Ada berapa kali mereka yang menjadi bahagian dari gerombolan bangsat tukang 
fitnah dan bajingan pendusta seperti Dipo, Duke, rezamautia dan suryana yang 
bicara tentang masaalah seperti ini?

Atau tentang orang kelaparan dan orang kurang gizi di Indonesia?

Disamping menyebar fitnah dan dusta mereka demennnya ribut-ribut tentang 
pertandignan sepak bola dan musik populer.


--- In proletar@yahoogroups.com, item abu <itemabu@...> wrote:
>
> Yg kena getahnya itu bukan cuma penduduk setempat, tp jg seluruh orang 
> Indonesia 
> krn pemerintah udah ngambil alih sebagian tanggung jawab si keparat Abu Rizal 
> Bakrie itu. Dan ga cuma itu aja, perekonomian di Jawa Timur jg rugi ga tau 
> berapa trilyun krn biaya transport naik banyak. Belum lagi kerugian akibat 
> polusi dr lumpurnya yg dibuang ke kali Porong dan masuk laut.
> 
> Hehehe.... keluarga Bakrie itu kaya raya dgn nginjak orang2 di Porong antara 
> lain.
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> ________________________________
> From: sunny <ambon@...>
> To: Undisclosed-Recipient@...
> Sent: Sun, May 29, 2011 9:37:28 PM
> Subject: [proletar] Javan mud survivors scrape by in misery
> 
>    
> Refleksi : Tentunya rezim SBY tidak mau tahu tentang penderitaan korban 
> lumpur 
> Lapindo, sebab pemilik Lapindo adalah konco kentalnya. Bukankah begitu?
> 
> http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/world/javan-mud-survivors-scrape-by-in-misery/story-e6frg6so-1226065138575
> 
> 
> Javan mud survivors scrape by in misery 
> Peter Alford, Jakarta correspondent 
> From: The Australian 
> May 30, 2011 12:00AM 
> 
> More than 9m of mud sludge is piled up under the Lusi volcano. Source: AFP 
> 
> IT was a bleak anniversary for Muhammad Budi and Sarwi, marked as every other 
> day for the past five years by Lusi's sulphurous white plume rising from the 
> middle of 640ha of grey-black devastation. 
> 
> 
> Before May 29, 2006, the two men had family homes, communities and good jobs, 
> but today they scrape a miserable living showing gawkers around the edges of 
> the 
> freakish Sidorajo mud volcano, which ruined their lives.
> 
> Sarwi, 42, remembers the Monday morning everything changed. He was 
> breakfasting 
> with his wife and daughter before his shift at a nearby steel plant. "There 
> was 
> a loud bang, a very bad smell, then we saw a fountain of boiling mud. 
> Everybody 
> ran to the village office but there was not enough space for us all," he said.
> 
> Sarwi's house in Tampak Siring village was 300m from the world's worst mud 
> eruption - triggered, most scientists believe, by a gas-drilling accident - 
> and 
> is today buried beneath a vast mud dome.
> 
> He scrapes a living as an ojek (motorcycle taxi) rider on the 15m-high rock 
> embankment shielding the highway, railway and neighbourhoods on the western 
> flank of Lusi, short for Lumpur (mud) Sidorajo.
> The area's ojek association is open only to men from the devastated zone, 
> such 
> as Sarwi and his friend Budi, 28, who had his own scrap business there five 
> years ago.
> 
> Their customers - at best one or two each per day, says Sarwi - are mostly 
> sightseers.
> 
> Lusi has spewed more than 150 million cubic metres of sterile sludge across a 
> once-prosperous mixed district of farms, light industry and suburban housing 
> on 
> the southern fringe of Surabaya, East Java's largest city.
> 
> More than 40,000 people have lost their homes, 33 schools are laid to waste, 
> 65 
> mosques shut, 30 factories gone, hundreds of smallholdings and fish farms are 
> ruined and thousands of jobs lost.
> 
> Groundwater has been fouled beyond the inundated area and hundreds of homes 
> have 
> been demolished by householders relocating brick by brick from spoiled water, 
> reeking air and the continuing threat of wall breaches.
> 
> The transport corridor to Surabaya's industrial port, Tanjung Perak, remains 
> severely disrupted, and what used to be a four-hour truck journey can now 
> take 
> 10 hours.
> 
> Since Wednesday, the disruption has been worsened by hundreds of protesters 
> sporadically blocking the highway in their campaign to be included in 
> compensation schemes run by BPLS, the government's Lusi disaster management 
> body, and drilling company Lapindo Brantas.
> 
> "We've been protesting for five years," said neighbourhood organiser Bambang 
> Subandrio.
> 
> "But there's never any answer - we just keep getting the bad water and smelly 
> air."
> 
> The government's national audit office has calculated that Lusi's accumulated 
> economic costs will reach $US3.46 trillion ($3.23 trillion) in 2015.
> 
> "Perhaps the most devastating and defining aspect of this disaster, as 
> opposed 
> to others, has been the loss of community experienced by the victims," says a 
> new social impact report prepared by Humanitas Foundation, an Australian 
> charity.
> 
> "I liked it most at Idul Fitri (the end-of-Ramadan feast) when everyone was 
> here, but now our families, everyone, is scattered," says Budi, standing on 
> the 
> embankment's southwest corner above the grey brackish water and sulphurous 
> mud 
> submerging his village, Jatirejo.
> 
> Like most of the displaced, Budi and Sarwi lived on land handed down through 
> generations of family, fixed in their communities.
> 
> But not for their children, the ojek men are reminded each day as they ride 
> along the wall.
> 
> About 14,000 families have been cut off from their heritage. Hundreds more 
> would 
> risk severing those ties if they could get government money to escape from 
> Lusi's poisoned surroundings.
> 
> It hardly matters to those people that hopes are rising that Lusi's worst 
> might 
> have passed.
> 
> The daily mud flows have fallen to about 10,000cu m, down from an average of 
> more than 100,000cu m , and after almost five years of continuous eruption, 
> the 
> volcano now goes quiet for up to 13 minutes at a time. "It's changed its 
> behaviour and that's a positive thing," said Durham University geologist 
> Richard 
> Davies, a leading authority on Lusi.
> 
> He thinks pressure in the aquifer, pushing water from 2.8km below the 
> surface, 
> might be equalising with pressure at the surface, although subterranean gas 
> continues pushing mud upwards.
> 
> In a paper in February, Professor Davies calculated the eruption would 
> probably 
> continue for 26 years before reaching manageable levels - less than a 1000cu 
> m 
> daily flow. Now he's recalculating.
> 
> However, he warned that events could still go badly wrong for the people 
> living 
> around Lusi.
> 
> The most dangerous of the possibilities would be a major collapse of the mud 
> dome - in one area the surface has subsided 12m in a year - spreading the 
> damage 
> outside the walls
> 
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
> 
> 
>  
> 
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>




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