Monday 11 November 2013

Penulis Blog Dihentam Publik Malaysia

Penulis blog Negara Pakatan Rakyat menuai kecaman publik di Malaysia atas tulisannya yang memberi pembelaan ke atas tersangka tindak jenayah yang menembak mati seorang pengurus bank di Subang Jaya, Selangor dan melarikan RM450,000 (Rp 1.6 Milyar) pada Rabu 23 Oktober 2013 jam 18:36 waktu Malaysia.

Penulis mahukan pemerintah Indonesia menghantar protes ke atas Malaysia berhubung tundingan kecurangan kepolisian Malaysia ke atas tersangka yang dikatakan melanggar HAM.

Diinilai publik, penulis blog dikatakan sebagai coba menjadi biang kerok dalam mahu memanaskan hubungan Malaysia - Indonesia.

Monday, November 11, 2013

Layanan Buruk Suspek Bunuh Ambank: Indonesia Perlu Kemuka Bantahan  

Aku betul tak faham kenapa ramai sangat yang gembira bila suspek utama kes pembunuhan seorang pegawai Ambank di Subang Jaya pada 23 Oktober yang lepas berjaya ditangkap polis. Termasuklah yang menyatakan kegembiraan itu semalam ialah Najib Tun Razak!! Ini biasalah, orang macam Najib memang kemaruk publisiti politik, walhal dia bukan Menteri Dalam Negeri pun, tak tahu apa yang kecoh sangat. Zahid Hamidi pun tak cakap apa-apa. Seolahnya suspek yang dikenali sebagai Ardi itu telah pun didapati bersalah atas kesalahan tersebut dan sedang menunggu tarikh untuk digantung saja layaknya. 
at 12:20 PM
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Kepolisian Malaysia Bekuk Satpam WN Indonesia Pelaku Bunuh dan Rampok Bank

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Drainase Jakarta Buruk, Jokowi: Waktu Dibangun Mungkin Dikasih Sesuatu

Senin, 11/11/2013 18:17 WIB
Mulya Nurbilkis - detikNews


Jakarta - Saluran pembuangan air Jl TB Simatupang, Jakarta Selatan, jadi perhatian Gubernur DKI Jakarta, Joko Widodo. Jaringan saluran air ini terkesan dibuat asal-asalan tanpa memperhatikan aliran air sehingga akibatkan genangan air di jalan raya.

Saluran air bermuara di depan tanah kosong samping kantor PT Antam. Sayangnya, di depan muara tersebut tidak ditemukan saluran air yang juga dibangun untuk melanjutkan aliran air.

"Lihat ini coba, saluran di sana, seharusnya ada saluran jadi tidak mentok. Ini tidak ada," terangnya pada wartawan, Senin (11/11/2013).

Ia mencurigai lemahnya pengawasan usai ijin membangunnya dikeluarkan. Lebih jauh lagi, ia bahkan menduga ada suap yang diberikan pemegang proyek hingga saluran tersebut bisa tak bermuara.

"Ini harus ada evaluasi untuk ijin yang dikeluarkan karena tidak diikuti terus. Kesalahan itu, yang harusnya lurus dan dibelokkan biar ada muaranya. Ini bisa karena pengawasan lapangan yang kurang, atau diberi sesuatu. Nanti dicek lah," ucapnya.

Banyaknya permasalahan dalam sistem pembangunan saluran air di Jakarta membuat Jokowi kembali menekankan pentingnya pengawasan di lapangan agar tidak terjadi penyelewengan pembangunan di lapangan.

"Saya ingin lihat titik-titik genangan minggu lalu. Sudah ketemu dan penyebabnya jug. Ini pekerjaan kecil yang detail. Seperti mulut air. Ada juga mulut airnya kurang lebar. Ada yang kena kabel. Ketutupan sampah nututp. Ada yang kasusnya daya tampungnya kurang besar. Sebetulnya problem kecil tapi kalau nggak diawasi ya begini," pungkasnya.


Foto : Metro News

Haiyan death toll could reach 10,000 - The Manila Times

The body of a dead man is seen at the bay of Tacloban on Sunday. Communities in the city were reduced to waste- lands after super typhoon ‘Yolanda’ sliced through them last week. AFP PHOTO
The body of a dead man is seen at the bay of Tacloban on Sunday. Communities in the city were reduced to waste- lands after super typhoon ‘Yolanda’ sliced through them last week. AFP PHOTO
The death toll from a super typhoon that decimated entire towns in the Philippines could soar well over 10,000, authorities warned on Sunday, making it the country’s worst recorded natural disaster.

The horrifying estimates came as rescue workers appeared overwhelmed in their efforts to help countless survivors of Super Typhoon Yolanda (Haiyan), which sent tsunami-like waves and merciless winds rampaging across a huge chunk of the archipelago on Friday.

Police said they had deployed special forces to contain looters in Tacloban, the devastated provincial capital of Leyte, while the United States announced it had responded to a Philippine government appeal and would send military help.

“Tacloban is totally destroyed. Some people are losing their minds from hunger or from losing their families,” high school teacher Andrew Pomeda, 36, told Agence France-Presse, as he warned of the increasing desperation of survivors.

“People are becoming violent. They are looting business establishments, the malls, just to find food, rice and milk . . . I am afraid that in one week, people will be killing from hunger.”

Authorities were struggling to even understand the sheer magnitude of the disaster, let alone react to it, with the regional police chief for Leyte saying 10,000 people were believed to have died in that province alone.

“We had a meeting last night with the governor and, based on the government’s estimates, initially there are 10,000 casualties (dead). About 70 to 80 percent of the houses and structures along the typhoon’s path were destroyed,” Chief Superintendent Elmer Soria told reporters in Tacloban.

However, while Leyte was believed to have been the worst hit, the carnage extended across a 600-kilometer stretch of islands through the central Philippines.

A few dozen other deaths had been confirmed in some of these areas, but authorities admitted they were completely overwhelmed and many communities were still yet to be contacted.

“We’re still establishing command and control through logistics and communications,” military spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Ramon Zagala said.

He said among the communities yet to be contacted was Guiuan, a fishing town of about 40,000 people on Samar island that was the first to be hit after Yolanda swept in from the Pacific Ocean.

About 130 hundred kilometers to the west of Tacloban, the popular tourist islands of Malapascua appeared to be in ruins, according to aerial photographs, with people there unaccounted for so far.

“The coast guard commander cannot communicate with the area. They are cut off in communications and from power,” regional civil defense director Minda Morante said.

Deadliest on record

The Philippines endures a seemingly never-ending pattern of deadly typhoons, earthquakes, volcano eruptions and other natural disasters.

It is located along a typhoon belt and the so-called Ring of Fire, a vast Pacific Ocean region where many of Earth’s earthquakes and volcanic eruptions occur.

However, if the feared death toll of above 10,000 is correct, Haiyan would be the deadliest natural disaster ever recorded in the country.

Until Haiyan, the deadliest disaster was in 1976, when a tsunami triggered by a magnitude 7.9 earthquake devastated the Moro Gulf on the southern Philippine island of Mindanao, killing between 5,000 and 8,000 people.

In Washington, the Pentagon announced that US Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel had responded to a request from the Philippines for military aid.

“Secretary Hagel has directed US Pacific Command to support US government humanitarian relief operations in the Philippines in the wake of Typhoon Haiyan,” it said.

“The initial focus includes surface maritime search and rescue, medium-heavy helicopter lift support, airborne maritime search and rescue, fixed wing lift support and logistics enablers.”

United Nations leader Ban Ki-moon also pledged that UN humanitarian agencies would “respond rapidly to help people in need”.

Ban is “deeply saddened by the extensive loss of life” and devastation caused by Haiyan, said UN spokesman Martin Nesirky in a statement.

2,000 missing

In Samar, at least 300 people were confirmed killed while 2,000 others were declared missing.

Leo Dacaynos, a member of Samar’s disaster management council, told DZBB that the 300 people died in Basey, a small town on Samar.

He said almost 2,000 other people were missing in Basey and Barabot town.

This was the first confirmation of large-scale fatalities in the island of Samar.

However, vast areas of Samar, an island of over 733,000, still have not been contacted over two days after the typhoon struck.

Most of the deaths were caused by the storm surge which brought floods 20 feet deep in the two towns.

Basey and Barabot are coastal municipalities.

Dacaynos said Samar acting governor James Tan is focusing on relief aid in Basey.

He added that they are trying to contact Barabot which is still isolated Daraynos appealed for food, water and other emergency supplies for the affected towns as stocks there are getting low.

An Australian man widely identified as a former priest who blew the whistle on child sex abuse in the Catholic Church is among the dead.

The Department of Foreign Affairs on Sunday said the 50-year-old New South Wales man had been killed, although it declined to confirm his identity.

But the Australian Broadcasting Corporation and other media said he was former priest Kevin Lee, who was removed from his parish responsibilities in Sydney last year after admitting to marrying a woman in secret.

Lee spoke out about abuse in the Catholic Church on an ABC program, Unholy Silence, last year. He was believed to be living in the Philippines with his Filipina wife and young baby.

Almost 10 million affected

The Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD) said the storm affected two million families or 9.53 million individuals.

Officials in the regions of Calabarzon, Mimaropa, Bicol, Western, Central and Eastern Visayas, Northern Mindanao and Caraga are still assessing the effects of the disaster.

Close to 100,000 families were staying at 1,790 evacuation centers and 36,627 others were staying at friends and relatives’ houses.

DSWD has extended an initial P10.6 million worth of relief assistance to Bicol, Western and Central Visayas, Northern Mindanao, and Caraga.

In Tacloban, the DSWD set up a satellite internet service at the city hall to enable people to communicate with their relatives.

AFP AND PNA


Singapore poverty in the spotlight

The island's rich get richer while its poor get poorer, prompting calls for an official poverty line to be set.

Singapore - Begging is illegal here, under the island-nation's Destitute Persons Act, carrying a fine of up to $3,000 or imprisonment for up to two years for repeat offenders.

But Singapore's poor still can be found, often selling packets of tissues outside food centres. Or spending the night on benches near their jobs to save the transport fare home - they are commonly called "sleepers". Or collecting empty soft drink cans out of trash bins.

The poor have no place in Singapore's vaunted success story, but there are growing calls for one of the wealthiest countries in the world to acknowledge rapidly rising income inequality by setting an official poverty line. Hong Kong's recent decision to set a poverty line as a way to better identify and assist its poor has prompted a similar debate in Singapore's parliament.

A report to be formally released on November 11 says Singaporeans are not aware of the scale and depth of poverty. Meanwhile, a new public awareness campaign challenges citizens to try living on $5 for a day in a nation with one of the highest costs of living in the world.

But even as government spending on anti-poverty efforts is rising - assistance payments to the poor exceeded $100m Singaporean dollars for the first time last year, a nearly 45 percent jump from the previous year - business-minded Singaporeans are balking at the idea.

Some 105,000 households in Singapore - that's one in 10 family homes, or 387,000 people - earn an average monthly income of $1,323 and some 114,000 individual residents earn less than $805 a month, according to government data. That's despite the country's average per capita income of $52,305 a year, one of the highest in the world.

While Singapore has no official measure of poverty, the average household spends $1,250 a month for a four-person household on basic needs - food, clothing and shelter, says a two-year-old survey held by the Department of Statistics.

"In light of rising concerns about increasing inequality, and debate about the existence, extent and nature of poverty in Singapore, it is time for Singapore to join comparable developed nations in officially defining and measuring poverty," reads the report to be released Monday by Singapore Management University's Lien Centre for Social Innovation.

In the report, a team of researchers and policy experts say officially defining and measuring poverty will help to identify at-risk households and to measure the performance of efforts to lift people out of poverty.

The report cites two measures of inequality in Singapore. First, the period from 1998 to 2010 saw the real median income of employed residents in the bottom 20 percent fall by approximately 8 percent, while the income of those in the highest-earning quintile increased by 27 percent. Second, Singapore's Gini coefficient - which measures the degree of inequality within the country - increased between 2002 and 2012 at a rate that far outpaces the rest of the developed world.

"Rising inequality does not necessarily denote the existence of poverty. However, rising inequality combined with evidence of poverty indicates that the poor are being left further behind, and this appears to be what is happening in Singapore," reads the report.

Income inequality

Singapore does not have as high percentages of impoverished residents as those in the less developed world, and its poor tend to go unnoticed amid the country's steel-and-glass opulence. But researchers point to a growing inequality - it ranks 26th out of 136 countries for income inequality - and a high cost of living: In 2012, Singapore was the world's sixth most expensive country to live in, according to the Worldwide Cost of Living Survey 2013.

Yet Singapore's poor are largely hidden, in part because affordable public housing typically means a roof over the heads of the working poor and elderly poor. That helps to create an overall impression that poverty and homelessness may exist only negligibly, if at all.

Reflecting that view, a leading academic, Kishore Mahbubani, dean of the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, wrote in 2001: "There are no homeless, destitute or starving people in Singapore. Poverty has been eradicated, not through an entitlements program (there are virtually none) but through a unique partnership between the government, corporate citizens, self-help groups and voluntary initiatives." 

The fact that many needy residents live in the shadows of a rich society prompted a new campaign to raise awareness about the poor in Singapore. Singaporeans Against Poverty, launched in October and organised by Caritas Singapore, a Catholic social action group, is intended to operate for three to five years.

"This is not a charity or donation drive. We want to set everyone thinking about the poor in Singapore. Who are they? Why are they in such a plight? How do they survive?" said Caritas Singapore advocacy committee chairman and member of parliament Laurence Lien. "We want to start a conversation. We invite everyone to move out of their comfort zones to join in this conversation." 

Public service advertisements include videos showing everyday citizens making decisions about what to eat, what to wear, and how to spend money, with the tagline: "105,000 low-income families would gladly swap their problems with yours." There is a webpage with facts about income inequality and a planned online educational game.

The campaign also urges the public to participate in its $5 challenge, which is based on the statistic that some 387,000 Singaporeans only have about $5 a day to spend on food and transport per family member. Radio personalities have been enlisted to join the campaign and make on-air appeals for listeners to do the same.

The 'cliff effect'

Calls for Singapore to follow Hong Kong's lead prompted a debate in parliament in late October, where Chan Chun Sing, Minister for Social and Family Development, expressed the government's opposition to the idea. He said he worries a single measure would allow some needy people to fall through the cracks.

"In Singapore, we use broad definitions for the groups we seek to help, have clear criteria to identify and assess those in need, and tailored schemes to assist them," he said in a written reply. "A poverty line does not fully reflect the severity and complexity of the issues faced by poor families, which could include ill health, lack of housing or weak family relationships."

Chan added: "If we use a single poverty line to assess the family, we also risk a 'cliff effect', where those below the poverty line receive all forms of assistance, while other genuinely needy citizens outside the poverty line are excluded. Our assessment process is rigorous but also flexible to cater to the genuinely needy. Singaporeans who do not meet scheme criteria but who still deserve help, can receive assistance." 

Singaporean bloggers were quick to criticise Chan's comments. "Chan's answer reinforces a general view about this government. They really do not want to provide social assistance," wrote Alex Au Waipang on his popular blog Yawning Bread. 

"At heart they really do believe in trickle-down and little else. They only get into social assistance when they can't avoid it and a problem is staring them in the face."

Foto Ngeri Kesan Bencana Taufan Haiyan Yolanda di Tacloban, Filipina


Taufan Haiyan atau dikenali Yolanda di Filipina dipercayai meragut 10,000 nyawa di bandar Tacloban sahaja. Angka kematian dipercayai lebih tinggi dari itu kerana beberapa puluh ribu lagi masih gagal dikesan atau dihubungi.

Kemusnahan menjadi dua kali ganda apabila taufan super dalam kategori lima mengikut pengkelasan di Amerika Syarikat ini turut menghasilkan tsunami setinggi 6 meter.

Ia menjadi bencana alam paling buruk di muka bumi tahun ini dan paling buruk dalam sejarah Filipina biarpun negara tersebut dihentam tidak lebih 20 taufan setiap tahun.













Kepolisian Malaysia Bekuk Satpam WN Indonesia Pelaku Bunuh dan Rampok Bank


Kuala Lumpur - Petugas keamanan yang nekat merampok bank tempatnya bekerja di Selangor, Malaysia pada  Rabu  23/10 berhasil dipergok kepolisian Johor.   Tidak hanya merampok, petugas keamanan ini menembak mati seorang karyawan bank dan kabur dengan sejumlah uang.

Beredar khabar bahawa pelaku sedang dalam upaya untuk keluar dari Malaysia menuju Batam.

Pelaku dipastikan warga negara Indonesia yang menggunakan KTP Malaysia palsu untuk bekerja menjadi petugas keamanan di perusahaan keamanan yang kini disidak polisi.

Seorang lagi teman tersangka, berinisial J sedang dilacak pihak kepolisian.

Aksi penembakan ini terjadi Kamis (24/10/2013) ketika sang karyawan bank yang diidentifikasi sebagai Norazita Abu Talib ini pergi ke brankas bank tersebut pada Rabu (23/10) malam. Norazita hanya ditemani oleh seorang koleganya dan seorang petugas keamanan yang mendampingi mereka, yang rupanya sudah memiliki niat jahat. 

Ketika Norazita berhasil membuka brankas tersebut, si petugas keamanan langsung menodongkan senjatanya ke Norazita. Tanpa berpikir dua kali, si petugas keamanan menembakkan senjata itu ke wajah wanita berusia 37 tahun tersebut.

Norazita pun tewas seketika di lokasi kejadian. Ibu dua anak ini diketahui telah bekerja pada bank ini selama 16 tahun.

Sedangkan terhadap kolega Norazita, petugas keamanan tersebut memaksanya untuk memasukkan uang dari dalam brankas ke dalam tas yang dibawanya. Si petugas keamanan kemudian kabur sambil membawa tas berisi uang tersebut dengan menggunakan sepeda motor.

Dilaporkan ada empat karyawan bank lainnya saat kejadian. Namun tidak diketahui keberadaan dan apa yang mereka lakukan saat perampokan dan penembakan terjadi. 

Kepolisian masih terus melakukan pengejaran terhadap pelaku yang diyakini bertindak seorang diri. Kepala kepolisian Selangor Datuk Abdul Rahim Jaafar menyampaikan kecurigaannya terhadap pelaku yang disebut bukan pegawai tetap pada bank tersebut.

"Menurut perusahaan keamanan, pelaku hanya merupakan petugas keamanan pengganti untuk bank tersebut dan dia bekerja pada sebuah bank lain di dekat lokasi kejadian," tuturnya.

"Pemeriksaan terhadap kartu pengenalnya menunjukkan bahwa itu palsu. Kami akan terus mencari informasi lebih dalam dan mencari tahu bagaimana bisa dia bertugas dengan kartu pengenal palsu. Saya meminta publik untuk waspada," imbuh Jaafar.

Lebih 10,000 Dikhuatiri Terbunuh Akibat Taufan Heiyan Yolanda di Filipina

Taufan Heiyan atau dikenali Yolanda di Filipina yang melanda Samar, Filipina tiga hari lalu disifatkan pendaratan mata pusar taufan super pertama kali ke kawasan daratan berpenduduk. Ia menjadi taufan terkuat yang pernah melanda daratan dengan kelajuan angin mencapai 380 km/j.

Lebih 10,000 orang hilang walaupun angka kematian rasmi mencatatkan 151 kematian. Kedahsyatan taufan ini juga mengakibatkan tsunami  yang menambah angka kematian.

Pekan nelayan Guiuan di Eastern Samar, Pulau Leyte menyaksikan 40,000 orang belum dapat dihubungi.

Guiuan


 Cebu

 Guiuan

Tacloban

Tacloban

Tacloban

Tacloban


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Minggu, 10/11/2013 10:35 WIB

Efek Hantaman Badai Haiyan di Filipina Mirip Tsunami 2004

Muhammad Taufiqqurahman - detikNews

Manila, - Badai super Haiyan menghantam wilayah Filipina. Dahsyatnya terjangan dan efek badai Haiyan ini hampir disamakan dengan efek tsunami 2004.

Seperti diberitakan AFP, Minggu (10/11/2013), di Provinsi Leyte, korban meninggal diperkirakan mencapai 10 ribu orang.

"Sekitar 70 sampai 80 persen rumah-rumah dan jalan hancur, " kata Kepala Kepolisian Filipina Elmer Soria.

Sementara itu, tim dari PBB yang berada di Tacloban menyebut kondisi kota yang berpenduduk 220 ribu orang itu mirip dengan kondisi setelah tragedi tsunami 2004. Hal itu terlihat dengan beton yang merupakan satu-satunya sisa bangunan yang tersisa, kendaraan yang terbalik dan putusnya kabel listrik.

"Ini adalah kehancuran dalam skala besar. Ada mobil yang terlempar seperti tumbleweed dan jalan-jalan penuh dengan puing-puing," kata Sebastian Rhodes Stampa , kepala tim koordinasi pengkajian bencana PBB di Tacloban .

"Terakhir kali saya melihat sesuatu dalam skala seperti ini adalah pasca tsunami di Samudera Hindia," imbuhnya yang mengacu pada bencana 2004 yang menewaskan sekitar 220.000 jiwa.

Badai Haiyan menghantam wilayah Leyte dengan kecepatan angin sekitar 315 kilometer per jam. Badai itu menyebabkan gelombang hingga tiga meter.- DetikNews, Indonesia.


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The Deutero Malay (TDM)



Blog ini, menyediakan berita dan artikel terpilih dari alam Melayu dalam tiga bahasa yakni Melayu , Indonesia dan Inggeris. Ia difungsikan sebagai sebuah pangkalan berita berkonsepkan dari perspektif akar pribumi bangsa Asia Tenggara dan survivalnya.



The Deutero Malay (TDM) mengisi berita-berita dan petikan-petikan blog serta artikel berbahasa Melayu (Malaysia Brunei Singapura  Indonesia- Johoriau, Jambi, Sumatera Selatan, Sumatera Timur) dalam pemberitaannya diikuti bahasa Indonesia dan Inggeris.

Blog ini akan berusaha mendidik khalayak untuk bersikap positif dalam persepsi untuk menjalankan kerjasama ekonomi, kebudayaan, kekeluargaan dan kerohanian di antara negara Malaysia dan Indonesia khususnya dan juga kalangan pribumi di kawasan Asia Tenggara yang disebut Nusantara, amnya.

Selain itu ia mengingatkan kita akan susur galur darah asal yang mengalir dalam diri kita.

Semoga niat suci dipermudahkan olehNya. Amin.

TDM
11.11.13

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This blog publishing assorted news from the Malay world it views, in three languange, Malay, Indonesian and English. Envisioned to be a news portal that will based on the South East Asian native perspective and it survival. 



The Deutero Malay (TDM) will publish selected news and articles and it's own view will be initialed. The content are of Malay language (Malaysia, Singapore, Brunei, Indonesia - Riau, Jambi, South Sumatra, East Sumatra) sequenced by standard Indonesian language and a few English. 

This blog will support the effort to turn the citizen of countries roamed by the blog content, to share among themselves a willing to co-operate in economy, culture, bloodline and spiritual mainly focused on Malaysia - Indonesia affair and few news around the Deutero Malay territory. 

May this good intention blessed.

TDM
11.11.13