Countries: Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia, Indonesia, Loas, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam (General news or articles related to ASEAN & ASIA )
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Wednesday, June 30, 2010
Scrap dollar as sole reserve currency: U.N. report
Tuesday, June 29, 2010
Yudhoyono: Humanitarian missions to Gaza must be respected
Taiwan, China sign historic trade deal

- China to cut tariffs on 539 items from Taiwan
- Taiwan to cut tariffs on 267 items from China
- China considers Taiwan a breakaway province
- Analyst calls it 'a milestone in the economic relationship'
Friday, June 25, 2010
Now you can help save Greece: Athens to sell off some of its islands in desperate attempt to raise cash


Thursday, June 24, 2010
Cooperation Needed in Shift to Multi-Currency Global Reserve System - Report
Tuesday, June 22, 2010
Leave W. Sahara to the UN: RI
Prosecutors Seek Nine-Year Sentence For Saudi ‘Financier’ of Hotel Bombings
Sunday, June 20, 2010
Iranians biggest drug smugglers to Indonesia
The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Sun, 06/20/2010 5:30 PM
The Indonesian government has said that Iranian nationals are the most common smugglers of class-A drugs into the country as of January this year.
Malaysians were the next-highest group, with eight suspects arrested so far this year, followed by India with six suspects, tempointeraktif.com reported.
The Customs and Excise Office at Soekarno-Hatta International Airport in Tangerang, Banten, has arrested 15 Iranian nationals this year linked to 22 cases. It has also seized a total 115 kilograms of crystal methamphetamine, locally known as shabu-shabu), ketamine, heroin, cocaine and marijuana.
"All of the evidence together is worth Rp 278 billion (US$30.5 million) at market value," the office's head Baduri Wijayanta said Sunday.
All of the arrested Iranian smugglers were believed to be part of an Iran-based international drug syndicate, he added.
The office's head of prosecutions Gatot Sugeng Wibowo said the Iran-based drug mafia might not have been aware that Indonesia enforced the death penalty for drug smuggling.
The 2009 Narcotics Law carries the death penalty and a Rp 10 billion fine for anyone in possession of more than 5 grams of drugs.

News maker: Journalists take pictures of Soekarno-Hatta airport customs office head Bahaduri Wijayanta following a press conference on the arrest of three Iranians for a drug smuggling attempt. The Iranian nationals were presented during the conference on Wednesday.-- JP/Multa Fidrus
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Saturday, June 19, 2010
RI still pushing Israel to international court
Antara News, Saturday, June 19, 2010 06:41 WIB
Jakarta (ANTARA News) - The Indonesian government is still trying to push Israel to responsibility of its attack on the humanitarian flotilla in international waters who was about to enter the Gaza Strip on May (31/5), a minister said.
"We demand for an impartial, transparent and neutral investigation according to the United Nations Security Council (UN SC) decision to ask for Israeli accountability," Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa said here Friday.
There are several types of accountability that Israel would face, such as political responsibility if the matter is taken to the UN SC and international law sanction if it was done in an International Court of Justice (ICJ) trial, he said.
Certain case can only be proposed to the ICJ if it was approved by the relevant parties, whether Israel agreed to take the matter in international court or not, the minister said.
"As a matter of fact, Israel seems unwilling in taking the case to the international court, they seem to take the political responsibility through the UN SC," Minister Marty said.
The minister also said that the UN SC had called for an investigation which is still ongoing right now.
Due to the humanitarian aid which are now flowing into the Gaza Strip, it is the Egyptian policy that only allows aid goods or the humanitarian figure entering the Gaza Strip.
"It`s whether the goods or the worker enters the area, and it is not our decision to take, but the Egyptian government," Marty said.
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Friday, June 18, 2010
Malaysia pressed by UN over detentions without trial

Former detainees said they were scared of the police
Malaysia has been urged to repeal security laws that allow for detention without trial.
The recommendation was made by UN officials investigating alleged widespread abuse of detainees.
According to the UN group, almost all those it interviewed said they were tortured or mistreated in Malaysia's detention centres.
Malaysia says it is amending the laws, but has not yet said how.
The UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention spent a week visiting prisons and detention centres.
It reported that between 2003 and 2007, over 1,500 people died while being held by authorities.
Of the detainees it interviewed, almost all complained of beatings, being confined in small spaces without light and having dirty water thrown on them.
No appeal
That is in stark contrast to the country's prisons, where there were no allegations of abuse, says the BBC's Jennifer Pak in Kuala Lumpur.
Mr Malick Sow, who led the UN working group, said people preferred being in prison rather than police stations and immigration detention centres, because they felt safer there.
He said much of the abuse happened in the initial period of detention when detainees are not allowed to contact their lawyer or family.
He said the problem was more acute under the country's preventive laws including the Internal Security Act, which allows for detention without trial for up to 60 days with the possibility of extensions for years.
The law has been used in the past against politicians and journalists.
Those held under the Act have no access to judicial appeal.
However, fewer people have been held under the law in recent years and the Malaysian government is expected to table amendments to address some of the issues next month.
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RI to host 7th Asian court conference
The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Fri, 06/18/2010 10:16 AM
Indonesia’s Constitutional Court will host the 7th Conference of Asian Constitutional Court Judges, which will take general election laws and constitutional practices as its theme, from July 12 to 15.
“A nation cannot restrain nor avoid the establishment of democracy and both law and human rights enforcement,” Constitutional Court chief justice Mahfud M.D. said Thursday.
He explained that nations needed to discuss each country’s past experiences with electoral systems and constitutional practices, then to find future plans to facilitate development.
Twenty-five countries are expected to participate at the conference, including Indonesia, Azerbaijan, Bangladesh, Brunei, Cambodia, Kazakhstan, Laos, Malaysia, Mongolia, Nepal, Pakistan, the Philippines, South Korea, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, Thailand, Timor Leste and Uzbekistan. The conference will also invite non-Asian countries: Austria, Germany, Turkey, Chile, Colombia, Mexico, Egypt and Morocco.
“At the conference, we will discuss elections issues and shortcomings of electoral courts in each country,” Mahfud said.
Mahfud said in terms of settling election disputes, Indonesia’s experience was considered exemplary by other countries.
“The Indonesian Constitutional Court has resolved 640 electoral disputes in the 2009 presidential and regional elections peacefully,” he said. Of these cases, the court delivered rulings in 70 cases that consequently changed the election results, Mahfud said.
He claimed that a peaceful settlement of electoral disputes through courts was rare in other countries.
Mahfud explained that Indonesia’s elections proved that laws could be drafted to settle any disagreement. He said he believed the Constitutional Court contributed to the country’s democracy.
However, Mahfud admitted there were still incidents of electoral violations, such as vote buying, unfair nomination processes and nepotism.
Eight Asian countries at the conference will also establish the Association of Asian Constitutional Courts and Equivalents Institutions by signing the Jakarta Declaration, Court secretary-general Janedjri M. Gaffar said.
The eight countries are the Philippines, Malaysia, Thailand, South Korea, Mongolia, Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan, as well as host Indonesia.
The objectives of the association are to protect human rights, promote democracy and supervise the implementation of the law, as well as overseeing the independence of constitutional courts and other similar judicial institutions.
“I hope the formation of the association can improve our role,” Mahfud said. (ipa)
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Whistleblower aims to expose dark side of Japanese whaling
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| 'Mr Whale' wearing his Kyodo Senpaku whaling fleet uniform. Photograph: Jeremy Sutton-Hibbert/Greenpeace |
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| Allegations: The Yushin Maru ship captures a whale. Japan has been accused of bribing small countries with cash and prostitutes to help end the ban on whaling |
Japan 'gave cash and call girls to rig whaling vote' in bid to end 24-year ban
Australia to mount legal bid against Japan whaling
Whale population in Indonesia decreases
Sperm whale faeces offset CO2 emissions
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Sperm whales may put a gentle (and unwitting) brake on climate change
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