Tag: Indonesia

  • Pemuda Indonesia Pijak Quran, Harus Dihukum Berat

    Pemuda Indonesia Pijak Quran, Harus Dihukum Berat

    INDONESIA: Seorang lelaki berusia 20 tahun, Kapry Nanda, disoal siasat Polis Pasaman Barat, Sumatera Barat berhubung gambar beliau memijak Al-Quran, yang dimuat naik ke laman Facebook.

    Dalam pada itu, angota Dewan Perwakilan Rakyat (DPRD) Kota Padang, Muharlion, mendesak polis mengenakan hukuman berat terhadap Kapry.

    “Pemuda itu harus dihukum berat serta dikenakan hukuman adat wilayah Minang,” kata Encik Muharlion kepada agensi berita Antara pada Selasa lalu (14 Jun).

    Beliau menegaskan, hukuman berat itu diperlukan kerana ia merupakan perkara serius bagi umat Islam, iaitu menghina kitab suci orang Islam.

    Encik Muharlion berkata individu seperti Kapry tidak boleh dibiarkan begitu sahaja dan harus dikenakan hukuman seberat-beratnya kerana memandang rendah kepada Al-Quran.

    Sebelum itu, polis Pasaman Barat menyiasat Kapry dan seorang rakannya, yang memuat naik gambar beliau memijak Al-Quran ke laman Facebook milik Andri, 21 tahun.

    Gambar Kapry memijak Al-Quran yang diletakkan di atas sejadah di ruang yang kelihatan seperti surau atau masjid, dimuat naik dengan kapsyen “Jangan tiru adegan ini, bro.”

    ADAKAN PERTEMUAN BINCANG TINDAKAN SETERUSNYA

    Pada pagi Rabu lalu, satu pertemuan di pejabat ketua kampung Sungai Air antara Kapry, polis dan ketua-ketua masyarakat turut diadakan untuk membincangkan tindakan seterusnya lebih-lebih perbuatan Kapry dijangka mencetuskan kemarahan ramai.

    “Benar kami melakukan pertemuan dengan pelaku untuk mendengarkan keterangannya,” kata ketua kampung, Erwin Lubis.

    Beliau berkata Kapry selama ini dikenali di kampung tidak pernah melakukan sebarang masalah. Namun, beliau berubah kerana terpengaruh dengan rakan-rakan.

    Selepas pertemuan di pejabat ketua kampung, Kapry dibawa ke polis untuk disiasat lebih lanjut.

    Belum ada maklumat lanjut sama ada Kapry ditahan oleh polis.

    Source: http://berita.mediacorp.sg

  • Backlash In Indonesia Over Ramadan Raid On Frail Auntie, Over $20,000 Donations Raised

    Backlash In Indonesia Over Ramadan Raid On Frail Auntie, Over $20,000 Donations Raised

    JAKARTA: Indonesian netizens have reacted with fury and a flurry of donations after footage emerged of a frail food seller breaking down as her cafe was raided for staying open during the daytime in Ramadan.

    Video of the 53-year-old business owner desperately begging officials not to confiscate her food went viral at the weekend, and social media users have donated almost $20,000 to a crowdfunding site to help her and other vendors.

    It is common for food outlets in the world’s most populous Muslim-majority country that remain open during the daytime in the holy month of Ramadan, when Muslims are supposed to fast from sunrise to sunset, to be raided.

    But the case of food seller Saeni, who like many Indonesians goes by one name, has touched a nerve, with many criticising authorities for being heavy-handed during the raid in Serang, west of the capital Jakarta.

    “You should be tolerant towards those who are not fasting, cruel authorities,” wrote Facebook user Elisabeth Oktofani.

    The food seller was deeply in debt and so had decided to keep the cafe open during daylight hours to make extra cash, she was quoted by local media as saying.

    President Joko Widodo condemned the raid and ordered his staff to make a personal donation, with his spokesman saying that the action “cannot be justified”.

    In the footage, a group of public order officers, who assist police in maintaining order but have fewer powers, march into the small food outlet, which consisted of a few goods in a glass case and some shabby chairs and tables.

    Saeni, wearing a blue Muslim headscarf, begs them not to take the food but they put it into plastic bags and march off.

    Local authorities defended the raid, saying that the food seller was breaking the law. While many restaurants in bigger cities stay open throughout Ramadan, local bylaws in smaller places often forbid vendors to sell food during the daytime.

    A crowdfunding campaign launched in response to Friday’s raid has raised over 265 million rupiah ($19,900), with the organisers planning to distribute the money to Saeni and other food sellers targeted for staying open during daylight hours in Ramadan.

    Most Indonesians practise a moderate form of Islam, but the country is also home to a vocal, hardline fringe.

     

    Source: www.freemalaysiatoday.com

  • Maid Fed Baby Milk Contaminated With Her Urine

    Maid Fed Baby Milk Contaminated With Her Urine

    The maid was unhappy that her employer’s mother-in-law had scolded her.

    She decided to get back at the family – by feeding their four-year-old a bottle of milk mixed with her urine.

    She also mixed her urine into a flask of water that the family later drank from.

    Her employer thought the water tasted odd and grew more suspicious after noticing her taking the flask out of a bedroom and washing it.

    He took the maid back to the agency, where she eventually confessed to her deeds.

    She told the authorities that she did so as she wanted the family to listen and be obedient to her.

    On Monday, the maid, Ela, 27, an Indonesian who goes by only one name, was jailed six weeks for mischief.

    Court papers said Ela started working for her employer, his wife, and two children, aged four and eight, in September last year.

    We are not naming them due to a gag order to protect the children’s identities.

    Sometime in October, Ela was scolded by her employer’s mother-in-law.

    TAINTED

    On Oct 16, she urinated into a small plastic cup and added the urine into a bottle containing milk.

    She fed her employer’s younger child the tainted milk.

    Court papers said Ela also mixed the urine with some drinking water in a flask.

    That day, her employer’s wife returned home and poured some water from the flask to drink.

    She took a sip of the water, which appeared to be slightly yellow.

    She showed it to her husband, who took a sip and found that it tasted odd.

    The employer decided to keep the flask in his bedroom to observe the water the next day.

    He found that the contents of the flask smelled pungent the next day.

    But when asked if anything had happened to the water, Ela said no.

    On Oct 18, the employer found her washing the flask that she had taken from his bedroom and he made a police report.

    It is not the first time that maids have been convicted of tainting food or drinks.

    In May 2012, a 24-year-old Indonesian maid was jailed a month for tainting her employer’s coffee with her menstrual discharge because she believed that he would be nice to her after consuming the drink.

    Last April, another Indonesian maid was jailed three years for adding eucalyptus oil into packs of stored breast milk that were meant for her employer’s two-month-old son.

    She did so as she wanted to be scolded and sent back home.

    The court at the time heard that the Health Sciences Authority advises against feeding children eucalyptus oil as it contains terpineol, which has been known to cause fatalities.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Indonesian Maid Arrested For Murdering Employer In Telok Kurau

    Indonesian Maid Arrested For Murdering Employer In Telok Kurau

    Three men on motorbikes were riding past a semi-detached house in Telok Kurau last night when they heard shouts for help.

    They parked their motorbikes in front of the house and saw a man struggling with a woman in the front porch.

    The gate was open and the man told them to grab hold of the woman. Two of them went to help him while the third called the police.

    One of them, a mechanic, told The New Paper in Mandarin: “I held on to the woman, who kept struggling and was bleeding from her hands.

    “I held her hands and got blood all over myself. The man was also covered in blood”

    His friend, who works in construction, added: “Of course, we were scared. Whoever saw what was happening would have been scared.”

    He then ran into the house to get a cloth to wipe the man’s wound, which was around the throat area.

    The three men, who are Malaysians in their 20s, had stumbled on the scene of a murder while heading to dinner after work.

    The house owner later told them the woman is his maid who had just killed his wife.

    When the police showed up about five minutes later, they went to a friend’s place nearby to wash off the blood on their hands and clothes before going for dinner.

    The men, who declined to be identified, returned to the scene around midnight to see what was happening.

    One of them said: “I would not call ourselves brave for helping.

    “We just saw that the uncle needed help and he looked really scared.”

    TNP understands that the house owner, 57, was on the first level of his three-storey house when he heard a commotion on the second storey.

    He went up to check and heard noises in the bathroom. When he opened the door, he was shocked to see his maid step out with a bloodied knife.

    He immediately tried to disarm her and was injured during the struggle while his daughter-in-law called the police for help.

    The police said they were alerted to the incident at 50C, Lorong H, off Telok Kurau Road, at 8.48pm.

    A spokesman said the injured man was later taken in an ambulance to Changi General Hospital (CGH). His condition could not be confirmed.

    His wife, 59, was found lying motionless in the bathroom and pronounced dead by paramedics at 9.03pm.

    He added that a 23-year-old woman was arrested in relation to the case, which has been classified as murder.

    Investigations are ongoing.

    TNP understands that the maid, believed to be an Indonesian, had attacked the woman in the bathroom.

    Her motive for the attack was not known by press time.

    CROWD

    A nearby resident told TNP that he saw a crowd of people milling outside one of his neighbours’ home.

    From the outside, he could see the house owner with blood on his chest.

    “The maid was sitting on a bench with her hands bandaged. There were blood stains on her legs,” said the neighbour who declined to be identified.

    “I think she had also sustained head wounds because I saw a policewoman cleaning her head and there was blood on the cloth.”

    The owner was then wheeled on a stretcher to an ambulance.

    “Before he got into the ambulance, he told the daughter-in-law to arrange for both their maids to be sent home,” he said.

    The injured maid was taken away in another ambulance, he added.

    “One of his sons later came out of the house and sat at the front porch. Then rain fell and most of the crowd dispersed.”

    A neighbour in her 50s, who wanted to be known only as Ms Wang, said that she usually saw the owner gardening.

    She heard from her sister that he spent a lot of time tending to the vegetables in the grass patch outside his house and did business in China.

    The Singapore Civil Defence Force said it sent two ambulances to the scene after receiving a call at 8.47pm.

    A spokesman said a woman in her 20s was taken to CGH with an injury on the left side of the head and lacerations on both hands.

    A man who was in the crowd identified himself as an employee of the house owner’s son, who owns a fish farm in Johor Baru, and that his father owns a construction company.

    He said he had gone to the house after his employer called him to say that something had happened to his mother.

    A group of six to seven men had also gathered at a bus stop about 50m from the house. One of them was sobbing while gesticulating as two friends tried to console him.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Indonesia Activists Apologise For Planning Demonstration At Singapore Embassy

    Indonesia Activists Apologise For Planning Demonstration At Singapore Embassy

    The group supporting Jakarta governor Basuki “Ahok” Tjahaja Purnama on Sunday (Jun 5) apologised for planning to stage a demonstration in front of the Singapore embassy in Jakarta.

    Singgih Widiyastono, one of the founders of Teman Ahok, or “Friends of Ahok”, said he regretted that the group reacted in a provocative manner when two of its members, Amalia Ayuningtyas and Richard Saerang, were questioned by Singapore officials on Saturday.

    “We issued a statement saying that we will deploy a mass movement. We were just being emotional because (Amalia and Richard) were supposed to return home at 10pm, but they didn’t,” said Mr Singgih during a news conference held at the Friends of Ahok secretariat in Jakarta on Sunday (Jun 5).

    Teman Ahok is a volunteer-run group campaigning for Mr Basuki’s attempt to contest as an independent candidate in Jakarta’s gubernatorial election next year.

    On Saturday, the group said that if Amalia and Richard were not released immediately, it would go to the Singapore embassy in Jakarta with its “entire strength that the Friends of Ahok possesses.”

    Their threat went viral on social media. Numerous social media posts in Indonesia had alleged that the two Indonesian activists were detained at Changi Airport.

    The Singapore Embassy in Jakarta on Sunday denied claims that they were detained, saying the pair were denied entry into Singapore as they were intending to carry out political activities in the city-state.

    “Two members of ‘Teman Ahok’ were not detained while they were in Singapore,” said the statement issued by the embassy. “They arrived in Singapore on Jun 4, 2016, and were interviewed by Singapore officials.

    “They informed immigration authorities that they were in Singapore to conduct political activities including raising campaign funds. They were therefore denied entry into Singapore and arrangements were made for them to return to Indonesia,” it said.

    The Indonesian Embassy in Singapore also issued a statement saying that the pair were “not detained” in Singapore, and reiterated that “Singapore law forbids political activities from being conducted in Singapore, and this law should be respected”.

    The statement added: “The embassy had been in communication with Singapore authorities to facilitate their return to Jakarta on Jun 4, 2016. However, because of technical difficulties in the field, the two activists could not return on the last Garuda flight departing Singapore and would depart on the first Garuda flight out of Singapore on Jun 5, 2016, instead.

    “Singapore immigration authorities had provided accommodation and sufficient services to the two activists,” the statement said.

    The two Indonesians arrived back in Jakarta at 11am on Sunday.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com