30 September 2009

Martabe set to produce in 2011

Hongkong-based mining company G-Resources Group Ltd. may begin producing silver and gold from the Martabe mine in North Sumatra as early as 2011, a senior official said.

"They expect to begin production within two years," Bambang Setiawan, director general for coal, minerals, and geothermal energy at the Energy and Mineral Resources Ministry, told reporters Thursday.

The Martabe mine is a gold and silver development project located about 40 kilometers from the port of Sibolga, North Sumatera. The mine covers a total area of 1,639 square kilometers.

The project was established under a so-called "sixth generation" contract of work (COW) signed in April 1997.

The mine is estimated to contain 2.2 million ounces of gold reserves and 29.7 million ounces of silver reserves.

G-Resources has begun construction for the project, which, once completed, is expected to produce gold at a rate of 250,000 ounces per annum and silver at 3 million ounces per annum.

G-Resources acquired a 95 percent interest in the Martabe project from Australia's OZ minerals in May this year. G-Resources stated that it had raised US$587 million to fund the acquisition of the development of the Martabe project.

The anticipated total development capital expenditures of the project stands at $360 million, of which around $76 million has already been spent, the company added.

Earlier this week, G-Resources announced it had found "outstanding high grade" gold and silver at the Martabe site over the past ten months.

"Drilling results confirm that significant potential exists to expand the existing resource base of 5.9 million ounces of gold and 61 million ounces of silver," G-Resources said in the statement.

G-Resources says it is seeking to rapidly increase production to more than one million ounces of gold annually through exploration of the large and highly prospective contract of work area and through the acquisition of other quality gold assets.

29 September 2009

Response Of Noordin M Top's Family In Malaysia

Indonesian Police's Special Forces, Densus 88 Anti-terror raid a house in the village of Beji, District Kedu, Temanggung regency, Central Java, on Saturday 8 August 2009. With full strength, Densus 88 intended to arrest one man, Noordin M Top, one of the top leader of Jemaah Islamiya (JI) linked to Al-Qaeda led by Osama Bin Laden. In the ambush, one person who died is suspected as Noordin M Top.

When asked for responses, one of the family of Noordin M Top's first wife, Siti Rahma at Sungai Tiram, Johor Bahru, Malaysia, refused.

"We do not have the report yet. The information just come from you," said a woman with a head scarf behind the window to tvOne reporter, Saturday 8 August 2009. When asked for her name, the woman said nothing. Then, when she was confirmed whether that she is Siti Rahma, the woman disputed. "her sister," she said.

Meanwhile, people around Pesantren Lukmanul Hakim (Boarding School), where Noordin M Top had been the teacher, refused to confirm. Similarly with people around the house of Noordin's parent. They fear will be arrested by the Malaysian police if provides information about Noordin M Top.

After the reports about Noordin circulate, Malaysian police await information concerning this leader of Jamaah Islamiyah (JI) in Asia. Chief of the Malaysian Police , General Tan Sri Musa Hassan said Malaysia to offer assistance for Indonesia, if the man was killed in the incident is Noordin M Top.

"I can not give a response concerning the incident, I do not get information from our colleagues in Indonesia," he said as quoted Bernama News Agency, Saturday 8 August 2009.

However, Musa Hassan said, Malaysia still in touch with the Indonesian police. "These include identifiying people who was killed in the incident, is he Noordin or not," he added.

Noordin's first wife, Siti Rahma came from Riau, one of Indonesia's province in Sumatera. She is the sibling of Mohammad Rois, Jamaah Islamiyah member who is also a teacher at the Luqmanul Hakiem, a boarding school where Noordin M Top once taught.

Currently Siti Rahma and her family known living in the area of Sungai Tiram, Johor Bahru, Malaysia. They live in the neighbor country began in 2005. According to information, for the recent years, Noordin's family in Malaysia sells pastry to survive. Noordin's parent-in-law, Rusdi resume his old job.

Post Lukmanul Hakim closed, law and Noordin's wife live in Riau and settling at Pendekar Bahan that is about 85 kilometers from Bagan Siapi-api capital of Rokan Hilir, or about 290 km from Pekanbaru, Riau, Sumatera.

In addition to the Siti Rahma, Noordin also married Munfiatun, a woman from Pecangakan Kulon, Jepara, Central Java.

The last, Noordin's newest wife traced in Cilacap, Central Java. In Cilacap, Noordin married Ariani Rahma alias Arina, maiden from Pesuruan Village, District Binangun, Cilacap, Central Java.

28 September 2009

DNA technology could help save endangered forest species

New technology is providing some hope to those battling to stop Indonesia's massively devastating and hugely costly illegal logging activity.

In recent years, unlawful forest destruction has resulted in undermining the rule of law and deprived the state of substantial revenues. The World Bank estimates the illicit practice costs more than a staggering Rp 100 trillion each year.

It has serious economic and social implications for the poor and disadvantaged and the threat to ecosystems and biodiversity is enormous, with very little long-term advantage for anyone other than those who are responsible for the plunder and smuggling of timber.

There is no doubt that the use of endangered wood for elegant furniture, timber-lined walls and hardwood floors in the West is fueling this appalling trade, which is threatening to wipe out whole species of trees and precious rainforests, and the livelihoods of millions of Indonesians dependent on the forests for their survival.

Despite efforts from the government to stamp it out, the destruction of massive amounts of irreplaceable Indonesian rainforest appears to continue unabated.

Environmentalists have long been attempting to pressure the authorities to do more to stop illegal logging but a key challenge has always been tracking the origin of timber.

But now one organization has developed an innovative process for identifying exactly where each piece of wood comes from by using DNA technology.

Singapore-based Double Helix Tracking Technologies (DHTT) extracts DNA samples in the forest and builds databases. DNA tests then enable them to identify precisely which forest a piece of timber actually comes from.

In effect, this technology should put the prevention of use of illegally traded timber in the hands of customers.

Various measures are in place to curb illegal logging with a plethora of bodies having been established by civil society stakeholders and private sector representatives from timber-producing countries, in partnership with the World Bank.

The United States must take the credit for taking the first important step in addressing the illegal logging issue by extending the century-old wildlife protection law to include timber.

The so-called Lacey Act made it mandatory for an importer to declare the origin of their timber. If found guilty of illegal logging, the importer is subject to heavy fines.

But this law has proven tough to enforce with the timber industry being dependent on an old-fashioned paper-based system for traceability, which is prone to fraud.

DHTT's DNA database is the first step in creating a system to irrefutably prove the origin of timber, and this could be used to enforce the Lacey Act. A perfect example is the merbau species, a resilient red hardwood that is one of the most valuable timbers in Southeast Asia because of the exquisite hardwood flooring that can be produced from it. It can also be used in high-quality furniture production.

Merbau was once found in many parts of the world. Today, the only significant quantities of commercially produced merbau come from the Indonesian province of Papua, and in Papua New Guinea.

"Illegal logging and the associated rampant trade in merbau means that most areas where the timber used to be found have none left, and what there is left is also facing extinction," says Greenpeace China's Liu Bing.

Liu explains that at the current legal rate of logging, merbau will have mostly disappeared within a single felling cycle, which is 35 years. If you take illegal factors into account, merbau's extinction moves much closer.

In 2005, the Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA) and its Indonesian partner, Telapak, uncovered crime syndicates that were removing 300,000 cubic meters of stolen merbau logs every month.

Western manufacturers and retailers buy the timber from Indonesia suppliers who claim they are legally harvesting the merbau.

Greenpeace maintains that hardly any of the merbau being sold has been properly legally certified and that most of the wood flooring made from the species is the result of illegal logging.

China plays a major role in this complex trading web because it is where most of the wood flooring in the world is actually made before being re-exported to the West.

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has established a joint team to try to stop illegal logging in provinces such as Riau, Kalimantan and Papua. But the success has been compromised by all-too-common rifts between government agencies.

Also, research undertaken by the EIA and Telapak has uncovered wide disregard in Malaysia and Singapore for Indonesian legislation aimed at stopping illegal loggers; the EIA believes the forest crisis is being made worse by countries such as these, which it accuses of "green-washing" illegally cut rainforest timber from neighbors such as Indonesia.

Let's hope that the deployment of DNA technology can seriously help to eliminate the hurdles that get in the way of halting the devastation caused by illegal logging.

27 September 2009

Idul Fitri, religious symbol, and liberation

Indonesian Muslims are celebrating Idul Fitri. Most commemorate it by gathering with their family. It is the normal circumstance that many people go back to their village of origin.

The Idul Fitri tradition is marked by silaturahmi (strengthening relations) among residents. They visit each other and shake hands while apologizing.

The relations become stronger this Idul Fitri. Hatred, revenge and envy disappear, and are changed into happiness and brotherhood.

It is common that Idul Fitri is described as a holy day in which all Muslims will be forgiven by God. Etymologically, *id means back or return, and fitr means holy, sacred or innocent.

Muslims believe that on this day, they are the same as babies who are innocent, because God erases their sins.

In general, Idul Fitri can be categorized as a symbolization of lots of values, such as brotherhood, forgiveness, sympathy, good relations, tolerance and mutual understanding.

According to noted Muslim scholar, the late Nurcholish Madjid, God often symbolized messages that He would like to deliver to people. Descriptions of paradise and of hell in the Koran are some of the obvious examples.

Furthermore, Islamic rituals such as prayer, fasting and pilgrimage are also symbolizations of good values that God would like to convey. In other words, Islam provided Muslims with symbols to be learned and transformed in their social life.

To a certain extent, these symbols are not reasonable. Critical questions such as why Muslims have to face the Ka'ba (sacred building in Mecca) while praying, and why Muslims should treat the Ka'ba as sacred, are difficult to explain rationally.

Interestingly, Muslims, either fundamentalists or liberals, accept symbols as part of Islamic teaching. It seems that it is inevitable that religions tended to create symbols to protect sacred things.

In the case of Idul Fitri, Muslims play a significant function in creating the meanings of Idul Fitri. As far as Indonesian Muslims are concerned, Idul Fitri is provided by God as a day in which all Muslims who fast during Ramadan (the month before Idul Fitri) turn into innocent people.

Fitr emphasizes the appreciation of humanity and brotherhood. This day requires Muslims to love all humans, regardless of ethnicity, religion, culture or nationality. Such liberal meanings should be disseminated.

Muslims are obliged to act in solving social problems in Indonesia. Hopefully, Idul Fitri this year will strengthen our empathy for the oppressed and marginalized people.

10,000 head home on sponsored buses

Over 9,000 noodle sellers and over 1,600 construction workers and their families headed to their hometowns on buses sponsored by companies on Thursday.

The instant noodle producer, PT Indofood Sukses Makmur, provided the transport for the noodle sellers, while the workers were given a free ride by a building materials company, PT Jaya Board.

"This is an annual event that has been held 16 times," Mustofa, the director of the Jakarta branch of Indofood and the event's coordinator , said during the departure ceremony at the Kemayoran's Pekan Raya Jakarta parking lot, Central Jakarta.

To list those entitled to the free exodus, the company regularly carries out a census in the nooks and crannies of Jakarta and Greater Jakarta, Mustofa said.

The company also recorded food sellers who use the company's brand of noodles: Mie Telor Cap 3 Ayam.

This year, the company listed 5,086 stalls that can benefit from the event. The owners of those stalls, along with their families and acquaintances, totalled 9,065 participants. Most of the buses were going to Kuningan and Sumedang in West Java.

Manpower and Transmigration Minister Erman Suparno witnessed the departure of most of the buses.

"Food stalls play an important role in supporting the economy's real sector," he said.

Wahyudin, a 63-year-old father of four, said that he had been selling instant noodles before the Indomie brand even existed.

"I have been running a stall since 1975, and I began selling Indomie in 1978," he said.

The 1,620 construction workers and their families, departing from Jakarta Police headquarters, headed towards several major cities including, Purwokerto, Semarang, Solo, Yogyakarta, Malang, and Surabaya, using 36 buses provided by the company.

Jayaboard's president director, Gavin Burton, told reporters the free mudik service was one of the company's social responsibility programs

26 September 2009

Australia, East Timor, RI FMs to meet in New York

Australian Foreign Minister Stephen Smith will have a meeting with his counterpart Hassan Wirajuda of Indonesia and Zacarias da Costa of East Timor in New York, US, this week, Antara news agency has reported.

In his press statement released in Brisbane on Monday, Smith said that several regional issues would be discussed int the trilateral meeting, held on the sidelines of 63rd UN General Assembly.

Smith, however, did not give further details on the issues to be discussed.

Earlier this month, Australia played down Thursday the possibility that ties between the two neighbors would be strained by the Australian Police's re-investigation of the deaths of five journalists in East Timor in 1975.

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono said that the new investigation should not continue and that Australia should focus on its future relationship with Indonesia. Jakarta has refused to cooperate with Australia in the re-investigation.

25 September 2009

Toe the line


Around 6,000 people queue at the State Palace to greet President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and his family during an open house held in conjunction with Idul Fitri on Sunday. The well wishers had to show coupons to meet the president.