People: Agus Santoso

People
Agus Santoso, deputy chairman of the money-laundering watchdog PPATK, hopes Indonesia will have a new law targeting terrorist financing by February. The law would enable authorities to freeze bank accounts used to finance terrorism.

Agus Santoso, deputy chairman of the money-laundering watchdog PPATK, hopes Indonesia will have a new law targeting terrorist financing by February. The law would enable authorities to freeze bank accounts used to finance terrorism.

Name              : Agus Santoso

Place of Birth  : Purwokerto, Central Java

Date of Birth   : 9 Agustus 1960

Job tittle          : Deputy chairman of the Financial Transaction Reports and Analysis Center (PPATK)

Wife                : Juli Widiastuti SH

Website          : www.agussantoso.org

Related article

  1. Indonesia prepares terror financing law

People: Ansyaad Mbai

People

Terrorism remains a real threat in Indonesia, and the target has shifted to the "near enemy", Indonesian police chief of the National Counterterrorism Agency (BNPT), Ansyaad Mbai told Khabar Southeast Asia in an exclusive interview last week. [2013: Oktofani]

Terrorism remains a real threat in Indonesia, and the target has shifted to the “near enemy”, Indonesian police chief of the National Counterterrorism Agency (BNPT), Ansyaad Mbai told Khabar Southeast Asia in an exclusive interview last week. [2013: Oktofani]

Name             : Inspector General (Retired) Ansyaad Mbai

Job tittle         : Head of National Agency for Combating Terrorism (BNPT)

Place of Birth : Buton, Southeast Sulawesi

Date of Birth  : 2 June 1948

Related article about Ansyaad Mbai:

  1. Bomb-makers getting more sophisticated: Ansyaad Mbai
  2. Indonesia: Following the money to new terror funding tactics
  3. Indonesia preparing amendment to terrorism laws: Ansyaad Mbai

New MataMassa app empowers regular people to help monitor elections

Khabar Southeast Asia

New MataMassa app empowers regular people to help monitor elections

by: Yositha Nirbhaya

Free mobile application encourages citizens to monitor violations during the election, inviting greater engagement in the democratic process.

A smartphone app offers greater Jakarta area residents a way to help ensure free and fair upcoming 2014 general elections.

The Jakarta branch of the Alliance of Independent Journalists (AJI) and the ICT Laboratory for Social Changes (iLab) launched MataMassa (“Eyes of the Public”) in November as a way for citizens to monitor and anonymously report administrative, criminal or ethical violations during voting or campaigning.

Those could include installation of campaign banners in houses of worship, highways, or hospitals; vote buying; or other violations as defined by the General Election Committee (KPU) and the Election Supervisory Committee (Bawaslu).

Nelson Simanjuntak, Bawaslu committee commissioner, said the app encourages direct societal participation of the process.

“It needs to be understood that MataMassa really helps us improve the 2014 election,” he told Khabar Southeast Asia.

Users can download MataMassa for free and use it to submit a report of a violation by text, photo or video to AJI Jakarta. Project personnel investigate and submit verified reports to Bawaslu.

Between December 15th last year and March 13th, MataMassa received 1,249 reports, and verified 1,154 of them, according to AJI. Because of limited funding, project personnel could only verify violations in Jakarta and outskirts including Bogor, Depok, Tangerang and Bekasi, AJI Jakarta Chairman Umar Idris told Khabari.

Direct participation

Renanda Laksita, a Partai Demokrat candidate for the House of Representatives (DPR) wished the app could be more widely used.

“I think this is a new innovation to invite society to participate in our democratic process, as we know that many Indonesian people love to use gadgets. I hope society takes advantage of it,” the candidate from Bali told Khabar.

“It would be better if it is applicable all over Indonesia than greater Jakarta only,” she added.

Stefani Bilwa tried, but failed to submit a violation in the form of a massive poster of a candidate in Setiabudi.

“Unfortunately, I was unlucky in submitting it directly through my iPhone,” she told Khabar. “Therefore I have to submit it through the website, which is not as efficient.” Still, Stefani liked the idea of the app to help deliver a fair election.

Reports can also be submitted through SMS center to 081370202014 or via email at lapor@matamassa.org for people without a smartphone or the app.

Data On-shoring: Is the Government Prepared?,

Newsroom

The Indonesian government obligates companies providing services to the public to have its data center in Indonesia. The mandate is stated on Government Regulation Number 82 of 2012 on Electronic System and Transaction (henceforth GR 82/2012) for the purpose of law enforcement and protection. But are they ready to enforce what they’re asking for? Yosef Ardi News spoke to the spokesperson of the Ministry of Communications and Informatics, Gatot Dewa Broto, yesterday (Mar. 11) to get the answer. [continue reading]

Our Phone Rights

Newsroom

The federation of international consumer rights groups, organized under Consumers International picked “Fix Our Phone Rights!” as the theme for 2014 World Consumer Rights Days (to be celebrated in Mar. 15). Our instant reaction to this was, “We have phone rights?” Let’s see what Consumers International is campaigning for this year and why they matter. [continue reading]

Deputy Chief Badrodin Haiti

Newsroom

The chief of the national police Sutarman has appointed commissioner general Badrodin Haiti as the new deputy chief to replace Oegroseno, who retired in Feb. 2014. Badrodin was picked out of other three-star police generals including Comr. Gen. Budi Gunawan, the chief of Police Education Institution, and Comr. Gen. Anton Bachrul Alam, the General Supervision Inspector. [continue reading]

People: Umar Patek

People

Umar Patek, an accused bombmaker in the 2002 Bali attacks, was speaking to reporters in West Jakarta District Court [2012: Oktofani]

Umar Patek, an accused bombmaker in the 2002 Bali attacks, was speaking to reporters in West Jakarta District Court [2012: Oktofani]

Name              : Hisyam bin Ali Zein

Alias                : Umar Patek alias Umar, Abu Syekh, Arsalan, Abdul Karim, Umar Arab, Umar Syekh, Zacky dan Anis Alawi Jafar.

Date of birth    : 20 Juli 1970

Place of birth  : Pemalang, East Java

Wife                : Fatimah Azzahra binti Husein Luceno alias Ruqoyah

Case               : 2002 Bali Bomb

Summary        : Umar Patek was found guilty of murder and bomb-making in connection with the Bali attacks, which killed more than 200 people, mostly foreigners. West Jakarta District Court has convicted a militant of making explosives used in the deadly 2002 Bali bombings and sentenced him to 20 years in jail in 2012.

On March 2014, Umar Patek was relocated from the Brimob prison in Kelapa Dua, Depok, West Java to Porong Penitentiary in Sidoarjo, East Java. The relocation was due to the police’s efforts to uncover a regional terrorism network.

Related article about Umar Patek:

  1. Witnesses: Loopholes in system helped Patek flee
  2. Patek: Bali bombings were “against my conscience”
  3. Prosecutors seek life sentence for remorseful Patek
  4. Witness: Patek said terror attacks were against Islam
  5. Judge: Patek can help deter youth from radical extremism
  6. Patek lawyers: client didn’t know what bombs were for
  7. Money for Bali bombing came from bin Laden, witnesses say
  8. Bali suspect apologises to victims, says bombings were wrong
  9. Muslim leader: terrorists must stop undermining Islam’s image