Maybe he write it for an english newspaper/magazine..

Jeezz...
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-----Original Message-----
From: "Metallic Bull" <metallic.b...@gmail.com>
Date: Sun, 17 Jan 2010 21:49:16 
To: <obrolan-bandar@yahoogroups.com>
Subject: Re: [ob] Insight: The Century and Bumi cases: Who is the slayer, who 
is the victim?

It's peculiar for someone who is an expert in communication, writing a very 
important topic for the whole nation, in English.

Doesn't he know that only a very small fraction of Indonesian reads Jakarta 
Post and speaks English?

Jeez...

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "victor_sperandeo" <victor_speran...@yahoo.com>
To: <obrolan-bandar@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Sunday, January 17, 2010 1:57 PM
Subject: [ob] Insight: The Century and Bumi cases: Who is the slayer, who is 
the victim?


Insight: The Century and Bumi cases: Who is the slayer, who is the victim?

Wimar Witoelar ,  Jakarta   |  Wed, 01/13/2010 9:05 AM  |  Headlines

After the disastrous machine gun attack on the Togolese national football 
team's bus on the Angola border, Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger said the 
African Cup of Nations should continue despite the fact the attack killed 
several people. "I don't believe you can just stop a competition because of 
an incident as I think that would reward the people who provoked the 
incident and could mean that any competition is stopped at any time," added 
Wenger, who has Arsenal players Alex Song (Cameroon) and Emmanuel Eboue 
(Ivory Coast) playing for their national teams in the finals. Arsenal Wenger 
has got it right. It's not only about winning. It's about doing the right 
thing.

There is more than a touch of surrealism in the events unfolding today. We 
remember that President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono  (SBY) won his second term 
with a majority of more than 60 percent. In addition, he has done nothing 
wrong. Even if he was at fault in the Bank Century allegations, it happened 
in 2008, the year before the political parties initiated the parliamentary 
proceedings supported by the media group that is owned by tax evaders.

Many parliamentarians who now allege fraud in the Bank Century bailout 
agreed with the bailout decision at the time it was taken. Finance Minister 
Sri Mulyani and Vice President Boediono should be the last people in any 
Indonesian government to be accused of dishonesty, with clean records for 
the lifespan of their careers. So why are these good people being vilified 
by politicians, student activists and people on the street?

You need search no further back than 2001 for a possible answer. The night 
before last New Year's Eve, the nation lost a great man who held the 
presidency for less than two years until he was ousted in 2001. In those 
brief years, Abdurrahman "Gus Dur" Wahid  succeeded in launching the 
greatest reforms in Indonesia's civil society. Through his leadership and 
the support of many good people, Indonesia became an overnight leader in the 
promotion of pluralism, democracy and humanity. Gus Dur is by all measures a 
hero.

Although he lost the presidency, Gus Dur was elevated to become the keeper 
of the nation's conscience. He was a victim of a cabal, a small group of 
secret plotters.  Who were the plotters? Parliament leaders, the media, big 
money, misguided students and paid activists. There is a strong sense of 
déjà vu. The cast of characters in 2010 is a bit different from 2001 but the 
story is the same.

SBY is not Gus Dur, but they are both popular leaders facing vindictive 
politicians.  Substitute Golkar chairman Aburizal Bakrie for Amien Rais in 
the leading role and you have the same scenario now as we had back then. 
Bulog-Bruneigate was the excuse for wanton attacks on the president in 2001 
and Bank Century is the issue in 2010. Buloggate was never proven as a crime 
and neither will the Bank Century case. Amien Rais went for straight 
impeachment instead, explaining that it didn't matter what he was guilty of, 
he had been removed. Aburizal may yet desert Century and aim at impeachment, 
all or nothing.

According to the press, student groups and activists plan to hold rallies to 
pressure President Yudhoyono and Vice President Boediono to step down. They 
demand that SBY and Boediono resign because the students feel they can no 
longer expect anything from them. Many do not agree, but they do not have 
the funding to resist, nor do they own political parties and television 
stations. The economy needs the smart and impeccably clean finance minister, 
but she is drowned out by meaningless screams.

Where are the anti-Wahid activists of 2001 now?  Everybody mourns the 
passing of Gus Dur whom the demonstrators derided, insulted and forced out 
of office. Students joined demonstrations led by Amien Rais in March of 
2001. Where have they all gone?  Will the activists of 2010 also disappear 
once their cynical job is done? Activists announced they would take to the 
streets in a force of 100,000 people last month on International 
Anti-Corruption Day. Fears disappeared when only 5,000 demonstrators showed 
up in Jakarta. A group of 50 threw stones at a KFC outlet in Makassar 
believing the neoliberal corporation was involved in Bank Century. Why such 
a disappointing turnout? It was raining, the leaders later explained.

The political battle could become serious if a TV expose gathers momentum, 
if a station presents a clinical overview of the tax fraud cases pending 
against the Bakrie Group. To make a long story short, it involves an amount 
that may well reach Rp 10 trillion (US$1.09 billion) in tax and royalty 
debts and fines for tax evasion. The Bakrie Group has declined to comment so 
we do not know their side of the story. But if the allegations are true then 
the money is much greater than the alleged Bank Century bailout cost, which 
is clearly retrievable. So where are the criminals? In the Century case, in 
the Bakrie case, in both, or in none of the above? As the chorus lament in 
Sophocles' Antigone: "Who is the slayer, who the victim? Speak".

The public wants to know. Not because we want to choose one above the other, 
not for the sake of picking the winner. The public has no partisan agenda 
because it's not only about winning; it's about doing the right thing.

http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2010/01/13/insight-the-century-and-bumi-cases-who-slayer-who-victim.html




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