Mengingatkan saja.

Yang menentukan sensitivitas data negara itu pemerintah. Saat ini penggunaan
data di Indonesia, baik data sumur seismic dan data-data migas diatur oleh
peraturan tersendiri. Setiap perusahaan bisa saja "memiliki" data-data itu
diserver masing-masing. Tetapi penggunaan data itu berdasarkan atas lisensi
yang harus diperoleh secara resmi.

Indonesia sepertinya tidak berpikir bagaimana anda (perusahaan)
memperolehnya, bisa saja lewat black market. Tetapi ketika anda (perusahaan)
ketahuan secara legal tidak memiliki ijin (lisensi) penggunaannya disitu
awal bencana. Disitulah anda (perusahaan) akan dijerat !!

The national data security and sensitivity will be defined by government,
not you !

RDP

*Subject:* IHS Geologist detained and tortured by China's state security
agents

*Chinese court sentences US geologist to 8 years
**By CHARLES HUTZLER
Associated Press Writer** *

* *

*BEIJING (AP) — An American geologist detained and tortured by China's state
security agents over an oil industry database was jailed for eight years
Monday in a troubling example of China's rough justice system and the way
the U.S. government handles cases against its citizens. * Beijing's No. 1
Intermediate People's Court convicted Xue Feng of collecting intelligence
and illegally providing state secrets and immediately sentenced him.

Xue's lawyer Tong Wei described the sentence as "very heavy", just short of
the maximum 10 years, and said he would confer with Xue over whether to
appeal. Xue was also fined 200,000 yuan ($30,000).  The U.S. Ambassador to
China, Jon Huntsman, witnessed the sentencing in a show of high-level U.S.
government concern about the case. Afterward, the U.S. Embassy released a
statement saying it was dismayed and urged China to grant Xue "humanitarian
release and immediately deport him."

For Xue, the verdict comes more than six months since the last court hearing
and two and a half years after he was detained — a protracted prosecution
and pretrial detention that Chinese officials never explained.  Born in
China and trained at the University of Chicago, Xue ran afoul of the
authorities for arranging the sale of a detailed commercial database on
China's oil industry to IHS Energy, the energy consulting firm he worked for
that is now known as IHS Inc. and based in Colorado.

Sentenced along with Xue were three Chinese nationals convicted of being
accomplices. Li Yongbo, a manager at Beijing Licheng Zhongyou Oil Technology
Development Co., was sentenced to eight years and fined 200,000 yuan
($30,000) while Chen Mengjin and Li Dongxu, who worked for research
institutes affiliated with state-owned PetroChina Co. were each given
two-and-a-half-year sentences and fined 50,000 yuan ($7,500).

The case has been seen as a troubling complex of the pitfalls of Chinese
justice, especially for successful native Chinese who go abroad for
education and work, acquire foreign citizenship and then return to China for
work.  "This is a very harsh sentence. It's a very sad day for justice in
China," said John Kamm, an American human rights campaigner whom the State
Department turned to for help last year to lobby for Xue's release. "It's a
huge disappointment and will send very real shivers up the spines of
businesses that do business in China." he said.

Xue's case came to trial just as another China-born foreign national,
Australian Stern Hu, was detained amid tense negotiations on iron ore sales
between his employer, global mining colossus Rio Tinto, and Chinese state
companies.  Both Xue and Hu were charged on vague state secrets charges. But
unlike Xue, Hu's arrest received immediate publicity from the Australian
government and media. He is not known to have been mistreated and was
brought to trial quickly, sentenced in March to 10 years for bribery and
infringing trade secrets.

By contrast, Xue languished in detention. His disappearance in 2007 and
arrest did not become public for two years until reported by The Associated
Press last November. During the early weeks of his detention, state security
agents tortured Xue, stubbing lit cigarettes into his arms and hitting him
on the head with an ashtray.  Later allowed visits by U.S. consular
officers, Xue told them he wanted his case made public. However, his wife,
who lives in Texas, disagreed, believing that quiet lobbying might be more
effective and fearing that the publicity would trouble their two children
and possibly jeopardize her relatives still living in China. Amid their
disagreement, the U.S. State Department pursued back-channel diplomacy.

Meanwhile, the case was batted between the court and prosecutors. All told,
he appeared three times in court before Monday's hearing, the first in July
a year ago and the last in December. The court then repeatedly postponed
sentencing. Legal experts said the delays in issuing a verdict exceeded
legal time limits; Xue's lawyer said a decision should have come in March at
the latest.

The lapses illustrate a growing willingness by the authoritarian government
to ignore laws to suit political interests.  "There's an increasing number
of cases where there's no legal fig leaf," Jerome Cohen, a venerable China
law expert at New York University who has advised Xue's wife, said in an
interview before the verdict.

Aside from Xue, Cohen ticks off other instances of detentions without legal
basis, among them Gao Zhisheng, a crusading rights lawyer disappeared by
authorities repeatedly, and Zheng Enchong, a lawyer who spent three years in
prison after revealing a corrupt land deal and is now in the fifth year of
house arrest that has little legal basis.  "These are increasingly apparent,
visible signs of lawlessness," said Cohen.

Chinese officials have wide authority to define state secrets, and the
latitude makes it difficult for foreigners and Chinese alike to know when
they are crossing the line.  Draft regulations released by the government in
April defines the business secrets of major state-run companies as state
secrets. In Xue's case, the database had been prepared by a Chinese company
and contained detailed information on the state of the Chinese oil industry,
which is predominantly state-controlled.

Chinese law enforcement never identified the prison where Xue was being
held, neither to embassy officials in Beijing nor his lawyer, the only
outsiders Xue was allowed to see. While the physical abuse of his early
detention stopped, Xue was still subject to indignities: The U.S. Embassy
said as of last week it had delivered 20-some books for Xue but prison
authorities only allowed him a few.

Trying to get Xue's case unstuck and underscore U.S. government interest,
Huntsman or the embassy's No. 2 have personally met with Xue every month
since late last year on the single monthly meeting consular officials are
allowed under a Chinese-U.S. agreement.

During last month's visit, Huntsman waited an hour for Xue at the No. 1
Intermediate People's Court, where the monthly meetings are held. The judge
stopped by to apologize, saying Xue was delayed by traffic, but he refused
to discuss the case, according to the U.S. Embassy.  Xue eventually showed
up, meeting with two consular officials who stayed after Huntsman left for
another appointment, the embassy said.


-- 
You can do hard way or you can do smart way ... both ways need you to do it
any way ... not just discuss it in the hall way.

Kirim email ke