Monday, July 26, 2010

Children's Day Laden With Bleak Statistics

Statistics of troubling and incidents of vielence againist childern is increase.
The recorded number of violence againist children this year reahed almost 2000 in may.
Most cases reported were of physical and sexual violence. mostly the violence cases happened because economic problems breed dysfuntional families. this condition affects several aspects of the children lives. there are many of children from poor families have a hard time of decent health and education services. Such as that 13 million indonesian children is malnutrition every year and at least 500 is died because of diarrhea and complications during their mother's pregnancies.
There are 2.5 million children between 7 to 15 years that doesn't get 9 years education and 486,426 children drop out from their school at the primary school and there were at least 600,000 under age marriage.
The goverment should establish crisis centers in neighborhoods to deal with the violence.

from the jakarta post, friday , july 25 2010



posted by : dhilla

Porn Site Blocking To Start Before Ramadhan

The goverment announced plans to block porn websites before the Muslim fasting month of ramadhan starts around Aug. 10 an official says......
i think this is must done before ramadhan so islamic activities are not disturbed.
Like Gatot said, the goverment would work with internet service providers to block the content. "the ISPs were quite cooperative. They only said they did not want to be burned.
FYI...Valens Riyadi from the indonesian internet service provider Association (APJIIA) said the goverment's plan would place a large burden on ISPs. "We are not in a position to reject the content-blocking, but we want it to be well regulated.

FROM THE JAKARTA POST FRIDAY, JULY 23, 2010

Posted By : NIA

Child obesity a growing Indonesia problem

Indonesia is a big country, so Indonesia has so many problem that we must to solve. Connected to Children's Day, nowaday many children suffering from obesity are proof the life may not be easier for those who carrying around extra weight.
Ade Saputra 12 years old from Bogor is one of example. He said he was often teased byhis friends because of his size. I think many example in other part of Indonesia that kind like his problem. So we all (stakeholders) must solving the problem, and we must help them. We must make Indonesia healthy and powerful.

from the jakarta post friday, 25, 2010

posted by aldi
China flooding kills 701, worst toll in a decade
Chi-Chi Zhang, The Associated Press, Beijing | Wed, 07/21/2010 4:11 PM | Headlines
A | A | A |


More than 1,000 people have died or disappeared in severe flooding in China so far this year, and the heaviest rains are still to come, a senior official warned Wednesday.

This year's floods, whch have caused tens of billions of dollars in damage already, have exacted the highest death toll since 1998, when the highest water levels in five decades claimed 4,150 lives.

With the typhoon season rolling in, Liu Ning, general secretary of the gernment's flood prevention agency, told a news conference authorities must ramp up preparations.

"Since 60 to 80 percent of the annual rain level occurs in June, July and August, we should be prepared to prevent and combat potential disasters," Liu said.

Tropical storm Chanthu is expected to hit Chia's southern island of Hainan and Guangdong province this weekend. Six to eight typhoons are expected this year.

Already, three-quarters of China's provinces have been plagued by flooding and 25 rivers have seen record-high water levels, Liu said.

State broadcaster China Central Television showed footage of soldiers and rescue workers searching through rubble and mud for survivors of a landslide in Ankang city in the northern province of Shaanxi, where 14 people have died and 35 remained missing as of Wednesday.

Footage from Shaanxi and the southwestern province of Sichuan showed flooded shops and homes, with buses and cars driving down water-filled streets. Some residents waded through knee-deep water to stock up at the local supermarket.

Flooding, particularly along the Yangtze River basin, has overwhelmed reservoirs, swamped towns and cities, and caused landslides that have smothered communities, including toppling 645,000 houses. The Three Gorges Dam faced its highest levels ever this week and water breached the massive dam.

"Although water levels in the upper stretches of the Yangtze River have surpassed that of 1998, the flood situation is still not as severe because the Three Gorges Dam has played a key role in preventing floods along the river this year," Liu said.

The waters have killed 701 people and left 347 missing. The overall damage totals 142.2 billion yuan ($21 billion), Liu said.

This year's torrential floods have hit farms especially hard, affecting 2.3 million acres (930,000 hectares) of crops, with more than 330 acres (133 hectares) destroyed by floods as of July 10, according to the Ministry of Civil Affairs.

-Aldi

from Jakarta Post

Indonesia Wins 4 Gold Medals in International Physics Olympics

Monday, 26 July, 2010 15:26 WIB

TEMPO Interactive, Pamekasan:The Indonesian Physics Olympics Team (TOFI) has won four gold medals and one silver medal. The team of five students was sent to the 41st International Physics Olympics in Zagreb, Croatia, on July 17 to 25, 2010.

The gold medal was won by Muhammad Sohibul Maromi (State High School Number 1 Pamekasan, Madura, East Java), Christian George Emor (Lokon St. Nikolaus High School, Tomohon, North Sulawesi), David Giovanni (Penabur Gading Serpong High School, Tangerang, Banten), and Kevin Soedyatmiko (State High School Number 12 Jakarta). The silver medal was won by Ahmad Ataka (State High School Number 3 Yogyakarta).

TOFI’s achievement this year was an improvement over last year’s performance in Mexico where they only won one gold medal, three silver, and one bronze medal.

The arrival of Mohammad Shohibul Maromi was greeted by Pamekasan Regent Kholilurrahman at the regency hall yesterday. Kholilurrahman hoped that his achievement can motivate other students to study more diligently and continue the tradition of winning gold medals at the International Physics Olympics.

State High School Number 1 Pamekasan Principal, Basyoir, said this was an extraordinary achievement. “I don’t have the words for it,” he said yesterday.

For State High School Number 1 in Pamekasan, this is not the first of such an achievement. In 2006, another student, Andi Oktavian Latief, also won the 37th International Physics Olympics in Singapore. At that time, TOFI won four gold medals and one silver medal.

“Thanks be to God, Alhamdulillah, we are the only regency in Madura to have achieved this,” Basyoir said proudly.

Before departing for Croatia, Shohibul and Ali Ihsanul Qauli, also from State High School Number 1 Pamekasan, won silver and bronze medals in the 10th Asian Physics Olympics held in Bangkok, Thailand, in 2009.


In the 11th Asian Physics Olympics held in Taiwan on April 23 to May 2010, both students won a silver medal and an honorable mention. The success in Taiwan qualified Romi to become a TOFI member with four other students competing in Zagreb.


MUSTHOFA BISRI

Posted by : NIA

As English Spreads, Indonesians Fear for Their Language

Children learning to prepare coffee at Kidzania, an amusement park in Jakarta that lets children try out jobs; both Indonesian and English are used there.

Paulina Sugiarto’s three children played together at a mall here the other day, chattering not in Indonesia's national language, but English. Their fluency often draws admiring questions from other Indonesian parents Ms. Sugiarto encounters in this city’s upscale malls.

But the children’s ability in English obscured the fact that, though born and raised in Indonesia, they were struggling with the Indonesian language, known as Bahasa Indonesia. Their parents, who grew up speaking the Indonesian language but went to college in the United States and Australia, talk to their children in English. And the children attend a private school where English is the main language of instruction.

“They know they’re Indonesian,” Ms. Sugiarto, 34, said. “They love Indonesia. They just can’t speak Bahasa Indonesia. It’s tragic.”

Indonesia’s linguistic legacy is increasingly under threat as growing numbers of wealthy and upper-middle-class families shun public schools where Indonesian remains the main language but English is often taught poorly. They are turning, instead, to private schools that focus on English and devote little time, if any, to Indonesian.

For some Indonesians, as mastery of English has become increasingly tied to social standing, Indonesian has been relegated to second-class status. In extreme cases, people take pride in speaking Indonesian poorly.

The global spread of English, with its sometimes corrosive effects on local languages, has caused much hand-wringing in many non-English-speaking corners of the world. But the implications may be more far-reaching in Indonesia, where generations of political leaders promoted Indonesian to unite the nation and forge a national identity out of countless ethnic groups, ancient cultures and disparate dialects.

The government recently announced that it would require all private schools to teach the nation’s official language to its Indonesian students by 2013. Details remain sketchy, though.

“These schools operate here, but don’t offer Bahasa to our citizens,” said Suyanto, who oversees primary and secondary education at the Education Ministry.

“If we don’t regulate them, in the long run this could be dangerous for the continuity of our language,” said Mr. Suyanto, who like many Indonesians uses one name. “If this big country doesn’t have a strong language to unite it, it could be dangerous.”

The seemingly reflexive preference for English has begun to attract criticism in the popular culture. Last year, a woman, whose father is Indonesian and her mother American, was crowned Miss Indonesia despite her poor command of Indonesian. The judges were later denounced in the news media and in the blogosphere for being impressed by her English fluency and for disregarding the fact that, despite growing up here, she needed interpreters to translate the judges’ questions.

In 1928, nationalists seeking independence from Dutch rule chose Indonesian a form of Malay, as the language of civic unity. While a small percentage of educated Indonesians spoke Dutch, Indonesian became the preferred language of intellectuals.

Each language had a social rank, said Arief Rachman, an education expert. “If you spoke Javanese, you were below,” he said, referring to the main language on the island of Java. “If you spoke Indonesian, you were a bit above. If you spoke Dutch, you were at the top.”

Leaders, especially Suharto, the general who ruled Indonesia until 1998, enforced teaching of Indonesian and curbed use of English.

“During the Suharto era, Bahasa Indonesia was the only language that we could see or read. English was at the bottom of the rung,” said Aimee Dawis, who teaches communications at Universitas Indonesia. “It was used to create a national identity, and it worked, because all of us spoke Bahasa Indonesia. Now the dilution of Bahasa Indonesia is not the result of a deliberate government policy. It’s just occurring naturally.”

With Indonesia’s democratization in the past decade, experts say, English became the new Dutch. Regulations were loosened, allowing Indonesian children to attend private schools that did not follow the national curriculum, but offered English. The more expensive ones, with tuition costing several thousand dollars a year, usually employ native speakers of English, said Elena Racho, vice chairwoman of the Association of National Plus Schools, an umbrella organization for private schools.

But with the popularity of private schools booming, hundreds have opened in recent years, Ms. Racho said. The less expensive ones, unable to hire foreigners, are often staffed with Indonesians teaching all subjects in English, if often imperfect English, she added.

Many children attending those schools end up speaking Indonesian poorly, experts said. Uchu Riza — who owns a private school that teaches both languages and also owns the local franchise of Kidzania, an amusement park where children can try out different professions — said some Indonesians were willing to sacrifice Indonesian for a language with perceived higher status.

“Sometimes they look down on people who don’t speak English,” she said.

She added: “In some families, the grandchildren cannot speak with the grandmother because they don’t speak Bahasa Indonesia. That’s sad.”

Anna Surti Ariani, a psychologist who provides counseling at private schools and in her own practice, said some parents even displayed “a negative pride” that their children spoke poor Indonesian. Schools typically advise the parents to speak to their children in English at home even though the parents may be far from fluent in the language.

“Sometimes the parents even ask the baby sitters not to speak in Indonesian but in English,” Ms. Ariani said.

It is a sight often seen in this city’s malls on weekends: Indonesian parents addressing their children in sometimes halting English, followed by nannies using what English words they know.

But Della Raymena Jovanka, 30, a mother of two preschoolers, has developed misgivings. Her son Fathiy, 4, attended an English play group and was enrolled in a kindergarten focusing on English; Ms. Jovanka allowed him to watch only English TV programs.

The result was that her son responded to his parents only in English and had difficulties with Indonesian. Ms. Jovanka was considering sending her son to a regular public school next year. But friends and relatives were pressing her to choose a private school so that her son could become fluent in English.

Asked whether she would rather have her son become fluent in English or Indonesian, Ms. Jovanka said, “To be honest, English. But this can become a big problem in his socialization. He’s Indonesian. He lives in Indonesia. If he can’t communicate with people, it’ll be a big problem.”


article by Norimitsu Onishi for The New York Times.

posted by Maqeba Ifadha

'Extinct' primate, slender loris, pictured in Sri Lanka

Some in Sri Lanka believe lorises can ward off the evil eye or help curse enemies

The first known photograph of a rare primate that was feared extinct has been captured by researchers in central Sri Lanka.

The Horton Plains slender loris, which has short, sturdy limbs and long fur, was tracked down in highland forest.

The photo shows an adult male sitting on a branch.

The elusive primate has been spotted only four times since 1937 and disappeared altogether from 1939 until 2002, when it was last glimpsed.

Superstitions

Experts feared the primate, whose numbers fell dramatically as much of its habitat was lost to crops and tea plantations, had become extinct.

The mysterious creature was traced by a joint team from the Zoological Society of London (ZSL) and Sri Lanka who conducted about 1,000 nocturnal searches in mountain forest.

The researchers were able to capture and physically examine one of the creatures, before releasing it back into the wild.

ZSL conservation biologist Dr Craig Turner said: "We are thrilled to have captured the first-ever photographs and prove its continued existence - especially after its 65-year disappearing act.

"This is the first time we have been able to conduct such a close examination of the Horton Plains slender loris," he said.

Slender lorises are small, nocturnal primates found only in the tropical forests of southern India and Sri Lanka.

About 6-10in long (15-25cm), their large eyes help their night-time hunting.

While the slender loris is extremely rare, other types of loris thrive in parts of South Asia and South East Asia.

Some communities believe eating loris flesh can treat leprosy. Tonics made from the animals are claimed to heal wounds and broken bones, and help women regain strength after childbirth.

In Sri Lanka, there is a belief that the animal's body parts can ward off the "evil eye" and be used to curse enemies. The primate's tears have been used as an ingredient in love potions.

Every year thousands of lorises are caught to supply such uses.


from bbc.co.uk

posted by Maqeba Ifadha