MPR Deputy Speaker reiterates support for Papua PON XX

Jakarta (ANTARA) – People’s Consultative Assembly (MPR) Deputy Speaker Syarief Hasan has reiterated his support for the convening of the PON National Games XX and National Paralympic Games XVI in October and November 2021 in Papua province.

“I fully support the convening of the PON National Games XX and the National Paralympic Games XVI hosted by Papua this year. This is one great achievement for Papua province for being able to host the games,” Hasan stated in a written statement received in Jakarta on Saturday.

The preparations for the PON and the Paralympic Games are already in their final stage, with most sporting venues and supporting facilities ready to welcome athletes and officials, he noted.

Hasan admitted the dilemma of holding the national games amid the COVID-19 pandemic, but said he felt confident that strict health protocols observed during the games would prevent them from giving rise to COVID-19 infection clusters002E “I am convinced the government and the relevant authority have planned COVID-19 risk management and its mitigation. We now have to support the enforcement and abide by the health protocols at the games’ venue,” Hasan said.

Earlier on Thursday, Coordinating Minister for Political, Legal, and Security Affairs, Mahfud MD, had assured of the preparedness of the national games committee to hold the PON National Games XX and the National Paralympic Games XVI in Papua.

The Minister of Youth and Sports, Zainudin Amali, has coordinated with ministries and institutions to ensure a smooth conduct of the games, he said.

“Let us support the games to reinvigorate our national stability,” he added.

The PON National Games are scheduled to take place from October 2 to October 15, 2021, and the National Paralympic Games from November 2 to November 15, 2021. The sports venues for the games are scattered across Jayapura City, Jayapura district, Mimika district, and Merauke district.

 

Source: Antara News

North Sumatra police nabs a drug courier, seizes 13 kg of crystal meth

Medan, N Sumatra (ANTARA) – The North Sumatra police apprehended a drug courier who attempted to transport 13 kg of crystal methamphetamine to Jakarta from East Aceh District on August 13, 2021, according to a police spokesperson.

The suspect, identified as MA, was arrested on a Medan-Banda Aceh road section in Tanjung Pura Sub-district, Langkat District, North Sumatra Province, North Sumatra Police Spokesperson Senior Commissioner Hadi Wahyudi said.

This 21-year-old suspect told the police investigators that the crystal meth packages belonged to a resident of Aceh Province named Putra, Wahyudi said in a statement that ANTARA quoted here Sunday.

The suspect, who resides in Lueng Puet Village, Madat Sub-district, East Aceh District, concealed the drug packages into two separate bags, he said.

MA confessed that Putra would pay him Rp103 million for transporting the package through the Trans-Sumatra highway to Jakarta, Wahyudi said, adding that the police still investigate the case.

Aceh remains vulnerable to drug smuggling and trafficking.

Last April, for instance, a joint team of police, customs, and excise officers foiled a trans-national drug ring’s attempt to smuggle 50 kg of crystal meth by boat into East Aceh, and arrested four persons.

During the drug raid, law enforcement personnel also seized a 30-GT boat, according to Aceh Police Chief Inspector General Wahyu Widada.

“The smuggling operation was conducted through the East Aceh waters. The boat carried two sacks containing 50 packs of crystal meth with a total weight of 50 kg,” Widada said.

The raid, carried out recently, also resulted in the apprehension of four suspects, identified by their initials as ZK, KR, ZR, and ZK, he added.

Domestic and transnational drug dealers see Indonesia as a potential market due to its vast population and millions of drug users.

Drug trade in the nation is valued at nearly Rp66 trillion.

Data indicate that people from all societal levels are falling prey to drugs in the country, irrespective of their socio-economic and professional backgrounds.

 

Source: Antara News

Bali’s Ngurah Rai airport has imposed PCR test price cap at Rp495,000

Badung, Bali (ANTARA) – State-owned airport operator PT Angkasa Pura I disclosed that the authority of Ngurah Rai International Airport in the resort island of Bali has imposed a newly-standardized price cap for individually-requested PCR tests at Rp495,000.

The price cap for these real-time polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) tests has been made effective since August 19, 2021, PT AP I General Manager at Ngurah Rai International Airport Herry A.Y. Sikado said.

Ngurah Rai International Airport which is located in Badung District or about 13 km away from Denpasar, the capital of Bali Province, is one of 13 airports managed by AP I in central and eastern parts of Indonesia.

The airport authority imposes this newly-standardized price ceiling for the RT-PCR tests to follow up on the Health Ministry’s circular No.02.02/I/2845/2021 dated on August 16, 2021, he said here Saturday.

The price ceiling is expected to help minimize air passengers’ expenses, and have a positive impact on the air transport services, he said.

The RT-PCR tests are served to travelers at the domestic arrival terminal’s public area as a result of the airport authority’s collaboration with the Bali Jimbaran Public Hospital, he said.

The airport’s COVID-19 testing booth also serves those in need of rapid antigen tests by paying Rp200,000. Both the PCR and antigen test results have been integrated into the Health Ministry’s PeduliLindungi App.

Sikado urges travelers wanting to take the COVID-19 swab and antigen tests to consider their flight schedules.

President Joko Widodo had recently requested that the ceiling for individually-requested PCR tests be set at between Rp450 thousand and Rp550 thousand.

He had also asked that the results of swab tests be issued within 24 hours of testing.

The government’s price cap for individually-requested PCR tests was earlier set at Rp900 thousand.

Following the President’s request, the Health Ministry issued Circular Letter No.HK.02.02/I/2845/2021 on the new RT-PCR test price ceiling on August 16, 2021.

The ministry’s circular has capped the price for individually-requested RT-PCR tests at Rp495 thousand in Java and Bali and Rp525 thousand in regions outside the two islands.

ANTARA had earlier reported that the government had set the price cap for individually-requested PCR tests at Rp900 thousand, and rapid antigen tests at Rp250 thousand for the island of Java and Rp275 thousand for areas outside Java.

Coronavirus infections initially emerged in the Chinese city of Wuhan at the end of 2019, and then spread to various parts of the world, including to countries in the Asia-Pacific region.

The Indonesian government announced the country’s first confirmed cases on March 2, 2020.

Since then, the central and regional governments have made persistent efforts to flatten the coronavirus curve by imposing healthcare protocols as well as social and travel restrictions.

 

Source: Antara News

Govt intensifies vaccination to achieve herd immunity: SOE minister

Jakarta (ANTARA) – State-owned Enterprises Minister Erick Thohir asserted that the government would continue to intensify COVID-19 vaccination in a bid to achieve national herd immunity.

“As you can see, the government has done its utmost to speed up vaccination program to achieve herd immunity. We continue to intensify (the vaccination),” Thohir said in a statement obtained here.

The minister has observed three vaccination centers in Central Java and East Java opened simultaneously on Sunday.

The government, he said, has involved the military and police, state-owned enterprises, and local administrations in the vaccination drives.

He called on the public to give positive response to the efforts to stem COVID-19 transmission by participating in the mass vaccination.

Some cabinet ministers presented in the occasion including Minister of State Secretary Pratikno and Minister of Transportation Budi Karya Sumadi.

The “Merdeka” vaccination drive in Cepu, Central Java, has involved state-owned companies PT Pertamina, Jasa Raharja and Telkom as well as Central Java’s Transportation Office, the Brawijaya Military Command, and the Central Java Police. Two other vaccination centers are in Bojonegoro, East Java, that involved state-owned port and harbour services company Pelindo III, East Java Transportation Office, and Brawijaya Military Command.

“The involvement of the central government, state-owned companies, and other institutions is a form of common responsibilities in line with President Joko Widodo’s guidance,” Thohir said.

As many as 15 thousand vaccines were prepared for mass vaccination in the three locations.

The centers would serve local residents including senior citizens and students, as well as workers at public service offices and Cepu oil and gas wells.

The government has targeted to curb the COVID-19 virus effective reproduction number (Rt) to less than one and positivity rate to below five percent.

 

Source: Antara News

Welcoming government’s decision to reduce price cap for RT-PCR tests

Travel expenses of domestic air passengers in Indonesia have slightly declined thanks to the government’s newly-standardized price cap for individually-requested real-time polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) tests.

Referring to the Health Ministry’s circular No.02.02/I/2845/2021 dated on August 16, 2021, the price ceiling for individually-requested RT-PCR tests in Java and Bali is set at Rp495 thousand.

The air passengers taking this COVID-19 swab test in regions outside the two islands are required to pay Rp525 thousand.

Apart from the different amount of money the people must pay for their individually-requested RT-PCR tests, the government’s decision to reduce the price cap has received positive responses from the public.

Haryadin Mahardika, an economist from the University of Indonesia (UI), said President Joko Widodo’s recent request for reducing the price cap for the individually-requested PCR tests was a right decision.

He argued that it is time for the government to manage the price cap for various COVID-19 testing services, including swab and antigen tests, so that their production costs become transparent and affordable.

By applying the principles of transparency and affordability, the prices of those COVID-19 testing services could publicly be audited, he argued. President Joko Widodo had recently requested that the ceiling price for individually-requested PCR tests be set at between Rp450 thousand and Rp550 thousand.

He had also asked that the results of swab tests be issued within 24 hours of testing.

The government had earlier set the price cap for individually-requested PCR tests at Rp900 thousand, and rapid antigen tests at Rp250 thousand for the island of Java and Rp275 thousand for areas outside Java.

Twelve days before the government decided to reduce the price ceiling for the PCR tests from Rp900,000 to between Rp495,000 and Rp525,000, Garuda Indonesia employees had raised this PCR issue.

They urged the government to reconsider its decision to make polymerase chain reaction (PCR) tests mandatory for air passengers in place of rapid antigen tests, arguing the step could affect airlines’ occupancy.

The Garuda Indonesia Labor Union (Sekarga), Garuda Pilot Association (APG), and Garuda Indonesia Cabin Crew Union (Ikagi) made the request on behalf of employees in a letter to the Home Ministry on August 3, 2021.

According to Tomy Tampatty, union coordinator of United Garuda Indonesia, the Home Minister’s Instruction No.27/2021 on the Enforcement of Level 4,3, and 2 Public Activity Restrictions in Java and Bali had made it compulsory for domestic airline passengers to take PCR tests at least 48 hours prior to departure.

However, travelers using other transportation modes, including private cars, motorbikes, buses, trains, and vessels are only required to show the results of rapid antigen tests taken a day before departure, he noted.

The different testing requirements for those traveling by airplanes and by other transportation modes in the country have created a sense of discrimination, Tampatty said.

He argued that traveling time is shorter for air passengers than those traveling by other means of transportation.

While taking a flight, passengers are also more comfortable because Garuda Indonesia, for instance, has strictly implemented the health protocols and installed HEPA filters to clean up cabin air, he said.

“PCR testing costs have become a burden for airline passengers, and, sometimes, they are higher than their flight ticket prices in certain flight routes,” he said in a press statement that ANTARA received on August 4.

Many air passengers have complained about the PCR test requirement, he said, adding that this could have contributed to a drastic decline in the occupancy rate of airlines.

The government has positively responded to the people’s complaints as evidently revealed by the Health Ministry’s circular No.02.02/I/2845/2021 dated on August 16, 2021.

Several airport authorities have even followed up on the ministry’s directive by implementing the government’s newly-standardized price ceiling for the individually-requested RT-PCR tests.

State-owned airport operator PT Angkasa Pura I disclosed that the authority of Ngurah Rai International Airport in the resort island of Bali has imposed the newly-standardized price cap since August 19, 2021.

Ngurah Rai International Airport which is located in Badung District or about 13 km away from Denpasar, the capital of Bali Province, is one of 13 airports managed by AP I in central and eastern parts of Indonesia.

The RT-PCR tests are served to travelers at the domestic arrival terminal’s public area as a result of the airport authority’s collaboration with the Bali Jimbaran Public Hospital, PT AP I General Manager at Ngurah Rai International Airport Herry A.Y. Sikado said.

The airport’s COVID-19 testing booth also serves those in need of rapid antigen tests by paying Rp200,000. Both the PCR and antigen test results have been integrated into the Health Ministry’s PeduliLindungi App.

The price ceiling is expected to help minimize air passengers’ expenses, and have a positive impact on the air transport services, he added.

 

Source: Antara News

Blockchain industry hoped to spur cryptocurrency exchange formation

Jakarta (ANTARA) – Deputy Minister of Trade Jerry Sambuaga hopes for the presence of the blockchain industry to encourage the formation of the first government-regulated cryptocurrency exchange in the world.

The formation of a cryptocurrency exchange is hoped to be able to provide assurance, clarity, and protection to consumers, at the same time preventing criminal acts such as money laundering and terrorism.

“When the (cryptocurrency) exchange is formed, there will be clearing, bookkeeping, and other procedures and they will make the management more visible. We can ensure that everything is surveilled and carried out properly,” he said in a press release from the Indonesian Blockchain Association received here, Sunday.

Expert Staff for Connectivity, Service Development, and Natural Resources at the Coordinating Ministry for Economic Affairs, Raden Edi Prio Pambudi, said that the blockchain industry also paved the way for industry players to be more creative in their business through crypto-based system innovation.

When the concept is materialized, he said, blockchain will no longer be known as a speculative instrument, but can solve problems in the real sector, at the same time becoming an investment instrument.

Additionally, he also believed that Indonesia’s blockchain industry can be exhibited in front of investors who will attend the G20 event next year.

“This should be prepared as an arena to show our blockchain industry next year. Indonesia is ready, as we have a lot of talent, (it is now a matter of) how do we invest to develop this, so this should be worked on,” he explained.

Meanwhile, Acting Director of Digital Economy at the Ministry of Communication and Informatics I Nyoman Adhiarna said that regulators must make policies that are more flexible with a nod to what is called as the agile regulation or smart regulation.

One of the issues when it comes to blockchain, is that its application can be very diverse and fast, so regulations that can catch up with the acceleration of its implementation will be needed.

He encouraged the Ministry of Law and Human Rights to be able to work towards a break through for smart contract applications if later realized based on the Presidential Regulation (PP) Number 5 of 2021 concerning the implementation of risk-based licensing in KBLI 62014 related to blockchain technology security activities that are already in effect.

 

Source: Antara News

Minister inspects industry full operation trial in Tangerang

Jakarta (ANTARA) – Industry Minister Agus Gumiwang Kartasasmita has inspected industries in Tangerang, Banten Province, that carried out full operation trial during the reinforcement of public activity restrictions (PPKM) to ensure stringent implementation of health protocols.

“These last three days, we have started full operation trial with health protocols in some companies that belong to essential sector based on the rule of Operation Permit and Mobility of Industrial Activities (IOMKI),” Kartasasmita said in a statement here on Sunday.

The minister inspected the trial at PT Gajah Tunggal and PT Pan Brothers Tbk on Saturday (August 21). Under the Home Affairs Minister Instruction no. 34/2021 on the imposition of level 4, 3, and 2 of public activity restrictions in Java and Bali on August 17-23, 2021, full operation trial would be carried out in eligible companies while still complying with health protocols, with workers shared in at least two shifts.

The trial is crucial before the government decided to allow industries across the country to be fully operated.

Kartasasmita said the implementation of health protocols has become one major criteria in the trial.

“In addition, companies already obtaining IOMKI are required to submit regular reports on Tuesday and Friday. Companies in regions enforcing level 4 PPKM should have vaccinated their workers and used PeduliLindungi application as a screening method,” he elaborated.

The result of the two-week trial would be used as a basis for the government to allow full operation for all essential industries, he added.

“But on condition that (the workers) are divided in two shifts and the PeduliLindungi app is applied,” Kartasasmita noted.

Meanwhile the ministry’s Director General of Chemical, Pharmaceutical and Textile Industry Muhammad Khayam said tyre industry is one of leading industries that supports the national economy.

It absorbs more than 250 thousand tons of natural rubber per year or some 42 percent of Indonesia’s natural rubber consumption.

“Some national brands can compete in international market and considered as global tyre manufacturer,” Khayam said.

 

Source: Antara News

East Nusa Tenggara’s eligible residents get free PCR tests

The East Nusa Tenggara administration reaffirmed that COVID-19 swab testing for eligible residents has been free of charge since the Undana Public Hospital’s laboratory commenced operations in February this year.

“The polymerase chain reaction (PCR) tests have been free since the province has its own laboratory facility at the Nusa Cendana University (Undana) Hospital,” Governor Viktor Bungtilu Laiskodat said here Sunday.

The East Nusa Tenggara Provincial Government continues to monitor the free services for students pursuing further studies in regions outside the province, and residents who cannot afford to pay for their PCR tests.

“Thus, eligible members of community may come to the Undana Public Hospital to obtain the free COVID-19 swab tests, and the provincial government continues to monitor the services,” Governor Laiskodat said.

However, those taking the PCR tests from other healthcare facilities outside the Undana Public Hospital would be charged with required price the government has determined, he added.

Referring to the Health Ministry’s circular No.02.02/I/2845/2021 dated on August 16, 2021, the price ceiling for individually-requested RT-PCR tests in Java and Bali is set at Rp495 thousand.

Those taking this COVID-19 swab test in regions outside the two islands are required to pay Rp525 thousand.

Apart from the different amount of money the people must pay for their individually-requested RT-PCR tests, the government’s decision to reduce the price cap has received positive responses from the public.

Haryadin Mahardika, an economist from the University of Indonesia (UI), said President Joko Widodo’s recent request for reducing the price cap for the individually-requested PCR tests was a right decision.

He argued that it is time for the government to manage the price cap for various COVID-19 testing services, including swab and antigen tests, so that their production costs become transparent and affordable.

By applying the principles of transparency and affordability, the prices of those COVID-19 testing services could publicly be audited, he argued.

President Joko Widodo had recently requested that the ceiling for individually-requested PCR tests be set at between Rp450 thousand and Rp550 thousand.

He had also asked that the results of swab tests be issued within 24 hours of testing.

The government had earlier set the price cap for individually-requested PCR tests at Rp900 thousand, and rapid antigen tests at Rp250 thousand for the island of Java and Rp275 thousand for areas outside Java.

 

Source: Antara News