Ruzie om sambal

Ruzie om sambal
lb4anim

Een beetje sambal deed de zaak aardig verhitten in een bakkerij. Een 21-jarige vrouw had een pizza met extra sambal besteld, maar dat niet gekregen. Ze ging dus terug naar de bakkerij. Daar raakten de gemoederen zelfs zonder sambal behoorlijk verhit. De 23-jarige medewerker van de bakkerij achtervolgde de vrouw tot op straat, alwaar er een klap in het gezicht viel. Daarop haalde de vrouw haar vriend erbij en toen werd het van kwaad tot erger. Beide mannen stonden met getrokken messen tegenover elkaar en de vriend werd zelfs geraakt. De politie heeft de bakkersknecht in de boeien geslagen en het stel deed aangifte.

Gepubliceerd in: on 08/02/2009 at 2:04 pm Reactie (1)
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Indonesian sex cult

Agence France-Presse – 1/29/2009 11:36 AM GMT

Indonesian ’sex cult’ leader arrested: police

An Indonesian cult head accused of leading his followers in wild orgies and giving sermons in his underpants was arrested Thursday and faces charges of “lewd acts” and insulting religion, police said.

Agus Noro, the head of the Satria Piningit Weteng Buwono sect, turned himself in early in the morning after a three-day hunt, Jakarta police spokesman Zulkarnain told AFP.

Noro, who is called Agus Imam Solihin or “leader of the faithful” by followers, is alleged to have had sex with his disciples and instructed them to have group sex while he watched in the sect’s mansion outside Jakarta.

“We’re investigating him based on a report made by a female follower named Kartiningsih on January 26. She complained that Noro had asked her to massage him and touch his genitals,” Zulkarnain said.

“She was also made to have sex with him, while her husband and followers watched,” he added.

“Lewd acts” and insulting religion carry jail terms of up to nine years and seven years respectively, Zulkarnain said.

“If our investigations prove that he carried out lewd acts, we’ll name him a suspect and hand him over to the court,” Zulkarnain said.

“He has about 40 followers, all adults. At the beginning, Noro told them to pray and carry out religious recitations. After several months, he told them he was God and that they didn’t have to do that any more,” Zulkarnain said.

Noro gave religious sermons wearing only his underpants and told his disciples they would be taught “Kamasutra” sex techniques to use in the afterlife, former follower Eko was quoted as saying by news website Okezone.

“We just obeyed like we’d been hypnotised,” Eko said.

Police described the sex guru, believed to be in his 40s, as looking “cool… just like youngsters nowadays,” with dyed brown hair and fair skin, the website reported.

Gepubliceerd in: on 29/01/2009 at 1:54 pm Laat een reactie achter
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Indonesian NGO backs villagers in fight against palm oil

Agence France-Presse – 1/29/2009 6:03 AM GMT

Indonesian NGO backs villagers in fight against palm oil

Deep in the forests of Indonesian Borneo, a small environmental group is using education and common sense to arm villagers against the devastating onslaught of palm plantations.

Yayasan Orangutan Indonesia (Yayorin) was founded in 1991 with the goal of saving Indonesia’s endangered orangutans and other wildlife as well as the forests that those species need to survive.

Since then the spread of palm oil plantations into forests and peatlands on Sumatra and Borneo islands have helped make Indonesia the world’s third-highest greenhouse gas emitter, thanks partly to the craze for “eco-friendly” biofuels.

They have also wiped out habitats of threatened species like orangutans and Bornean clouded leopards.

But the plantations are also hurting people whose traditional communities depend on the forests and the biodiversity they contain, and that is where Yayorin director and founder Togu Simorangkir sees hope for change.

“We think that above all the problem of deforestation is human,” said the 32-year-old biologist in Pangkalan Bun village in the heart of Central Kalimantan province.

“That’s why 80 percent of our programme focuses on education. It’s not enough just to give the message ’stop cutting down trees’. You have to explain the consequences of deforestation in the short and long term.”

Indonesia is the world’s largest producer of palm oil, which is used in a range of products including soap, cooking oil and biodiesel.

Vast tracts of forest have already disappeared under palm plantations and the government is encouraging more despite its stated commitment to lowering greenhouse gas emissions by preserving the carbon stored in jungles.

In 1990 there were 1.1 million hectares (2.7 million acres) of land under palm oil plantation in Indonesia, according to official figures. This year there are 7.6 million hectares.

“We’ve heard some terrible stories,” said Daryatmo, the chief of Tumbang Tura village in Central Kalimantan.

“Our neighbours (who sold their forested land to palm planters) can’t grow ratan anymore or harvest rubber. Fishing is impossible because the river is polluted,” he said.

“These are our principal sources of income. What kind of legacy are we going to leave our grandchildren?”

Lured by immediate “wealth” in the form of a few thousands dollars in cash, people in forest-dependent communities often are not aware of the consequences of selling out to the palm planters, Simorangkir said.

“Last year a plantation company offered a village two billion rupiah (176,000 dollars) to exploit its land. Every family calculated that that would bring them 30 million (2,640 dollars) each,” he said.

“The village authorities sought our advice and we told them the consequences for the environment in the medium term. Despite the bait, they concluded by refusing the project.”

The NGO followed up by helping the villagers improve their subsistence-level agriculture techniques, he said.

With projects spread across several villages as well as plantations, companies, schools and government agencies, Simorangkir said he hoped Yayorin could help make a difference in the battle to save Indonesia’s forests.

But will such initiatives be enough to save the “man of the forest,” the orangutan?

There are currently an estimated 40,000 wild orangutans on Borneo but the United Nations estimates there could be fewer than 1,000 by 2023.

Palm oil companies have been clearing orangutan habitats on Borneo despite signing up to voluntary standards under the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO), a talking shop for industry and environmental groups.

The Indonesian Palm Oil Producers Association, in rejecting a moratorium on new plantations proposed by Greenpeace last year, argued that the RSPO standards were enough to protect the species.

But the Centre for Orangutan Protection says orangutans living outside Central Kalimantan’s conservation areas could be wiped out within three years. Of the roughly 20,000 individuals in Central Kalimantan province, close to 3,000 die every year, it says.

“Their future is in the north of the Central Kalimantan region, which at the present time is preserved. The belt of palm oil plantations must not extend to the north,” said Stephen Brend of Orangutan Foundation International.