"Kita" ini siapa dan apa itu Bi-Ba  ,  mahluk apa itu Bi-Ba? yang telah "kita" 
deklarasikan akan "kita" perangi ?

Ngak terasa negara kita ini tergelincir digagahi oleh penggede2 yang sudah 
kalap, melawan opini luas, bahkan opini sedunia dan ......paling celaka yalah 
"kita" melawan pembuktian ilmiah.

Ngak tega atas nasibnya Babi yang "haram",  dengan sengaja aku rubah jadi Bi-Ba 
karena sebentar lagi jutaan akan mengalami "genocide" juga di negeri ini. Iba 
rasa hatiku terhadapmu Bi-Ba! Sekalipun UNFAO memberikan ketegasan bahwa Babi 
tidak menularkan penyakit seperti Flu Burung tapi karena "scientist" Indonesia 
bilang bahwa babi sudah terkontaminasi dengan Flu burung, maka babi mulai kena 
genocide dinegeri yang belum sempat menangani pembunuhan2 lain, manusia 
terhadap manusia, sekarang mengalihkan pandangannya membunuh juga binatang.   
Aduh nasib mu Babi , sudah hidup hanya untuk mati  jadi santapan enak, tapi 
karena fitnah kamu kena  hujat/ kena fitnah sebagai pembawa malapetaka!

Dianjurkan kepada peternak babi agar mulai saja dengan business lain, 
memelihara sapi/kerbau. Takut2 achir2-nya nanti piara kerbau/sapi, bisa kena 
serangan virus mad cow....dan achirnya nanti bisa meng-edan-kan banyak penduduk 
Indonesia yang sekarang sudah mulai edan. Betapa tidak kalau ini bukan edan. 
Diseluruh dunia belum ada kabar kalau ada babi yang kena kontaminasi flu burung 
hanya di Indonesia para "scientist"nya bilang sebaliknya.

Oh babi kenapa nasibmu begitu jelek. Sudah dicipta-in untuk mengabdi manusia, 
sekarang kamu di fitnah tanpa bukti. Apa  bukti di Indonesia ini memang in 
short supply ya?. Babi, babi kenapa nasibmu begini. Ditakdirkan jadi binatang 
yang oleh sebagian manusia sudah dikatakan haram, tapi sekarang kena label 
baru, babi, kamu menyandang pembawa virus flu burung. Ngeneeeees  benar nasibmu 
Bi-Ba!

Harry Adinegara.





Subject: Fw: Indonesia Accused Of Playing Politics
With Pig Farmers [+JP; China; Vietnam] 
Date: Fri, 29 Jul 2005 13:18:32 +0700


- Indonesia Accused Of Playing Politics
With Pig Farmers Indonesia Accused Of Playing
Politics With Pig Farmers

RANCA IYUH, July 28 (AP)--When government workers
in white anti-contamination suits descended on Ceng
Kim's farm to slaughter his pigs, claiming they were
infected with the bird flu virus that killed
three people nearby, he hid inside his house.

He couldn't bear to watch, but the rest of
Indonesia saw the dramatic images on television that
night: Squealing pigs electrocuted one by
one and tossed into a fire.

"My pigs didn't kill anyone," said Kim. "But if
the government says they're sick, what can I do?"

Pig farmers are not the only ones scratching their
heads - international experts are bewildered as well.

They say there is no evidence pigs have been
infected with avian flu, despite the government's
insistence that the animals are contributing
to the recent outbreak in Indonesia, the world's
most populous Islamic country.

Critics say the government is going after pigs
because they are an easy target and may divert
attention away from fears about the
infection in poultry, a staple food for millions
of people throughout the country.

Many Muslims consider pigs to be unclean, though
pork is regularly eaten by the country's large ethnic
Chinese minority, a group that frequently faces
discrimination and abuse.

Indonesia is the only country to be culling swine
in its fight against bird flu, which has swept
through poultry populations in Asia since
2003, killing or forcing the slaughter of hundreds
of millions of ducks and chickens. Fifty-seven people
have died, mostly in Vietnam and Thailand.

The most recent deaths from bird flu were a
38-year-old state auditor and his two young daughters
living on the outskirts of the Indonesian capital,
Jakarta.

The government initially said the victims had no
known contact with birds, and that the closest source
of infection appeared to be Ceng Kim's pigs, 15
kilometers away. Later, traces of the virus were found
in chicken droppings in the family's own backyard.

Though an Indonesian scientist claimed in May he
discovered the H5N1 strain of bird flu in pigs, the
U.N. Food and Agricultural Organization says it has no
evidence that swine have been infected - in Indonesia
or anywhere else.

The "focus should be on chickens and ducks," said
FAO veterinarian Juan Lubroth.

Trisatya Putri Naipospos, Indonesia's top
veterinarian, agreed and accused the government of
playing "politics" with pig farmers, the
majority of whom are ethnic Chinese.

At the same time, many Muslim Indonesians are
happy to see ministers appearing on television saying
pigs are dirty.

The Agriculture Ministry defended ongoing pig
culls, saying they are part of a multi-pronged
approach to eradicating bird flu and are in
"no way influenced by politics, religion or race."
More than 9 million chickens and ducks also have been
killed since 2003, it noted.

But Indonesia's larger strategy is not always
clear, even to itself.

Days after Agriculture Minister Anton Apriyantono
vowed to carry out mass culls in bird flu-affected
areas, he changed his mind, saying only sick animals
would be killed.

He blamed a lack of money, saying the government
could not afford to compensate farmers for their
loss. It's the same argument made 18 months ago when
bird flu first surfaced, though no request has been
made to Parliament for emergency funds.

International health organizations say Indonesia
has done many things right, but the FAO urged it to
respond faster to reports of the virus.

"The whole machinery of the emergency response
needs to be strengthened in Indonesia," Lubroth said.

Experts say it is important to keep a close eye on
pigs, which are genetically similar to people and
often carry the human influenza virus.

Their fear is that pigs infected with both bird
flu and its human equivalent could act as a "mixing
bowl," resulting in a more dangerous mutant virus that
might spread to people more easily.

So, Kim and other pig farmers in Ranca Iyuh, a
village 40 kilometers west of Jakarta, continue to
worry.

The government suggests they start breeding cows
and other livestock, something Kim says is impossible
because they don't have enough land.

"For hundreds of years, my family has raised
pigs," said Kim, a 52-year-old father of four. "It's
all we know."

And while he was given IDR920,000 for each pig
killed, he says he'll wait before he replaces any of
them.

He's afraid the men in white suits will return.










---------------------------------
Do you Yahoo!?
Messenger 7.0 beta: Free worldwide PC to PC calls

                
---------------------------------
Do you Yahoo!?
  Messenger 7.0 beta: Free worldwide PC to PC calls

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor --------------------~--> 
<font face=arial size=-1><a 
href="http://us.ard.yahoo.com/SIG=12heuie85/M=362335.6886444.7839734.2575449/D=groups/S=1705796846:TM/Y=YAHOO/EXP=1122646226/A=2894362/R=0/SIG=138c78jl6/*http://www.networkforgood.org/topics/arts_culture/?source=YAHOO&cmpgn=GRP&RTP=http://groups.yahoo.com/";>What
 would our lives be like without music, dance, and theater?Donate or volunteer 
in the arts today at Network for Good</a>.</font>
--------------------------------------------------------------------~-> 

Post message: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subscribe   :  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Unsubscribe :  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
List owner  :  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Homepage    :  http://proletar.8m.com/ 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/proletar/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 


Reply via email to