If you can, pick the clean ones. Don’t play favourites, show some real guts Mr...
Document reads: 10 Candidate KPK Leaders
If you can, pick the clean ones. Don’t play favourites, show some real guts Mr...
Document reads: 10 Candidate KPK Leaders
From an oped piece titled Questions on the Electricity Problem
A massive power failure hit the Indonesian capital of Jakarta and surrounding cities on Sunday affecting millions of people.
From an oped piece titled Risks of a Fat Coalition
Concern has been expressed in both the Indonesian and foreign mainstream media that President Joko Widodo’s ruling coalition – which now holds around 60 percent of the seats in parliament – has become too “fat”.
The National Disaster Mitigation Agency (BNPB) says that eighty percent of the land destroyed by forest fires in Indonesia this year will be converted into plantations, pointing the blame for the fires at unsustainable practices in the country’s agriculture industry.
Writing on T-shirts reads: “Save Nduga”, “I Love NKRI”.
According to the aid group Humanity Volunteer Team of Nduga – which has been helping communities displaced by armed conflict in Papua’s Nduga regency with food, health and education needs in Wamena – 182 civilians have died fleeing violence in the highlands.
Jakarta’s notorious air pollution has again been thrust into the spotlight this week thanks to a trending social media hashtag in which people shared photos of the capital’s smog blanked skyline.
Man: Finding someone with some guts is also important Mrs.
Robot’s arms and legs read: Integrity, professionalism, commitment, independence.
May the work go well, stay optimistic...!
Writing on weights reads: Fake news, import mafia, intolerance, radicalism, maritime axis, nepotism, collusion, corruption, malnutrition, terrorism, poverty, oligarchy, and so on...
From an oped piece titled The Constitutionality of Dismissing Corrupt Civil Servants
Indonesia Corruption Watch (ICW) says there are 1,466 state civil servants (PNS) who have been found guilty of corruption but have yet to be dismissed and are still receiving wages.
According to the Ministry of Health, while Indonesia has seen a gradual decline in stunting from 37.2 percent in 2013 to 30.8 percent in 2018, other reports confirm a far higher prevalence of malnutrition among children in eastern Indonesia with some area reporting figures as high as 40 percent.