from more than a dozen countries gathered in Copenhagen to discuss a possible peace plan for Ukraine.

    But some major developing countries are still hesitant to condemn the war, as evident during last month’s EU summit with Latin American leaders.

    According to the Journal, officials are hoping the upcoming talks could garner international support for Ukraine’s peace demands, and potentially lead to a summit later this year. Western diplomats reportedly said that Saudi Arabia was picked to host this round of talks partly in hopes of persuading China — which has close ties to Saudi Arabia — to participate.

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    Claudia Chiappa

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  • Indonesia blocks Musk’s X.com under curbs on porn, gambling

    Indonesia blocks Musk’s X.com under curbs on porn, gambling

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    Medan, Indonesia – Elon Musk’s aspirations for X, the social media site formerly known as Twitter, have hit a stumbling block in Indonesia after the site X.com was blocked under the country’s curbs on online pornography and gambling.

    Indonesia’s Ministry of Communication and Informatics said the site was restricted as the domain had been previously used by sites that did not adhere to the country’s strict laws against “negative” content such as pornography and gambling.

    Usman Kansong, the director general of information and public communication at the ministry, said the government had been in contact with X to clarify the nature of the site.

    “Earlier today, we spoke with representatives from Twitter and they will send a letter to us to say that X.com will be used by Twitter,” Kansong told local media on Tuesday.

    The move means that Indonesians currently cannot access the platform, which reportedly has about 24 million users among the country’s population of 270 million.

    Rebranding

    The debacle comes after Musk on Monday announced Twitter would be dropping its name and bird logo in favour of a white X on a black background as part of a rebranding of the influential social media platform.

    Musk has cast the rebranding, which generated a mixed response among users, as a first step toward transforming the platform into an “everything app” that offers services beyond social networking, such as payments and banking.

    Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim-majority country, has form when it comes to blocking, or threatening to block, popular websites.

    In 2022, authorities said they would block popular sites including Netflix, Google, Facebook, Instagram and Twitter if they did not make a submission to the ministry detailing the content that appears on their platforms. The sites all managed to avoid the proposed ban by registering before the deadline.

    Netflix was blocked by Indonesia’s largest telecommunications company, Telekomunikasi Indonesia, shortly after its launch in 2016 due to fears of “inappropriate content”, including pornography, and remained restricted until mid-2020. TikTok, the popular video-sharing app, was also briefly blocked by authorities in 2018.

    “Generally, the ministry blocks websites that are considered to be offensive, criminal or dangerous to social harmony,” Gatria Priyandita, a cyber policy analyst at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, told Al Jazeera.

    “These may include pornographic materials, sites that violate intellectual property laws, those that incite hate or are filled with false information.”

    “Given that Twitter can be freely used in Indonesia, I doubt removing X.com from the list of banned sites would be a great challenge, so long as Twitter can demonstrate that the domain name truly does direct to Twitter,” Priyandita said.

    Aribowo Sasmito, the co-founder of MAFINDO, a fact-checking group, said he believed X.com has been blocked as the name had negative connotations.

    “The name is not too far from XXX, I guess,” Sasmito told Al Jazeera.

    Sasmito said Indonesia’s history of blocking risque online content posed a “dilemma” for internet users in the country.

    “Those who prefer freedom are against it but if the context is pornography-related, then it is more related to religious aspects since Indonesia is the country with the largest Muslim population in the world,” he said.

    Sasmito, however, said that online censorship did not always succeed in its aims as users could easily get around the curbs.

    “This comes with its own challenges. For example, if a domain or URL is blocked, then the site owners will change the address, if they are blocked again then they will just change the name again,” he said.

    Al Jazeera reached out to X for comment and received an automated reply that said: “We’ll get back to you soon”.

    Previously, press enquiries sent to press@twitter.com received an automatic reply in the form of a poop emoji.

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  • Indonesian ferry capsizes, leaving at least 15 people dead and 19 others missing

    Indonesian ferry capsizes, leaving at least 15 people dead and 19 others missing

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    An overloaded ferry capsized off Indonesia’s Sulawesi island, killing at least 15 people and leaving 19 others missing, rescuers said Monday.

    The boat was traveling from Lanto village in Buton Central regency in Southeast Sulawesi province to nearby Lagii village when it capsized just after midnight on Monday, Buton’s search and rescue agency head Muhammad Arafah said.

    The wooden boat was carrying 40 people but was designed for just 20.

    Rescuers were searching Monday for 19 people who were still missing in rough seas, while 15 bodies had been recovered and six people were rescued, Arafah said.

    Three rubber boats, two fishing boats and six divers were deployed to search for the missing people, he said.

    Thousands of residents had traveled to their villages to celebrate the regency’s 9th anniversary on Sunday, and many people were transported by fishing or passenger boats.

    Indonesia is an archipelago with more than 17,000 islands and ferries are a common form of transportation. With lax safety standards and problems with overcrowding, accidents occur frequently.

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  • Indonesia’s orphanages turn to TikTok to plead for donations

    Indonesia’s orphanages turn to TikTok to plead for donations

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    Medan, Indonesia – Every night, the staff at the Mutiara Mulia orphanage go through the same ritual.

    They set up a tripod with a mobile phone attached and drag over a speaker to play soothing, ambient music. Then they start livestreaming on TikTok as the children sleep soundly behind them, soliciting donations for the orphanage and thanking viewers who send digital gifts that can be exchanged for cash through the app.

    “We were inspired to start livestreaming because we saw other orphanages in Indonesia doing the same thing,” Mika Ndruru, whose husband Maredi Laia set up the orphanage in 2019, told Al Jazeera.

    On a good night, the orphanage’s livestreams can attract up to 2,000 viewers and earn about $165 through gifts and direct donations to the orphanage’s bank account, which is prominently displayed on a banner in the background.

    The livestreams have been so lucrative the orphanage has been able to pay for four of its 30 students, aged between two and 17 years, to attend private schools.

    Mika Ndruru and Sahabat Laia use TikTok to solicit donations for the orphanage they run in Medan [File: Aisyah Llewellyn/Al Jazeera]

    Indonesia is TikTok’s second-largest market after the United States, with some 106 million users in 2022.

    Since launching in the Southeast Asian country in 2017, the video-sharing app has emerged as a platform for eliciting donations, particularly for vulnerable groups such as orphans, disabled people and the elderly.

    In February, the trend went viral following a series of videos of elderly women sitting for hours in pools of water and mud while begging viewers to send donations. A resulting public outcry saw the original creator being briefly questioned by the police and raised questions about the ethics of online begging.

    Yet at Mutiara Mulia in Medan, Ndruru, 26, is adamant that TikTok has been a lifeline when other sources of funds have dried up. As a private orphanage, Mutiara Mulia does not receive any government subsidies and relies entirely on donations from the public.

    “Some months, we don’t get any donations aside from those from TikTok,” Ndruru said.

    Ethical questions

    Yet livestreaming images of the children and soliciting donations come with their own set of complex ethical issues.

    When Ndruru is tired of leading the livestreams, which usually run every night from 10pm to 1am, 18-year-old Sahabat Laia takes over.

    Laia came to the orphanage in 2021 from Nias, an island off the western coast of Sumatra, and now helps Ndruru with the day-to-day running of operations. Laia speaks softly during the livestreams, welcoming new viewers and answering questions sent in the chat, although he admits viewers are not always supportive of the orphanage’s aspirations.

    “Some people accuse us of exploiting the children for money,” he told Al Jazeera. “And some people ask us why the government isn’t taking responsibility for the children.”

    Many of the children at Mutiara Mulia are also from Nias.

    Niswan Harefa, a lawyer in Medan who is originally from the island, said the orphanage and its use of TikTok are symptomatic of the social problems on the island and the government’s inability to deal with them.

    “Nias’s economy is low as are salaries on the island. Many parents are unable to pay for their children’s education or give them adequate food,” Harefa told Al Jazeera.

    “It is also not that there is no government help available,” he said. “But parents often don’t know how to access government services. As a result, they send their children to live in private orphanages on the mainland where they know they will be fed and sent to school.”

    Orphanage
    Mika Ndruru says her livestreams on TikTok can bring in about $165 in donations on a good night [File: Aisyah Llewellyn/Al Jazeera]

    Private orphanages are commonplace in Indonesia, which has one of the highest rates of children in residential care in the world, although many, including Mutiara Mulia, are not registered with the government, making data regarding the number of orphans in Indonesia difficult to assess.

    According to a 2007 report by Save the Children, some half a million Indonesian children live in orphanages across some 8,000 institutions – 99 percent of which are private and many of which are faith-based like the Christian Mutiara Mulia.

    Malahayati, a human rights lawyer at the Indonesian Child Protection Institution (LPAI) in Langkat in North Sumatra, said private orphanages fill the gap left by overburdened government institutions despite the Indonesian constitution guaranteeing all children state protection if they are orphans or live in poverty.

    “Orphanages soliciting donations are a common phenomenon in Indonesia and I’ve often encountered them when I’ve been doing fieldwork,” she told Al Jazeera.

    “Sometimes, children beg for money by carrying around a donation box with the name of the orphanage on it. Open donations, where the public volunteer funds, are legal in Indonesia because the children are not working for the money, but it is illegal in Indonesia for children to work full time and they have a right to education.”

    Mutiara Mulia’s TikTok account has been suspended three times, twice permanently over livestreams in which children were seen coming out of the bathroom after bathing wearing only a towel or naked. Mutiara Mulia set up a new account after each permanent suspension.

    The orphanage denies that it is exploiting the children with the livestreams and insists that all the money received is used to provide for their needs.

    A close-up of the black TikTok logo, with its variation on a musical note
    TikTok says it does not prohibit livestreams at orphanages as long as they do not violate community guidelines [File: Kiichiro Sato/AP Photo]

    “Some people even accuse us on the livestreams of using fake children that we have recruited from the local neighbourhood, but we need these livestreams to pay for their school and other needs,” Ndruru said.

    A TikTok spokesperson told Al Jazeera that livestreams by orphanages are allowed as long as they do not violate the community guidelines, which prohibit the exploitation of minors and abuse.

    The spokesperson said the platform’s safety and civility policies do not allow the solicitation of donations or gifts in a demeaning context, such as when someone is begging on their knees, but that TikTok does not consider Mutiara Mulia’s account to violate these guidelines.

    Ndruru said Mutiara Mulia is planning to register with the government’s social affairs department to be eligible for subsidies and some financial help, but the process is bureaucratic and confusing, which is why it is taking them so long to file all the necessary paperwork.

    Until then, the orphanage has no plans to abandon the nightly livestreaming.

    “Lots of people support us and, without any regular donations to rely on, what else are we supposed to do?” Ndruru said.

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  • Family, friends mourn the death of pro surfer Mikala Jones:

    Family, friends mourn the death of pro surfer Mikala Jones:

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    Professional surfer Mikala Jones died Sunday after a surfing accident in Indonesia, his father told The Associated Press. Friends, family and members of the surfing community took to social media to mourn the loss of Jones, who was known for shooting stunning photos and videos from inside barreling waves.

    Daughter Isabella “Bella” Jones posted a touching tribute to her father on Instagram, saying “he was doing what he loved the most” before he died. 

    “I love you so much dad and i wish i could give you one last hug,” she wrote. “This is too soon.” 

    The post accompanied a carousel of images of Isabella and her father throughout the years: on a surfboard or just on the water. 

    “Thank you for teaching me so many life lessons, and always being there for me,”  she wrote. 

    Obit Mikala Jones
    Mikala Jones at Surf Ranch in Lemoore, Calif., in 2019. Jones, a Hawaii surfer known for shooting awe-inspiring photos and videos from the inside of barreling waves, has died at the age of 44 after a surfing accident in Indonesia. (Dr. John Jones via AP)

    Dr. John Jones / AP


    In a separate Instagram post, she promised she would carry on his legacy: “Thank you for taking me out to your spots and teaching me your ways.”

    Jones, 44, had gone out into the ocean Sunday morning during a trip to the Mentawai Islands off the western coast of Sumatra when his surfboard fin cut his femoral artery, said his father, dentist Dr. John Jones. The femoral artery is a large blood vessel in the thigh that delivers blood to lower limbs.

    Born in Kailua, Hawaii, Mikala Jones started surfing at about seven or eight years old and began competing in the 12-and-under “menehune” age group a few years later. He won two national championships as an amateur.

    Later, he took on sponsors and traveled to surf spots in Tahiti, Fiji, South Africa and the Galapagos Islands. 

    In the 1990s, Jones began experimenting with taking photos of himself on the the water. Jones attached a camera to fabric fastener on his board and then held the camera under his chin while paddling out to waves lying on his stomach. He’d grab the camera after popping up and hold it behind himself to take pictures. After he started using a GoPro to take images, the company began sponsoring him. 

    “He was a humble artist. His pictures were incredible,” his father said in a phone interview with the AP.

    Stunning selfies of waves curling around Jones while he crouched on his board were frequently posted on his Instagram. The final photo —posted on May 28— began to gather comments from fellow surfers after the news broke that Jones had died. 

    Surf world champion Kelly Slater commented “Legend” with a broken heart emoji. Paul Fisher commented “RIP MY BROTHER.” Surf photographer Zak Noyle commented, “Love you MJ.”

    Artist Robbie Crawford posted a clip of Jones on his own Instagram account and Jones’ daughter commented with heart emojis. 

    “I always wanted you to know how special of an artist you are,” Crawford wrote. “You would humbly say you just like nature and surfing but you were the greatest surf artist to me.”

    Jones is survived by his wife, Emma Brereton, and daughters Bella and Violet, who split their time between homes in Bali, Indonesia, and Hawaii. In addition to his father, Jones is survived by an older sister and two younger brothers. His mother, Violet Jones-Medusky, died in 2011.

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  • Muslim nations demand action after ‘Islamophobic’ Quran burning

    Muslim nations demand action after ‘Islamophobic’ Quran burning

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    Motion at the UN Human Rights Council urges action over Quran burning incidents in Sweden, which Pakistan says incited ‘religious hatred’.

    Muslim nations including Iran and Pakistan say the desecration of the holy Quran amounts to an incitement of violence and called for accountability after a series of stunts in Sweden caused a backlash around the world.

    A motion filed at the United Nations human rights body on Tuesday was in response to the latest incident last month, and calls on countries to review their laws and plug gaps that may “impede the prevention and prosecution of acts and advocacy of religious hatred”.

    The debate highlighted rifts in the UN Human Rights Council between the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation and Western members concerned about the motion’s implications for free speech and challenges posed to long-held practices in rights protection.

    An Iraqi immigrant to Sweden ripped, burned, and stomped on the Quran outside a Stockholm mosque last month during the Eid al-Adha holiday, sparking outrage across the Muslim world and angry protests in several Pakistani cities.

    “We must see this clearly for what it is: incitement to religious hatred, discrimination and attempts to provoke violence,” Pakistan’s Foreign Minister Bilawal Bhutto Zardari told the Geneva-based council via video, saying such acts occurred under “government sanction and with the sense of impunity”.

    ‘Irresponsible and wrong’

    Bhutto Zardari’s remarks were echoed by comments from ministers from Iran, Saudi Arabia, and Indonesia, with the latter calling the Quran burning an act of “Islamophobia”.

    “Stop abusing freedom of expression,” said Indonesia’s Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi. “Silence means complicity.”

    In 2020, members of a Danish far-right group burned a copy of the Quran in Stockholm, days after a similar incident in the southern city of Malmo.

    Iran’s Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian urged Sweden and European nations to take “urgent and effective measures” against such incidents.

    Some Western nations condemned the stunts, but also defended “free speech”.

    Germany’s UN Ambassador Katharina Stasch called the acts in Sweden a “dreadful provocation”, but added “freedom of speech sometimes also means to bear opinions that may seem almost unbearable”.

    France’s envoy said human rights were about protecting people, not religions and their symbols.

    UN Human Rights Chief Volker Turk told the council that inflammatory acts against Muslims, as well as other religions or minorities, are “offensive, irresponsible and wrong”.

    Taliban targets ‘Sweden’

    The Taliban administration said in a statement it halted all activities by Sweden in Afghanistan “after the insulting of the holy Quran and granting of permission for insulting of Muslim beliefs”.

    It did not provide details on which organisations would be affected by its ban. Sweden no longer has an embassy in Afghanistan since the Taliban took over in 2021.

    The Swedish Committee for Afghanistan (SCA) aid organisation said it was seeking clarification with authorities.

    “SCA is not a Swedish government entity. SCA is independent and impartial in relation to all political stakeholders and states, and strongly condemns all desecration of the holy Quran,” the NGO said in a statement.

    “For over 40 years SCA has been working in close collaboration with the rural population and in deep respect of both Islam and local traditions in Afghanistan.”

    Thousands of Afghan staff work for the organisation throughout the country in health, education and rural development. SCA treated 2.5 million patients in its health clinics last year.

     

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  • Grab cuts 1,000 jobs, its biggest round of layoffs since the pandemic

    Grab cuts 1,000 jobs, its biggest round of layoffs since the pandemic

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    The headquarters of Grab Holdings Ltd., in Singapore. Grab Holdings Ltd., reported its latest earnings on Feb. 23, 2023.

    Bryan van der Beek | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Singapore-based Grab Holdings is cutting over 1,000 jobs, its CEO said Tuesday, in a bid to manage costs and reorganize the company in a competitive landscape.

    In an email to staff, CEO Anthony Tan said the layoffs are a “painful but necessary step” that the ride-hailing and food delivery app operator must take to remain competitive in the future.

    “The primary goal of this exercise is to strategically reorganize ourselves, so that we can move faster, work smarter, and rebalance our resources across our portfolio in line with our longer term strategies,” said Tan.

    This is the group’s largest round of layoffs since 2020, when it cut 360 jobs in response to Covid-19 pandemic challenges.

    Even without layoffs, Tan said Grab is on track to hit breakeven this year on group adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization. In February, the company said it was bringing forward its target to the fourth quarter of 2023, half a year earlier than its previous guidance.

    The CEO said the job cuts are not a “shortcut to profitability” but will enable Grab to adapt to the business environment and rapid emergence of A.I.

    Tan said Grab will provide severance payment of half a month for every six months of completed service, or based on local statutory guidelines, whichever is higher. Laid off workers will also receive medical insurance coverage until the end of the year, repatriation support as well as career transition and development support, among other measures.

    The announcement comes after Grab’s COO Alex Hungate told Reuters in September that the company does not expect to conduct mass layoffs despite weaker economic conditions. Hungate said Grab was “very careful and judicious about any hiring.”

    Major U.S. tech firms like Amazon and Meta went on a hiring spree during the pandemic as lockdowns boosted business. Many later laid off thousands of workers as business conditions reverted to or approached pre-pandemic conditions.

    Grab posted strong revenue growth and narrowed losses for 2022, citing a rebound in mobility demand.

    Tuesday’s announcement is the latest round of layoffs from a major Southeast Asian tech company. In March, Indonesia’s GoTo announced it was laying off 600 employees to boost profitability, Reuters reported, while Singapore-based Sea cut more than 7,000 jobs in the last six months of 2022.

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  • The truth about travelling in Aceh, Indonesia’s marijuana-crazy, ultraconservative Muslim-majority province, where sharia law rules – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    The truth about travelling in Aceh, Indonesia’s marijuana-crazy, ultraconservative Muslim-majority province, where sharia law rules – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

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    The truth about travelling in Aceh, Indonesia’s marijuana-crazy, ultraconservative Muslim-majority province, where sharia law rules Original Author Link click here … Read More

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  • El Nino is approaching and your next cup of coffee could be at risk

    El Nino is approaching and your next cup of coffee could be at risk

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    A cup of Espresso coffee in Cascais, Portugal on October 11, 2021.

    Nikolas Kokovlis | Nurphoto | Getty Images

    Extreme weather conditions brought on by an approaching El Nino are fueling concerns that robusta beans in major coffee producers like Vietnam and Indonesia could be hit, resulting in soaring prices.

    “The now widely-expected transition to El Nino conditions in Q323 has stoked fears of reduced output in Vietnam and Indonesia, both major coffee robusta producers,” Fitch Solutions’ research unit BMI said in report dated May 24.

    Robusta beans are known for their bitter characteristics and higher acidity, containing more caffeine than their premium and pricier arabica counterpart.

    Brazil’s robusta crop has also been negatively impacted by drought as well, the report said.

    That means the cost of instant coffee and espressos, which are often made with robusta beans, could come under pressure amid supply worries and a stronger than usual demand for robusta as consumers turn to cheaper substitutes for arabica.

    El Nino is a weather phenomenon that typically brings hotter and drier than usual conditions to the central and eastern tropical Pacific Ocean. Climate scientists are predicting that this year’s El Nino could descend in the second half of 2023

    Southeast Asia recently saw record-breaking heat in the middle of May.

    Asia, generally speaking, has taken a liking to Robusta more so than Arabica, and as such the demand for Robusta is growing at a much faster rate

    Shawn Hackett

    President of Hackett Financial Advisors

    “Across Southeast Asia, El Niño conditions are associated with below-average rainfall and higher temperatures, both of which depress coffee production,” the BMI report said.

    Vietnam, Indonesia and Brazil are the largest producers of robusta, according to the Food and Agriculture Organization.

    “We draw attention to heavy rains in Indonesia through Q123, which have had a negative impact on coffee bean quality, with the USDA forecasting a decline of about one fifth in coffee robusta production,” the analysts said.

    Carlos Mera, head of agri commodities markets at Rabobank, is forecasting a 10% drop in production to 11.2 million bags of robusta in the coming crop harvest.

    A man holding Robusta coffee beans at a coffee tasting fair in Buon Ma Thuot city in Daklak province, Vietnam. Bitter and earthy. fit for instant brews only.

    Nhac Nguyen | Afp | Getty Images

    In 2016, El Nino-related water shortages in both Vietnam and Indonesia led to a global production decline of close to 10%, according to the research unit’s statistics.

    Typically, in an El Nino year, it is “not uncommon” for Vietnam and Indonesia to “see a 20% decline in production” in robusta beans, Shawn Hackett, president of commodity brokerage firm Hackett Financial Advisors, told CNBC.

    “That would mean a pretty severe contraction of robusta,” he said.

    Rising demand for the robusta

    Robusta beans account for 40% of the world’s coffee production, and arabica beans make up the remaining 60% of global coffee production. Arabica beans are usually deemed to be of higher quality and command higher prices than robusta coffee.

    However, global economic pressures are tipping demand toward robusta, the underdog of coffee beans.

    Robusta prices are supported as coffee-product manufacturers and consumers substitute robusta beans for pricier arabica beans to save costs during inflationary times, the BMI report said.

    Robusta coffee prices recently soared to a 15-year high of $2,783 per ton toward the end of May. They last traded at $2,608 per ton for July futures, according to data from the Intercontinental Exchange.

    Additionally, the premium that arabica beans have over robusta beans plunged to the lowest since 2019 due to soaring demand for the relatively cheaper coffee bean.

    “Asia, generally speaking, has taken a liking to robusta more so than arabica, and as such the demand for robusta is growing at a much faster rate than demand for arabica,” said Hackett.

    He cited the lower price point of robusta beans in Asia and the population’s palette for robusta-bean based drinks. 

    Kopi, also known as Nanyang coffee, is a dark coffee beverage popular in Southeast Asia that’s traditionally brewed using robusta beans.

    A farmer harvesting coffee cherries at a coffee plantation in Central Java, Indonesia, on May 25, 2023.

    Dimas Ardian | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    But Asia is not the only region that has taken an increased liking to robusta.

    “While the reduction in washed arabica imports is partially due to lower availability … the shift to robusta shows that cheaper coffees are being heavily preferred by the European market,” said Natalia Gandolphi, analyst at HedgePoint Global Markets’ Intelligence.

    Gandolphi said she expects a deficit of 4.16 million bags of robusta for the October 2023 to September 2024 period.

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  • Heather Mack, convicted in mother’s murder in Bali, plans to plead guilty in US, attorney says

    Heather Mack, convicted in mother’s murder in Bali, plans to plead guilty in US, attorney says

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    CHICAGO (AP) — A Chicago woman facing federal conspiracy charges in the 2014 killing of her mother during a luxury vacation in Bali plans to plead guilty, her attorney said Thursday.

    The details of any plea agreement or potential penalties under discussion by Heather Mack and U.S. prosecutors remain unclear. Her attorney, Michael Leonard, said Mack’s defense has been in negotiations with federal prosecutors “over the last several weeks” ahead of her trial set to begin Aug. 1.

    “We anticipate that the parties will be in a position to enter a written plea agreement, and proceed with a change of plea hearing on June 15,” Leonard said in an email.

    The Chicago Tribune and Chicago Sun-Times reported that prosecutors also told a judge Thursday they expect Mack will plead guilty but the parties were still negotiating.

    A representative for the office of the U.S. Attorney of the Northern District of Illinois did not immediately return a message seeking comment.

    Mack was convicted in Indonesia in 2015 of being an accessory to her mother’s murder, served seven years of her original 10-year sentence and then was deported back to the U.S. along with her then-six-year-old daughter. The violent case drew international attention.

    The body of Sheila von Wiese-Mack was found stuffed into a suitcase, which had been left in the trunk of a taxi. Mack, who was 19 and a few weeks pregnant, and her then-boyfriend Tommy Schaefer were arrested at a hotel about 6 miles (10 kilometers) from the hotel where her mother’s body was discovered.

    Schaefer was convicted of murder and is still imprisoned in Indonesia.

    Federal agents arrested Mack when she arrived at Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport in November 2021 on the U.S. charges, accusing her of conspiring with her former boyfriend to kill her mother while on vacation in Bali.

    Legal experts have said the allegations involve two countries with their own laws and jurisdiction, which doesn’t violate the U.S. Constitution’s prohibition on prosecuting someone twice for the same acts.

    U.S. prosecutors say text messages, surveillance video and other evidence from the Indonesian cases show Mack and Schaefer planned von Wiese-Mack’s killing for months and cleaned up her body and the hotel’s bloody linens together.

    According to a court document filed by the U.S. prosecutors, a relative who visited Schaefer and Mack while they awaited trial in Indonesia later told authorities that the couple said Schaefer hit von Wiese-Mack with a fruit bowl and Mack covered her mother’s mouth with her hand.

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  • In a changed Indonesia, some fear a ‘backlash’ against freedoms

    In a changed Indonesia, some fear a ‘backlash’ against freedoms

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    Medan, Indonesia – On the morning of May 21, 1998, Indonesia’s then-leader Soeharto stood in the Presidential Palace and addressed the nation.

    For weeks, protesters had filled the streets amid soaring prices of fuel, cooking oil and rice as a result of the Asian Financial Crisis.

    The unrest had spread to cities across the country. Shops and businesses of the country’s ethnic Chinese were attacked and there were violent clashes between protesters – mainly students – and security forces. On May 12, four students had been shot dead during a demonstration at Trisakti University in Jakarta. In all, more than 1,000 people had been killed and there were reports of rapes of ethnic Chinese women.

    After 30 years in power, the military strongman sometimes called the Smiling General, announced he was resigning with immediate effect.

    Indonesian President Soeharto announcing his resignation as his Vice President BJ Habibie looks on at the presidential palace in Jakarta [File: Agus Lolong/AFP]

    Standing next to Soeharto was his vice president, BJ Habibie, who would take over the top job and allow Indonesians freedoms that had been denied during Soeharto’s decades in power – a time when activists disappeared and the military was deployed in the restive regions of Aceh and Papua.

    The administration of the charismatic Soekarno, who led Indonesia to independence from the Dutch in 1945, became increasingly chaotic and in 1965, an abortive coup attempt led to the killing of millions of suspected Communists.

    Amid the chaos, Soeharto’s emergence in 1968 was initially greeted with optimism. Many hoped his New Order administration would bring calm and prosperity.

    But despite its early promise, the New Order modernisation eventually came to embody a highly-centralised government that focused on consolidating power, and an emboldened military designed to support Soeharto and his determination to stay in the presidential palace, whatever the cost.

    Since his surprise resignation, Indonesia has embraced democracy, if imperfectly, and has had five different presidents chosen through free and independent elections.

    FILE PHOTO: Indonesian President Joko Widodo casts his ballot during elections in Jakarta, Indonesia April 17, 2019. REUTERS/Edgar Su/File Photo
    President Joko Widodo was elected for a second term in 2019. Indonesia will choose its next president in 2024 [File: Edgar Su/Reuters]

    The economy has also recovered from the 1998 crisis and is now the second-fastest growing in the G20, behind India and ahead of China. Indonesia hosted the group’s annual gathering in Bali last year as its current president, Joko Widodo, popularly known as Jokowi, also tried to broker peace between Russia and Ukraine.

    There have been challenges, however, and concerns that legislation including the new Criminal Code and the Omnibus law – as well as the rise of hardline religious groups – could erode the hard-won freedoms of the past 25 years. There have also been accusations that some of the corruption, cronyism and nepotism that blighted the Soeharto years still runs rife across the country.

    On the anniversary of one of Indonesia’s most significant historical moments and with the next presidential elections set to take place in February 2024, Al Jazeera asked activists, academics and human rights advocates how the country has changed in the 25 years since Soeharto’s dramatic fall from power.

    Andreas Harsono, researcher at Human Rights Watch Indonesia

    “We were not naive when we were trying to topple the Soeharto rule in the 1990s but we really did not anticipate that we would see the rise of Islamism and religious zealots in post-Soeharto Indonesia with Shariah-inspired discriminatory regulations against gender, sexuality, and religious minorities.

    “There have been 45 anti-LGBT regulations and at least 64 mandatory hijab regulations, out of over 700 rules in post-Soeharto Indonesia. Obviously, the biggest one is the new Criminal Code.”

    Damai Pakpahan, feminist activist

    “Indonesia changed dramatically for at least the first five years post 1998. A lot of laws and policies changed that focused on women and the women’s agenda. We got the Law on the Elimination of Sexual Violence in 2004 under former President Megawati Soekarnoputri and, in 2007, we got the Anti-Trafficking Law during the Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono presidency.

    “We also had the Presidential Directive on Gender Mainstreaming in 2000 under President Abdurrahman Wahid (Gus Dur). We also changed the age for marriage from 16 for women and 18 for men to 19 years old for both women and men in 2019, after lobbying from feminist groups. Last year, we got the new Sexual Violence Eradication Law.

    “Women’s interests are heard by the state now at a legal level. But we are also facing a backlash where women and girls are not able to freely choose what they want. The rise of conservative Islam has forced some women, girls and even babies to wear hijab. We also have a backlash in the form of discriminatory or unconstitutional local laws around Indonesia which mostly target women and minority rights.”

    Yohanes Sulaiman, lecturer in international relations at Universitas Jenderal Achmad Yani

    “At the time, I was in Madison, Wisconsin in the United States. I remember more about when I found out about 9/11 but, if I’m not mistaken, I read about the fall of Soeharto online.

    “Back in those days, when people had demonstrations or public protests, the cities were eerily quiet in Indonesia. Shops would close down and students were told to go home quickly and quietly. We feared the military a lot. They were basically the kings as they were in power.

    “Nowadays, I think they are far less arrogant, more approachable and more respectful of the law. When I was a kid, I saw an officer who was stuck in a traffic jam. He simply got out of his car, slapped a traffic policeman and told him to get his car moving. I was flabbergasted. I think the status of Chinese has changed a lot too and to some degree for the better. I think people are less discriminatory nowadays, though of course except for the usual suspects.”

    Ian Wilson, lecturer in politics and security studies at Murdoch University

    “I was doing my PhD at Murdoch University in Perth and watched Soeharto’s resignation on TV on campus in excitement, but also in apprehension. We just saw this wave of people say ‘No, we’ve had enough’. It happened so quickly.

    “There was no fundamental electoral democracy in Indonesia pre-1998 and we have seen big structural reform in that area which has been imperfect but important. More regional autonomy has meant that a new generation of Indonesians have grown up with a different set of political expectations about power. There is an expectation now that the government should be clean and serve the public good.

    “While there has of course been some democratic backsliding, public support for electoral policy has remained high and people support public elections. This prevents the wishes of political parties to capture the system so they can control it. It is harder now for elites to push things forward. The next few years after the elections in 2024 will be fundamental for Indonesia.”

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  • Chinese Indonesians reflect on life 25 years from Soeharto’s fall

    Chinese Indonesians reflect on life 25 years from Soeharto’s fall

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    Jakarta, Indonesia – Indonesia’s strongman Soeharto stepped down 25 years ago this week after protests and unrest across the archipelago, some of which targeted the country’s ethnic Chinese minority.

    Soeharto’s departure – after more than 30 years in power – brought new freedoms not only for Indonesians, who are mostly Muslim, but also for Chinese Indonesians who had endured government-sponsored discrimination since colonial times and often been the focus of violence for their perceived wealth.

    Soeharto called his administration the New Order to underline its focus on strong, centralised government closely aligned with the military.

    He also adopted a policy to try and assimilate the ethnic Chinese minority and make them more “Indonesian”, but effectively turned them into second class citizens.

    They were pressured to adopt Indonesian-style names and often asked to show Indonesian citizenship certificates (SBKRI), unlike other ethnic groups, while cultural displays like Chinese characters and the celebration of the Lunar New Year were banned.

    Charlotte Setijadi, an assistant professor of humanities at Singapore Management University, however, says the Soeharto regime was “opportunistic” in its treatment of the Chinese, since the government worked closely with some ethnic Chinese tycoons in its efforts to boost the economy.

    According to the 2010 national population census, there were about 2.8 million people of Chinese ethnicity in Indonesia, compared with a total population of about 237 million. The most recent census in 2020 did not list the nation’s ethnicities.

    “It’s important to emphasise that discriminatory practices and exclusionary narratives about ethnic Chinese didn’t start from the Soeharto period,” the author of the forthcoming book Memories of Unbelonging: Ethnic Chinese Identity in Post-Suharto Indonesia, told Al Jazeera.

    Even before Indonesia’s independence in 1945, Dutch colonial rulers classified the ethnic Chinese in the middle of a social pyramid – below the Europeans and above the so-called “natives” – of Indonesian society in a typical colonial policy of divide-and-rule.

    Following the resignation of Soeharto, who died in 2008, the country reversed many New Order-era laws.

    Lunar New Year is now a national holiday, while Confucianism – locally known as Konghucu – has been recognised as one of the country’s six religions. Meanwhile, SBKRI are no longer required in everyday life.

    Chinese Indonesians have also become more visible in politics since 1998, including former Indonesian government minister Mari Elka Pangestu and ex-Jakarta governor Basuki Tjahaja Purnama, popularly known as Ahok.

    “We’ve seen a lot of really positive changes that have taken place over the past 25 years but inevitably, community-level and daily-level prejudices still exist,” Charlotte said.

    And as Indonesia prepares for elections next year, Chinese Indonesians are aware they could be a target.

    “The anti-Chinese narrative is still very much alive and well under the surface and can be used for the purpose of political mobilisation whenever the political circumstances are prime for it,” said Charlotte, who has researched Chinese-Indonesian identity politics.

    Ahok, for instance, was sentenced to two years in prison after he was accused of blasphemy by Islamic groups for comments made as he campaigned for a second term as Jakarta governor.

    Al Jazeera asked five Chinese Indonesians who grew up under Soeharto, or since 1998, about their experiences in the multiethnic and multicultural country.

    Evi Mariani, 46

    Evi Mariani says it was ‘incredibly difficult’ for Chinese Indonesians to be called Indonesians during the Soeharto era [Courtesy of Evi Mariani]

    Evi Mariani has been the co-founder and executive director of Project Multatuli – an independent media outlet reporting on marginalised people in Indonesia – since 2021.

    Born and raised in the West Java provincial capital of Bandung, she now lives in South Tangerang near Jakarta and has more than 20 years experience as a journalist.

    Evi’s parents married in 1970, but divorced the same year because her father’s Indonesian citizenship documents were not registered in the Indonesian civil registry so he was not considered an Indonesian. Based on the citizenship law at the time, that meant that none his children would be considered Indonesians either.

    The divorce meant that while their children would be “born out of wedlock” they would be able to get Indonesian citizenship because their mother was Indonesian and her documents were considered authentic.

    Evi’s parents remained together and remarried in 1999, while her father sorted out all paperwork to officially become an Indonesian citizen that year.

    “It was incredibly difficult for [ethnic] Chinese people to be called Indonesians,” Evi told Al Jazeera.

    “[For] my parents, so that their children were called Indonesians, [they] must pretend to be divorced first,” she added. “We had to be legally fatherless to be Indonesian. That is the condition we grew up with: the most real and obvious discrimination from the state.”

    As a student in 1994, she recalls a university official in Yogyakarta asked for her SBKRI for “administrative purposes“ only to realise he wanted her to give him some money – something her non-Chinese peers did not experience.

    While life has improved considerably in the past 25 years, she also hopes the Chinese community will not forget the pain of discrimination and stand against it.

    “As victims of racism, we must be in solidarity with people who are subject to class discrimination, with people who are subject to other racial discrimination,” she said.

    Angelique Maria Cuaca, 32

    Angelique Maria Cuaca talking at an event. She is in the middle in front of the stage. There are lines of people on either side listening to her.
    Angelique Maria Cuaca is a campaigner for diversity and interfaith dialogue [Courtesy of Angelique Maria Cuaca]

    Angelique Maria Cuaca regularly advocates for religious diversity and interfaith dialogue in her hometown of Padang on the island of Sumatra, through the Pelita Padang interfaith youth organisation she founded in 2019.

    According to the Tolerant Cities Index 2022 launched by Indonesia’s SETARA Institute for Democracy and Peace in April, Padang recorded the third-lowest tolerance score out of 94 cities surveyed across Indonesia.

    “Cities with leadership that prioritise certain religious identities both in vision and mission tend to issue policies (that appear to show) favouritism for religious identities that represent themselves,” the institute said in a statement on the scores.

    Born into a multiethnic and multireligious family – with her paternal grandmother a Minang Muslim and paternal grandfather a Chinese Catholic – Angelique has participated in various cultural and religious celebrations with her family since she was a child. However, her parents were concerned about her safety when she got involved in activism.

    Angelique was seven years old when the May 1998 riots broke out. The chaos in her hometown was mild compared with the situation in major cities like Jakarta and Medan, she said, but she remembers seeing her parents phoning their relatives in Java to check on them.

    “At that time, the tense atmosphere in Java could be felt in Padang, too.”

    Angelique also said that Chinese-Indonesian parents became worried if their children chose a social-political major in college or got involved in social activism because of what they saw during the New Order era.

    “For a decade, they tried to convince me that what I was doing was a big mistake,” she told Al Jazeera, adding that her parents later relented.

    Even though her work with Pelita Padang mainly focuses on religious diversity, Angelique says the group also collaborates with other organisations on other issues.

    “Diversity issues can never just be diversity issues. If we do this alone, it is going to be exhausting and tends to get stuck in the problem of inter-identity battles,” she said.

    During COVID-19, Pelita Padang worked with one of the oldest Chinese associations in Padang to hold a mass vaccination event. She also joined other organisations and communities to support the Chap Goh Mei festival – held every 15th day on the first month of the lunar calendar – in Padang in February. The festival involves the famous Sipasan parade, where children dressed in traditional attire sit on top of a centipede-like vehicle carried by adults.

    “We really need to build more civic power and intercultural meeting opportunities because the trauma [Chinese Indonesians experienced] can only be healed by community support and presence,” Angelique said.

     

    Dédé Oetomo, 69

    Dédé Oetomo sitting at a desk with a book case behind him. He is smiling and propping his head up on one hand. There's a calico cat walking on the desk in front.
    Dédé Oetomo does not speak any Chinese languages because his family no longer speaks any of them [Courtesy of Dédé Oetomo]

    Dédé Oetomo has been the founder and trustee of the GAYa NUSANTARA Foundation, which has been campaigning for the equality and welfare of gender and sexual minorities in Indonesia since 1987. Before that, he was active in Lambda Indonesia, which he described as “the first gay organisation” in the country.

    Originally from Pasuruan in East Java province, Dédé’s father had an Indonesian name for him as early as 1964 and describes his family as “Westernised”. His parents were fluent in Dutch and spoke no Chinese languages. Besides Indonesian, Dédé is fluent in Javanese. He does not speak any Chinese languages because his family no longer speaks any of them, which means he had no exposure to any of those languages growing up.

    The lecturer and scholar, who has been openly gay for about 40 years, says most Indonesian Chinese were now “more or less” free but other forms of discrimination persist.

    “As queers, not OK. You live with this hatred around you,” he told Al Jazeera. “I personally am strong enough, so I ignore it.”

    According to Human Rights Watch’s World Report 2023, “Indonesia has also increasingly used other laws to target and prosecute LGBT people, including the 2008 Anti-Pornography law”.

    Dédé, who lives in Indonesia’s second-largest city of Surabaya, believes activism goes beyond differences.

    “If [we are] already part of the movement, ethnicity doesn’t matter,” he said. “Diversity should not be discriminated against [and] should not be restrained.”

    Aurelia Vizal, 21

    Aurelia Vizal is an undergraduate studying international affairs in Taoyuan, near Taiwan’s capital Taipei. Born and raised in Jakarta, her family is originally from West Kalimantan on the island of Borneo and Jambi on Sumatra island.

    Popularly known as Orei, she regularly posts about Chinese-Indonesian culture and history on her Twitter account @senjatanuklir, which has more than 242,000 followers.

    She said her interest in Chinese history was relatively recent – she did not like the idea of participating in traditional Chinese rituals and celebrations during her primary and high school years.

    “I found the rituals very bothersome and tiring. More so, I did not get why we did it,” she said.

    That changed in early 2020 when she realised her hatred towards her ethnic identity and heritage was probably the result of a lack of knowledge.

    “There used to be a lot of things I disliked but started to like and wanted to learn more about after studying it. Why didn’t I apply this mindset to ’Chineseness’?” she said.

    That realisation propelled her to read more about Indonesian Chinese culture. As part of Gen Z, she believes her generation has become more aware of their identity.

    “People used to participate out of obligation. Now we participate in it consciously and carry it as a part of us with pride,” she told Al Jazeera.

     

    Iskandar Salim, 49

    Iskandar Salim. He's smiling.
    Iskandar Salim says he struggled for a long time with being an ethnic minority [Courtesy of Iskandar Salim]

    Iskandar Salim was born in Medan on Sumatra and now lives in Jakarta where he works as a comic artist and illustrator.

    Through his Instagram account @komikfaktap, which has more than 136,000 followers, Iskandar often makes humorous and satirical comic strips on Indonesia’s social and political issues, ranging from law enforcement to hate speech.

    At first, the comics were just an outlet for him to speak his mind but then some of them went viral.

    “There were concerns from family and friends but they never tried to stop me [from creating comics]. They just reminded me to be careful,” he said.

    Iskandar admits he sometimes has to be more subtle with his criticism given the sensitivities around some issues.

    “Consciously, I tried to work around the idea so I can still criticise without getting into trouble.”

    As a child in the New Order era, Iskandar saw how the regime banned public Chinese cultural displays and curbed freedom of expression. He remembers his mother had to hide a book she bought from abroad as she passed through customs at the airport because it was written in Chinese, and how Lunar New Year could only be celebrated quietly at home after finishing classes.

    “Teachers would purposely hold examinations on Lunar New Year so students had no choice but to attend school. If there were no tests, we would’ve skipped school to visit relatives,” he told Al Jazeera.

    Iskandar says he used to struggle with his identity as an ethnic minority, even after the fall of Soeharto.

    He felt like he was not Indonesian enough but not fully Chinese either. Now, he is more comfortable with the man he has become and is proud to define himself.

    “I can simply say, ’I am Indonesian, more specifically Chinese Indonesian’,” the artist said. “In the end, our identity is ours to decide and define.”

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  • China fears threaten to shatter G7 unity

    China fears threaten to shatter G7 unity

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    HIROSHIMA, Japan — As the leaders of the Group of Seven gather for their annual summit in Japan this week, three world-changing conflicts — past, present and potential — will converge. 

    The atomic bomb that ended World War II destroyed much of the city of Hiroshima, where the leaders will meet. Today, Russia’s war in Ukraine is costing thousands of lives and billions of dollars as it drags on. And then there’s the risk of another horrifying catastrophe to come, as China threatens Taiwan. 

    And it’s over China where the alliance may come unstuck. 

    For hawks like the U.S. and Japan, the summit beginning Friday offers a timely opportunity to make the case to Europe’s leaders directly that it’s time to get off the fence when it comes to confronting China. 

    “This G7 Summit will be an appropriate venue to also discuss security issues and our security cooperation not only in Europe, but also in the Indo-Pacific region,” Noriyuki Shikata, cabinet secretary at the Japanese prime minister’s office, told POLITICO. 

    The U.S. is betting on at least the appearance of common ground with allies about the People’s Republic of China. Ahead of the summit, U.S. National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby told reporters: “You can expect to hear at the end of those discussions that all the G7 leaders are of a common mind about how to deal with the challenges that the PRC presents.”

    But — beyond the inevitably bland diplomatic lines of a summit communique — getting consensus on meaningful security measures for the Indo-Pacific region will be hard, even in the symbolic setting of Hiroshima. 

    East Asia is again descending into a state of growing security risks and military imbalance, this time due to China’s aggressive moves against Taiwan and the South China Sea. 

    “There’s a feeling that there’s a little bit of a gap, perhaps, between where the Europeans are on some China issues and where the U.S. is,” said Zack Cooper, former aide to the U.S. National Security Council and a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute. 

    Chief among the points of tension is how far to go in trying to stop a potential Chinese invasion of Taiwan, which could trigger world war and wreck the global economy. The self-governing island, which Beijing claims as its own, provides most of the world’s advanced computer chips that are vital to the tech and defense industries. Not all European governments are convinced it’s something they need to prioritize. “It’s going to be a continuing challenge,” Cooper said. 

    Picking friends

    NATO is set to extend its footprint in Asia and set up a new liaison office in Tokyo to better coordinate with regional partners, such as Australia, South Korea and New Zealand. 

    However, French President Emmanuel Macron has repeatedly called on NATO to focus only on the Euro-Atlantic theater, saying Asia — China — is not covered geographically. He also triggered an outcry with recent comments to POLITICO, suggesting that Taiwan’s security was not Europe’s fight, and that the EU should not automatically follow America’s lead.  

    Justin Trudeau comes to the G7 following months of intelligence leaks that have painted his government as weak on foreign interference | Yuchi Yamazaki/AFP via Getty Images

    Macron’s stance sets France — which is the EU’s biggest military power — apart from the U.S. and Japan, and also from the U.K., where Prime Minister Rishi Sunak is expected to announce a new security deal with Japan during his visit.

    “Ukraine today could be East Asia tomorrow,” Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida said last year, not long after Russia’s full-scale invasion began. Last week, Japan’s Foreign Minister Yoshimasa Hayashi made an even more explicit warning in a speech made to his 27 EU counterparts in Sweden.

    “China is continuing and intensifying its unilateral attempts to change the status quo by force in the East and South China Seas. China is also increasing its military activities around Taiwan,” Hayashi said. “In addition, China and Russia are strengthening their military collaboration, including joint flights of their bombers and joint naval exercises in the vicinity of Japan.”

    The Chinese-Russian ties will be part of the G7 leaders’ discussions, according to two officials involved in the process, who spoke on condition of anonymity because summit preparations are not public. While the Chinese authorities stop short of openly arming Russia in its war against Ukraine, a long-term strategic partnership between Beijing and Moscow is unshakable for President Xi Jinping.

    G7 countries such as the U.S. and Japan are expected to raise the need to sanction countries that work around Western trade restrictions on Russia, according to the officials. Chinese companies found to be selling dual use goods to Russia would be a top focus. 

    Bully tactics

    China’s willingness to throw around its economic weight is one area where there’s likely to be more unity between G7 allies. 

    The need to fight back against economic coercion will take center stage at the summit. The EU, U.S., Canada and Japan are going to rally around calls to combat China’s use of its economic power to bully smaller economies that act against its political interests.

    “The sense of urgency and unity is a force factor in and of itself. For example, never before has the G7 addressed economic coercion,” Rahm Emanuel, the U.S. ambassador to Japan, told POLITICO. 

    “When measured against the recent past, the G7 and EU are more strategically aligned in key economic and military matters,” added Emanuel, who served as chief of staff to former U.S. President Barack Obama.

    When it comes to the European view, EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen is clear that the bloc is “competing with China” and will need to up its game. “We will reduce strategic dependencies — we have learned the lessons of the last year,” she said in a press conference ahead of the trip.

    Justin Trudeau, the Canadian prime minister, comes to the G7 following months of intelligence leaks that have painted his government as weak on foreign interference, specifically from China. He’ll be carrying Canada’s message that it can be a safe, non-authoritarian alternative to Russia and China for supplying critical minerals and energy, including nuclear power. 

    Despite the toughening rhetoric on China, what still unites the G7 countries is an eagerness not to shut the door on talks with Beijing. 

    US President Joe Biden arrives to attend the G7 Summit in Hiroshima on May 18, 2023 | Brendan Smialowski/AFP via Getty Images

    The Biden administration has for months been seeking to secure a visit to China for top Cabinet members, such as Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen. Biden’s national security adviser, Jake Sullivan, held eight hours of talks with the Chinese Communist Party’s foreign policy chief, Wang Yi, this month. 

    Just before he left for Japan on Wednesday, U.S. President Joe Biden was asked whether his last-minute decision to truncate his trip abroad could be seen as “almost a win for China.” Instead of staying in the region for a summit of the Quad — Japan, India, the U.S. and Australia — Biden plans to return to Washington Sunday to deal with domestic issues. 

    The president downplayed the move as something China could use to its advantage, noting he will still meet with Quad nation leaders in Japan. “We get a chance to talk separately at the meeting,” he said

    Then, Biden was asked whether he has plans to speak with the Chinese president soon.

    “Whether it’s soon or not, we will be meeting,” he said, before leaving the room. 

    Cristina Gallardo in London and Zi-Ann Lum in Ottawa contributed reporting.

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  • Dozens missing after Chinese fishing boat sinks in Indian Ocean

    Dozens missing after Chinese fishing boat sinks in Indian Ocean

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    The incident took place in the early hours of the morning and rescue efforts are under way.

    A Chinese fishing boat has sunk in the Indian Ocean with all 39 of its Chinese and international crew missing, according to state media.

    Broadcaster CCTV said the incident happened in the early hours of Tuesday morning. The crew includes 17 people from China, 17 from Indonesia and five from the Philippines, the report said.

    President Xi Jinping ordered a coordinated search, CCTV said, but “so far, no missing persons have been found”.

    China has deployed two commercial vessels to help in the regional search-and-rescue operation.

    “It is necessary to further strengthen the safety management of fishing vessels at sea and implement preventive measures to ensure the safety of maritime transportation,” Premier Li Qiang was quoted as saying.

    The Chinese reports did not identify the exact location of the sinking, revealing only that it took place in the centre of the Indian Ocean that stretches from South Asia and the Arabian Peninsula to East Africa and western Australia.

    The Philippine Coast Guard said on Wednesday it was monitoring the situation and coordinating with the Chinese Embassy in Manila as well as with search-and-rescue teams operating near the vessel’s last-known location.

    The Lupenglaiyuanyu No 8 boat was based in the eastern coastal province of Shandong and operated by Penglai Jinglu Fishery Co, one of China’s major state-run fishing companies.

    It was authorised to fish for neon flying squid and Pacific saury, according to data from the North Pacific Fishing Commission.

    The boat left Cape Town, South Africa on May 5, and was heading towards Busan, South Korea, according to the MarineTraffic tracking website, which last located the vessel on May 10 to the southeast of Reunion, a tiny French island in the Indian Ocean.

    China is believed to operate the world’s largest deep-sea fishing fleet. Many of its ships stay at sea for months or even years at a time, supported by Chinese state maritime security agencies and a sprawling network of support vessels.

    The Philippines, meanwhile, supplies about a quarter of the world’s 1.2 million seafarers.

    There was no explanation for the cause of the sinking, although weather and high seas often play a role in such tragedies.

    Chinese squid fishing ships have been documented using wide nets to illegally catch already overfished tuna as part of a surge in unregulated fishing activity in the Indian Ocean, according to a report released in 2021 by a Norway-based watchdog group. The report highlighted growing concerns about the lack of international cooperation to protect marine species on the high seas.

    The group, called Trygg Mat Tracking, found that the number of squid vessels in the high seas of the Indian Ocean – where fishing of the species is not regulated – has increased six-fold since 2016.

    The United States Coast Guard was involved in a dangerous confrontation with Chinese vessels not far from Ecuador’s Galapagos Islands in 2022 during a mission to inspect the vessels for any signs of illegal, unreported or unregulated fishing.

    Chinese fishing fleets sometimes go “dark” – turning off their tracking systems to prevent the monitoring of their activities.

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  • ‘I kept thinking of my child’: Shipwrecked Indonesians back home

    ‘I kept thinking of my child’: Shipwrecked Indonesians back home

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    Caught up in mountainous seas whipped up by Cyclone Isa, the 11 men were rescued from a remote atoll by Australia.

    Indonesian fisherman Badco Said Jalating could not hold back the tears as he was reunited with his family this week after floating for more than 30 hours at sea when the fishing boat he was on sank during Cyclone Isa.

    Hugging his mother and cradling his young son, 40-year-old Badco wiped away tears as he returned home to Rote Island in eastern Indonesia.

    “I kept thinking of my child,” he told Al Jazeera. “When I was swimming at night, I heard my son’s voice calling my name. It gave me strength.”

    Badco was one of 11 Indonesian fishermen shipwrecked on Bedwell Island, a remote, exposed and inhospitable stretch of white sand with no natural shelter or freshwater sources, as Cyclone Isa whipped up the seas off northwestern Australia before making landfall as one of the most ferocious storms ever to hit the country.

    He had left Rote Island with nine other men, including his brother, on board the Putri Jaya, a typical Indonesian-style fishing boat. Australian authorities say the boat probably sank in “extreme weather conditions” on April 11 or 12. The other members of the crew are thought to have drowned.

    Badco’s grief-stricken mother said she had begged her sons not to go to sea because of the weather conditions but they had little choice.

    “Like all fishermen here, they have to listen to their boss,” she said. “If the boss says you go, you have to go.”

    When Badco finally made it to Bedwell, he was discovered by 10 fellow residents of Rote Island, the crew of the Express 1, which had run aground on the island some 300km (200 miles) west of the Australian coastal tourist town of Broome, on April 12.

    Wilhemus Bora’a, the ship’s 40-year-old captain, recalled that Badco was naked after so many hours at sea.

    “We gave him clothes,” Wilhemus said. “I feel sad (about what happened to their boat) because they were fishermen like us – poor people.”

    The 11 men ended up spending six days on Bedwell before they were spotted by the Australian authorities conducting routine air surveillance and later winched from the island.

    Wilhemus, who has four children including a one-year-old baby, said they had no food and were drinking salt water. They did, however, manage to make a simple shelter from the boat’s debris.

    “The wind took us until we ran aground on that atoll,” he said. “There was nothing there. Our boat was broken and we didn’t eat anything for six days.”

    Indonesian authorities said they were grateful to Australia for rescuing the men but said they had gone to sea without a permit.

    “If they had asked for a permit, we would have told them about the weather,” said Merry Foenay, the head of the fishing authority in West Nusa Tenggara where Rote is located. “If the weather is not good, we will not issue the permit.”

    As their boats crashed around in the giant waves, the men doubted they would make it home again.

    Badco recalled that Putri Jaya was overwhelmed by the powerful winds and capsized. At that point, the crew was still together.

    “I grabbed my brother’s arm and I hung onto the boat,” he remembered. “But a log hit me and I was separated from my brother.”

    Then another wave crashed into him.

    “I lost my grip to the boat. I couldn’t do anything any more.”

    Without a lifejacket to keep him afloat, Badco said he conserved energy by following the current and alternating the use of his legs and arms.

    Reunited with the son whose image had kept him going through the darkness, Badco hugged him tight.

    “I will still go to sea but I will watch the weather first,” he said.

    With reporting by Eliazar Ballo in Rote Island, Indonesia.

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  • 11 stranded fishermen rescued after week without food or water, 8 feared dead at sea after powerful cyclone hits Australia

    11 stranded fishermen rescued after week without food or water, 8 feared dead at sea after powerful cyclone hits Australia

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    Eight Indonesian fishermen are feared drowned and another 11 have been rescued after spending almost a week without food or water on a barren island off the northwest Australian coast in the wake of a powerful tropical cyclone, authorities said Wednesday.

    Two primitive wooden Indonesian fishing boats were caught in the path of Cyclone Ilsa, which made landfall Friday as Australia’s most powerful storm in eight years, with winds gusting at an apparent record of 180 miles per hour.

    One of the boats, Putri Jaya, sank in “extreme weather conditions” early on April 12 while Ilsa was gathering strength over the Indian Ocean and heading toward the coast, Australian Maritime Safety Authority said in a statement, citing survivors.

    Australia Indonesian Fishermen
    In this photo provided by the Australian Maritime Safety Authority, fishermen from Indonesia stand on a beach on Bedwell Island, 194 miles west of Broome, Australia, on Monday, April 17, 2023. 

    / AP


    The other boat, Express 1, ran aground with 10 men aboard around the same time on Bedwell Island, a sandy outcrop some 200 miles west of the Australian coastal tourist town of Broome, the authority said. The only known survivor from the Putri Jaya spent 30 hours floating in the water tied to a fuel can for buoyancy before swimming to the same island, officials said.

    The authority said the 11 survivors had spent for six days on the island without food and water before being rescued on Monday night.

    The authority clarified in a later statement that the Putri Jaya survivor reached the island a day later than the rest.

    The fishermen live in the East Nusa Tenggara province in the eastern part of the Indonesian archipelago.

    The survivors were spotted Monday by the Australian Border Force, which patrols Australia’s northern approaches for smuggling and other illegal activity, from a plane on a routine surveillance mission. A Broome-based rescue helicopter was deployed and winched all 11 aboard in failing light.

    Gordon Watt, a manager at helicopter provider PHI Aviation, said the rescue helicopter crew had been unable to land on the sand.

    “They had to conduct winch recoveries which, in itself, is a challenging task,” Watt said. “The time of day meant that nightfall was upon the crew during the rescue, so they had to transition to using night vision goggles.”

    The survivors were taken to Broome Hospital where Border Force said in a statement they were reported to “be in good health despite their ordeal.”

    “This incident highlights the dangers of undertaking journeys in small boats unsuited to rough seas and adverse weather events, both of which are common in Australia’s northern waters,” the statement said.

    Australia Indonesian Fishermen
    In this photo provided by the Australian Maritime Safety Authority, a fishing boat is beached on Bedwell Island, 313 km (194 miles) west of Broome, Australia, on Monday, April 17, 2023. 

    / AP


    The survivors have been flown from Broome to the northern city of Darwin, from where they will be flown back to Indonesia, the statement said.

    Indonesia’s consulate in Darwin requested to meet the fishermen and provide them with assistance, Indonesia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement. The consulate would facilitate their repatriation, the statement said, thanking Australian agencies for their help.

    The Australian Maritime Safety Authority, which manages searches and rescues in Australian waters, said there was no ongoing search for further survivors.

    The missing Indonesian fishermen are expected to be the only fatalities from Ilsa, which was a maximum Category 5 cyclone when it crossed the Pilbara region coast of Western Australia state southwest of Broome.

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  • Indonesia stripped of hosting Under-20 World Cup by FIFA

    Indonesia stripped of hosting Under-20 World Cup by FIFA

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    GENEVA (AP) — Indonesia was stripped of hosting rights for the Under-20 World Cup on Wednesday only eight weeks before the start of the tournament amid political turmoil regarding Israel’s participation.

    FIFA said Indonesia was removed from staging the 24-team tournament scheduled to start on May 20 “due to the current circumstances” without specifying details.

    The decision followed a meeting in Doha, Qatar between Indonesian soccer federation president Erick Thohir and Gianni Infantino, the president of FIFA, soccer’s world governing body.

    Israel qualified in June of last year for its first Under-20 World Cup. But the country’s participation in the official draw for tournament groups, scheduled to be held Friday in Bali, provoked political opposition this month.

    Indonesia is the world’s most populous Muslim-majority nation and does not have formal diplomatic relations with Israel, while publicly supporting the Palestinian cause.

    Indonesia’s host status for the tournament was cast into doubt last Sunday when FIFA postponed the draw.

    It is unclear who could now host the tournament, which was scheduled to be played in six stadiums in Indonesia. Argentina, which did not qualify for the tournament, is reportedly interested in hosting.

    “A new host will be announced as soon as possible, with the dates of the tournament currently remaining unchanged,” FIFA said.

    The Indonesian soccer federation could be further disciplined by FIFA. A suspension could remove Indonesia from Asian qualifying for the 2026 World Cup. The continental qualifiers start in October.

    FIFA seemed to remove all blame Wednesday from Thohir, the former president of Italian club Inter Milan — the team Infantino supports — and a former co-owner of the Philadelphia 76ers.

    FIFA staff will continue to work in Indonesia in the months ahead, the governing body said, “under the leadership of President Thohir.”

    Thohir said as a member of FIFA, Indonesia had little choice but to accept the decision.

    “I have tried my best,” he said in a statement. “After delivering a letter from President Joko Widodo and discussing it at length with the President of FIFA, Gianni Infantino, we must accept FIFA’s decision to cancel the holding of the event that we are both looking forward to.”

    He said although he’d conveyed all the concerns and hopes of Indonesia’s president, soccer lovers as well as the players from the Under-20 Indonesian national team, “FIFA considered that the current situation cannot be continued.”

    Soccer and public authorities in Indonesia agreed to FIFA’s hosting requirements in 2019 before being selected to stage the 2021 edition of the Under-20 World Cup. The coronavirus pandemic forced the tournament to be postponed for two years.

    But Indonesian President Joko Widodo said Tuesday evening that his administration objected to Israel’s participation. He told citizens that the country agreed to host before knowing Israel would qualify.

    However, the removal of the hosting rights by FIFA has raised concerns within Indonesian soccer.

    Arya Sinulingga, an executive committee member of Indonesia’s national soccer association PSSI, was concerned about further repercussions.

    “This is a sign that we are not able to carry out what has been asked (by FIFA) … among other things that there should be no discrimination,” Sinulingga said in an interview with a local television, “What we are most worried about right now is that we will be ostracized from international events, especially from world soccer activities.”

    He said that “it can happen and it will be very detrimental to us in many ways.”

    “We have something that is bigger than losing our right to host the Under-20 World Cup. We have to face it in the near future, and that could effect the future of our sport,” Sinulingga said, “We are now fighting not to get sanctioned, but people should know … this is too hard.”

    Israel qualified for the tournament by reaching the semifinals of the Under-19 European Championship. The team went on to lose to England in that final.

    Israel plays in Europe as a member of UEFA after leaving the Asian Football Confederation in the 1970s for political and security reasons.

    FIFA bills the men’s Under-20 World Cup as “the tournament of tomorrow’s superstars.”

    Diego Maradona, Lionel Messi and Paul Pogba are previous winners of the official player of the tournament award, and Erling Haaland was the top scorer at the 2019 edition.

    ___

    Associated Press writers Niniek Karmini and Edna Tarigan contributed to this report from Jakarta, Indonesia.

    ___

    More AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

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