Showing posts with label Australia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Australia. Show all posts

Friday, August 12, 2011

Australian project hunts lost indigenous languages

BBC News, 12August 2011


Indigenous communities number under half a million in today's Australia

RelatedStories 

Librariansin Australia have launched a three-year project to rediscover lost indigenouslanguages.

The NewSouth Wales State Library says fragments of many lost languages exist in papersleft by early settlers.

BeforeBritish colonialisation began there in 1788, around 250 aboriginal languageswere spoken in Australia by an estimated one million people.

Only a fewdozen languages remain and the communities number around 470,000 people in anation of 22 million.

'Unrivalled'accounts

"Anation's oral and written language is the backbone to its culture," saidthe Arts Minister of New South Wales, George Souris.

"Thepreservation of the languages and dialects of our indigenous citizens is a veryimportant project in this regard."

NoelleNelson, the acting chief executive of Anglo-Australian mining giant Rio Tinto,which is backing the project, said the settlers' first-hand accounts at theState Library are "unrivalled".

"Thesefirst-hand accounts are often the only surviving records of many indigenous languages,"Nelson told the AFP news agency.

"Theproject will introduce and reconnect people with indigenous culture."

AnAustralian government survey in 2004 found that only 145 indigenous languageswere still spoken in Australia and that 110 of these were severely orcritically endangered.




Brazil's indigenous protection service says the area threatened by drug
 traffickers has 'the greatest concentration of isolated groups the world'.
Photograph: Gleison Miranda/AFP/Getty Images



Monday, May 9, 2011

Over 35% of tourist arrivals from other ASEAN countries

Antara News, Mon, May 9 2011

Related News

Jakarta (ANTARA News) - Indonesia received 210,372 tourists from other ASEAN member states in March, accounting for 35.17 percent of the overall tourist arrivals in the country in that month.

"In March 2011, ASEAN tourists, for instance, from Singapore, Malaysia, the Philippines and Thailand reached 210,372," Deputy Director of ASEAN Region at the Culture and Tourism Ministry Chrismiastutie said here on Monday.

She said 598,068 tourists visited Indonesia in March.

Cumulatively, the number of tourists from other ASEAN member states reached 556,336 in the first quarter of 2011. The figure represented 32.44 percent of the overall tourist arrivals over the period reaching 1,714,946, according to the center of data processing and network system at the ministry.

"We predict the figure will increase significantly in line with the position of Indonesia as the 2011 ASEAN chair," she said.

In the first quarter of 2011, tourists from other ASEAN member states dominated tourist arrivals in Indonesia, she said.

"Throughout this year there will be many MICE (Meeting Incentive Conference and Exhibition) events to be held in Indonesia as the ASEAN chair," she said.

Singapore took the lead as the source of Indonesia`s tourist arrivals among ASEAN member states in the January-March 2011 period, with 271,523 tourists, up 7.92 percent from the same period last year.

This was followed by Malaysia with 239,663 tourists, the Philippines 28,400, and Thailand 16,750.

Overall, tourist arrivals in the country grew 6.44 percent in the first three months of 2011 compared with the same period last year.

Editor: Jafar M Sidik

Friday, January 21, 2011

Australia to build "peace museum" in Indonesia's Bali

English.news.cn   2011-01-21

JAKARTA, Jan. 21 (Xinhua) -- The Australian government is seeking support from Indonesia's local government in Bali for building a "peace museum" that commemorates Australians perished in 2002 Bali bombing, local media reported on Friday.

Speaking on the sidelines of his meeting with regent of Bali's Badung regency Anak Agung Gde Agung on Friday, Australian ambassador to Indonesia, Greg Moriarty, said that the museum would be constructed near the ground zero in Badung regency where the bomb blast killed 202 people in Bali in mid-August 2002.

Most of the casualties were Australians, the Antara news service reported.

Badung regent Anak Agung said that his administration would fully support the museum construction plans after learning that the Australia government has settled the acquisition process on the site where the project would be carried out.

Indonesia's leisure island of Bali saw strings of deadly terrorist attacks perpetrated by Indonesian terrorist cells that killed hundreds of westerners and local people. The security in the Indonesia's prominent island has been in perfect condition after Indonesian apparatus arrested the terrorists. Some of them were executed after undergone trials in public courts.

Editor: Tang Danlu

Monday, December 13, 2010

Australia sponsors workshop for Indonesian actors

Antara News, Monday, December 13, 2010

Jakarta (ANTARA News) - Australia has sponsored a one-week "Mind, Body and Soul Acting" workshop at Teater Popular in Jakarta for emerging Indonesian actors.

The Australian Embassy in a media release in its official website on Monday said the workshop was provided for the actors to explore creative exchange of cultural, traditional and contemporary practices between Indonesia and Australia.

The workshop was conducted from December 6 to 12, 2010 by Indonesia`s leading stage and film director Slamet Rahardjo Djarot (Teater Popular Jakarta) and Australian theater director and trainer Robert Draffin (Liminal Theatre), who has particular expertise in the Asian region.

The workshop is part of a larger production by Teater Populer Jakarta and Melbourne`s Liminal Theatre to create a new piece of theatre drawing on cultural and universal perspectives of the story of Oedipus entitled The Ghost of Oedipus: Universal Eye of the Future.

"This theatre performance will draw on contemporary practices of multi-media theatre and performance, interwoven with traditional Indonesian practices of song, dance and shadow puppetry producing a unique Indonesian and Australian collaboration. We are delighted this workshop will develop further the cultural exchange between artists from both countries," said Australian Ambassador to Indonesia, Greg Moriarty.

The project, which is sponsored by the Australian Government through the Australia- Indonesia Institute, will build on strong people-to-people relationships between Indonesian and Australian theatre specialists and artists.

"This close cooperation at a cultural level is just one of the practical ways in which Australia and Indonesia are working together as close neighbors," Moriarty said.

Monday, November 1, 2010

Indonesian president vows 'no immunity' for torturers

RNW, 1 November 2010

Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono said Monday there was "no immunity" for members of the country's armed forces, after a video showed them torturing unarmed civilians in Papua.

He told a weekly cabinet meeting that the soldiers involved would be punished and rejected international pressure over the issue ahead of talks in Jakarta with Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard.

"It became a news topic in various international media and we must take steps. Not because of pressure from anyone," he said.

"That (torture) is not this country's policy. If there's a violation, we will pass sanctions. There's no immunity."

As Gillard arrived in Jakarta for Tuesday's talks, military chief Agus Suhartono said five suspects had been identified and their files had been passed to military prosecutors. He did not name the suspects.

The video, which appeared online, showed two Papuan men being kicked and abused as soldiers interrogated them over the whereabouts of a weapons cache. One screams in pain when a burning stick is applied to his genitals.

The video, first reported in The Sydney Morning Herald newspaper, follows similar allegations against Australian-funded Indonesian anti-terror police said to have abused peaceful political activists in the Maluku islands.

Papua and the Malukus have underground separatist movements which Indonesia regards as threats to its territorial unity. Activists are regularly given lengthy jail terms for crimes such as possessing outlawed rebel flags.

New York-based Human Rights Watch (HRW) has urged Gillard to press Indonesia for a full investigation into torture by its military during her talks with Yudhoyono.

Yudhoyono said however that Indonesia needed no outside pressure to "do what needs to be done".

"I read in the news... Australia has been asked to pressure Indonesia to carry out an investigation. I say there's no need to pressure Indonesia," he said.

"There should be no pressure from any country or any non-government organisation."

Australia has worked closely with the Indonesian security forces since 88 Australian tourists were killed in the 2002 Bali bombings by Islamist extremists.

Few Indonesian military officers have ever faced justice for gross human rights abuses dating back decades, including alleged crimes against humanity in East Timor.


Related Articles:

Sunday, October 17, 2010

Arrest of Foreigners in Bali Up 25% So Far This Year

Jakarta Globe, Made Arya Kencana | October 17, 2010

Australian boxing trainer Michael Sacatides sits next to the 1.7 kilograms of methamphetamine he is alleged to have attempted to smuggle into Bali. Bali Police say they have arrested 41 foreign nationals so far this year, compared with 31 for the same period last year. (AFP Photo) 

Jakarta. The number of foreigners arrested for committing crimes in Bali has risen 25 percent this year, most of it drug-related, and the numbers are climbing.

Police said on Sunday that from January through September, 43 foreign nationals had been arrested, mainly for drug offenses, compared with 31 for the same period last year.

“Narcotics-related crime dominates and it seems to be a continuing trend,” Bali Police chief Insp. Gen. Hadiatmoko said.

The latest tourist to be arrested was Michael Sacatides, 43, an Australian national accused of attempting to smuggle 1.7 kilograms of methamphetamine into the country on Oct. 1.

Sacatides is just the latest in a string of foreigners connected to the drug trade.

The case of Australian Schapelle Leigh Corby has generated endless attention. She was caught smuggling 4.2 kg of marijuana in 2005 that she claimed was planted in her luggage.

Corby has filed a request for clemency to the president, pleading to have her 20 years sentence reduced on the grounds she is suffering from mental illness.

But a justice official has said she shows no signs of mental illness.

Another high-profile narcotics case involves the so-called Bali Nine group. Andrew Chan, Myuran Sukumaran and Scott Anthony Rush from Australia have been sentenced to death for their role in smuggling 8.2 kg of heroin into the country. The results of a review of their case is still pending.

Police said a rise in theft cases included that of ancient sacred Hindu statues called pratima . A French national has been put on the police’s wanted list after authorities found 16 pratimas in a warehouse. He fled after the raid.

The operation followed the arrest of Italian Roberto Gamba, whom police say was caught with 144 of the statues.

“It is important that the police, immigration and tourism authorities be more vigilant,” Hadiatmoko said.

He urged Balinese to be careful about what foreigners they rented their properties to and ascertain what their intentions were.

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Obama to give Australia a miss

ABC News, 24 Sep 2010

No visit: US president Barack Obama
(Reuters: Lucas Jackson)
United States president Barack Obama has announced he will make a long-awaited trip to Indonesia in November, but Australia is again off the itinerary.

Mr Obama has called off two previous plans to visit Indonesia and Australia, first to concentrate on passing his health care reform bill, and then over the Gulf of Mexico oil spill.

The president will now go to Indonesia as part of a trip that will also take him to South Korea for a G20 meeting and to Tokyo for the APEC summit.

The American ambassador in Australia has given assurances that Mr Obama will eventually visit Australia.

Related Articles:

Monday, September 13, 2010

National Police Deny Maluku Rights Abuses

Jakarta Globe, Nivell Rayda & AFP | September 14, 2010

Related articles

Jakarta. Authorities have denied accusations that the National Police’s antiterror unit, Densus 88, tortured suspected members of a separatist group in Maluku.

“It is impossible. We have strict protocols and procedures,” National Police spokesman Insp. Gen. Marwoto Soeto told the Jakarta Globe on Monday, in response to torture allegations raised by rights watchdogs.

He said police officers “took the necessary measures” when they seized the men, some of whom resisted arrest.

“It is possible that they were injured during one of the raids, particularly if the officers suspected them to be armed and dangerous,” Marwoto said.

At least 21 people were arrested between Aug. 1 and 7 in Ambon and the adjacent city of Saparua in Maluku.

Police accused the suspects of attempting to raise the banned South Maluku Republic (RMS) flag during President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono’s visit to the province on Aug. 3.

Semuel Wailaruny, from the Maluku People’s Advocacy Team, said a number of people had been taken to Densus 88’s provincial office in Ambon, where members of the unit exerted violence during police interrogations.

“They were blindfolded with duct tape and scarves so that they would not be able to see their attackers,” Semuel told the Globe on Monday. “They were beaten. Their heads were slammed [against] walls and they were kicked in the stomach.”

“One of them, Yonias Siahaya, was left a cripple. He is paralyzed from the waist down,” he said.

The Australian government has sent officials to investigate the claims. Densus 88 receives millions of dollars in funds from Australia each year to combat extremism in Indonesia.

“The Australian government is aware of and concerned by the allegations of brutality [raised by Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch] toward political prisoners,” a foreign affairs official said in a statement.

“Australian Embassy officials [in] Jakarta have made inquiries with the Indonesian National Police, including during a recent visit to Ambon, where these allegations were discussed with both government and civil society representatives,” the official said.

The Sydney Morning Herald ran statements from seven of the alleged separatists. One of the men, who was recovering at a hospital, said that police officers jumped on the detainees and put plastic bags over their heads so they could not breathe.

Another detainee said he was forced to eat raw chilies, while two others said they were told to hug and kiss, and were beaten when they refused.

“We were all tortured beyond the limit. And during the torture, if we mentioned the name of the Lord Jesus, we would be punched and slapped,” one of the detainees was quoted as saying.

Semuel said those arrested were not armed and had meant to hold a peaceful protest during the president’s visit, which was scheduled to coincide with Sail Banda 2010, an international maritime event.

“The activists were planning to use [Yudhoyono’s visit] as an opportunity to disseminate posters, books and other materials related to alleged human rights violations in Maluku because the Sail Banda event also attracted a lot of foreign dignitaries and journalists,” he said.

“Some of them didn’t even participate in the plot. They were caught carrying pieces of fabric, which [the] police suspected were going to be used to assemble the RMS flag, which was not true,” Semuel said.

Singapore, Australia, New Zealand and the United States were among the countries that participated in Sail Banda, which was organized to showcase how Maluku had overcome years of sectarian conflict.

Maluku Police spokesman Adj. Sr. Comr. Johanis Buai, however, said the suspected separatists were planning to float dozens of RMS flags attached to helium-filled balloons during the event.

He said the police were still investigating the case, which will be forwarded to the prosecutors’ office this month.

In 2007, a group of RMS activists posing as a dance troupe entered Ambon’s Merdeka Stadium, where Yudhoyono was hosting a Family Day celebration.

The group performed the cakalele, a traditional war dance, before unfurling a nine-meter-long RMS flag hidden inside a drum, as a stunned and angry Yudhoyono looked on.

Police officers brutally beat up the activists involved in the 2007 incident, according to London-based Amnesty International.

On Monday, one of the activists involved in the stunt, Yusuf Sipakoly, died after years of internal bleeding and kidney failure, which his family said was caused by police beatings during his interrogation and detention. He was 52.

Yusuf was sentenced to 12 years in prison for treason. Despite complaining about his health, he was repeatedly denied medical attention.

Concerned groups have long urged the police to respect the rights of prisoners during questioning or detention to avoid human rights violations.


Related Articles:

Monday, August 2, 2010

Darwin mayor wants yacht race to Ambon maintained

Antara News, Monday, August 2, 2010 17:42 WIB

Ambon, Maluku (ANTARA News) - The annual Darwin-Ambon Yacht Race will be maintained as it is having a major impact on the continuity of the sister-city cooperation between Darwin and Ambon, the Australian city`s mayor said.

Darwin Mayor Graeme Sawyer said here on Monday the race was of great importance to the strengthening of the Darwin-Ambon sister city cooperative ties.

Sawyer admitted the prestigious international yacht race was also important to strengthen the relations between the peoples of Darwin and Ambon.

"The people of Darwin have a very friendly relationship with their friends in Ambon, and thus they make use of the yacht race every year to visit Maluku provincial capital," Sawyer said.

He expressed optimism that in the years to come the participant of the Darwin-Ambon Yacht Race would continue to increase following conducive situation in Ambon after almost three-year sectarian violence from 1999-2002.

The Darwin to Ambon Yacht Race was initially organized by the Cruising Yacht Association of the Northern Territory Incorporated (CYANT).

That Association ran the event from 1976 until 1998 when it was suspended for safety and security reasons.

The 600 mile downwind race attracted six yachts in its inaugural year.

For months afterwards, conversation amongst returning yachties was dominated by stories of "champagne sailing", overwhelming hospitality, lovely friendly people, the scenic beauty, the cultural diversity, the food, and an annual event not to be missed.

Entries steadily increased over the years as the event?s reputation spread and its tradition grew.

International skippers began to use Ambon as a starting point to visit some of the 13,000 islands of the Indonesian Archipelago. Some sailed north to Manado and onto the Raja Muda Selangor Regatta in Malaysia.

Others headed southwest to the amazing Buton Passage and then on to visit the famous Komodo Dragons en route to Makassar or Bali and beyond.

A big factor in the growing popularity of the race was related to the excellent facilities Darwin offered for yachts and their crews. For many, Darwin would be the last access to western comforts and familiar language for many months.

Monday, July 5, 2010

Torres Strait islanders win marine rights battle

BBC News, By Phil Mercer, 5 July 2010

Indigenous islanders in the Torres Strait are celebrating Australia's largest ever marine rights victory.

Community elders say it will help to
maintain their unique maritime culture
Communities there have secured ownership of more than 40,000 sq km of sea between the tip of northern Queensland and Papua New Guinea.

Ships, fishermen and other businesses will still be able to operate in the waters, but indigenous groups must be consulted about future development.

Australia's Federal Court made the ruling after a nine-year legal battle.

There has been jubilation across the Torres Strait as indigenous islanders celebrate a historic decision.

Community elders say it will help to maintain their unique maritime culture and provide economic opportunity.

At the heart of their claim was a call for their spiritual ties to the sea to be formally recognised.

The court's ruling does not grant islanders exclusive rights over the vast area of ocean, nor were they claimed.

More than 200 islands are peppered throughout the Torres Strait.

Its people speak two distinct languages. Their traditional beliefs are based on the sea, the land and the sky, which have been portrayed over thousands of years in a rich array of stories, songs and dances.

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