AGO names ex-Garuda Indonesia boss as suspect in graft case

The Attorney General’s Office (AGO), on Monday, named a former Garuda Indonesia president director as new suspect in the alleged case of corruption related to the procurement of planes from 2011 to 2021.

In addition, the AGO named PT Mugi Rekso Abadi director as a suspect in the alleged graft case.

Speaking to the press on Monday, Attorney General Sanitiar Burhanuddin confirmed that no arrests were made since the two suspects, identified by their initials as ES and SS, are serving jail term in connection with the graft case handled by the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK).

Earlier, the AGO also announced three suspects in the graft case related to the procurement of CRJ-1000 and the takeover of ATR72-600 by Garuda Indonesia.

They are identified by their initials as AW, Garuda Indonesia Executive Project Manager for Aircraft Delivery during the 2009-2014 period; SW, Vice President of the Strategic Management Office for the 2011-2012 period; and AB, Vice President of Treasury Management for the 2005-2012 period.

On Tuesday, June 21, 2022, the Junior Attorney General for Special Crimes handed over the dossiers of the three suspects and evidence to the Central Jakarta Public Prosecutor’s Office.

Chief of the Legal Information Center at the AGO Ketut Sumedana affirmed that the process of procuring Garuda Indonesia planes violated the fleet management procedure.

During the planning phase, the suspect SA made no market analysis, planned route, and plane need analysis and received no approval from the board of directors, he pointed out.

Source: Antara News

BPBD ensures aid adequate for Muara Enim flood victims

The South Sumatra provincial Regional Disaster Mitigation Agency (BPBD) has prepared adequate logistics assistance for several thousand flood victims in Muara Enim District to meet their needs for some time.

The Muara Enim District BPBD has prepared public kitchens and disaster posts in flood-affected areas, Head of Emergency Handling at the provincial BPBD Ansori informed in Palembang City, South Sumatra, on Monday.

The flood-affected locations include Lawang Kidul, Tanjung Agung, and Muara Enim Sub-districts. The height of the water reportedly reached two meters in the areas on Sunday (June 26, 2022).

The public kitchens and disaster posts have readied meals, logistics, and medical assistance for victims. At least 1,352 families comprising 4,674 people have been affected by the disaster.

In addition to the local BPBD, assistance has been provided by a number of mining companies in Muara Enim District under their corporate social responsibility program, Ansori informed.

Currently, the floodwaters have receded, he said. The residents, along with officers from the disaster mitigation operation control center as well as the rescue team of the mining companies, have removed flood debris from homes.

According to information provided by the Muara Enim district BPBD, the flood was caused by the overflowing of Enim River after heavy rain from Saturday (June 25) night until Sunday (June 26) morning.

The flood inundated hundreds of homes and swept away a bridge in Lawang Kidul sub-district.

In Muara Enim Sub-district, 365 people from Karang Raja Village and 624 people from Tanjung Raja Village had to seek refuge elsewhere.

Furthermore, 1,600 residents of Lingga Village, 45 residents of BTN Karang Asem housing, 1,267 residents of Pasar Tanjung Village, 728 residents of Tegal Rejo Village, as well as 45 residents of Tanjung Enim Village in Lawang Kidul Sub-district also took shelter due to the flood.

The Muara Enim BPBD’s Disaster Mitigation Operations Control Center team said that there were no casualties in the disaster.

Source: Antara News

Legislator calls for strengthening quarantine for curbing FMD spread

Chairman of Commission IV of the House of Representatives (DPR) Sudin has called for the strengthening of quarantine for farm animals to prevent the spread of the foot-and-mouth disease (FMD).

In a meeting with the Ministry of Agriculture at the Parliament Building here on Monday, he informed that he found the availability of quarantine officers and disinfectant facilities in the borders between regions to be insufficient.

“For example, when Commission IV made a working visit to East Java, we got information that the control efforts to prevent the spread of FMD were inadequate,” he said.

The commission also found that there were only two quarantine officers and two hand sprayers at the entrance gate.

In addition, he highlighted issues related to the availability and distribution of FMD vaccines for the immunization program, which is the main measure for preventing the transmission of the disease. He requested that the procurement and distribution of vaccines be accelerated.

The Ministry of Agriculture has ordered three million doses of the FMD vaccine from France, and only 800 thousand doses have arrived so far for the first phase of vaccinations. Meanwhile, arrangements are being made to obtain the remaining 2.2 million doses, but funds for the procurement are awaited.

According to the Ministry of Agriculture, the three million doses are emergency vaccines, and in the future, the vaccines will be produced domestically.

However, Sudin said that Indonesia is not yet ready to produce FMD vaccines for the entire population of ruminants in the country. He informed that during a working visit to the Veterinary Farma Center of the Ministry of Agriculture in East Java, he found that it could only produce one million FMD vaccines in a year.

This would not be sufficient to administer three vaccine doses to 18 million heads of cattle in Indonesia.

He also said he expected the allocation of Rp4.4 trillion provided by the government for FMD handling to be followed up with a detailed work plan.

Meanwhile, during the meeting, the chairman of Commission IV also lauded the formation of the FMD task force by the National Disaster Mitigation Agency (BNPB).

Source: Antara News

Navigating the food crisis, war

Even as the world is trying to recover from the economic downturn triggered by the COVID-19 pandemic, a war has broken out in Ukraine and worsened the economic situation and food supply chain disruption in several parts of the globe.

Food security is on the agenda of the G7 Summit for Partner Countries at Schloss Elmau in the Bavarian Alps, Germany, which President Joko Widodo attended on June 26–27, 2022.

Germany has invited Indonesia, Argentina, India, Senegal, and South Africa to the summit as partner countries.

The G7 is an informal forum of leading industrialized nations, comprising Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the United States.

The grouping was previously called G8 after Russia was accepted as its member in 1998, but it was kicked out in 2014 following a conflict with Ukraine.

Having taken over the G7 presidency from the UK in January 2022, Germany has set “progress towards an equitable world” as its goal and is focusing discussions on a sustainable planet, economic stability and transformation, healthy lives, and sustainable investments.

Germany wants to use its presidency to foster a sustainable planet, healthy living, investment in a better future, and building a world that is stronger together.

However, Europe is currently witnessing a war in Ukraine following the Russian invasion of February 24, 2022, and has been affected by the impacts of the war, which have included food chain disruption.

The sanctions imposed by the West on Russia have also triggered an energy crisis, with oil and gas supply dwindling in several European countries.

The G7 leaders, during the three-day summit ending June 28, are expected to make new commitments on food security and tackling rising energy prices as the UN has repeatedly warned of an unprecedented global hunger crisis due to the war.

The reports by the United Nations Secretary-General’s Global Crisis Response Group on Food, Energy, and Finance have painted a dramatic picture: of the 1.7 billion people in 107 states impacted by the crisis, 1.2 billion people will be exposed to a perfect storm of constrained finances, sharply increasing food prices, and rising energy prices.

Other problems that could plague the world include intense droughts in places like the Horn of Africa, and hunger being used as a weapon of war in conflict areas.

Prior to the summit, Germany had hosted the G7 Ministerial Conference on “Uniting for Global Food Security” on June 24, 2022.

Speaking at the meeting, Foreign Affairs Minister Retno Marsudi said that war will always be a humanitarian tragedy whose impact is not limited to one region. She invited countries across the world to unite to restore the global food chain.

The ongoing war has harmed the global food chain that has already been weakened by the pandemic and climate change, she noted.

“In this difficult time, the world has no other choice but to unite to restore global food resilience,” she remarked.

She called for an immediate end to the war and a peaceful solution to the Russia-Ukraine conflict.

Meanwhile, the presence of President Widodo at the G7 Summit reflects his concern over food security issues and intention to contribute to handling the food crisis as Indonesia has a lot of experience in strengthening food resilience and food security issues.

The President recently reminded his cabinet ministers to remain prudent in facing the looming food crisis and turn the crisis into an opportunity to benefit the nation.

As Indonesia has sufficient land for farming and plantations and adequate human resources to work the land, he asked people to plant and produce more food, including rice, corn, and soybean.

“Imagine if we can produce foods in a short period and we implement all of it, we will not only achieve self-sufficiency in the food aspect, but we will also have the potential to export commodities,” he stated.

The Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) recently lauded the performance of Indonesia’s Agriculture Ministry for successfully maintaining productivity to allow the nation to feed its population of more than 270 million.

The FAO praised the Indonesian government for boosting food production and securing domestic rice stocks despite the difficult global situation, FAO’s head for Indonesia and Timor Leste, Rajendra Aryal, said in a recent statement.

Based on reports received by FAO, several countries in the world are reeling under the food and financial crises, he noted. However, Indonesia has been able to achieve national food security.

Coordinating Minister for Economic Affairs Airlangga Hartarto recently said that Indonesia will, in the near future, export around 200 thousand tons of rice to several countries.

Over the past three years, the country has not imported rice, in fact, it has managed to achieve a surplus in the production of rice, which is the main staple food of its people.

Earlier, Indonesia had received an FAO award for achieving rice sufficiency in 1984. The award was presented by then FAO director general, Dr. Edoard Souma, to then Indonesian President Soeharto on July 22, 1986.

On November 14, 1985, during the 23rd Conference of the FAO, Soeharto went to Rome, Italy, to symbolically present 100,150 tons of rice donated by Indonesian farmers for African countries facing famine at that time.

On June 16, 2013, Indonesia again won an FAO award for rice self-sufficiency, which was presented by then FAO director general Graziano da Silva to a minister in Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono’s cabinet, Hatta Rajasa, in Rome.

If the current government is able to maintain the rice production surplus amid the global food crisis, it would not be a surprise if the nation wins another FAO laurel this year or next year.

Source: Antara News

Ministry to restrict number of visitors to Komodo National Park

The Environment and Forestry Ministry has decided to limit the number of tourists visiting Komodo National Park, West Manggarai District, East Nusa Tenggara (NTT) Province, to protect the population of Komodo dragons.

According to a statement received from the Administrative Bureau of the Regional Secretariat of NTT Province here on Monday, the decision was announced by Deputy Minister of Environment and Forestry Alue Dohong after a meeting with Deputy Governor of NTT Josef A Nae Soi regarding restricting the entry of visitors to the park.

The deputy minister said that the park is one of the world’s natural heritages with a high outstanding universal value (OUV).

However, the number of tourist visits to the park has tended to increase, he noted.

“The restriction intends to mitigate the negative impact of tourism activities on the preservation of the population of Komodo dragons and other animals, preserve the ecosystem sustainability of Komodo Island and Padar Island, as well as maintain the safety of tourists and officers during their visit to the park,” he explained.

He informed that the ministry’s Komodo National Park Center (BTNK), along with a number of experts from several universities in Indonesia, had studied the ecosystem service-based tourism carrying capacity and assimilative capacity (DDDTW) of Komodo Island and Padar Island.

He said that the study suggested that the ideal number of visitors each year should be 219 thousand for Komodo Island and 39,420 for Padar Island.

So far, BTNK has allowed tourists to visit Padar Island three times a day, with 100 people permitted per schedule.

However, according to the study, the number of visitors to Padar Island can be increased by 2 to 2.5 times by considering the carrying capacity of the tourism infrastructure in the area, such as tracking posts, public toilets, tracking safety equipment, rangers, as well as medical personnel.

Dohong said that the visitor restriction policy should be implemented through digital apps to facilitate tourism services, for instance, online accommodation booking.

“Through the policy, it is hoped that tourism activities will continue to run well, thus it can provide benefits and income to the community, while preserving the Komodo dragon’s population and habitat,” he added.

Source: Antara News