Jun 4, 2009

Obama Addresses World's Muslims

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President Barack Obama delivers much-anticipated message to Muslim world from auditorium at Cairo University campus, 04 Jun 2009
President Barack Obama delivers much-anticipated message to Muslim world from auditorium at Cairo University campus, 04 Jun 2009
VOA, Paula Wolfson, Cairo, June 4 - U.S. President Barack Obama says it is time for a new beginning in relations between America and the world's Muslims. The president said they should unite to confront violent extremism and promote the cause of peace.

Fresh start

President Obama says, after decades of frustration and distrust, it is time for candor ... for dialogue ... and a fresh start.

"I have come here to Cairo to seek a new beginning between the United States and Muslims around the world; one based upon mutual interest and mutual respect, and one based upon the truth that America and Islam are not exclusive, and need not be in competition," the president said.

Seeking common ground

He spoke in a packed auditorium on the sprawling campus of Cairo University. But his intended audience was far broader: more than one-billion Muslims around the world.

"I am convinced that in order to move forward we must say openly to each other the things we hold in our hearts, and that too often are said only behind closed doors," President Obama said. "There must be a sustained effort to listen to each other, to learn from each other, to respect one another, and to seek common ground."

The president spoke of his own perspective as a Christian with Muslim relatives who spent part of his youth in predominantly Muslim Indonesia.

"That experience guides my conviction that partnership between America and Islam must be based on what Islam is, not what it is not," he said. " And I consider it part of my responsibility as President of the United States to fight against negative stereotypes of Islam wherever they appear."

Hatred of a few

President Obama said problems must be dealt with through partnership, and tensions must be faced head on.

He said extremists are playing on their differences, and are killing people in many countries of many faiths.

"The enduring faith of over a billion people is so much bigger than the narrow hatred of a few," President Obama said. "Islam is not part of the problem in combating violent extremism, it is an important part of promoting peace."

Eliminate friction

The president said it is important to talk directly about all the issues that have created frictions in the past, from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan to the Israeli-Palestinian peace process.

"If we see this conflict only from one side or the other, then we will be blind to the truth: the only resolution is for the aspirations of both sides to be met through two states, where Israelis and Palestinians each live in peace and security," he said.

Israeli-Palestinian conflict

President Obama said the Palestinians must renounce violence, and Israel must cease settlement activity. He said all sides must look honestly and openly at the reality of the situation.

"Privately, many Muslims recognize that Israel will not go away," the president said. "Likewise, many Israelis recognize the need for a Palestinian state. It is time for us to act on what everyone knows to be true."

Nuclear proliferation

The president also spoke of the need to work together to curtail the spread of nuclear weapons, making specific mention of Iran's nuclear ambitions.

And he spoke bluntly of the need to promote democracy, religious freedom, and women's rights.

"I reject the view of some in the West that a woman who chooses to cover her hair is somehow less equal, but I do believe that a woman who is denied an education is denied equality," President Obama said.

Before the speech, Mr. Obama met with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and visited a mosque. After the address, he headed to the outskirts of the city to see the pyramids - a nod to the Egyptian capital's long history at the heart of the Arab world.

Source - http://www.voanews.com/english/2009-06-04-voa2.cfm

Exacting Change

On May 15, House Energy and Commerce Committee chair Henry Waxman and subcommittee chair Edward Markey unveiled the American Clean Energy and Security Act, addressing a priority of President Obama's reform agenda: the drive for new energy. The bill was both pathbreaking and disappointing, with major compromises from its initial draft. Cuts in carbon emissions that had been pegged at the international standard of 20 percent by 2020 (from 1990 levels) were reduced to 4 percent. Mandates on renewable energy for utilities were slashed. Standards on new coal plants were weakened. Instead of auctioning off pollution permits under a cap-and-trade system (raising revenue to relieve low-income ratepayers and spur investment in clean energy), the bill gives away 85 percent of the permits, with coal utilities, oil refineries and energy-intensive industries like steel getting huge handouts. The subsidies and deals bloated the bill to more than 900 pages, and Republicans introduced so many amendments that Democrats had to hire a speed-reader to get through them. The bill's fate in the Senate is even more uncertain.

    Duke Energy, the Edison Electric Institute and various other energy producers praised the bill, along with some conservative coal-state Democrats. The environmental community split: Al Gore, Environmental Defense Fund and others endorsed the bill as an important first step, while Public Citizen, Friends of the Earth and Greenpeace questioned whether it would spur action toward renewable energy in the short term. "This bill has been seriously undermined by the lobbying of industries more concerned with profits than the plight of our planet," Greenpeace declared in announcing its opposition.

    The climate bill isn't the only piece of legislation being compromised. Although the major banks are on life support, they were still able to block "cramdown," the linchpin of Obama's mortgage plan, which gives bankruptcy judges the right to reset mortgages of families facing foreclosure. That led Senate majority whip Richard Durbin to fume that the banks "own the place." Credit card companies are less popular than Somali pirates, but they managed to fend off any limit on interest rates they can charge customers.

    All of the signature economic reforms the president has promoted--from healthcare to employee free choice--are under siege. Without a grassroots uprising that challenges business as usual in Washington, we aren't likely to get the change we were promised, much less the change we need.

    The Reform Moment

    It shouldn't be that tough. All the stars are aligned for launching the greatest era of progressive reform since the 1960s. We face stark crises that require fundamental structural reform. We have a powerful, popular president with a mandate for change--and a majority of Americans yearning for it. Catastrophes have left conservative ideas discredited, and Republicans are leaderless and divided.




    Both houses of Congress enjoy large Democratic majorities with arguably the most liberal caucuses in four decades, if not longer. Nancy Pelosi, the strong liberal Speaker of the House, has helped to define and drive reform (one reason she is the target of withering Republican attacks over her comments on the CIA). In the Senate, normally the graveyard of change, Arlen Specter's switch and Al Franken's eventual seating will give Democrats the sixty-vote supermajority needed to shut down filibusters and move legislation. This doesn't resolve the difficulty of rounding up sixty votes, but it should concentrate the mind of the majority leader, Harry Reid. Democrats can no longer blame obstructionist Republicans for their inability to move. They will be expected to deliver.

    Obama, whose watchword is pragmatism and whose gift is for compromise, has clearly grasped the moment. Whether you consider him a "pragmatic conservative," as Martin Wolf of the Financial Times suggests, or "the world's best salesman of socialism," in Republican Senator Jim DeMint's words, the president has been clear that "we cannot go back to the bubble-and-bust economy that led us to this point." We can't "recover" by restoring the old economy--and we should not want to.

    Spurning the conventional advice of Beltway pundits to limit his agenda, Obama has acted boldly in response to the crisis. His recovery plan, despite being weakened in the Senate, includes the greatest increase in support for the poor since the Great Society and doubles the federal education budget. His budget calls for dramatic investment in core areas like healthcare and education. (In fact, it is caution, not audacity, that may most retard any recovery and haunt the president, as exemplified by Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner's bank bailout.)

    Obama has also championed issues that progressives have put on the agenda. He has pledged to move forward on new energy, the Employee Free Choice Act (EFCA), common-sense immigration reform, improved funding for education from pre-K to college and reregulating the financial sector to make it smaller and less destructive.

    Together these reforms begin to define a new direction for the country, first steps toward a more just and sustainable economy. Needless to say, the administration's ability to chart that course will be largely determined by the path of the recession and the success of the administration's recovery plan, not to mention Afghanistan and Iraq. But these core economic reforms are the centerpiece of Obama's progressive promise.

    In the Trenches

    Each of these initiatives rouses the concerns of powerful and deeply entrenched corporate interests. All are mobilizing for a full-scale rumble, deploying legions of Democratic lobbyists and amassing war chests for advertising and "astroturf" campaigns. The healthcare industry tops the list for spending on lobbying in 2009, reporting about $127 million in expenditures in the first three months alone. The lobby's Swiftboat operation, Conservatives for Patients' Rights, vows to spend $20 million to scare Americans about Obama's reforms.The fight over EFCA "will be Armageddon," threatens Randel Johnson, vice president for labor policy at the US Chamber of Commerce. The National Journal reports that the Coalition for a Democratic Workplace, a major business umbrella group, alone has committed $200 million to defeat EFCA.The fierce struggle over the climate legislation is illustrative. According to the Center for Public Integrity, the climate lobbies had four lobbyists for every member of Congress at the end of last year, up more than 300 percent since 2003. The center reports that a staggering 880 groups and interests on all sides are signed up to influence the bill. The oil and coal industry spent about $76.1 million on ads in the first four months of the year, according to the Campaign Media Analysis Group.Most of the key reforms--healthcare, energy, EFCA and immigration (but notably not finance)--have sophisticated, independent progressive coalitions driving the issue. Health Care for America Now (HCAN) enlists more than 1,000 groups, with a budget of $40 million; it is already on the air urging support in key Democratic states. The unions may spend more than $100 million supporting EFCA, but they will be outgunned several times over. The environmental community mobilizes thousands of activists and has already expended millions on advertising: together, Gore's Alliance for Climate Protection, the Environmental Defense Fund and the Sierra Club spent $28.6 million in ads over the first four months of 2009. But enviros will be outspent some ten to one in lobbying and three to one in advertising.The progressive infrastructure built during the Bush years provides Obama with independent capacity that didn't exist in the Clinton years, from media monitoring to grassroots mobilization. Two new groups--Common Purpose Project and Unity '09--were set up and staffed by Obama campaign veterans to coordinate message and field operations in support of major administration reforms. They are complemented by the largest new operation of all, Organizing for America, the 13 million-person donor and activist list lodged at the DNC, which can flood House and Senate offices with calls and letters.

    Sausage-Making

    Ironically, the key targets for both the corporate and popular mobilizations are a remarkably small number of legislators. Most are Democrats--the handful of conservative "Blue Dog" and DLC representatives and their equivalents in the Senate--plus a few moderate Republican senators who aren't wedded to obstruction. House Republicans can do little but howl at the wind. The president's greatest challenge in passing reform is thus garnering support from his own party, not from the opposition.

    Obama's leadership style encourages compromise: he lays out a broad vision, eloquently makes his case and invites all the stakeholders to the negotiations--paying special attention to efforts that forge common ground. For example, the climate bill used as a blueprint the plan released by the US Climate Action Partnership, which brought leading environmental groups like the Natural Resources Defense Council and the Pew Center on Global Climate Change together with giant companies like PepsiCo and Ford and many top energy providers.

    Obama then allows Congress to work out the legislation, often counting on Pelosi to ensure that strong committee leaders drive the negotiations. White House aides, marshaled by chief of staff Rahm Emanuel, help to cut deals and build consensus backstage. Citizen groups are called upon to support the resulting legislation and to target swing legislators.

    The White House mantra is, Never let the perfect be the enemy of the good. The president doesn't single out the Democrats standing in the way; he prefers compromise to pitched battle, particularly within his party. A senior White House aide has described Obama as a "raging minimalist," by which he means someone who believes that you should put all the parties at the table, find out what can be agreed upon and go with that.

    Obama's emphasis on gaining as much consensus as possible, and his reluctance to challenge publicly the interests or legislators seeking to delay or dilute reform, has no doubt won him some support he might otherwise not have had. Corporate trade associations are seeking to shape reforms on climate and healthcare rather than to blow them up. But the emphasis on backstage compromise also weakens the president's ability to challenge the balance of forces in Congress by mobilizing public outrage. When a compromise is struck, progressives are asked to join the president in supporting it and to mute their criticisms. Passage of the recovery plan and the president's bold budget outline bear testament to that strategy. And no doubt, whatever progress is made on healthcare or energy or workers' rights will be in stark contrast to the black hole of the Bush years.

    The danger is that this process may make the weak the enemy of the good. Legislated reforms always reflect the gulf between what is needed and what is possible. That gulf is very wide despite the economic crisis and the sea-change elections, because corporate lobbies still hold sway in Washington. Many Congressional liberals worry that there isn't enough push to overcome the opposition, particularly in the Senate. We could see a series of reforms with the heart cut out of them--healthcare without a good public plan, energy without strong cap-and-trade and renewable energy standards, EFCA without card check or binding arbitration--and immigration may not even make it to the table. To change that balance, the president may have to put his popularity on the line--or citizens may have to change the terms of the debate.

    Compromise is inevitable. The hard question is whether the compromise opens the door to greater progress or forecloses opportunity. A weak public plan will make it hard to get healthcare expenses under control while extending care to all. Timid cap-and-trade standards won't spark the drive for renewable energy or substantially reduce carbon emissions. Without significant reform, workers' ability to organize won't improve all that much.

    Moreover, the reform moment may not last long. Given the economic devastation and the wars abroad, the president's popularity is more likely to decline than to rise. Parties in power tend to lose seats in the first midterm election of a new presidency. If unemployment is still increasing next year, as seems likely, the Republican opposition could find its voice. Conservative Democrats and their corporate allies could grow bolder. And as bankers are bailed out while autoworkers get their pink slips and an increasing number of homeowners receive foreclosure notices, citizens could become disillusioned with the party in power.

    The Progressive Challenge

    Obviously, progressives can have the greatest impact by mobilizing voters to challenge those who stand in the way of reform. Legislators too often are more attuned to the needs of their donors than to those of their constituents. Many conservative Democrats seem wedded to old arguments, oblivious to the impact of the crisis on the people they represent. Independent organizing can have a significant effect, particularly in a time of dramatic change.

    To forestall crippling compromises, reform coalitions must define the scope of the campaign early. Clear red lines must be drawn around the heart of the reform, putting everyone on notice that compromise beyond a certain point is a deal-breaker. Progressives should also be exposing the lobbyists, pointing out the parochial concerns and wrongheaded ideas of those opposing change, and mobilizing support in targeted states and districts. The pain of standing in the way should be made greater than the benefit.

    HCAN has exemplified this strategy. The coalition helped to introduce comprehensive healthcare reform into the presidential campaign--itself a compromise from the single-payer plan designed to appeal to the 90 percent of voters who have some kind of coverage. HCAN then focused on the public plan, detailing its importance and anticipating that the insurance companies and Republicans would target it. When key Senate Democrats like Max Baucus and Ben Nelson began raising doubts about the public plan, HCAN worked with Progressive Caucus leaders to change the calculus. The caucus polled its members and released a statement that the majority of them would vote against any reform that did not include a strong public plan. They were soon joined by the Hispanic, Black and Asian-American Caucuses. At last count, more than 100 liberals have pledged to vote against any reform without a public plan. This provides a counterbalance in the negotiations and may help stiffen the leadership's spine. At the same time, HCAN has sponsored ads in recalcitrant legislators' districts, often singling them out by name.

    The Obama administration prizes coordination of message and mobilization, and prefers that disagreements be aired in the back rooms rather than in the streets. White House aides argue that going after legislators--particularly Democrats-- publicly could make it harder for the administration to deal with them. This is, of course, particularly true for Organizing for America, run out of the DNC. But conservative legislators are likely to be skeptical of any White House claim that this most popular president couldn't curb the activities of progressive groups if he chose to.

    At this point, most of the national constituency groups--labor unions, environmental groups, MoveOn--have organized independently to drive their causes. But they've chosen to co-operate with the White House, often muting disagreements on message or tactics.

    Driving Progressive Change

    The fate of the climate bill, cramdown, credit card and healthcare legislation, along with the fight over the rest of the agenda, suggests the limits of this strategy. Clearly, the balance of forces remains biased against significant reform. With Republicans committed to obstruction, only a few Democrats are needed to force major concessions or block key legislation.

    We need a grassroots uprising against business as usual in Congress. The White House won't find it easy to spark that and may not support it. But without a movement that exposes legislators to the fury of their constituents, and challenges the cozy relationships between moneyed interests and incumbents, we risk blowing the greatest moment for reform in decades.

    Moreover, independent organizing is vital because Obama's agenda--as he admits--is a beginning, not the end. Though it is ambitious, it is, not surprisingly, both imperfect and incomplete. Although reluctant to challenge a popular president, progressives have begun to question some of his initiatives. Joseph Stiglitz, Paul Krugman and a range of economists have criticized the bank bailout and sounded a call for a second round of stimulus spending. Fifty-one progressive House members voted against funding for escalation in Afghanistan, and many are calling for a clear exit strategy. And when Obama reversed his position on military tribunals and releasing the torture photos, this magazine and the human rights and civil liberties community responded with an uproar.

    We also need to expand the agenda for reform. For example, if we are to make the investments vital to our future, as the president has called for, a sustained expansion of public investment is essential--and that will require a far bolder tax policy. Under current projections, domestic discretionary spending will decline to the lowest percentage of the economy since the early 1960s. We need a campaign for sustained investment linked with progressive tax reform to pay for it, featuring a higher rate for high-income earners, a tax on stock transactions to limit speculation, a crackdown on tax havens and taxation of income from wealth at the same rates as that from work.

    Similarly, Obama has largely embraced America's role as GloboCop and calls for sustaining military budgets that are nearly as large as the rest of the world's combined. As the escalation in Afghanistan indicates, the American posture virtually guarantees involvement in constant wars and interventions across the globe. Changing this unsustainable strategy will require creative thinking about security and how to argue for it.

    The struggle over financial regulation has only begun. The contrast between the treatment of bankers and the treatment of autoworkers and suppliers--between those, in Steelworkers president Leo Gerard's phrase, who shower before work and those who shower after work--has not gone unnoticed. Congress has passed legislation to set up an independent commission with subpoena power to detail what went wrong in the financial collapse and demonstrate the fraud, greed and regulatory malfeasance that drove us into this mess. Progressives should be pushing hard for aggressive hearings to help provide the popular mandate for fundamental reforms: restructuring firms "too big to fail," limiting leverage, outlawing exotic financial instruments, controlling consumer and credit card gouging and returning finance to its position as the servant, not the master, of the Main Street economy.

    At the beginning of the administration Rahm Emanuel famously said, "You never want a serious crisis to go to waste." With Obama's leadership, Washington will produce reform. But even with coordinated efforts to support his agenda, it is likely to be deeply compromised unless an independent movement challenges business as usual and forces far bolder changes than Washington now thinks possible.

    Robert L. Borosage is president of the Institute for America's Future

    Katrina vanden Heuvel is Editor and Publisher of The Nation.

    Source - http://www.thenation.com/doc/20090615/borosage_kvh

    Groups on the Left Are Suddenly on Top

    Washington Post, Dan Eggen, June 4 - Less than 24 hours after President Obama announced the nomination of Judge Sonia Sotomayor to the Supreme Court, an alliance formed solely to push the appointment launched a six-figure ad buy on the major television networks.

    "Raised in public housing by a working mom who taught her the power of education," the text of the ad reads, as Obama talks in the background about the virtues of an ideal jurist. "Tough prosecutor. Distinguished judge. Practical understanding of the law."

    Conservative groups, by contrast, stumbled through days of disjointed messages and never mustered the resources for a major television campaign. By the end of the week, Republicans were fighting among themselves over the perils of attacking the nation's first Hispanic nominee to the high court.

    The episode was one of the latest examples of how Obama's election has dramatically altered the landscape occupied by the advocacy groups, think tanks and lobbying firms that make up Washington's sprawling influence industry. Democratic and left-leaning groups are now ascendant, enjoying clout not seen in a generation and benefiting from close access to a White House brimming with former colleagues.

    Nurses turn their backs to the Senate Finance Committee in silent protest during a hearing on health-care reform.


    Nurses turn their backs to the Senate Finance Committee in silent protest during a hearing on health-care reform. (By Pablo Martinez Monsivais -- Associated Press)

    Many of the groups spent the Bush years championing policies that had little chance of being adopted; now, their ideas and positions are at the center of the Washington debate. Obama's plan to offer public health insurance to compete with the private sector, for example, has its roots in a series of obscure papers circulated among liberal policy analysts several years ago. Some of those analysts are now briefing the administration and Congress on how the system could be implemented.

    Several thousand liberal activists have gathered in Washington this week for a national conference that includes appearances by Labor Secretary Hilda L. Solis and other administration officials. The three-day event, "America's Future Now," focuses heavily on health-care reform, climate-change policy and other issues championed by Obama.

    But liberal groups are also learning the limits of their influence, whether they are being thwarted by conservative Democrats in the Senate or undermined by a president who has pursued a centrist path on many terrorism and defense issues. One example came in April, when a proposal allowing bankruptcy judges to reduce mortgage payments went down to easy defeat in the Senate, despite support from Obama and consumer groups.

    "We're in an era now where we have a president who has committed to a transformative agenda of progressive change, but it's absolutely clear that change will be impossible without enormous involvement from the grass roots," said Justin Ruben, executive director of MoveOn.org, an Internet-focused advocacy group that nearly doubled in size, to more than 5 million members, during the 2008 presidential campaign. "That's what our role is. It's not enough to change who's in power."

    Many of the most influential liberal groups are new or relatively young. Fresh groups on the scene include Business Forward, which attempts to attract corporate support for Obama's economic policies; Unity '09, a coalition of progressive groups focused on pushing Obama's policy agenda; and Organizing for America, an Obama-sanctioned outreach project at the Democratic National Committee.

    There are young left-leaning groups devoted to health care (Health Care for America Now), economics (the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities), defense (the Center for a New American Security) and labor issues (Change to Win). Another group, Common Purpose, holds seminars every Tuesday at the Capital Hilton near the White House, bringing together more than 100 liberal activists with Obama administration aides to debate policy and plot strategy.

    Matt Bennett, public affairs director for Third Way, a center-left think tank, said the groups amount to "a new intellectual infrastructure" for progressives in Washington.

    The granddaddy of the new vanguard is the Center for American Progress, a think tank founded with three employees in 2003 by longtime Democratic adviser John D. Podesta, who served as President Bill Clinton's chief of staff and ran Obama's transition office. Now with 180 employees and a $25 million annual budget, CAP has its own lobbying arm, called the Center for American Progress Action Fund; a student-focused project called Campus Progress; and a political blog called Think Progress.

    Podesta began the project as a liberal counterpoint to conservative think tanks such as the Heritage Foundation and the American Enterprise Institute. He estimates that 40 staff members from his project are employed in the Obama administration, including domestic policy adviser Melody C. Barnes, deputy White House counsel Cassandra Q. Butts and climate envoy Todd Stern.

    But Grover Norquist, a conservative activist whose influential Wednesday breakfast meetings served as an inspiration for the Common Purpose project, argues that left-leaning groups have too many "internal contradictions" to get along indefinitely.

    "For the moment there's a false sense of comity," he said. "But at the end of the day, they're competing parasites. At some point, the unions will come up against the environmentalists, and the whole thing will start to fall apart."

    Indeed, small cracks have appeared in the fragile coalition. Many grass-roots groups strongly object to expanded military involvement in Afghanistan, the bailouts of financial firms on Wall Street, and Obama's decisions last month to revive military commissions and block the release of photos that show detainee abuse. In Congress, Democratic-led hearings on health-care reform have been disrupted by activists demanding a "single-payer" nationalized insurance system, which Obama and his allies have explicitly ruled out.

    Liberal activists acknowledge that disagreements between Obama and the groups that support him are inevitable. But Podesta said that "being in the wilderness concentrated people's attention on trying to be good collaborators. It's not like we're not being competitive. But people have done a pretty good job of keeping focused on the prize and trying to get the country moving in the right direction."

    Robert L. Borosage, the founder of the Campaign for America's Future, which began as a group opposed to Clinton's centrist approach on welfare and other issues, said the "scope of the crisis" facing the country has so far tamped down potentially noisy disputes.

    "There is a real argument going on with the Obama administration on some issues, but it hasn't gotten in the way of unity around other issues," Borosage said, adding: "You have to remember, Obama is enormously attractive to progressives in general. That goes a long way."

    Borosage's group is a typical example of the expansion of liberal influence in Washington. His center's budget, which not long ago barely broke $1 million annually, has expanded to more than $5 million because of financial support from "regular people, foundations, unions and idiosyncratic rich people," as he jokingly puts it.

    Source - http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/06/03/AR2009060303396.html

    Jun 2, 2009

    The Evolving Terrorist Threat to Southeast Asia: A Net Assessment

    Book by Peter Chalk, Angel Rabasa, William Rosenau, Leanne Piggott

    Terrorism is not new to Southeast Asia. For much of the Cold War, the activities of a variety of domestic ethnonationalist and religious militant groups posed a significant challenge to the region's internal stability. Since the 1990s, however, the residual challenge posed by substate militant extremism has risen in reaction to both the force of modernization pursued by many Southeast Asian governments and the political influence of radical Islam.

    Cover: The Evolving Terrorist Threat to Southeast Asia: A Net Assessment

    Building on prior RAND research analyzing the underlying motives, drivers, and capabilities of the principal extremist groups that have resorted to terrorist violence in the Philippines, southern Thailand, and Indonesia, this study examined the historical roots of militancy in these countries to provide context for assessing the degree to which local agendas are either being subsumed within a broader ideological framework or shaped by other extremist movements. Moving beyond simple terrorism analysis, this research also examined national and international government responses to militant movements in the region, including counterterrorist initiatives, military and policing strategies, hearts-and-minds campaigns, and funding and support from international organizations and governments (including the United States). Finally, the study broke new ground in assessing Cambodia as a potential future terrorist operational and logistical hub in Southeast Asia.

    Pages: 264

    ISBN/EAN: 9780833046581

    Free, downloadable PDF file(s) are available below.

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    Use Adobe Acrobat Reader version 7.0 or higher for the best experience.

    Contents

    Chapter One:
    Introduction

    Chapter Two:
    Malay Muslim Extremism in Southern Thailand

    Chapter Three:
    Muslim and Communist Extremism in the Philippines

    Chapter Four:
    Terrorism and National Security in Indonesia

    Chapter Five:
    The Regional Dimension: Jemaah Islamiyah

    Chapter Six:
    Counterterrorism and National Security in Thailand

    Chapter Seven:
    Counterterrorism and National Security in the Philippines

    Chapter Eight:
    Counterterrorism and National Security in Indonesia

    Chapter Nine:
    National Security in Southeast Asia: The U.S. Dimension

    Chapter Ten:
    Conclusion

    Appendix:
    Exploring the Potential for Emergent Operational and Logistical Terrorist Hubs in Cambodia

    The research described in this report was prepared for the Office of the Secretary of Defense (OSD). The research was conducted in the RAND National Defense Research Institute, a federally funded research and development center sponsored by the OSD, the Joint Staff, the Unified Combatant Commands, the Department of the Navy, the Marine Corps, the defense agencies, and the defense Intelligence Community.

    Source http://www.rand.org/pubs/monographs/2009/RAND_MG846.pdf

    Documents of the Day, No. 2, June 2, 2009

    The Religiosity of American College and University Professors
    http://socrel.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/full/srp026v1

    Timor-Leste Health Care Seeking Behaviour Study
    http://www.sphcm.med.unsw.edu.au/SPHCMweb.nsf/resources/01_UNSW_Timor-Leste_Study_English.pdf/$file/01_UNSW_Timor-Leste_Study_English.pdf

    The History of Violence and the State in Indonesia
    http://www.crise.ox.ac.uk/pubs/workingpaper54.pdf

    The Barong Wants to Go Out Again: Krisis Moneter and the Resurgence of Rituals in Indonesia
    http://www.seas.at/aseas/1_2/pdf/ASEAS%201-2-A7.pdf

    Identifying Key Concerns of Jemaah Islamiyah: The Singapore Context
    http://www.pvtr.org/pdf/Ideology%20Response/Identifying%20key%20concerns%20of%20JI.pdf

    Southeast Asia: Weathering the Economic Crisis

    Business Week, Frederick Balfour, Cebu, May 28 - Painful economic slowdowns are nothing new to Southeast Asia. The region went through its own gut-wrenching financial crisis more than a decade ago in what now seems like a dress rehearsal for today's turmoil. Companies defaulted, banks collapsed, stock markets tanked, and economies shrank at double-digit rates as foreign investment slowed to a trickle. But Southeast Asia dutifully swallowed the bitter pill of austerity, devaluing currencies and working off debt while banks restructured and companies patched up balance sheets.

    Now Southeast Asia is getting whacked again, a victim of sins on the other side of the globe. Last autumn the region's exports plunged as the U.S., and then China, slumped. Foreign investment, meanwhile, has plummeted as multinationals rein in spending. "It's frustrating that we are in a crisis that is not of our own making," says Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva.

    http://images.businessweek.com/mz/09/23/370/0923_34emergingmarkets.jpg

    A café in Hanoi: Vietnam is a popular alternative for companies diversifying away from China Justin Mott

    Yet this downturn is hardly a full-blown repeat of the Asian crisis. That's testament to the surprising strength of the 10 countries that belong to the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN). The region's banks are virtually free of toxic assets and haven't needed government bailout money. Years of trade surpluses and high savings rates have contributed to record foreign reserves. Debt loads—for governments, corporations, and consumers—are a fraction of those in the U.S. and Europe, and inflation and interest rates have fallen dramatically. "Of course there is a slowdown, but [these countries] are well prepared to weather the storm," says Mark Mobius, president of Templeton Emerging Market Funds. "They have outperformed global markets, which is telling us they are going to do quite well." ASEAN bourses have led the recovery in emerging-market stocks, with Jakarta's benchmark index up 70% and Vietnam's up 80% from recent lows.

    Some companies operating in the region continue to do well, as demand for everything from computers to discount airline tickets remains strong. Unilever Indonesia has sold so much Pepsodent toothpaste, Lifebuoy shampoo, and other goods that its first-quarter revenue jumped 18%, to $412 million, boosting earnings 9%, to $70 million. "The impact from the global crisis is minimal," says Franky Jamin, Unilever Indonesia's corporate secretary. And London's Standard Chartered Bank, which gets two-thirds of its revenue in Asia, says first-quarter profits were its best ever, indicating that the region's slump will be shallower and shorter than elsewhere. Consumer banking and lending to small companies are strong, while the mortgage business continues to grow, says Ray Ferguson, the bank's CEO for Southeast Asia. Foreclosures, he adds, "are not a feature of the market."

    Southeast Asia's strength is an encouraging sign that the region is still a player. Though it may have been half-forgotten by many investors since the crisis, its educated workers, natural resources, and—in some countries, at least—first-class infrastructure make it worth paying attention to. ASEAN has a total population of 560 million, and its combined gross domestic product of $1.3 trillion is greater than India's. Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia, the Philippines, Vietnam, and Singapore—which account for about 95% of the region's economy—attracted nearly $50 billion in foreign direct investment last year, vs. China's $92 billion.

    General Electric (GE), for instance, has committed more than $1 billion to Southeast Asia in the past 18 months. Those investments include expanded aircraft maintenance facilities in Kuala Lumpur and a water-technology research center in Singapore. And in May, GE broke ground on its first project in Vietnam, a $61 million plant in the port city of Haiphong to produce wind turbine generators for export. "We wanted to put the GE footprint into a high-potential country," says Stuart Dean, the company's Southeast Asia president.

    Scuttled Summit

    That's not to say the region doesn't pose significant challenges for investors. Red tape and corruption are rampant; Indonesia is ranked 126 out of 163 by Transparency International, behind Nigeria and Nepal. Jakarta's opaque laws have prevented a country rich in gold and copper from attracting a single new foreign mining project in a decade. In Vietnam, traffic moves at a snail's pace along roads that can barely handle motorbikes, let alone the growing number of cars. And in Thailand, tourists and investors alike have been spooked by instability as anti-government demonstrators in recent months have forced the cancellation of an ASEAN summit and closed Bangkok's airport for days.

    Those troubles, combined with the global crisis, are weighing on growth. Singapore and Thailand—which depend on exports—are contracting. The Asian Development Bank expects Vietnam to expand 4.5% this year, Indonesia 3.6%, and the Philippines 2.5%—near-recession levels for those countries. And new foreign investment in Malaysia fell 79%, to $931 million, in the first quarter, while in Vietnam investment inflows dropped 71%, to $2.8 billion.

    Governments are fighting back by formulating stimulus plans. In Thailand, where the economy could shrink as much as 4%, retail sales have held up thanks to $58 checks mailed to 10 million low-income workers as part of a three-year, $45 billion stimulus package. Chipmaker Intel (INTC) expects stimulus-driven spending on health care and education to boost sales of computers that use its chips. Retail PC sales for the five biggest economies in ASEAN grew 17% year-on-year in the first quarter, more than twice as fast as in China, research firm GFK Asia estimates.

    Up from Call Centers

    The region is also growing fast as an outsourcing center. In the Philippine city of Cebu, nestled between emerald hills and luminous coral reefs, the seven-year-old Asiatown IT Park is home to two dozen call centers and software outsourcing shops. "It's not an easy job, but the salary is pretty good," says 29-year-old Leyland Canoy, who earns $470 a month at locally owned eTelecare, where he provides tech support to customers of Internet phone company Vonage (VG).

    The Philippine outsourcing industry has been operating for years, but now it has big plans to grab as much as 10% of the global IT outsourcing market. Wipro (WIT), Accenture (ACN), HSBC (HBC), and others have opened scores of new back-office and tech-support centers in the country, helping to build an industry that saw $6 billion in revenue and employed more than 370,000 in 2008. "We are growing like crazy," says Marife Zamora, Philippines chief for Cincinnati-based Convergys (CVG), which hopes nearly to double its Philippines staff, to 20,000, this year. By 2010, industry leaders expect the sector to employ 900,000 and generate sales of $13 billion.

    That's an ambitious target, but the country is just starting to move up from call centers. "There's work in finance and accounting, and corporate back offices have yet to be tapped," says Oscar Sañez, CEO of the Business Process Association of the Philippines. Accenture, which employs about 16,000 in the country, is helping clients upgrade IT systems to keep up with financial regulatory changes in the recession-racked U.S. JPMorgan Chase (JPM), S.C. Johnson & Sons, and Siemens (SI) are expanding their back-office work there. And Wipro is doubling its Philippine staff, to 1,550, by October. "The talent is really good," says Sanjeev Bhatia, vice-president for international operations at Wipro BPO. "We are really bullish."

    Global corporations still come to Southeast Asia-to find manufacturing alternatives to China. First Solar (FSLR), of Tempe, Ariz., has chosen Kulim, Malaysia, for a $680 million solar panel manufacturing plant. British motorcycle maker Triumph is building a $73 million plant in Thailand. And Volkswagen (VLKAY) this summer is launching a joint venture to produce Touran minivans in Indonesia.

    Vietnam, though, is the primary beneficiary of the move to diversify away from China. Its proximity to the mainland and the low tariffs it enjoys in Southeast Asia thanks to ASEAN trade agreements are big pluses, as are its productive labor force and entrepreneurial culture. In April, Samsung Electronics opened a $50 million mobile-phone plant outside Hanoi. Some 700 miles to the south near Ho Chi Minh City, Jabil Circuit (JBL) is building a $100 million circuit board plant in the Saigon Hi-Tech Park. Nearby, across former rice paddies muddied by afternoon rains, workers are readying a $1 billion Intel (INTC) plant that will open next year. "We expect more high-tech companies to follow," says Rick Howarth, general manager of Intel Products Vietnam. "The global crisis may have dampened companies' desire to invest, but they are also being forced to look at new markets for growth."

    One of the region's greatest strengths is also a weakness: a growing reliance on exports, especially to China. The mainland's coastal factories use countless parts made in Southeast Asia for goods that are ultimately destined for the U.S. and Europe. When those Chinese exports get slammed, ASEAN economies suffer. "The region is excessively dependent on China, which does assembly, while ASEAN does components," says Charles Adams, a professor at Singapore's Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy. "What's needed is more intraregional trade in final goods."

    The China Connection

    There are few signs Southeast Asia will wean itself from that dependence anytime soon. Philippine outsourcers work primarily with U.S. customers. Intel plans to export most of its production from Ho Chi Minh City, since Vietnamese will buy just 3 million or so computers this year, while the Intel plant will be able to turn out hundreds of millions of chips annually. And Canon's (CAJ) $100 million laser printer facility outside Hanoi, its largest anywhere, ships its products overseas.

    An ASEAN agreement that allows free trade in autos around the region may help reduce the importance of China and the West. Ford Motor (F), for example, ships sport-utility vehicles from Thailand to Vietnam, Indonesia, and the Philippines. The free trade "gives us enough volume," says David N. Alden, president of Ford's operations in Southeast Asia, where auto sales are about the same as in India. "Thailand's market alone could not have made this a business base."

    AirAsia, a scrappy budget airline based in Malaysia, shows the potential of the regional market. In 2001, entrepreneur Tony Fernandes took a bankrupt carrier and relaunched it with just two planes flying out of Kuala Lumpur. Thanks to liberalization of air travel in much of the region, Fernandes has ramped up to 81 aircraft and 122 destinations in 16 countries—often smaller cities others had ignored. He expects to carry 24 million passengers in 2009, up 30% from last year. "We focused on building an ASEAN brand," says Fernandes. "We saw a huge opportunity no one was exploiting."

    Source - http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/09_23/b4134034737154.htm

    Happn.in Finds What’s Hot in Your City on Twitter

    Mashable, Josh Katone, June 1 - Following trending topics on Twitter (Twitter reviews) (which you can do from the Twitter home page when you're logged in, or from the search page) is a great way to find out what people are talking about around the world.

    Often, when a topic is trending on Twitter, it means that some major bit of news is unfolding about the trending term. But news that has global appeal might not be relevant to you when viewed through a local lens. A new site called Happn.in tracks trends locally on Twitter in 52 different metro areas around the world.

    Happn.in tracks local Twitter users in 52 global cities, and computes a list of the top 10 phrases used in each city every hour. The top phrases used significantly more often that hour than the last are compiled into a list of trends. As Happn.in explains, "A phrase's hotness is calculated with the ratio of the [percentage of users who used that phrase during the past hour] to the [mean percentage of users who used that phrase over the past week]. Phrases decay exponentially, and quickly drop from the list once they have stopped being used."

    Or, in other words, at any given time you should be seeing a list of the top trending topics in your area over the past hour. This is important because very often things trend locally that would be important to residents of that area, but not to the rest of the world. Without a way to track those local trends, it might be difficult to find that sort of news.

    happenin-cities

    For example, in the city of Montreal today news that the Canadiens hockey team has named a new head coach is one of the top trends. That's clearly very important to many residents of the hockey-crazed Canadian city, but not very trend-worthy outside of that geographic area. If you live in Montreal and had no way of tracking local trends, you might miss that news on Twitter.

    Happen.in offers a special Twitter account for each of the 52 cities it currently tracks, allowing interested users to get automatic trend updates via Twitter every few hours.

    Local trend data could be very valuable for research purposes - for example, being able to track how information about a specific topic spread across Twitter within certain areas or from place to place. Happn.in's Labs page offers a glimpse into that potential, letting users load up trends for any past date (back to May 12, when the site launched). Additionally, more comprehensive data sets are available to researchers on request.

    In the future, Happn.in plans to extend trend tracking beyond local metro areas to other groups of users, such as people with common interests, or presumably, the people you follow. Being able to track trending topics within a specific, predefined subset of topically-linked users could be infinitely valuable in terms of exposing relevant breaking news on Twitter.

    Source - http://mashable.com/2009/06/01/happenin/

    China Censors: The Tiananmen Square Anniversary Will Not Be Tweeted

    Wired, Kim Zetter, June 2 - Chinese authorities have instituted censoring measures to block access to several internet sites and services in anticipation of Thursday's 20th anniversary of the Tianenmen Square protest and massacre.

    The censoring began at 5pm local time on Tuesday as access to sites was blocked, though users could still reportedly reach some of them through proxies, VPNs and third-party desktop clients.

    The blocked sites include Twitter, Flickr, and Microsoft's Hotmail, according to the Telegraph. FoxNews added the Huffington Post, Life Journal and MSNs Space blogging tool to the list. BBC viewers in China also saw their screens black out when the news service broadcast stories about the anniversary, and foreign news crews have been barred from filming in the square. Readers of the Financial Times and Economist magazine found stories about Tiananmen ripped from their pages. Authorities also plan to begin cracking down on unapproved internet cafes, according to reports from state media.

    tiananmen

    Photo: A Chinese policeman grabs a protester in Beijing's Tiananmen Square on the 15th anniversary of a bloody military crackdown on democracy protesters, Friday June 4, 2004. (AP Photo/Greg Baker)

    The blocked sites are just a few among thousands that China's censors have targeted since the beginning of last year as a string of anniversaries is marked, including the 50th anniversary of the Tibet uprising. In April, access to YouTube was blocked after someone posted images of China's military police beating Tibetan monks.

    Twitter became popular in China after last year's earthquake in Sichuan when people used it to get out reports of the devastation and signal news of their safety to friends and family members. The Times of London recently noted that Chinese users of Twitter can write terms that would normally be blocked if they typed them on other web sites, such as "6/4″ for the date of the Tiananmen massacre or "Charter 08," referring to a document published online last year by a group of intellectuals that calls for greater freedom and democracy.

    As a result, the Times says, bloggers have been anticipating the blocking of Twitter.

    "Twitter is a new thing in China. The censors need time to figure out what it is," blogger Michael Anti told the China-based blog Danwei.org. "So enjoy the last happy days of twittering before the fate of YouTube descends on it one day."

    He noted that given the nature of the Chinese language, a Chinese tweet could crowd in much more meaning in the 140 characters allowed by Twitter per message, than can English users. "140 Chinese characters can make up all the full elements of a news piece with the '5 Ws' (Who, What, Where, When and HoW)," he said. "But the joy of the Chinese Twitterland is more fragile, and I hope that it will live longer in this country."

    Source - http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2009/06/china-censors-internet-before-tiananmen-square-anniversary/

    Jun 1, 2009

    The Facebook Controversy in Indonesia

    Posted by: Bruce Einhorn on June 01

    Indonesians still seem to be talking about the suggestion by some Muslim clerics last week that the government should regulate Facebook to prevent users in Indonesia from trading gossip or accessing porn. The Jakarta Post on Saturday ran a piece by Ary Hermawan with the great headline, "Thou Shall Not Facebook." (Here's a link, via UCLA's AsiaMedia site.) Peter Gelling, writing in the Global Post, has another useful take on the story. Some eye openers: According to Gelling, Indonesia has the world's fifth-largest Facebook population, behind the U.S., Britain, France and Italy. (This despite the fact that Internet penetration in Indonesia last year was just 10.5% of the total population.) Moreover, according to Gelling, Facebook has become "the most visited website" in the country.



    Luckily for Facebook, the suggestion that the Indonesian government crack down on the social networking site seems to be going nowhere. The story does highlight, though, the potential that the company has in a part of the world that often gets forgotten. In Asia, China and India are the big markets that matter. But Facebook is an also-ran in China, where local companies rule, and it's a laggard in India, too, well behind Google's Orkut. (Thanks to Thomas Crampton's blog for linking to a survey by comScore on the Indian market.) Facebook seems to have hit fertile ground in Indonesia, a market with plenty of room still to grow - objections from some religious leaders notwithstanding.

    Source - http://www.businessweek.com/globalbiz/blog/eyeonasia/archives/2009/06/the_facebook_co.html

    Worldwide Incidents Tracking System



    The Worldwide Incidents Tracking System is the National Counterterrorism Center's database of terrorist incidents.

    According to NCTC definition, terrorism occurs when groups or individuals acting on political motivation deliberately or recklessly attack civilians/non-combatants or their property and the attack does not fall into another special category of political violence, such as crime, rioting, or tribal violence.

    Posted via web from John's posterous

    Documents of the Day - No. 1, June 1, 2009

    These choice documents are all free, full-text, and open source. They all fall within the main topics covered by this blog (listed in the blog logo).

    National Intelligence: A Consumer's Guide
    http://dni.gov/reports/IC_Consumers_Guide_2009.pdf

    Facebook and Academic Performance
    http://www.uic.edu/htbin/cgiwrap/bin/ojs/index.php/fm/article/view/2498/2181

    Indonesia: Radicalization of the Palembang Group
    http://www.crisisgroup.org/library/documents/asia/south_east_asia/b92_indonesia___radicalisation_of_the_palembang_group.pdf

    Timor-Leste: The Dragon's Newest Friend
    http://irasec.com/components/com_irasec/media/upload/publication_file_fr_287.pdf

    That should be enough provocation for one day. I will try to make these posted research searches a regular blog feature.

    Approval of U.S. Leadership Up in Some Arab Countries

    Julie Ray and Mohamed Younis, Washington, D.C., June 1 -- President Barack Obama may find audiences in many Arab countries more willing to listen when he addresses the Muslim world Thursday from Cairo, Egypt. New Gallup Polls conducted in 11 Arab countries show that although approval of U.S. leadership remains generally low, ratings are up in 8 countries including Egypt.

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    Throughout much of President George W. Bush's second term, Gallup found U.S. leadership approval ratings in many Arab countries at times in the single digits and among the lowest in the world. Declines in approval were evident in several Arab countries over time, and in some nations, Egypt in particular, views soured significantly toward the end of Bush's term.

    Surveys conducted roughly two months into Obama's presidency show median approval of U.S. leadership across the 11 Arab countries surveyed at 25%, ranging from a low of 7% in the Palestinian Territories to a high of 56% in Mauritania.

    In eight Arab countries, including Egypt, Gallup recorded double-digit increases in approval from the last measurements of Bush's term. These upsurges, which ranged from 11 percentage points in Syria to 23 points in Tunisia, may reflect positive reception to Obama and his administration's public outreach to the Muslim world. The president's overtures toward pulling U.S. troops out of Iraq and closing Guantanamo Bay prison, two actions that respondents in previous Gallup surveys said could help improve the United States' image, also may have resonated with residents.

    While approval is up in a number of countries, it is important to note that considerable numbers of respondents appear to be reserving their judgment or just didn't know enough about the new leadership in the United States to express an opinion. In countries such as Saudi Arabia, Syria, Tunisia, Lebanon, the Palestinian Territories, and Yemen, the percentage of respondents answering "don't know/refused" increased at least twofold.

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    Palestinians More Disapproving Than Before

    Approval ratings took a negative turn in the Palestinian Territories, dropping from 13% to 7%. Perhaps related to Obama's silence during Israel's attacks on Gaza shortly before he took office, Palestinians grew more uncertain about the leadership of the United States between 2008 and 2009. Disapproval of U.S. leadership during this period remained steady at about 80%, but the percentages of Palestinians who did not have an opinion doubled from 6% to 12%. It's important to note that when Gallup asked Palestinians in 2008 whether it would make a difference who was elected president of the United States, a substantial majority (72%) said it would not.

    In two other Arab countries surveyed, Yemen and Lebanon, approval ratings in 2009 didn't change significantly from ratings in 2008.

    Bottom Line

    Gallup Polls show that Obama will deliver his message Thursday with an arguably stronger basis of support than his predecessor ever had in many Arab countries. Nonetheless, approval remains low and underscores the work that remains as Obama seeks to pave a new, more positive way forward. Given the higher percentages of people in many Arab countries who do not have an opinion about U.S. leadership, Gallup surveys later this year in these same countries may provide a clearer picture of public opinion about the administration and its efforts to move relations forward.

    In addition to policy decisions on matters of concern to the Arab world, Obama's Mideast policy will continue to figure prominently in future relations. The administration's reaction to Israel's shifts in rhetoric on the negotiation of a two-state solution will likely have a bearing on future views of U.S. leadership.

    Survey Methods

    Results are based on face-to-face interviews with approximately 1,000 adults, aged 15 and older, conducted in February and March 2009 in Egypt, the Palestinian Territories, Syria, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Tunisia, Algeria, Mauritania, Yemen, Lebanon, and Kuwait. Non-Arabs were excluded from the sample in Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Kuwait; samples in these countries are nationally representative of Arab adults. For results based on the total sample of national adults, one can say with 95% confidence that the maximum margin of sampling error ranged from a low of ±3.3 percentage points in Tunisia to a high of ±3.8 percentage points in Yemen. The margin of error reflects the influence of data weighting. In addition to sampling error, question wording and practical difficulties in conducting surveys can introduce error or bias into the findings of public opinion polls.


    Source - http://www.gallup.com/poll/118940/Approval-Leadership-Arab-Countries.aspx?CSTS=alert

    May 31, 2009

    Mati Ketawa Ala Indonesia: SBY Berboedi

    Tim sukses SBY sedang pusing melakukan pembenahan di Palembang. Alasannya, ketika mereka memunculkan jargon "SBY berbudi," mereka tidak memikirkan kalau di Palembang arti kata Budi = menipu/berbohong.

    Jadi artinya SBY berbudi = SBY berbohong, sehingga slogan-slogan di Palembang yang naik cetak harus dibatalkan semua.

    Oleh karena itulah orang Palembang lebih suka SBY berpasangan dengan Hatta Rajasa agar jargonnya jadi "SBY berjasa."

    Tetapi masih untung SBY tidak berpasangan dengan Salahudin karena jargonnya jadi "SBY bersalah."

    Dan juga PAN tidak jadi mengajukan ketumnya Sutrisno Bachir karena jadi "SBY berachir."

    Namun siapapun "ber sama nya, tetap SBY depannya"....termasuk Rani kalo jadi cawapres menjadi "SBY berani."

    Source - http://www.kabarinews.com/article/Berita_Indonesia/Lelucon/Mati_Ketawa_Ala_Indonesia/33165

    Published 05/27/2009 - 5:39 a.m. GMT

    May 30, 2009

    Banned: First Altantuya, Now Perak

    Athi Veeranggan | May 30, 09 4:38pm | Malaysiakini

    It is clear that any mention of a possible link between Prime Minister Najib Abdul Razak and murdered Mongolian woman Altantuya Shaariibuu can land a person into trouble.

    PKR supreme council member and fiery orator Badrul Hisham Shaharin had to spend nearly five hours at the Central Seberang Perai police headquarters yesterday to answer questions over his by-election campaign speech in Penanti on Monday where he mentioned ‘Altantuya’.

    Now, however, one cannot also link Najib to the four-month political impasse in Perak or you can be investigated for sedition and criminal defamation.

    Senior DAP leader Lim Kit Siang found out about this after a report was made by the police and a statement was taken on the matter.

    At a 3,000-strong by-election campaign rally in Guar Perahu, Penanti last Sunday, Lim accused Najib of engineering the Perak power grab.

    The Ipoh Timur parliamentarian was quizzed by investigating officer ASP Norazizi Saad for nearly an hour from 11.30am today at his house in Island Park, Georgetown.

    Lim said he was being investigated for sedition and criminal defamation in blaming Najib for the Perak political stalemate.

    He added that he was being probed following a report lodged by an on-duty police officer at the Sunday rally.

    “If I am charged and found guilty, I will be imprisoned … simple as that,” the DAP supremo told a press conference, flanked by his son and Penang Chief Minister Guan Eng, DAP national chairperson Karpal Singh and several DAP local leaders and assemblypersons.

    Even Najib’s father did not do this.

    The senior Lim cautioned that the two-month-old Najib’s premiership was fast descending into a “police state” and into an “era of darkness”.

    He cited police crackdowns on candlelight vigils, hunger strikes, wearing black, the raid on DAP headquarters, and the harassment of Pakatan Rakyat leaders and social activists to back his claim. Over 160 people have been arrested in the past three weeks.

    “This is a serious violation of human rights and civil liberties,” said the veteran opposition leader, the only opposition parliamentarian who has faced off the country’s six prime ministers.

    “I don’t blame the police. They are acting on the directives from a higher-up power,” he said, suggesting that the Barisan Nasional government was increasingly spooked by the rapid loss of public confidence.

    Kit Siang recalled that even Najib’s late father, former premier Abdul Razak Abdul Rahman, had never investigated him for sedition or criminal defamation despite engaging in many political duels with him back in the 70s.

    “We are facing a major political crisis at the same time when the country is facing its biggest economic crisis,” lamented the senior politician.

    Guan Eng, meanwhile, criticised the police for wasting their resources on petty political issues, and ticked them off for increasingly acting like “bodyguards to BN rather than to the people.”

    Like Chegu Bard, as Badrul Hisham is fondly known, Kit Siang was slapped with a police order yesterday under Section 111 of Criminal Procedure Code (CPC) requesting him to be present at the Central Seberang Perai police headquarters this morning.

    However, the DAP leader had asked Norazizi to record his statement at his Penang home.

    Karpal, who was also at the press conference after Kit Siang’s sesssion with the police, slammed the police for applying Section 111 on his DAP colleague.

    The MP-cum-lawyer said that such an order could only be issued after a witness had failed to turn up at the designated police station to give a statement.

    Karpal: Charge Khir Toyo instead

    Karpal instead called on the attorney-general to press charges against former Selangor menteri besar Dr Mohd Khir Toyo for taking part in an illegal Umno Youth rally in Waterfall, Penang on Feb 13.

    The demonstration was to include a march from Waterfall to Karpal’s house nearby in Jalan Utama. However, it was called off after police warned Umno Youth members that severe action would be taken against them.

    Mohd Khir and Permatang Pauh Umno Youth chief Mohd Zaidi was later escorted to the Georgeown police headquarters for their statements to be recorded. They were later released.

    “It was an illegal assembly. Why none of them were charged?” asked Karpal, the Bukit Gelugor MP.

    According to Kit Siang, he was approached by police officers at a Pakatan Rakyat rally in Berapit last night where he was informed about the investigation. At the same time, a police order was delivered to his house in Persiaran Besi, Island Park.

    Police also served a separate notice to Chegu Bard at his homes in Seremban and Bangi on Thursday when he was in Perak.

    During the Guar Perahu ceramah, Kit Siang had condemned the police raid on DAP headquarters in Petaling Jaya as “a shameful incident”, and called on Penanti voters to teach Najib a political lesson.

    Pakatan candidate Mansor Othman from PKR is up against three independent candidates – Aminah Abdullah, Kamarul Ramizu Idris and Nai Khan Ari, in Penanti by-election.

    Campaigning will end at midnight and polling is tomorrow.


    Excerpt -http://blog.limkitsiang.com/2009/05/30/are-there-enough-courts-and-prisons/#

    May 29, 2009

    Indonesian Presidential and Vice Presidential Candidates

    The three campaigns now have their own websites. Timothy Simamora kindly provided the URLs to me via Facebook. Here they are. I've appended the Alexa traffic ranking for today in each case. The rankings add another set of numbers to public opinion polls in Indonesia. Lower numbers mean more traffic. Like most of those polls, it looks like a walkover for SBY-Boediono. Their site gets a surprising high level of traffic for an Indonesian political site.


    Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono-Boediono
    http://sbypresidenku.com/
    Alexa ranking - 59,778

    Megawati Soekarnoputri-Prabowo Subianto
    http://megaprabowo.com/
    Alexa ranking - 1,563,135

    Jusuf Kalla-Wiranto
    http://jk-wiranto-2009.com/
    Alexa ranking - 3,364,705

    Looks like money, and even long-established branch networks, don't conquer all. But iit remains a politics of personality system.

    May 28, 2009

    Bottom of the Blog Wonders

    Today I began rounding out our choice of news and other gadgets which appear at the bottom of Starting Points, always after the regular postings (my originals, re-posts from others). You have to scroll down to see all these goodies. They're not just cute. They're an integral part of this blog.

    So is the right sidebar, to which I also added a few more gadgets today, all designed to make your online life easier and a little more fun. (Yeah, I know some of the diverse postings here can get a little heavy.) There will many new link headers in the sidebar in coming days.

    Here's a rundown of today's new sidebar gadgets:

    • Translate This Blog or Any Other Webpage (new)
    • Dictionary Help Tools (new)
    • Sidebar Search Menus (new)
    • Google Phrase Translator (new)
    And here's a complete list of all that's now at the bottom, since the original posting explaining what I was doing down there has now gone into the blog's March 2009 archive:

    • Breaking News Customized for This Blog (unique, covers all areas mentioned in the blog logo)
    • BBC News (new)
    • Al Jazeera Video News (new)
    • TwitterSearch (a very easy way to get the best of Twitter fast)
    • Many Other Social Networks (new, may not yet cover your favorite)
    • Easy Wikipedia Search
    • Google Mini Search
    • Google Tools (new)
    • Search YouTube
    I re-named some of these gadgets to better reflect what they do. Collectively, they're a unique set of tools which to a significant degree replace typical blog postings and facilitate net search- and-explore processes. Try out as many as you can. The learning curve is pretty flat. Play around -- you can't break anything.

    Malaysia Ban on 'Allah' Upheld

    The Catholic church in Malaysia has failed in a bid to suspend a government ban on the use of the word "Allah" in its weekly newsletter after the court rejected its application.

    The high court ruling on Thursday effectively upheld the federal government's 2007 ban, which has become a symbol of religious tensions in the country.

    The court will hear the newspaper's original bid to review the administrative order on July 7.

    The government directive bars non-Muslims from translating God as "Allah" in their literature, saying it would confuse Muslims in this plural, Muslim-majority country.

    The Herald, which reports on Catholic community news in English, Malay, Tamil and Mandarin, tried to get the order suspended while waiting for a court decision on the ban's legality.

    'Status quo'

    Lawrence Andrew, a Catholic priest and the editor of The Herald, told Al Jazeera they had asked to suspend the ministerial directive until the court rules on whether the ban is legal.

    "Since the status quo remains we will not use the word "Allah" in our publication. In fact we have not been using it since our January edition."

    The government had previously warned The Herald, which has a circulation of 12,000 limited to Catholics, that its permit could be revoked if it continued to use the word "Allah" for God in its Malay-language section.

    The section is read mostly by indigenous tribes across the country who converted to Christianity decades ago.

    In 2007, the government issued a warning over The Herald's use of the word "Allah", which officials had said could only be used to refer to the Muslim God.

    Christian groups say the ban is unconstitutional, arguing that the word "Allah" predates Islam.

    Print publications in Malaysia require a permit which is renewed every year, and is subject to conditions set by the government.

    State laws

    In multi-racial Malaysia, the government considers religion a sensitive matter and often classify related matters as a security issue.

    S Selvarajah, a lawyer for The Herald, told Al Jazeera the court said about 10 Malaysian states had similar prohibitions on non-Muslims' use of the word "Allah".

    He said the judge explained that suspending the ban "would tantamount to the court aiding the infringement of those provisions".

    "But it [the ruling] has no real prejudice as such because The Herald, in compliance with the ban, had stopped using the word since January," he said.

    "We'll wait for July when the court will hear the parties and decide on the matter once and for all."

    About 60 per cent of the country's 27 million people are Muslim Malays, with one-third of them ethnic Chinese and Indians, and many who are Christians.

    The minorities have often said their constitutional right to practice their religion freely has come under threat from the Malay Muslim-dominated government.

    The government has repeatedly denied any discrimination against the country's ethnic minorities.

    http://english.aljazeera.net/news/asia-pacific/2009/05/200952894123668106.html

    May 27, 2009

    East Timor Resisting Legalized Abortion, UN Committee Calls Current Policies "Discriminatory"

    NEW YORK, MAY 25, 2009 Zenit.org - The predominantly Catholic nation of East Timor is under pressure from the United Nations for its laws that penalize abortion, even in the case of rape and incest.

    The Catholic Family and Human Rights Institute reported last week that East Timor's policies are being scrutinized by the U.N. committee responsible for overseeing compliance with the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women, which will meet for its 44th session in July.

    The country's new penal code, which will take effect at the beginning of June, continues to penalize the practice of abortion, though it adds an exception for cases where the mother's health is in jeopardy.


    A report from East Timor to the committee states that abortion is a "sensitive issue" in the country, "especially given the traumatic events of recent years" when a 24-year Indonesian occupation enforced family planning programs that were "widely resented" by the people.

    The report notes that in the Timorese culture, contraception is generally unpopular, as both men and women see it as "fueling promiscuity and sexually-transmitted diseases while decreasing the number of children."

    The Catholic Family and Human Rights Institute stated that despite general support in East Timor for the continued criminalization of abortion, several non-governmental organizations such as the Alola Foundation and Rede Feto, with the support of the United Nations Population Fund and the United Nations Children's Fund, have been lobbying for more liberalized abortion laws.

    It also reports that under the guise of promoting "gender equality," the U.N. committee is pushing for the "modification of customs and practices" regarded by them as "discriminatory."

    Additionally, the U.N. body responds with opposition or indifference to Timor's reference to their long-standing customs, distrust of foreign influence, and the "reproductive rights" abuses suffered by Timorese women under Indonesia's rule.

    The Timorese report states that the nation values gender distinctions as they help to protect the integrity of the family, as well as the well-being of women.

    http://easttimorlegal.blogspot.com/2009/05/east-timor-resisting-legalized-abortion.html

    Fumbled Flag Has Timorese Worried

    May 26th, 2009 by The Lost Boy

    The people of Timor-Leste celebrated seven years of independence last Wednesday with a day of parades, music and festivities in Dili, the capital city

    Only a few bloggers marked the occasion. Sandra Martz wrote on her blog, “On May 20, 2002, following 25 years of violent domination by the Indonesian military which was aided and abetted by the US under Gerald Ford and Henry Kissinger, Timor-Leste became an independent nation.”

    It was, however, a minute of awkwardness during the flag-lowering ceremony last week that has been the talk of town ever since.

    It happened at about 5 pm – the national anthem played while the flag of Timor-Leste was lowered in front of President Jose Ramos-Horta, Prime Minister Xanana Gusmao, police commander Longuinhos Monteiro and about 1,000 onlookers.

    As two honour guards ceremoniously folded the flag, one of them suddenly fumbled and dropped his end.

    Pausing for a moment, the guard recovered to pick up his end of the flag and kiss it, but continued to bugle his folding duties.

    Radio Nomad of Notes from Abroad was the first blogger to notice the significance of the accident:

    Many Timorese are superstitious and that includes issues concerning the flag. Some believe what happened yesterday is a bad omen — signalling trouble ahead.

    I was quickly reminded this morning by colleagues that on May 20, 2002, when the flag was raised for the first time at Government Palace over an independent [Timor-Leste] – the flag did not flutter. Within months, they said, new violence broke out.

    Timorese Josh Trindade, 34, independent consultant and researcher, says the Timorese are a traditional people who read a lot into symbols such as this.

    “We read small signs from nature – from the birds, the trees, the moon, the sun. Everyone is saying that the flag being dropped is a bad sign. Most people interpret it as a sign of conflict,” he said.

    The colours of Timor-Leste’s flag – yellow, black, red and white – symbolize colonialism, overcoming obscurantism, the struggle for liberation and peace.

    The national flag was based on that of the Revolutionary Front for an Independent Timor-Leste (FRETILIN) party, who were heavily involved in Timor-Leste’s fight for independence and now sit in opposition to Prime Minister Xanana Gusmao’s coalition government.

    “The flag was chosen by a political party. The flag doesn’t represent the country – it represents politics. This is a sign to get a new flag,” added Trindade.

    An anonymous commenter on the Timor Lorosae Nacao blog raised the question, “When is Timor-Leste going to have their own flag and push aside the FRETILIN flag? Because this flag remembers every prisoner who FRETILIN assassinated during the civil war, some of them were buried alive.”

    Maria Neto, 42, who has six children and works as a maid in Dili, saw the flag being dropped.

    “Many of the people there held their breath and wondered what would happen. At the moment I saw it I thought this was a bad sign – there’s going to be something bad again,” she said.

    Timorese people voted almost 80% in favour of independence in 1999 after a bloody 24-year occupation by the Indonesian military.

    A country with a recent history of conflict, Timor-Leste’s flag has become a sacred item and a symbol of the thousands of people who died during the struggle for independence.

    Blogger Young Activist wrote, “Seven years ago today, in one of the greatest victories for the human rights movement, Timor-Leste’s independence from Indonesia was finally formally recognized. Although the nation declared its independence after Portugal’s renunciation of its claims to the territory in 1975 the colony was promptly invaded by American-backed Indonesia.

    “For the next two and a half decades Timor-Leste would be subjected to occupation, starvation, torture, military rule, repression and the largest proportional genocide since the Holocaust, a genocide that left over 100,000 people decade.”

    Timorese blogger Isaias Abilio Caldas remembered the devastation of that time in a blog post on Renova Timor:

    “The whole country had just been laid to waste. Schools, hospitals, government buildings and private homes were razed to the ground by fire set by the Indonesian military and Pro-Indonesian militias. Corpses were found everywhere, half-buried or unburied at all leaving them as the nourishment of dogs, cows, flies and wild birds.”

    Jeremias da Costa, a student at the National University of Timor-Leste, says that the dropping of the flag is a sign that all is not well with the nation’s leaders.

    “The incident that happened [at the ceremony] was a big one. It showed people and the community that some leaders who reign in this country are ruling the country with their dishonesty,” he said.

    FRETILIN leader Mari Alkatiri told reporters on Thursday that the fallen flag could be a sign that the end is near for Prime Minister Gusmao and his coalition government.

    Later that day, Gusmao apologised for the flag incident.

    “On behalf of the government I would like to apologize for that. It was not the fault of the young man or the government,” he said.

    “We can only promise that next time they won’t wear gloves so the flag won’t slip out of their hands again when they fold it,” added the prime minister.

    Despite this, Radio Nomad says people are still worried:

    “The reaction to yesterday’s incident shows just how on edge people are — it was just over a year ago that an assassination attempt was made on the president.”

    Maid Neto added, “Of course people are worried – even me. We don’t see that happen often. It’s the flag of the nation and when it falls it tells you that our leaders are not united. It tells us that there will be something bad in the future.”

    http://whatismatt.com/fumbled-flag-has-timorese-worried/


    Is Posterous the New TwitPic?

    Image sharing via Twitter just got more complicated, or easier, depending on how you look at it. Sure we already showed you 5 ways to share images on Twitter, and suggested that Tweetphoto could rival TwitPic, but it looks as if Twitter’s most popular image sharing service is getting some healthy competition courtesy of an unexpected battler — Posterous.

    Posterous? You say. Well yes. The simple site that’s great for posting anything by email has managed to sneak its way into the Twitter for photos space. The service is now announcing that no less than 11 of the most popular Twitter clients — including some of our favorites like Seesmic Desktop, Tweetie for Mac, and Twitterific — now support image uploads courtesy of Posterous.

    With today’s news, Posterous has done what very few Twitter image sharing services have managed to do: get mass adoption by user-favorite Twitter clients. Even though we know that TweetDeck is missing from the list, we can’t help but be impressed by the array of mobile, web, and desktop Twitter clients that are now on the Posterous band wagon.



    Interestingly enough, Posterous had the gumption to assert, in a previous blog post on the capabilities of their API, that they are indeed in direct competition with TwitPic.

    Now we understand why Posterous so boldly claimed that, “We allow you to upload multiple photos and you get an image gallery. We offer the full size download of the image, or a zip file of multiple images. It posts to *your* Posterous site, which may have a custom domain and Google Analytics. And we autopost not just to Twitter, but also Facebook, Flickr, and many blogs. Oh, and TwitPic is down all the time. That’s no fun.”

    Essentially by using Posterous in lieu of TwitPic, you’ll be creating a photo blog of your shared Twitter images, without sacrificing comments that can be posted as @replies or image analytics. To see what a Twitter photo blog of images posted to Posterous can look like, have a look at Rainn Wilson’s Posterous.

    The full list of Twitter clients now supporting Posterous image posting is below. See any that catch your fancy, or have a Posterous wish list of your own? Leave us a comment with the details.

    - Tweetie for Mac
    - Seesmic Desktop for Adobe Air
    - Destroy Twitter for Adobe Air
    - PowerTwitter for Firefox (Firefox reviews)
    - PeopleBrowsr
    - Twinbox for Microsoft Outlook
    - Twitterific for iPhone
    - Pichirp Pro for iPhone
    - Twitterville for iPhone
    - Simply Tweet for iPhone
    - Gravity for Nokia N60

    http://mashable.com/2009/05/26/posterous-twitter/