Indonesia calls for global cooperation for ending pandemic

Addressing world leaders at this year’s United Nations General Assembly (UNGA), Indonesian President Joko Widodo (Jokowi) highlighted an issue that has remained a prime concern for almost all nations today: the COVID-19 pandemic.

“When will people be free from the pandemic?” was the question that the President put before world leaders attending the 76thUNGA in New York City last week.

The same question most likely came to everyone’s mind, given the devastating impact the pandemic has had on the world in nearly two years.

According to the World Health Organization (WHO), the virus has claimed more than 4.7 million deaths. In addition, it has pummeled economies globally.

Hence, in its national statement presented at the UNGA, Indonesia emphasized the importance of cooperation and collaboration to accelerate the global effort to end the pandemic and its impact, both in terms of health and economic recovery.

“Assessing the global developments to date, many things must be done together. First, we have to give hope that the pandemic will be resolved quickly, fairly, and evenly. We know that no one is safe until everyone is,” the President affirmed.

According to the President, the ability and pace of all countries in dealing with COVID-19—specifically the implementation of the vaccination program—has been highly disproportionate.

Referring to the statement of UN Secretary General António Guterres regarding the wide gap in access to vaccines, Widodo alluded to how people in most of the wealthier countries have been immunized, while over 90 percent of Africa’s population has not even received one dose.

Of the nearly 6 billion doses of the coronavirus vaccine administered worldwide, only two percent have been distributed in Africa compared to almost 80 percent in high- and upper middle-income countries, he pointed out.

Such data showcases the deep inequalities in the global pandemic response, he said. In addition, discrimination towards certain types of vaccines has also widened inequalities and created uneven recovery, he added.

“Politicization and discrimination against vaccines is still occurring. They have to be resolved with real attempts,” the President asserted.

Indonesian Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi, as co-chair of the COVAX Advance Market Commitment (AMC) Engagement Group, has voiced two solutions to address vaccine inequity: increasing production and implementing a dose-sharing mechanism.

“Vaccine producers must be able to increase their production capacity. It is time for developing countries to be included in the global vaccine supply chain,” the Foreign Minister said while delivering an online press statement on Wednesday (September 29, 2021).

Increasing the production or supply of vaccines is considered an important effort to meet the target of vaccinating 70 percent of the world’s population by mid-2022, she noted.

To achieve this target, the WHO has said that the world needs at least 11 billion doses of the COVID-19 vaccine, she pointed out.

“When we talk about the vaccine supply chain, I mention that the establishment of an mRNA vaccine manufacturing center that has been carried out in South Africa should be replicated in other regions to accelerate the increase in vaccine production,” Marsudi said.

In addition to seeking an increase in production, Indonesia has also continued to encourage the mechanism of dose-sharing between countries with excess doses of vaccines and low- and middle-income countries, she added.

Marsudi emphasized the importance of countries that have excess vaccine doses sharing their doses more transparently, conveying delivery times, and avoiding sharing of vaccine doses that have expired.

During a recent meeting with the Vaccine Alliance (Gavi) Board and the co-chairs of the COVAX AMC Engagement Group, Marsudi also expressed concern about the trend of vaccine discrimination, following entry bans imposed by several countries on cross-border travelers even though they had received vaccines approved for emergency use by the WHO.

There are also countries that are allowing foreign nationals to enter their territory as long as they have received a booster that is recognized by their authority, she pointed out.

“During the meeting, I asked WHO, Gavi, and the COVAX Facility to make a joint effort to prevent this vaccine discrimination. The Gavi Board is also very worried about this discrimination and will try to deal with it together with WHO,” Marsudi said.

Indonesia has also urged the international community to strengthen the global health security system by improving the role of the WHO to prevent future pandemics, she added.

In this case, a new mechanism is needed to establish global health resilience—in terms of funding, vaccines, medicines, medical services, and health workers—quickly and evenly across all countries, she said.

“This pandemic has showed us the importance of international cooperation,” Marsudi said.

Source: Antara News

Indonesia’s COVID-19 orphans experiencing behavioral changes: activist

Many kids who have lost their parents to COVID-19 are experiencing behavioral changes, advocacy coordinator and child protection specialist for SOS Children’s Villages Indonesia, Tri Dewi Saraswati, has said.

“Kids are often dazed/dumbfounded, their eyes are blank. There are kids who go out (of their homes) every day. They say there are leaving to catch fish, and they only return in the evening,” Saraswati said at a webinar entitled ‘United and Moving #BersamaUntukAnak (Together For Children) Who Lost Parents Due to COVID-19’ here on Thursday.

She also pointed out some other changes in their attitude, including how they often bite their nails and look down. Some do not leave the house, she said. “Some often sleep. They sleep way too much,” she said.

She said her agency even found a child who, when he saw a woman whose face resembled his mother’s, immediately hugged the woman tightly.

These behavioral changes came to light after a research conducted by SOS Children’s Villages Indonesia in Semarang city, Central Java, and Yogyakarta, Saraswati informed.

The researchers did not find the children displaying any form of violence, she informed. In addition, there was no difference in the pattern of parenting between caregivers and orphans, she said.

These children are vulnerable to violence if they do not receive psychosocial assistance, she said.

“We see that it is quite risky for kids who can not receive psychosocial assistance. When they have unexpected behavior and the caregivers are not mentally and economically ready, this is very risky for children and they can experience physical and emotional violence,” she added.

Source: Antara News

PON has bolstered Papua’s vaccination coverage: official

The XX Papua National Sports Week (PON) 2021 has led to an increase in the COVID-19 vaccination coverage in Papua, head of Papua province’s Health Office, Robby Kayame, said here on Thursday.

Residents have become more enthusiastic about getting the COVID-19 vaccine, especially after the government made it mandatory for PON spectators, he informed.

“This (PON) momentum has motivated residents to get vaccinated because those who can enter (the PON venues) are those who have received the COVID-19 vaccination,” Kayame said.

Earlier, President Joko Widodo had instructed that the vaccination coverage in the four PON areas reach 70 percent before the opening of PON on October 2, 2021.

However, according to data from the Ministry of Health, as of September 30, 2021, the vaccination coverage in the areas has not yet reached the 70-percent mark. Nonetheless, it has surpassed the 50 percent figure for the first dose vaccination, Kayame said.

In Jayapura district, the first-dose vaccination coverage has reached 58.90 percent and second-dose vaccination coverage 36.86 percent, as per ministry data. In Jayapura city, the first-dose vaccination has reached 65.70 percent and second-dose vaccinations 39.52 percent.

Meanwhile, Mimika district has achieved a vaccination coverage of 61.62 percent for the first dose and 43.18 percent for the second vaccination dose.

In Merauke district, the first dose has been administered to 71.34 percent and the second dose to 45.18 percent of the population.

To expedite COVID-19 vaccinations in Papua, the Indonesian government and the PON committee have provided several vaccination booths in a number of PON venues.

The XX Papua National Sports Week (PON) 2021 will be held from October 2-15, 2021. At least 6,400 athletes and 3,500 officials from 34 provinces across Indonesia are expected to participate in the National Games that will feature 37 sports.

Source: Antara News

BNPB’s communication cars, personnel to support PON

The National Disaster Mitigation Agency (BNPB) has provided a fleet of satellite technology-equipped communication cars to facilitate coordination among Health Protocol Task Force members amid the implementation of the XX Papua National Sports Week (PON).

“The fleet has been stationed at the Health Protocols Sub-Task Force Post in Jayapura City since Tuesday,” Acting Head of the Disaster Data, Information, and Communication Center at BNPB Abdul Muhari noted in a statement here on Thursday.

Moreover, the agency has deployed some technical personnel to ensure smooth running of the communication network at the venues of the XX Papua PON, especially in Jayapura City.

Furthermore, Muhari revealed that the initiative to station the fleet arose from reports on unstable communication network at the venues.

Meanwhile, the situation could potentially hinder coordination in reinforcing health protocols amid the event that officially opened on October 2, 2021.

“The fleet can support the post’s internet network and provide fluent communication among the post, the Jayapura City Regional Disaster Mitigation Agency (BPBD), as well as other institutions through the use of radio frequencies,” he noted.

Muhari has stated that the fleet will facilitate easier coordination and data transfer to and from the Jayapura City BPBD, especially at the agency’s Operations Control Center, or with other stakeholders.

The BNPB’s Disaster Data, Information, and Communication Center attempts to provide its fleet of communication cars at every disaster or public event, such as the XX Papua PON, that direly require communication support.

The step aims to serve as a precautionary measure against communication problems that may arise in the area in the event of disruption to the internet network or cellular communication signals.

Source: Antara News

Digital optimization to be conducted across several strategic sectors

Digital optimization is conducted in various strategic sectors to support recovery of the national economy, the Communication and Informatics Ministry’s (Kominfo’s) official, Ichwanul Muslim, stated.

“(This optimization) was conducted in sectors, such as farming with go digital farmers, maritime with go digital fishermen, tourism with digital content creation training, education with learning management system, and health with the IoT application,” the official noted during a webinar here on Thursday.

In the tourism sector, the ministry digitalized tourism products in 200 tourism villages within the five Super Priority Tourism Regions (DPSPs), he remarked.

The ministry also improved tourism human resources through the virtual tour training and English training for managers.

In addition, a digital ecosystem training was conducted for one thousand micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs) in DPSP and districts with the Information and Telecommunication Accessibility Agency (BAKTI) infrastructure, he noted.

“We are also developing the tourism and branding portal through Proud of Indonesian Products and Proud of Tourism in Indonesia,” Muslim noted.

The official revealed that for MSMEs, the ministry was providing go digital mentorship using the available technology.

Moreover, Kominfo reviewed requirements for technological interventions, technology adoption facilitation, and raising transaction awareness and activity through financial technology for MSMEs.

Meanwhile, Muslim outlined several targets that the ministry is working toward to realize Digital Indonesia during the period from 2021 to 2024.

“There is the president’s directive regarding the expansion of digital infrastructure, preparing a digital transformation roadmap, accelerating the integration of the national data center, preparing digital talents with the Digital Talent Program, and preparing regulation for digital transformation funding and payment scheme,” he stated.

The ministry is also aiming to transform Indonesia from a technology consumer into a producer through investment in various platforms that were deemed to have important strategic value.

Muslim elaborated that the ministry’s primary initiatives within that time period were boosting 4G network access in priority tourism destinations, strengthening internet access, and developing the digital government program.

Source: Antara News

Students return to school under strict health protocols

Indonesia has managed to overcome a drastic COVID-19 spike triggered by the Delta variant and culminating in July 2021 after imposing tough public activity restrictions dubbed as PPKM level 4 for nearly two months. The national task force for COVID-19, on September 19, 2021, recorded 1,954 fresh confirmed cases and 117 deaths over the last 24 hours, bringing the tally to 4,213,414 cases and the death toll to 141,826.

The figures showed a sharp decline compared to 56,757 fresh confirmed cases recorded on July 15, 2021, and daily deaths at 2,069 on July 29, as Indonesia’s daily COVID-19 cases hit a record when the country faced the second COVID-19 wave that had overwhelmed the nation’s medical facilities.

Following the significant drop in new cases, the government has decided to ease the semi-lockdown measures and lower the PPKM levels to 2 or 1 in several regions.

Another factor leading to the decision is that the country’s vaccination rate is relatively high, even higher than the target set by the World Health Organization (WHO).

The authorities have administered 90,361,002 first shots, accounting for 43.3 percent of the target of over 208 million, and 50,688,220 second shots, or 24.3 percent of September 29, 2021, afternoon.

The government rolled out its COVID-19 vaccination program on January 13, 2021, for healthcare workers, public service officers, elderly people, and teachers. Later, students aged 12 years old and above were also covered.

As nearly all teachers and many students have been vaccinated, a face-to-face learning process becomes possible, so several schools are allowed to open under strict health protocols.

“We hope to start (face-to-face learning activities) as soon as possible because we want the students to immediately get the knowledge back in school,” President Joko Widodo (Jokowi) said recently while reviewing COVID-19 vaccinations at the State High School 3 in Wajo District, South Sulawesi.

The President, however, urged students and teachers to keep applying health protocols, especially wearing a mask, washing hands and maintaining a safe distance.

Education, Culture, Research, and Technology Minister Nadiem Makarim, on September 14, 2021, urged schools in regions with PPKM status at levels 1, 2 and 3 to not hesitate to hold face-to-face offline school activities.

Schools should not delay offline learning activities, pending vaccination of teachers and students, as the national coverage for teachers has reached around 60 percent, Makarim emphasized.

A total of 490,217 schools in areas with level 1 to 3 PPKM are allowed to conduct face-to-face learning. However, Makarim stressed that the pupils’ parents have the final say on allowing their children to attend offline activities at school.

The education minister explained that the joint decision of four ministers on learning activities during the pandemic offered flexibility for the regional authority to plan and implement face-to-face offline school activities.

The joint decision sets a maximum attendance of 18 pupils in one classroom and five pupils per classroom at pre-school level and instructs strict health protocol enforcement, school canteen closure, and restricts extra-curricular activities.

Women’s Empowerment and Child Protection Minister Bintang Puspayoga has urged all parties to implement the 5 SIAP (5 READY) concept during the face-to-face learning process.

“The role of parents, teachers, schools, local governments, and the community is greatly needed. Thus the children can continue learning optimally without being infected with COVID-19,” she said September 9.

Under the Children SIAP component, children must be made to understand and comply with the health protocols. The concept of 5 SIAP comprises Children SIAP, Families SIAP, Education Units SIAP, Infrastructure SIAP, and Local Government and Communities SIAP, she explained.

Family SIAP means that parents/caregivers have to prepare for the needs of the children and build their understanding, so they comply with the health protocols.

Education Units SIAP requires academic units to be ready to implement health protocols. Infrastructure SIAP refers to ensuring infrastructure such as safe routes for school and public transportation meets the requirements set in the health protocols, she informed.

Lastly, Local Government and Community SIAP are meant to ensure that all regional and community leaders support the reopening of schools and are ready to oversee learning activities.

“If the SIAP points of 1-5 are not ready, then the PTM must be postponed,” the minister said.

Data of the Ministry of Education, Culture, Research, and Technology in Early August showed that around 39 per cent of around 270 thousand school units nationwide have reopened and commenced offline learning activities, Sri Wahyuningsih, the ministry’s Director for Elementary Schools, said,

She urged school administrators to establish COVID-19 task forces in their respective schools for health protocol enforcement monitoring at the school and assuring the health of students and teachers.

“(A COVID-19 task force is important because) a safe and secure school is our priority,” she said.

Furthermore, the COVID-19 Handling Task Force spokesperson, Prof. Wiku Adisasmito, has asked schools to halt face-to-face learning if a new COVID-19 case is detected in school areas.

According to data from the education ministry, as of September 23, 2021, only 2.77 percent out of 47,033 schools have reported COVID-19 cases during face-to-face learning.

“Ensure that students and teaching staff are disciplined in following health protocols,” he urged.

Many students participating in online learning remotely for months have welcomed the government’s policy to resume face-to-face learning activities.

“Online learning is challenging for us who are majoring in fashion. The material, if given online, is difficult to understand. Face-to-face learning helps us to understand the subject better,” Hasna Nabilashe, a student of a vocational senior high school, said.

Source: Antara News

57 investigators failing civic knowledge test bid farewell to KPK

Fifty-seven investigators of the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK), who had earlier failed the civic knowledge test, bid farewell to the commission on their last working day on Thursday.

At the end of their working hours, the 57 discharged KPK staff performed a long march from the KPK Main Office building in Rasuna Said Road, South Jakarta, to the KPK’s Anti-Corruption Learning Centre (ACLC) building, which is located 500 meters from the anti-graft headquarters.

Among the 57 people who joined the long march were former KPK senior investigator Novel Baswedan, former director of the KPK’s Anti-Corruption Promotion and Campaign Department, Giri Suprapdiono, and former KPK staff union head Yudi Purnomo Harahap.

After arriving at the KPK ACLC building, the 57 dismissed staff bid farewell to each other.

At the farewell, former KPK investigator M Praswad Nugraha said that the 57 former KPK staff will establish the Indonesia Memanggil (Indonesia Calling) IM57+Institute to continue their struggle against corruption in the country.

The institute will serve as a platform for dismissed KPK staff to continue their anti-corruption struggle by hosting anti-corruption discussions and education and will serve as an anti-corruption watchdog, he informed.

“The IM57+Institute will serve as our platform to unite and continue our struggle to eradicate corruption from this country,” Nugraha stated at the ACLC building.

Meanwhile, Baswedan’s wife Rina Emilda, who also joined the long march, expressed her pride in her husband’s anti-corruption struggle and affirmed her continued support despite his no longer working for the KPK.

“My presence here is not only to pick up my husband home but also to express my pride as I have accompanied him since his days at the police, then the KPK, until his final day from the KPK today,” Emilda remarked.

Earlier, the KPK granted an honorable discharge to the 57 KPK investigators who had failed a civic knowledge test and designated September 30, 2021 as their last working day.

The civic knowledge test has become the cause célèbre of the nation’s anti-corruption struggle, and some parties have launched protests, calling the test a ploy to target high-profile KPK investigators probing major corruption cases.

On Tuesday (September 28, 2021), National Police chief General Listyo Sigit Prabowo had expressed his intention to recruit former KPK employees to the National Police Criminal Investigation Unit to strengthen the Corruption Crime Directorate.

General Prabowo said he had conveyed his intention to President Joko Widodo in a letter sent on September 24, 2021. He said the President responded in the affirmative on September 27 and instructed him to coordinate with the relevant ministries for the recruitment process.

Source: Antara News

Entikong border security task force arrests man for drug possession

Personnel from the Border Security Task Force Mechanical Infantry Battalion 643/Wanara Sakti arrested a man on drug possession charges at the Entikong sub-district Community Control and Command Tactical Post in Sanggau district, West Kalimantan.

“The arrest was made on Wednesday night when we conducted inspection and frisked people who passed the post,” the task force’s commander, Lieutenant Colonel Hendro Wicaksono, said in a statement at the Entikong sub-district Command Tactical Center on Thursday.

The man, 33, was arrested after the post’s guarding squad commander, Second Sergeant Rabiul Azmi, ordered his men to check all vehicles going through the post.

“Amid the inspection, a resident with the initials L was found to bring an item suspected of being methamphetamine, crystal meth, weighing 2.8 grams in his trouser pocket,” Wicaksono informed.

A drug test conducted using a kit from the Entikong sub-district National Narcotics Agency confirmed the contraband as crystal meth, he said.

Hence, the suspect and the drugs were handed over to the sectoral police for further case development and investigation, he added.

“We will always carry out strict supervision at all border routes to prevent any illegal actions – for instance, drug-trafficking, which harms the nation’s community,” the task force commander added.

Meanwhile, head of the Entikong sub-district, Sectoral Police Adjunct Commissioner Oloan Sihombing, expressed his gratitude for the good cooperation with the military task force to uncover crystal meth use in the region.

“In future, the cooperation has to be maintained, thus the military task force can prevent the crime and the police can take action against any illegal acts in Entikong sub-district,” he remarked.

Source: Antara News