edisi 12 oktober 2012 | international bali post

16
Reports involving the “certain movement” of terrorists have been received, said Bali Police Brig. Gen. I Ketut Untung Yoga Ana. He said that security had been tightened at all entry points to the resort island prior to the event, and that snipers would be placed around memorial sites. “We have prepared a maximum security arrangement, even for the post-commemoration,” he said. He declined to provide any specific details about the threat. However, an intelligence official said information about a potential threat first surfaced prior to Oct. 1, the anniversary of a second Bali bombing in 2005 that killed 20 people at restaurants. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media. Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard is scheduled to attend Fri- day’s event remembering the Oct. 12, 2002, attacks that blasted two Bali nightclubs. The bombs killed 202 people, including 88 Australians and seven Americans. The attack was carried out by Jemaah Islami- yah, an al-Qaida-linked group. Gillard is due to give an address to commemorate the Australians who were among the victims of the strike against the Sari Club and Paddy’s Bar in the Indonesian tour- ist island’s nightlife strip of Kuta. Asked in Sydney whether she was concerned about travelling to Bali, Gillard said: “I do want to be in Bali for the 10-year commemo- rations. “Families will be travelling there. It will be a day in which we pay our respects and remember what that moment was like for Australians.” Friends and families of victims have poured into Bali for Fri- day’s service, some meeting at the “ground zero” site of the attacks or laying flowers at an adjacent stone memorial inscribed with the names of the dead. A group of regular police stood guard next to the Kuta memorial on Wednesday afternoon with armed police patrolling the beach area, an AFP photographer saw. WEATHER FORECAST Friday, October 12, 2012 16 Pages Number 205 4 th Year e-mail: [email protected] online: http://www.internationalbalipost.com. http://epaper.internationalbalipost.com. Price: Rp 3.000,- I N T E R N A T I O N A L PAGE 13 DPS 23 - 32 PAGE 4 Continued on page 13 PAGE 7 REUTERS/Beawiharta An Indonesian policeman stands guard at the 2002 Bali bombing memorial monument, ahead of the 10-year anniversary of the incident in Kuta, Bali resort island October 11, 2012. Indonesian police have warned of possible attacks on commemorations for the tenth anniversary of bomb blasts on the island of Bali and have brought in reinforcements to protect the thousands due to attend, including Australia’s prime minister. Warns of threat before Bali anniversary Associated Press/Agence France-Press DENPASAR — Indonesian police warned of a possible ter- rorist threat targeting dignitaries planning to commemorate Friday’s 10th anniversary of the Bali bombings, raising the country’s security alert to its highest level. Eto’o back as Cameroon seek to prevent upset Man arrested after smoke grenade found in luggage West Tianyar residents face water crisis

Upload: e-paper-kmb

Post on 17-Mar-2016

222 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

DESCRIPTION

Headline : Warns of threat before bali anniversary

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Edisi 12 Oktober 2012 | International Bali Post

Reports involving the “certain movement” of terrorists have been received, said Bali Police Brig. Gen. I Ketut Untung Yoga Ana. He said that security had been tightened at all entry points to the resort island prior to the event, and that snipers would be placed around

memorial sites.“We have prepared a maximum

security arrangement, even for the post-commemoration,” he said. He declined to provide any specific details about the threat.

However, an intelligence official said information about a potential

threat first surfaced prior to Oct. 1, the anniversary of a second Bali bombing in 2005 that killed 20 people at restaurants. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media.

Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard is scheduled to attend Fri-day’s event remembering the Oct. 12, 2002, attacks that blasted two Bali nightclubs. The bombs killed 202 people, including 88 Australians and seven Americans. The attack was carried out by Jemaah Islami-

yah, an al-Qaida-linked group.Gillard is due to give an address

to commemorate the Australians who were among the victims of the strike against the Sari Club and Paddy’s Bar in the Indonesian tour-ist island’s nightlife strip of Kuta.

Asked in Sydney whether she was concerned about travelling to Bali, Gillard said: “I do want to be in Bali for the 10-year commemo-rations.

“Families will be travelling there. It will be a day in which we pay our respects and remember

what that moment was like for Australians.”

Friends and families of victims have poured into Bali for Fri-day’s service, some meeting at the “ground zero” site of the attacks or laying flowers at an adjacent stone memorial inscribed with the names of the dead.

A group of regular police stood guard next to the Kuta memorial on Wednesday afternoon with armed police patrolling the beach area, an AFP photographer saw.

WEATHER FORECASTFriday, October 12, 201216

Friday, October 12, 2012

16 Pages Number 205 4th year

e-mail: [email protected] online: http://www.internationalbalipost.com. http://epaper.internationalbalipost.com.

Price: Rp 3.000,-I N T E R N A T I O N A L I N T E R N A T I O N A L

PAgE 13

Dps 23 - 32

Entertainment

PAgE 4

Continued on page 13

PAgE 7

But at the film’s premiere later in the evening, guitarist Jimmy Page set the record straight, sort of, about a potential reunion. “I think it’s disappointing for people when the answer is no,” Page said. But he later added: “That’s what it is now.”

“Celebration Day” covers their 2007 reunion concert at London’s 02 Arena. Original members Plant, Page and John Paul Jones, as well as Jason Bonham, the son of the late John Bonham, played the one-time tribute concert to honor Atlantic Records founder Ahmet Ertegun.

“Once the idea was proposed, ‘Would we do the concert?’ It had to be Jason,” Page said. Since the death of Bonham in 1980, the band has played only a handful of gigs, with the 2007 tribute concert being the last time. The group enlisted the younger Bonham, a suc-cessful drummer in his own right, to play with the band.

On the red carpet, Bonham said he understands why the fans want some-thing more from the band, but feels there’s good reason to put it to rest. “I think it’s probably frustrating to the public when they see how good it is, and they go, ‘Why won’t you do anymore?’ They don’t get it,” Bonham said. “But you know what, there’s a time, and for me it’s when John Bonham was in Led Zeppelin.”

Jones, the band’s bassist, eloquently said all the band’s energy went into that performance. “We focused on the show and that was it. Fortunately it was on film,” Jones said.

Page was conscious of Led Zeppelin’s uninspired performance at the Atlantic Records’ 40th anniversary concert in 1988. So the band rehearsed for about six weeks before the London show.

“You have to understand, any other group would be a doing a warm-up gig, and then they would have like two or three concerts in a row. We could have done more than one, with the demand, but we only had one shot and we had to be super-duper confident on it, and it went well,” Page said.

During a news conference earlier in the day, the band became uncomfort-able with a question about “anticipating something bigger for the band.”

Associated Press Writer

MINEOLA, N.Y. — Police were called to Lindsay Lohan’s child-hood home in suburban New York on Wednesday morning after a report of a fight between the troubled actress and her mother. It was the third run-in involving the actress and New York po-lice officers in the past several weeks.

Nassau County Police Insp. Ken-neth Lack said officers were called around 8 a.m. Wednesday to the Mer-rick, Long Island, home where the 26-year-old starlet grew up. Her mother

Dina lives in the home with some of her other children. An investigation revealed “no criminality,” according to Lack. Police did not release details on the subject of the argument.

Celebrity website TMZ first report-ed the dispute. Lohan publicist Steve Honig declined to comment.

She was involved in a New York City police investigation about two weeks ago. She alleged a man had assaulted her in a New York hotel, but charges against the man were later dropped. In mid-September, she was accused of clipping a pedestrian

with her car outside a nightclub and driving away. She was given a ticket and was scheduled to appear in court Oct. 23.

Honig said previously he expects those allegations to be proven false. The actress was also involved in a car accident in California this summer that sent her and an assistant to a hospital, but didn’t result in serious injuries for anyone. The accident remains under investigation.

Lindsay Lohan, mom in reported dispute at NY home

In this May 9, 2012 photo shows actress Lindsay Lohan at the

A&E Networks 2012 Upfront at Lincoln

Center in New York.

AP Photo/Starpix, Kristina

Bumphrey, file

Jimmy Page says ‘no’ to Led Zeppelin reunion

Associated Press Writer

NEW YORK — Led Zeppelin will not be reuniting anytime soon. That message came through loud and clear Tuesday with sarcasm, stoic silence and even the occasional barb at reporters who dared to ask. Just the mention of the topic set off lead singer Robert Plant at a news conference for the band’s upcoming concert film, “Celebration Day.”

Photo by Dario Cantatore/Invision/AP

Musicians Jason Bonham, Robert Plant, Jimmy Page and John Paul Jones attend the “Led Zeppelin: Celebration Day” premiere at the Zieg-feld Theater on Tuesday, Oct. 9, 2012 in New York.

REUTERS/Beawiharta

An Indonesian policeman stands guard at the 2002 Bali bombing memorial monument, ahead of the 10-year anniversary of the incident in Kuta, Bali resort island October 11, 2012. Indonesian police have warned of possible attacks on commemorations for the tenth anniversary of bomb blasts on the island of Bali and have brought in reinforcements to protect the thousands due to attend, including Australia’s prime minister.

Warns of threat before Bali anniversaryAssociated Press/Agence France-Press

DENPASAR — Indonesian police warned of a possible ter-rorist threat targeting dignitaries planning to commemorate Friday’s 10th anniversary of the Bali bombings, raising the country’s security alert to its highest level.

Eto’o back as Cameroon seek to prevent upset

Man arrested after smoke grenade found in luggage

West Tianyar residents face water crisis

Page 2: Edisi 12 Oktober 2012 | International Bali Post

InternationalFriday, October 12, 20122 Friday, October 12, 2012 15International Activities

Bali News

Founder : K.Nadha, General Manager :Palgunadi Chief Editor: Diah Dewi Juniarti Editors: Gugiek Savindra,Alit Susrini, Alit Sumertha, Daniel Fajry, Mawa, Sri Hartini, Suana, Sueca, Sugiartha, Wirya, Yudi Winanto Denpasar: Dira Arsana, Giriana Saputra, Subrata, Sumatika, Asmara Putra. Bangli: Pujawan, Buleleng: Adnyana, Gianyar: Agung Dharmada, Karangasem: Budana, Klungkung: Bali Putra Ariawan. Ja-karta: Nikson, Hardianto, Ade Irawan. NTB: Agus Talino, Izzul Khairi, Raka Akriyani. Surabaya: Bambang Wilianto. Development: Alit Purnata, Mas Ruscitadewi. Office: Jalan Kepundung 67 A Denpasar 80232. Telephone (0361)225764, Facsimile: 227418, P.O.Box: 3010 Denpasar 80001. Bali Post Jakarta, Advertizing: Jl.Palmerah Barat 21F. Telp 021-5357602, Facsimile: 021-5357605 Jakarta Pusat. NTB: Jalam Bangau

No. 15 Cakranegara Telp. (0370) 639543, Facsimile: (0370) 628257. Publisher: PT Bali Post

EvEry Temple and Shrine has a special date for it annual Ceremony, or “ Odalan “, every 210 days according to Balinese calendar, including the smaller ancestral shrine which each family possesses. Because of this practically every few days a ceremony of festival of some kind takes place in some Village in Bali. There are also times when the entire island celebrated the same Holiday, such as at Galungan, Kuningan, Nyepi day, Saraswati day, Tumpek Landep day, Pagerwesi day, Tumpek Wayang day etc.

The dedication or inauguration day of a Temple is con-sidered its birth day and celebration always takes place on the same day if the wuku or 210 day calendar is used. When new moon is used then the celebration always happens on new moon or full moon. The day of course can differ the religious celebration of a temple lasts at least one full day with some temple celebrating for three days while the celebration of Besakih temple, the Mother Temple, is never less than 7 days and most of the time it lasts for 11 days, depending on the importance of the occasion.

The celebration is very colorful. The shrine are dressed with pieces of cloths and sometimes with brocade, sailings, decorations of carved wood and sometimes painted with gold and Chinese coins, very beautifully arranged, are hung in the four corners of the shrine. In front of shrine are placed red, white or black umbrellas depending which Gods are worshipped in the shrines.

In front of important shrine one sees, besides these umbrellas soars, tridents and other weapons, the “umbul-umbul”, long flags, all these are prerogatives or attributes of Holiness. In front of the Temple gate put up “Penjor”, long bamboo poles, decorated beautifully ornaments of young coconut leaves, rice and other products of the land. Most beautiful to see are the girls in their colorful attire, carrying offerings, arrangements of all kinds fruits and colored cakes, to the Temple. Every visitor admires the grace with which the carry their load on their heads.

Balinese Temple Ceremony

Calendar Event for September 1 through October 17, 20121 Sep Saniscara Pon Dunggulan Pura Segara JembranaPura Dalem Gede Losan Klungkung

2 Sep Redite Wage Kuningan Pura Dalem Tegal Tamu Sekarmukti-BalubulanPura Kubayan Umagunung Sempidi-Badung3 Sep Soma Keliwon Kuningan Pura Dasar Gelgel-KlungkungPura Pasek Tohjiwa Sawah/Selemadeg-TabananPura Pemerajan Agung Benawah Kangin-GianyarPura Panti Pasek Gelgel Pelapuhan-Busungbiu BulelengPura Kahyangan Tulus Desa Apuan.8 Sep Saniscara Keliwon Kuningan Pura Taman Pule Mas-UbudPura Ularan Takmung-KlungkungPura Bukitjati Gulingan-Kawan BangliPura Dalem TegehePura Dalem TahakPura Dalem BatuajiPura Dalem Tegaljaya-BatubulanPura Jenengan Maspahit Cemenggaon-SukawatiPura Dalem Guwang-SukawatiPura Sadha KapalPura Sakenan Sakenan SeranganPura Pekendungan Kediri-TabananPura Pasek Gaduh Grokgak Gede TabananPura Dalem Sanding TampaksiringPura Dalem Purnajati Tanjung Puri Tanjung Periuk JakartaPura Dalem Tenggaling Guliang-BangliMr. Dukuh Tetek Peguyangan-DenpasarPura Agung Blambangan BanyuwangiPura Dalem Agung Sri Nararya Kresna Kepakisan Gelgel -KlungkungDesa Adat Munggu (Mekotekan) Mengwi-BadungPura Panti Paksebali-Klungkung (Perang Jempana)Pura Penataran Agung MargoweningDesa Balong garut Sidoarjo, Jawa Timur2 Oct Anggara Wage Pahang Pura Batu Madeg(Meru Tumpang Sanga) BesakihPura Hyang Tibha i Batuan Sakah3 Oct Buda Keliwon Pahang Pura Luhur Puncak Padang Dawa Baturiti TabananPura Silayukti Padangbai-Karangasem.

Pura Aer Jeruk SukawatiPura Dangin Pasar Batuan-SukawatiPura Penataran Batuyang-BatubulanPura Desa Lembeng Ketewel-SukawatiPura Pasek Bendesa Dukuh Kediri-TabananPura Kawitan Dalem Sukawati GianyarPura Kresek Banyuning BulelengPura Puseh Bebandem-KarangasemMerajan Pasek Kubayan-GajiMerajan pasek Gelgel Jeroan Abang-Songan.Merajan Pasek Subrata Temaga TemagaMerajan Pasek Gelgel Bungbungan Gelgel BungbunganSad Kahyangan Batu Medahu Swana Nusa PenidaPura Buda Kliwon Penatih-DenpasarPura Penataran Dukuh Nagasari Bebandem KarangasemPura Pasek Bendesa Tagtag PaguyanganPura Pulasari Sibang Gede AbiansemalPura Batur Sari UbudPura Penataran Agung Sukawati8 Oct Soma Keliwon Krulut Pura Pasel Gelgel Kekeran Mngwi BadungMerajan Pasek Subadra Kramas-Gianyar13 Oct Hari Tumpek Krurut Pura Pasek Gelgel Br Tengah BulelengPura Dalem Pemuteran Jelantik Tojan - KlungkungPura Pedarmaan Bhujangga Waisnawa BesakihPura Taman Sari Desa Gunungsari Penebel TabananPura Dalem Tarukan Bebalang BangliPura Benua Kangin BesakihPura Merajan Kanginan Besakih14 Oct Redite Umanis Merakih Pura Parangan Tengah Banjar Ceningan Kangin - LembonganPura Dalem Celuk Sukawati - Gianyar17 Oct Buda Wage Merakih Pura Bendesa Mas Kepisah PedunganPura Natih Banjar Kalah - BatubulanPura Desa Silakarang SingapaduPura dalem Petitenget Kerobokan - KutaPura Dalem Pulasari Samplangan - GianyarPura Kubayan Kepisah Pedungan Denpasar SelatanPura Pasek gelgel Banjar Tanahpegat - TabananPr. Paibon Banjar Bengkel Sumerta - DenpasarPura Pasek Lumintang DenpasarPr. Panti Penyarikan Medahan Sanding - TampaksiringPr. Pasar Agung Banjar Dauh Peken Kaba-kaba - Tabanan

19 Deluxe Pool Villas (265m) exude an idyllic appeal in the tranquil surroundings. Soft fur-nishings in a simple yet tasteful style create an atmosphere of warmth and cosines. The private plunge pool and gazebo for in-villa massage treatments are added luxuries for guests’ daily indulgence.

The 5 Royal Pool Villa are fashioned like the Deluxe Pool Villas and the 480m compound houses two villas instead of one. A common patio area encourages relaxing evening chats and in-villa dining.

All villas are well equipped with modern con-veniences, ideal for discerning executive types and vacationing couples to lounge around and unwind in maximum comfort, inviting you into a memorable holiday experience.

Furama Vilas & SpaIBP

The Furama vilas & Spa, Bali is nestled amidst padi fields in the Banjar Bindu district in mountainous Ubud, covering over 2000m2 verdant lands. Accessible to the popular Ubud market via the resort’s free shuttle service, the Concierge can also arrange for transportation to other tourist attractions based on guest’s needs.

IBP/File Photo

Denpasar (Bali Post) –It seems to be a serious matter now that West Denpasar

has been targeted a lot with the walls holing modus. Three building walls have been a victim and a safe is targeted with recent one at Libbi Plaza and Gunung Agung Book Shop, Teuku Umar Street, Denpasar, last Wednesday (10/10) yet it seemed nothing is taken this time. “Only files were seen scattered, there are two holes, 60 centi-meters at Libbi Plaza while 30 centimeters at Gunung Agung Book Shop,” police source stated.

According to the officer, it is strongly suspected that these similar incidents are done by the same people. No cash were taken this time, only Sprite drink and fruits were consumed. It was a security in Libbi Plaza, Ketut Sri Utama, who was coming in for work at 6.45 am local time witnessed it first. What’s weird, the employee door was locked from the inside so then Utama went through the front door. Utama reported to the police and then holes were found. One of the holes were next to a cashier desk and safe place which means one of the robbers could be someone from the company or knowing well the place condition as it’s impossible to know if it’s someone who doesn’t know the area. (kmb21)

Meanwhile, a much different condi-tion was seen in the complex of Sari Boga II night market. The number of traders offering special food of Gianyar compared to outside traders was nearly balanced. The remaining traders sold clothing, toys, original tapes and pirated CDs.

Desak Anom, 42, from Gianyar town selling typical traditional food of Gianyar looked slightly happy when approached by visitors. Since the age of ten, Desak Anom had help her mother, Niang Temon, sell rice, por-ridge, assorted vegetables with grated coconut spices and seafood.

In her memory, before the night market traders were as busy as today, there were only two traders. Then, the traders increased and repeatedly moved. Originally, most traders in the night market sold traditional food. It brought in a special appeal

to truck drivers and other visitors to come by. Economic transactions with small business were going on until late night.

Such activities kept going on until she got married and opened her own business. When met on Tuesday night (Oct 9), Desak Anom said the increas-ing number of traders and uncertain people’s purchasing power made her income uncertain, too. During low season, of the 25 kg of rice prepared, sometimes it stayed a quarter. She peddled from early afternoon until 1:00 a.m. on the following day.

Even though the competition among the traders was getting tighter with the entry of outside food, for Desak Anom selling traditional food was a blessing. Amidst the increasing insistence, she remained to serve traditional food. By selling food, at least until closing the stall she could obtain IDR 2 million.

“If lacking of visitors, my earnings may reach IDR 1 million. Such amount can only cover the amount of capital,” she explained.

It is one of the illustrations on the presence of night market traders exist-ing in Gianyar Regency. Though the overall number of traders in the night market cannot be ascertained, based on the deposit of the generally gener-ated revenue (PAD) from daily levies, it can be known that Gianyar Regency has five night markets.

Those night markets are located in Ubud, Gianyar town, Sukawati, Semebaung, and Blahbatuh. From the five night markets as indicated by the data of the regional revenue agency (Dispenda) up to August 2012 as presented by the Spokesperson of Gianyar Government, contributions to the regionally generated revenue reached IDR 17,718,900. (dar)

Gianyar (Bali Post)—A banyan tree in the area of Dalem Puri Sukawati temple

suddenly drew the attention of local residents. It happened because the appearance of a reddish-furred ape had been a spectacle of residents. Besides, right in the cranny under the banyan tree was also found a mask resembling a Sidakarya mask on Wednesday (Oct 10).

One of the residents, Ida Bagus Dira, said the appearance of the ape and discovery of the Sidakarya mask were just known three days ago. As information compiled, the ap-pearance of the red ape was known by a worker who was repairing the temple on Tuesday (Oct 9). The worker was surprised by the appearance of the ape from the banyan tree. After seeing the red-furred ape, the worker reported it to the local village apparatus.

Village apparatuses and residents eventually thronged to see the appearance of the ape. Such appearance was then at-tributed to the existence of the sacred banyan tree. Even, at that time the village apparatus and residents were surprised by the discovery of Sidakarya mask under the root of banyan tree.

A leadership of Dalem Puri Batuan temple, Dewa Made Oka Bawa, said the location was previously never occupied by a herd of apes. Before the discovery of the Sidakarya mask and appearance of the ape, it was the location of Merajapati shrine (upstream of cemetery). However, after the banyan tree uprooted, the Merajapati shrine was relocated to the current location. For clarity, it would be consulted first, he explained. (kmb16)

IBP/File

Gianyar Market

Attempt to survive by serving traditional foods

ALIGNING of blue-roofed stalls began to embellish the parking lot of Gianyar Market and parking space in front of the shopping complex located on Jalan Ngurah rai, Gianyar. At that time, it was 3:00 p.m. One by one the entourage of night market traders arrived and immediately opened their stall. Along the parking space on Jalan Ngurah rai were seen 23 beautifully arranged stalls offering traditional specialties. Only two stalls were seen to sell assorted salads and side dishes.

Red ape draws attention of residents

Libbi Plaza and Gunung Agung shop robbed

Page 3: Edisi 12 Oktober 2012 | International Bali Post

3Friday, October 12, 201214 InternationalInternational Bali NewsScience Friday, October 12, 2012

This is Antarctica, the polar op-posite of the Arctic. While the North Pole has been losing sea ice over the years, the water nearest the South Pole has been gaining it. Antarctic sea ice hit a record 7.51 million square miles in September. That happened just days after reports of the biggest loss of Arctic sea ice on record.

Climate change skeptics have seized on the Antarctic ice to ar-gue that the globe isn’t warming and that scientists are ignoring the southern continent because it’s not convenient. But scientists say the skeptics are misinterpreting what’s happening and why.

Shifts in wind patterns and the giant ozone hole over the Antarctic this time of year — both related to human activity — are probably behind the increase in ice, experts say. This subtle growth in winter sea ice since scientists began measuring it in 1979 was initially surprising, they say, but makes sense the more it is studied.

“A warming world can have complex and sometimes surpris-ing consequences,” researcher Ted Maksym said this week from an Australian research vessel sur-

rounded by Antarctic sea ice. He is with the Woods Hole Oceanograph-ic Institution in Massachusetts.

Many experts agree. Ted Scam-bos of the National Snow and Ice Data Center in Colorado adds: “It sounds counterintuitive, but the Antarctic is part of the warming as well.” And on a third continent, David Vaughan of the British Ant-arctic Survey says that yes, what’s happening in Antarctica bears the fingerprints of man-made climate change.

“Scientifically the change is nowhere near as substantial as what we see in the Arctic,” says NASA chief scientist Waleed Abdalati, an ice expert. “But that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t be paying attention to it and shouldn’t be talking about it.” Sea ice is always melting near one pole while growing around the other. But the overall trend year to year is dramatically less ice in the Arctic and slightly more in the Antarctic.

It’s most noticeable in Sep-tember, when northern ice is at its lowest and southern ice at its high-est. For over 30 years, the Arctic in September has been losing an average of 5.7 square miles of sea

ice for every square mile gained in Antarctica.

Loss of sea ice in the Arctic can affect people in the Northern Hemisphere, causing such things as a higher risk of extreme weather in the U.S. through changes to the jet stream, scientists say. Antarctica’s weather peculiarities, on the other hand, don’t have much effect on civilization.

At well past midnight in Ant-arctica, where it’s about 3 degrees, Maksym describes in a rare ship-to-shore telephone call from the R.V. Aurora Australis what this extra ice means in terms of climate change. And what it’s like to be out studying it for two months, with the nearest city 1,500 miles away.

“It’s only you and the pen-guins,” he says. “It’s really a strik-ingly beautiful and stark landscape. Sometimes it’s even an eerie kind of landscape.”

While the Arctic is open ocean encircled by land, the Antarctic — about 1.5 times the size of the U.S. — is land circled by ocean, leaving more room for sea ice to spread. That geography makes a dramatic difference in the two polar climates.

Experts: Global warming means more Antarctic iceAssociated Press Writer

WASHINGTON — The ice goes on seemingly forever in a white pancake-flat landscape, stretching farther than ever before. And yet in this confounding region of the world, that spread-ing ice may be a cockeyed signal of man-made climate change, scientists say.

AP Photo/NSIDC, University of Colorado

This handout photo provided by NSIDC, University of Colorado, taken in Oct. 2003, shows the Ant-arctic sunlight illuminating the surface of the sea ice, intensifying the effect of the fracture lines.

The newest singing sensation in the animal kingdom? Mice. The creatures not only sing ultrasonic melodies high above sopranos, dis-tinct from their regular squeaks, but they also learn new tunes from each other, researchers report today (Oct. 10).

Song learning is known to exist in humans, dolphins, songbirds and parrots, but the new research overthrows a 50-year assumption that mouse vocalizing is inborn and instead shows that mice have a rudimentary vocal system to control their vocal cords and learn new tunes.

“The mouse brain and behavior for vocal communication is not as primitive and as innate as myself and many other scientists have considered it to be,” senior author Erich Jarvis, a neurobiologist at Duke University, told LiveScience. “Mice have more similarities in their vocal communication with humans than other species like our closest relatives,” Jarvis added, referring to chimpanzees.

Generally, vocalizing comes from a coordinated effort between the brain’s motor cortex, which controls voluntary muscles, and the vocal cords in the larynx. Jarvis and colleagues found a rudimentary indirect connection in mice between the two, absent in chimpanzees and monkeys.

The findings may also impact human speech disorders such as those found in autism, commonly studied in mice genetically engineered to mimic the disorders.

Singing new songs

Jarvis, who studies how language works and evolves, set out to demonstrate and verify that mice didn’t have brain connections to learn singing behavior.

In their study, the researchers destroyed the motor control region in mice and then tested their singing abilities. The altered mice could still sing, “but they weren’t able to modulate or stay on pitch on their songs as they were before,” Jarvis said. [10 Cool Facts About the Brain]

The inborn ability to vocalize is built into the brain stem of mice, whereas pitch modulation and melody comes from the rudimentary motor control center, Jarvis hypothesized.

Next, the researchers wanted to determine just how modifiable these songs were. Previous research had shown male mice become mini-Pavarottis when sexually excited by the female scent. But the new research suggests mice are able to mimic new songs.

Singing Mice Can Change Their Tune

WASHINGTON — It sounds like a scene from a TV show: Some-one sends a discarded coffee cup to a laboratory where the unwitting drinker’s DNA is decoded, predicting what diseases lurk in his or her future.

A presidential commission found that’s legally possible in about half the states — and says new protections to ensure the privacy of people’s genetic information are critical if the nation is to realize the enormous medical potential of gene-mapping.

Such whole genome sequencing costs too much now for that ex-treme coffee-cup scenario to be likely. But the report being released Thursday says the price is dropping so rapidly that the technology could become common in doctors’ offices very soon — and there are lots of ethical issues surrounding how, when and with whom the results may be shared.

Without public trust, people may not be as willing to allow scien-tists to study their genetic information, key to learning to better fight disease, the report warns.

“If this issue is left unaddressed, we could all feel the effects,” said Dr. Amy Gutmann, who chairs the Presidential Commission for the Study of Bioethical Issues.

Mapping entire genomes now is done primarily for research, as scientists piece together which genetic mutations play a role in various diseases. It’s different than getting a lab test to see if you carry, say, a single gene known to cause breast cancer.

Gutmann said her commission investigated ahead of an anticipated boom in genome sequencing as the price drops from thousands today to about $1,000, cheaper than running a few individual gene tests.

Bioethics panel urges more gene privacy protectionAssociated Press Writer

Bali Post

DENPASAR - Other than anti-rabies vaccine (VAR), the Bali Health Agency also provides anti-rabies serum (SAR) to handle the rabies cases in Bali. After being unavailable for long time, now Bali has 283 vials of anti-rabies serum distributed throughout Bali. It was revealed by the Head of Bali Health Agency, Ketut Suarjaya, when contacted.

According to him, such amount of anti-rabies serum had been distributed to each regency/mu-nicipality where 30 vials were distributed to Buleleng, Jembrana (15 vials), Tabanan (25 vials), Ba-dung (5 vials), Denpasar (25 vials), Gianyar (30 vials), Klungkung (25 vials), Bangli (35 vials) and Karangsem (30 vials), while the remaining 63 vials were used for buffer stock.

Providing anti-rabies serum, added Suarjaya, was to overcome the bite of animal rabies carrier located at hazardous parts of the body from the shoulder upward. As known, rabies took time to get to the brain. The speed to reach the brain highly depended on the location, depth and distance of the wound from the head. Administra-tion of the anti-rabies serum was usually undertaken to patients bitten by dog whose wound lo-cated on the shoulder upward with the assumption that virus would quickly reach the brain because position of the wound was very close to the head.

Meanwhile, Secretary of the Rabies Treatment Team of Sanglah Hospital, Ken Wirasandhi, admit-ted that Sanglah Hospital had no inventory of anti-rabies serum at the moment. “If we need, we will request it to the Bali Health

Agency,” explained Wirasandhi. He added the use of anti-rabies serum was usually very rare as the bite wound on the shoulder upward caused by animal rabies carrier rarely happened. By and large, the dog bite victim injured on the foot or hand.

The anti-rabies serum itself, added Ken, had difference from the anti-rabies vaccine. Anti-rabies serum was a ready-to-use rabies immune system, while the anti-rabies vaccine was a matter serving to trigger the body to be immune against rabies. In terms of its function, the anti-rabies serum certainly gave a faster immune ef-fect on rabies virus than anti-rabies vaccine.

Unfortunately, since it was expensive and only available overseas, in Indonesia the anti-rabies serum was only given to the victim whose location of dog bite was very close to the head. According to Ken, administra-tion of the anti-rabies vaccine to dog bite injuries so far in Bali was still effective. “Of the many cases of dog bite in Bali, administration of the anti-rabies vaccine was still effective. This can be seen where none of the dog bite victims undergoing a complete administration of anti-rabies vaccine has been exposed to rabies,” said Ken.

For patients of rabies suspect who died usually had a history of dog bite injuries without un-dergoing a treatment or obtain-ing the anti-rabies vaccine.

Other than anti-rabies serum, the Bali Health Agency had also prepared approximately 34,334 vials of anti-rabies vaccine that were expected to meet the needs of anti-rabies vaccine in Bali for a year. (san)

Russian Division Head of the HPI Bali, Nengah Archana, said the arrival of Russian tourists to Bali was previously dominated by the middle to upper class. Now, the Russian tourists who jazzed up the Island of the Gods were dominated by middle to lower class tourists.

“The arrival of lower-class Rus-sian tourists to Bali is also a result of the MICE tourism program. Russian tourist arrivals do occur en masse, but the quality of Russian tourists that spend holidays in Bali has been declining,” said Nengah Archana on Wednesday (Oct 10).

According to him, the phenom-enon of decline in quality happened to Russian tourists who vacationed in Bali had taken place since 2011. Such condition was indicated by the decline in the purchase of tour pack-ages by Russian tourists through travel agencies.

“Aside from not purchasing a tour package through travel agen-cies, the Russian tourists simply choose to stay in hotel without tak-ing any tour package,” he said.

He said that Russian tourists who wanted to travel predominantly rented a motorbike instead of pur-chasing a tour package. Those who took advantage of rental services

were not only repeater guests, but also those traveling to Bali for the first time.

“Apparently, they are willing to take risks of travelling by renting a bike, or using freelance transport services,” he said.

Archana alleged the courage of Russian tourists to travel by them-selves in Bali happened because it was easy to get global information about Bali through the Internet though it was not fully correct. “Particularly, the more valid in-formation about Balinese culture can be obtained from the Russian tourist guides coalesced into the HPI Bali,” he said.

Meanwhile, Chairman of the Tourism Industry Association of Indonesia (GIPI) of Bali, Ngurah Wijaya, assessed the degradation of tourists coming to Bali did not only happen to Russian tourists, but also to the entire tourism mar-kets. Quality could be measured by two benchmarks, namely the length of stay and tourist expendi-tures. The existing data indicated that length of stay of tourists since the past 10 years tended to shift to 3-4 days only and their spending power only reached about USD 100 per day.

“Now, the foreign tourist visit amounts to 2.5 million per year. However, their spending is low reaching only USD 100 per person with a length of stay up to 3 days,” he said.

Such conditions, assessed Ngu-rah Wijaya, happened in harmony with the shifting concept of Bali tourism from segmented tourism to mass tourism. To that end, the Bali tourism should change the paradigm of mass tourism into segmented tourism. Development of the segmented tourism would boost the economic growth of Bali in the whole.

“The appropriate tourism for Bali is not mass tourism, but seg-mented tourism that can draw tour-ists who can spend something more such as spiritual, cultural, golf and other tourism. To that end, we are encouraging the government to create segmented tourism,” he explained.

The development of segmented tourism, added Ngurah Wijaya, would also have an impact on the economic and social welfare improvement. With a high level of spending and long stay, their consumption would automatically increase, too. (kmb27)

Quality of Russian travelers shiftsBali Post

DENPASAR - Quantitatively, the number of Russian tourists coming to Bali increases from year to year. However, the Indonesian Tourist Guides Association (HPI) of Bali assesses the presence of the Russian market qualitatively tends to decrease.

Tourists visit shop at Seminyak, Badung Regency, Bali Island. Quantitatively, the number of Russian tourists coming to Bali increases from year to year. However, the Indonesian Tourist Guides Associa-tion (HPI) of Bali assesses the presence of the Russian market qualitatively tends to decrease.

Bali provides 283 vials of anti-rabies serum

IBP/Photo Document

A man getting anti-rabies vaccine (VAR) at one of Bali’s hos-pitals. Other than anti-rabies vaccine (VAR), the Bali Health Agency also provides anti-rabies serum (SAR) to handle the rabies cases in Bali.

Page 4: Edisi 12 Oktober 2012 | International Bali Post

Bali News International4 Friday, October 12, 2012 Friday, October 12, 2012 13International RLDWWarns of threat....

The Kuta attacks 10 years ago plunged Indonesia -- which has the world’s largest number of Muslims -- into the war on militancy and battered Bali’s tourist-reliant economy.

Tourism to Bali, which is dominated by Australian visitors, was just beginning to recover in 2005 when another suicide blast killed 20 people as they dined at the beachfront Jimbaran district.

Today, Bali’s fortunes have recovered fully and Indonesia has won praise for a crackdown on militants that has left all the leading Bali perpetrators either executed, killed by police or jailed.

The nation has not seen a major attack since 2009 when blasts at two five-star hotels in Jakarta killed nine, and more than 700 JI members have been killed or put behind bars.

Bali is on track to lure a record one million Australian arrivals this year as tourists flock back to the Hindu-majority island, which is renowned for its pristine beaches, wild night-life and welcoming locals.

But despite the apparent recovery, the 2002 atrocity is seared into the memory of Indo-nesians -- 38 of whom perished in the blasts -- and Wednesday’s terror threat rekindled dark memories of the previous attacks.

“Bali used to be safe but you never know anymore,” said hotel developer Boy Harlin, whose friend was badly burned in the 2002 bombings.

“I’m in the hospitality industry and all my buyers ran away after the attacks, so another attack is the last thing I want to happen.”

For many Australians the bombings were a direct attack on their country.

“This memorial is just another step in the journey, because it’s something that will never go away,” said Keith Pearce, 65, who flew from Perth with around 30 members of his Australian Rules football club which lost seven young men.

“Each year when we have an anniversary, you look into the boys’ eyes and you can see it’s still very raw for them.”

There are also fears that although crippled, Jemaah Islamiyah is far from defeated, with old names cropping up in new terror cells that aspire to impose an Islamic caliphate across Southeast Asia by violent means.

“The current threat in Indonesia is at a dif-ferent scale from what it was a decade ago,” International Crisis Group Southeast Asia proj-ect director Jim Della-Giacoma told AFP.

“But recent police raids on suspected terrorists show that the threat continues and that there’s still a lot of radical thought and ideology.”

A ceremony will be held Friday at a park in Jimbaran followed by a ground-zero memorial in Kuta.

Former Australian Prime Minister John Howard, U.S. Ambassador to Indonesia Scot Marciel and diplomats from elsewhere are expected to attend. Hundreds of survivors of the bombings and victims’ family members will also gather.

“It is better not to underestimate. ... It is better to carry out an excessive security ar-rangement rather than being defeated,” said Bali police Chief Maj. Gen. Budi Gunawan. “At stake is the image of Indonesia’s police.”

After a massive crackdown on Muslim ex-tremists, terrorist attacks aimed at foreigners in Indonesia have been largely replaced in recent years by smaller, less deadly strikes targeting the government.

From page 1

Boston-bound Yongda Huang Harris, 28, was arrested Friday on suspicion of transporting hazardous materials on a flight from Japan, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials said Tuesday.

Harris is a U.S. citizen whose permanent residence is in Boston and he had recently begun living and working in Japan, of-ficials said.

He has been charged with one count of transporting hazardous materials, which carries a maximum penalty of up to five

years in prison.Harris drew suspicion when U.S. Cus-

toms and Border Protection officers at LAX noticed he was wearing a bulletproof vest and flame retardant pants under his trench coat, triggering a formal investigation by Homeland Security special agents.

In a search of Harris’ checked luggage, numerous suspicious items were uncov-ered, including a hatchet, a collapsible ba-ton, a biohazard suit, a full-face respirator and billy clubs.

The smoke grenade was subsequently x-rayed by the Los Angeles Police Department’s bomb squad, and officers said the device fell into a category that is prohibited on board pas-senger aircraft by the United Nations.

“Depending on the conditions when it is ignited, the smoke grenade, made by Com-mando Manufacturers, could potentially fill the cabin of a commercial airplane with smoke or cause a fire,” federal officials said in the release.

Attempts to reach Harris’ family in Boston and other associates were unsuc-cessful.

An investigation is ongoing.Harris is expected to make an initial

appearance in federal court Tuesday af-ternoon.

Associated Press

VATICAN CITY — Pope Benedict XVI is marking the 50th anniversary of the Second Vatican Council, the church meetings he attended as a young priest that brought the Catholic Church into the mod-ern world but whose meaning is still hotly debated.

Benedict was celebrating Mass on Thursday in St. Pe-ter’s Square and later will greet churchmen, including a dozen original Vatican II par-ticipants, re-enacting the great procession into St. Peter’s that launched the council in 1962.

The anniversary comes as the church, beset by recent scandals, is fighting what it sees as a wave of secularism erasing the Christian heritage of the West and competition for souls from rival evangeli-cal churches in Latin America and Africa.

The pope has spent much of his pontificate seeking to cor-rect what he considers the mis-interpretation of Vatican II.

Pope Benedict XVI arrives to conduct mass to open

the year of faith at the Vati-can October 11, 2012.

Departement of Home-land Security police officers keep an eye on planes at the Los Angeles International Airport Wednesday,

Oct. 10, 2012.

AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes

Man arrested after smoke grenade found in luggage Associated Press

LOS ANGELES — A man dressed in body armor was arrested by federal officials at Los Angeles International Airport after a smoke grenade, knives, a gas mask, leg irons, body bags and a variety of weapons were discovered in luggage.

Pope marks 50th anniversary of Vatican II

REUTERS/Stefano

Rellandini

Denpasar (Bali Post) –The commitment of Denpasar

City to take action and arrang-ing illegal advertisement boards seen by Indonesia Advertisement Company Union (P3I) Bali still half hearted or even ignoring as they keep on publishing new permits on crowded advertising places such as seen at Teuku Umar that has been an electronic shops center now has a new ad-vertisement board built when actually in the pilot project of advertisement arrangement by Cleanliness and Grounds Agency (DKP) was not to produce any new permits since 2010. “We think government is not serious, as up to now there hasn’t been any clear action taken in viola-tions on advertising such as at Teuku Umar which ideally has 25 billboardsm now has 40 with dis-tance minimal 50 meters each,” P31 Bali Head, Roy Guritno Wicaksono, stated in Denpasar last Wednesday (10/10), “There has been arrangement going on

but it is getting worse instead.”A letter has been sent to the

Agency on arranging construction of billboards by making a model of the arrangement. At least four billboards were built after the stoppage at 2010 yet P3I don’t want to comment too far as this is the city’s government authority. Business Section of the Union, A.A.Md. Gede Sudiadnyana, also thinks that this is not what it is suppose to be. “It shouldn’t be half hearted, it should be clear ac-tions so Denpasar City is cleaner and beautiful also comfortable from all those advertisements that shouldn’t be where they are,” Sudiadnyana exclaimed.

Meanwhile Head of the re-sponsible agency, I Ketut Wisada, did say before a disciplinary on stopping illegal advertisements have been a routine and not just a response after a complain. The agency also took action at Gatot Subroto Street up to east, Toh-pati, Akasia cross way and along Hayam Wuruk Street. (kmb27)

Residents who urgently needed clean water and had water storage like those at Tamansari hamlet should purchased water from the seller bringing tank truck. A tank truck of water containing 5,000 liters was purchased at IDR 150,000 by residents. It was re-vealed by the hamlet chief I Gede Daryana not long ago when met at his village.

Daryana said that most villag-ers among the 900 families at his hamlet were poor. They did not have water storage because the cost of making it was expensive. The water storage with capacity of 10 cubic meters of water could spend up to IDR 30 million. “Majority of our residents do not have water storage. If they afford to purchase water during this crisis, it will be kept in an emergency pond layered with tarpaulin,” he said.

Other than residents at West Tianyar, according to a legislator of Karangasem House from West Tianyar, Nyoman Oka Antara, the clean water crisis in the dry season was also faced by most people on Kubu mountain area. They regularly

lived through clean water crisis in dry season.

As observation, the residents at Lebah Bongli and Bejug Batudawa Kaja also faced clean water crisis. They purchased clean water from water seller by tank truck coming to 5,000 liters at IDR 200,000. “They are poor families who do not have water storage and purchase water from the water seller. It is then kept in an emergency pond layered with tarpaulin,” said hamlet chief of Apadsari, Tulamben village, Wayan Putra.

Oka Antara said the pond project was less effective in addressing the crisis of clean water happen-ing regularly during dry season in Kubu. As evidence, Oka Antara said the pond spending the budget worth IDR 4 billion remained dry during dry season. The water in the pond at Sebudi Selat, Puragae, Daya ham-let at Ban village (Kubu), Nangka and Yehkori hamlet (Bebandem), Batudawa Kaja and Muntig had totally dried up.

“Although there are ponds built with costly budget, the residents constantly face clean water crisis. I

think it will be more effective if the community groups are given water storage aid. It costs cheaper and can be worked on through mutual assistance. If rainwater in the stor-age has run out, the storage can be used to keep water supplies from the government or philanthropists. In short, it will be much cheaper,” said Oka Antara.

He said if the fund of govern-ment assistance worth IDR 4 billion was used to build water storage and worked on independently by the recipient groups, then it would cover more residents and be more effective.

Oka Antara regretted the tank truck given by the Bali Govern-ment for Karangasem Regency, was claimed and used only by particular party cadres in Karangasem to sup-ply clean water in Kubu subdistrict. “Supposedly, the tank truck given by the Bali Government can be managed independently, should not be claimed to supply clean water by the ruling political party cadres in Karangasem,” said Oka Antara, Chairman of Commission B of the Karangasem House when hosting the visit of Deputy Governor of Bali, AA Puspayoga, few days ago at West Tianyar in conjunction with the development of water storage. (bud)

Semarapura (Bali Post)—Commitment of the govern-

ment to build the agricultural sector is only a discourse. So far, there have been no government programs that can preserve the farmland in Bali. The govern-ment is unable to maintain the farmland, let alone do extensifi-cation. By degrees, the farmland will diminish and local people leave the agriculture due to loss of farmland.

Every year, the farmland dwindles. Nothing can stem the land conversion, so that the farmland is getting narrower in keeping with the reluctance of young generation to become a farmer. By referring to the data of land use in Klungkung Regency, the chart of farmland acreage in Klungkung within the past four years has fallen sharply. From 3,888 hectares of paddy fields in Klungkung in 2008, it has re-duced to 3,845 hectares in 2011. It means that within a period of four years the smallest regency in Bali has lost 43 hectares of paddy fields. Will there be any land ex-pansion next year? Apparently, it is impossible.

In 2008, the land conversion occurred to 12 hectares, consist-ing of 8 hectares at Subak Jero Kuta, Tempek Ayung in Klung-

kung subdistrict and 4 hectares at Subak Sampalan Baler Margi in Dawan subdistrict. Later in 2011, the existence of farmland in Klungkung was increasingly worrying. Within a year, 31 hectares of paddy fields van-ished after the land conversion. This time, two hectares of land conversion happened at Subak Lepang, Dlod Banjarangkan and Lunjungan in Banjarangkan subdistrict, while in Klungkung subdistrict it scattered in the area of Gembalan, Selat, Akah, Selisihan, Kawan, Manduang, Pegending, Toya Cau, Toya Hee and Pegatepan Hee happened to 29 hectares.

The Head of Klungkung Ag-riculture, Plantation and For-estry Agency, Wayan Muliarta, seemed reluctant to comment last Wednesday regarding the farm-land conversion in his territory. It had been attempted to visit him for several times but he was not in the office. When contacted via phone, he did not answer.

In the future, the presence of wetland should get protection in the form of real programs of the government so as not to be continuously eroded by other interests. Otherwise, farmers will lose their cultivated rice fields in the future. (kmb31)

IBP/File

A farmer is trying to cultivate a dry land in West Tianyar village, Kubu subdistrict, Karangasem.

West Tianyar residents face water crisis

RESIDENTS of West Tianyar village, Kubu subdistrict, Karan-gasem, are now on the peak of water crisis. Water storage built by people and used to keep rain water during the last rainy season has dried out.

Farmland in Klungkung getting narrower

City Government half hearted sanctioning illegal adverts

Page 5: Edisi 12 Oktober 2012 | International Bali Post

Bali News Friday, October 12, 2012 5InternationalFriday, October 12, 201212 International

Associated Press

MADRID — The dilemma facing the Spanish government has become more acute following a downgrade of the cash-strapped country’s credit rating.

Late Wednesday, Standard & Poor’s cut its rating on Spain’s debt by two notches to BBB-, leaving the country on the cusp of junk status. That’s important because it potentially makes it more expensive for the Spanish government to borrow money.

As well as citing the deepening economic recession in Spain and rising levels of social discontent, the agency said the government’s “hesitation” in requesting help was “potentially raising the risks to Spain’s rating.”

Though S&P’s warning may nudge the Spanish government to make a bailout request sooner than later, rival agency Moody’s has indicated it may cut its rating on Spain in the event of a bailout request.

“It would appear that when it comes to the rating Spain is a bit between a rock and a hard place,” said Gary Jenkins, managing director of Swordfish Research.

Financial markets responded negatively Thursday to the overnight develop-ments and Spain’s main IBEX stock index was underperforming its counterparts in Europe, trading 1 percent lower in early trading. Meanwhile, the yield on the country’s 10-year bond spiked 0.10 percentage point higher to 5.88 percent, an indication of mounting investor unease.

Last month, the European Central Bank announced a new plan to keep a lid on the borrowing costs of indebted countries like Spain. It said it would buy unlimited amounts of debt of struggling European countries. However, the governments first need to apply for bailout and so far the Spain’s has balked at the prospect.

Instead, the government, led by Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, has introduced a series of austerity and labor measures in a bid to bring down its deficit and convince investors it can manage its finances without outside help.

If the Spanish government continues down that path, it will have to do so with a debt rating, near, or even, below junk status.

Though it has raised around 90 percent of the money it needs to service its debts in 2012, Spain will soon be confronted with the prospect of having to tap investors for around 200 billion ($258 billion) in 2013.

“Not easy to raise that kind of money with that kind of rating when the economic data is likely to come in worse than government forecasts,” said Swordfish’s Jenkins.

Speaking at a financial con-ference in Tokyo on Thursday, Geithner said the Obama admin-istration would strive to resolve by the end of the year the impasse with the Congress that threatens to impose a so-called “fiscal cliff” of tax increases and deep spending cuts if the two sides do not reach agreement.

The U.S. has been relatively successful in managing to clean up the mess left by the 2008 fi-nancial crisis while not starving the economy of credit, Geith-ner said. Growth has dragged, though, due to the European crisis and severe drought across the U.S.

“We’ve been relatively suc-cessful in doing these reforms in a way that didn’t starve the economy of credit,” he said.

Growth has averaged just over 2 percent a year since 2009, low-er than the 3 percent to 4 percent that many had forecast, he said. Geithner put the impact from the European slowdown at up to 1 percentage point of GDP growth and from this year’s drought at about 0.5 point.

“Those two factors alone ex-

plain the difference,” he said.“From my perspective, the

U.S. economy is doing signifi-cantly better than anybody had reason to expect, not just because of the magnitude of the crisis but because of the size of the force of the shocks that hit the U.S. economy,” Geithner said, pointing to the European debt morass and two spells of surging oil prices.

The Obama administration did well to act aggressively and early on financial reforms and recapitalizing financial institu-tions, Geithner said, though he acknowledged there was much work ahead, especially on reforming housing finance — which was at the heart of the collapse in 2008.

“Mortgage credit in the United States is tighter than it needs to be,” Geithner said.

Progress made in getting the economy back on track could be undone, economists have warned, if Washington fails to deal effectively with the so-called “fiscal cliff.”

Christine Lagarde, manag-ing director of the International

Monetary Fund, urged that the U.S. take “decisive action” on the issue.

Geithner acknowledged the urgency of the problem, saying the Obama administration in-tends to try to resolve its standoff with the Republican-controlled Congress over spending limits by the end of the year. The aim is to draw up a set of reforms that could be phased in over time.

If the impasse is not resolved by 2013, tax increases and deep spending cuts amounting to up to 4 percent of GDP will take effect, walloping the U.S. economy. The IMF has urged the U.S. to raise the ceiling on the level of debt the government can issue, which is capped by law and avoid a show-down similar to that in August 2011, when a similar impasse went unresolved until the U.S. almost defaulted on its debt.

Deferring the problem is not a “responsible strategy,” Geithner said.

“It might feel like an easy path at the moment but it will still leave a set of big questions hanging over the country. I don’t think that will help.”

AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner

Geithner: US economy growing despite headwindsAssociated Press

TOKYO — U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said Thursday that financial reforms and other actions in response to the global crisis are yielding results, helping the U.S. economy to grow at a pace better than there was reason to expect.

AP Photo/Daniel Ochoa De Olza

Protestors gather near Parliament demonstrating against austerity mea-sures announced by the Spanish government in Madrid, Spain, Saturday, Sept. 29, 2012. Tens of thousands of Spaniards and Portuguese rallied in the streets to protest enduring deep economic pain from austerity cuts.

Spanish bailout dilemma gets more acute

Antara

BANDUNG - Thousands of striking workers took to the street blocking roads in this West Java capital leading to the office of the city mayor here on Thursday.

The strike followed nation wide strike earlier this month with the same demand of the abolition of outsourcing system of labor recruitment.

“This is only one percent of workers in Bandung. Our demand is abolition of outsourcing system and pay hike,” Adjat Sudrajat, the chairman of the Bandung unit of the Indonesian labor union (SBSI), said.

The workers are members of various labor unions in Bandung including SBSI, SPSI, SPN, FK-PTDI, SPFKK, etc. joining in what they called Labor Communication Forum.

Adjat said under the outsourcing system the workers have weak bargaining positions facing their employers.

“Any time we could be dismissed without separation pay,” he said.

The government has pledged to improve the system of labor recruitment.

“In my opinion, poverty reduc-tion has always been the priority since independence, starting from Soekarno, and then followed by Soe-harto, Habibie, Abdurahman Wahid, and Megawati. Therefore, the duty must be continued,” he said here on Wednesday.

“The number of people whose earnings are above the national aver-age per capita income is rising,” the President noted.

“But the poverty issue still both-ers me. Even though the number of

people living below the poverty line has decreased to approximately 20 or 30 million, I think it`s still quite an enormous number,” he added.

Therefore, President Yudhoyono said, the central government should work together with regional govern-ments, state enterprises and private companies in order to eradicate poverty.

He pointed out that poverty could also be reduced through sustainable economic growth.

“Therefore, everybody’s agenda

should be to reduce poverty and improve the welfare of the poor,” the head of state said.

“Only then we will discover how important economic growth is for creating jobs and fulfilling the basic needs of the nation`s people,” he stated.

“I am again underlining the ur-gency for state enterprise leaders to contribute to Indonesia`s economic growth by stepping up efforts to increase investment,” the President added.

Reuters

LONDON/SINGAPORE - Telephones and email accounts belonging to Indonesia’s influential Bakrie clan have been hacked, a Bakrie official said, pointing to unspecified “suspicions” likely to further strain relations with fellow investors in UK miner Bumi Plc.

News that Bakrie communications were infiltrated over several months comes just a day before the board of London-listed Bumi - created by the family and financier Nat Rothschild - meets in Singapore to discuss progress in an inquiry into potential financial irregularities at its Indonesian operations.

The probe, still ongoing and being led by a London law firm, began after an anonymous whistleblower passed documents to independent directors on the Bumi board. Most of the allegations of impropriety, expected to total more than $500 million, relate to Indonesian affili-ate Bumi Resources, the flagship Bakrie company and Indonesia’s largest coal producer.

“We are aware that our email servers and telephones have been compromised or “hacked” and we have reported this to the Indone-sian National Police, Cyber Crime Unit,” Christopher Fong, Bakrie Group Senior Vice President, said on Wednesday.

He added the group had “strong suspicions” about who was behind the attacks on the family’s own calls and emails and those of family-owned companies, but declined to comment further.

One source familiar with the situation said the attacks had been carried out over two months and suspicions were centering on hackers based in France. The source gave no further detail.

The inquiry into potential financial irregularities has battered Bumi’s languishing shares and frayed already tense relations among investors in Bumi Plc, particularly between the family and Indone-sian tycoon Samin Tan, who pulled the Bakries back from default last year with a $1 billion investment, only to watch the value of his shares crumble.

The Bakries and Tan each hold half of a 47.6 percent stake in Bumi Plc, after Tan helped the Bakries stave off default by buying a 23.8 percent holding. However, sources have said he is “furious” with the Bakries, after watching the value of his investment plunge.

After news of the probe into the Indonesian operations and par-ticularly part-owned Bumi Resources, Bumi Plc’s shares, already hit by weak thermal coal prices, dropped to a low of 119.54 pence - compared with a high of over 10 times that after the coal miner re-listed as Bumi in June last year.

The current share price is also a fraction of the value Tan himself, who borrowed heavily to fund the deal, agreed to buy in.

Rothschild, whose own relations with the Bakries soured after he sent a letter last year calling for a “clean up”, owns 12 percent. He was ousted as co-chairman in March but remains a director and is expected to attend Thursday’s board meeting.

Antara

BEIJING - Indonesia is the sec-ond biggest destination of Chinese investment in the Southeast Asian region, according to the Chinese Trade Ministry.

China`s overseas direct investment (ODI) in Indonesia reached US$590 million in the first seven months of this year, the head of the international trade and economic cooperation department at the Chinese Trade Ministry, Jiang Jiqing said here on Wednesday.

“Hopefully, the figure will continue

to increase in line with the Chinese government`s go global policy which encourages Chinese investors to invest overseas,” he said at a seminar on in-vestment opportunities in Indonesia.

Meanwhile, Indonesian Ambas-sador to China and Mongolia Imron Cotan said Chinese investment in Indonesia is still relatively small.

“With its foreign exchange reserves reaching US$3.5 trillion, China`s in-vestment in Indonesia which reached US$1.2 billion in 2011 has not reflected its real potential,” he said.

The Chinese investment in Indone-

sia is still far below that of Singapore, Japan, South Korea and The Nether-lands, he said.

“Ideally, Chinese investment in Indonesia should increase by US$2 billion per year,” he said.

As Southeast Asia`s largest econo-my which has gross domestic product of around US$1 trillion, coupled with conducive investment climate and stable macro economic policy and political situation and endowed with abundant natural resources, Indonesia is promising destination of foreign investment, he said.

FOTO ANTARA/M Risyal Hidayat

Homeless people doing their daily activity. President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has stated that the reduc-tion of poverty in the country must be the next government`s top priority.

Poverty reduction must be top priorityAntara

YOGYAKARTA - President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has stated that the reduction of poverty in the country must be the next government`s top priority.

RI is China`s second biggest investment destination

Bakries say phones, emails hacked

Thousands of workers resume strike in Bandung

BUSINESS

Page 6: Edisi 12 Oktober 2012 | International Bali Post
Page 7: Edisi 12 Oktober 2012 | International Bali Post

Friday, October 12, 2012 7SportsFriday, October 12, 201210 InternationalInternationalSport

Honda has warned it would con-sider quitting MotoGP if Dorna’s spec ECU proposition becomes mandatory. Dorna has long advocat-ed a move to a spec system in order to cut costs and level the playing field. It recently announced that a spec ECU will be made available to any team that wishes to use it from 2013.

Honda has been the most vocal opponent of the scheme, warning that it

could pull out of grand prix rac-ing.

“If [Dorna boss] Carmelo Ez-peleta carries on with his decision to force a control ECU and a rev limit, then Honda might retire from

MotoGP,” HRC t e a m

principal Shuhei Nakamoto told Motosprint. “Yamaha and Ducati agree with us, and so does Suzuki. The responsibility is Ezpeleta’s, this is his decision.”

Nakamoto was however speak-ing before the recent announcement that Dorna will take over the organi-sation and promotion of the rival

Wo r l d

Superbike Championship from 2013.

The deal effectively means Dor-na could also introduce a spec ECU into the category, thereby negating Honda’s previous threat that “in order to develop electron-ics technology we could switch to [World] Superbikes, since there are no limitations in that series and the manufacturers are free to develop

their projects.”Ezpeleta confirmed

the issue of spec ECU’s was on the table for 2014 and would be dis-cussed at the forthcoming Japanese Grand Prix.

“I want MotoGP to follow Mo-to3’s style. This idea (control ECU and rev limit), like others, is cur-rently under discussion for 2014,” he said.

“We’ll soon go to Motegi, where I will have some very important meetings with the Japanese. I’m optimistic: we’ll find a solution that is OK for everyone.”

Honda issues MotoGP quit threat over standard ECUs

Dani Pedrosa of Spain leads Jorge Lorenzo on his way to winning the Aragon MotoGP Grand Prix at the Motorland racetrack in Al-caniz, Spain, Sunday Sept. 30, 2012.

AP Photo/Paul White

Along with Cape Verde Islands, the Central African Republic are also on the verge of their first African Na-tions Cup qualification in a turn about in fortunes for two of the continent’s smallest countries from virtually no international competition just over 10 years ago.

Cape Verde Islands are 2-0 up against four-times winners Cameroon, who replaced their coach following their first-leg defeat. Eto’o, who had refused to play in the first match after labelling the set-up around the team amateurish, made himself available for Sunday’s game following a meeting with Camer-oon’s prime minister.

“I am convinced that together, put-ting aside other interests for the country, we are capable, with God’s assistance, of giving Cameroon football the pa-nache, and shine of old,” Eto’o said last month.

The Central African Republic, who have jumped from 200th in the FIFA rankings in 2009 to 49 in the latest standings, have a 1-0 first-leg lead against Burkina Faso, having upset record winners Egypt in the first round of qualifiers.

ZAMBIA DANGERAlso in danger of missing the finals

are champions Zambia, who take a 1-0 lead to Uganda on Saturday. The upset winners in 2012 have looked unconvinc-ing since, particularly in struggling to win the first leg of their qualifier against Uganda, who last played in the 1978 finals.

Ivory Coast have a 4-2 lead from

an action-packed first leg against Sen-egal last month as they continue their quest to provide talismanic captain Didier Drogba with a first Nations Cup title.

Drogba has competed at four succes-sive tournaments, and reached two finals, but has never won African football’s most coveted prize. Aged 34, the 2013 tournament in South Africa represents his last chance.

“For me and my team mates, it would be a great trophy to have, a just reward for the last 10 years when we’ve worked so hard and tried to carry the country,” he said in an interview on the FIFA website this week.

But the Ivorians could yet slip up in Dakar on Saturday after conceding two away goals in the first leg to a strong Senegal side, whose attack will be lead by the Newcastle United pair of Demba Ba and Papiss Cisse.

Ethiopia, one of the African football’s founder members, seek to qualify for the first time in 31 years but are two goals down after losing 5-3 to neighbours Sudan in the last month. Algeria, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Ghana, Mali, Nigeria and Tunisia are well placed to advance to the finals.

Reuters

LONDON - England midfielder Frank Lampard has been ruled out the 2014 World Cup qualifier against San Marino with a knee injury, the Football Association said on Thursday.

England face the European minnows on Friday, four days before a sterner test against joint Group H leaders Poland.

“Frank Lampard has returned to his club for further treatment and will not be available for England’s FIFA World Cup qualifier with San Marino,” the FA said on their website (www.thefa.com).

“The Chelsea midfielder will return to the England squad on Sunday for assessment ahead of the away qualifier with Poland on Tuesday.”

The injury to vice captain Lampard has opened a debate as to who will lead out England at Wembley on Friday, with usual captain Steven Gerrard suspended for the match.

The two most likely candidates to fill the role are Man-chester United striker Wayne Rooney and Manchester City goalkeeper Joe Hart.

England’s Frank Lampard acknowledges the support-ers at the end of his team’s match against Ukraine

during their 2014 World Cup qualifying soccer match at Wembley stadium in London September 11 , 2012.

Reuters

LONDON - Cardiac arrest survivor Fabrice Muamba has been invited by FIFA president Sepp Blatter to Zurich next month to discuss a possible role with world soccer’s governing body.

The former Bolton Wander-ers midfielder collapsed on the pitch during an FA Cup quarter-final against Tottenham Hotspur in March and his heart stopped beating for 78 minutes. He re-covered but was forced to retire as a player in August.

Speaking to reporters at the Leaders in Football business convention in London he said he now found going to matches tough emotionally, but was attracted to a career in sports

politics.“I like this kind of side of it,

making decisions,” the former England Under-21 player said. “I have a meeting with Sepp Blatter next week (Oct. 30), hopefully he can get a job for me.”

Muamba, who was given a Brazil No.9 shirt by World Cup winner Ronaldo earlier in the day, said he was recovering well but still suffers from memory lapses.

“As far as I’m aware the doctor told me it would take me about a year for my memory to get back to normality, how it was before,” Muamba said. “But I try not to think about it too much. I try to enjoy my life and enjoy my family.”

Cardiac arrest survivor Muamba weighs up FIFA options

England’s Lampard ruled out of San Marino match

REUTERS/Darren

Staples

Eto’o back as Cameroon seek

to prevent upset

Anzhi’s Samuel Eto’o reacts after scoring against Young Boys during the Europa League soccer match at the Lokomotiv stadium, in Moscow, Rus-sia, on Thursday, Oct. 4, 2012.

Reuters

CAPE TOWN - Striker Samuel Eto’o returns to the Cameroon side as they attempt to prevent elimination from the African Nations Cup at the hands of the island archipelago of Cape Verde in the final round of qualifiers this weekend.

AP Photo/Ivan Sekretarev

Page 8: Edisi 12 Oktober 2012 | International Bali Post
Page 9: Edisi 12 Oktober 2012 | International Bali Post
Page 10: Edisi 12 Oktober 2012 | International Bali Post

Friday, October 12, 2012 7SportsFriday, October 12, 201210 InternationalInternationalSport

Honda has warned it would con-sider quitting MotoGP if Dorna’s spec ECU proposition becomes mandatory. Dorna has long advocat-ed a move to a spec system in order to cut costs and level the playing field. It recently announced that a spec ECU will be made available to any team that wishes to use it from 2013.

Honda has been the most vocal opponent of the scheme, warning that it

could pull out of grand prix rac-ing.

“If [Dorna boss] Carmelo Ez-peleta carries on with his decision to force a control ECU and a rev limit, then Honda might retire from

MotoGP,” HRC t e a m

principal Shuhei Nakamoto told Motosprint. “Yamaha and Ducati agree with us, and so does Suzuki. The responsibility is Ezpeleta’s, this is his decision.”

Nakamoto was however speak-ing before the recent announcement that Dorna will take over the organi-sation and promotion of the rival

Wo r l d

Superbike Championship from 2013.

The deal effectively means Dor-na could also introduce a spec ECU into the category, thereby negating Honda’s previous threat that “in order to develop electron-ics technology we could switch to [World] Superbikes, since there are no limitations in that series and the manufacturers are free to develop

their projects.”Ezpeleta confirmed

the issue of spec ECU’s was on the table for 2014 and would be dis-cussed at the forthcoming Japanese Grand Prix.

“I want MotoGP to follow Mo-to3’s style. This idea (control ECU and rev limit), like others, is cur-rently under discussion for 2014,” he said.

“We’ll soon go to Motegi, where I will have some very important meetings with the Japanese. I’m optimistic: we’ll find a solution that is OK for everyone.”

Honda issues MotoGP quit threat over standard ECUs

Dani Pedrosa of Spain leads Jorge Lorenzo on his way to winning the Aragon MotoGP Grand Prix at the Motorland racetrack in Al-caniz, Spain, Sunday Sept. 30, 2012.

AP Photo/Paul White

Along with Cape Verde Islands, the Central African Republic are also on the verge of their first African Na-tions Cup qualification in a turn about in fortunes for two of the continent’s smallest countries from virtually no international competition just over 10 years ago.

Cape Verde Islands are 2-0 up against four-times winners Cameroon, who replaced their coach following their first-leg defeat. Eto’o, who had refused to play in the first match after labelling the set-up around the team amateurish, made himself available for Sunday’s game following a meeting with Camer-oon’s prime minister.

“I am convinced that together, put-ting aside other interests for the country, we are capable, with God’s assistance, of giving Cameroon football the pa-nache, and shine of old,” Eto’o said last month.

The Central African Republic, who have jumped from 200th in the FIFA rankings in 2009 to 49 in the latest standings, have a 1-0 first-leg lead against Burkina Faso, having upset record winners Egypt in the first round of qualifiers.

ZAMBIA DANGERAlso in danger of missing the finals

are champions Zambia, who take a 1-0 lead to Uganda on Saturday. The upset winners in 2012 have looked unconvinc-ing since, particularly in struggling to win the first leg of their qualifier against Uganda, who last played in the 1978 finals.

Ivory Coast have a 4-2 lead from

an action-packed first leg against Sen-egal last month as they continue their quest to provide talismanic captain Didier Drogba with a first Nations Cup title.

Drogba has competed at four succes-sive tournaments, and reached two finals, but has never won African football’s most coveted prize. Aged 34, the 2013 tournament in South Africa represents his last chance.

“For me and my team mates, it would be a great trophy to have, a just reward for the last 10 years when we’ve worked so hard and tried to carry the country,” he said in an interview on the FIFA website this week.

But the Ivorians could yet slip up in Dakar on Saturday after conceding two away goals in the first leg to a strong Senegal side, whose attack will be lead by the Newcastle United pair of Demba Ba and Papiss Cisse.

Ethiopia, one of the African football’s founder members, seek to qualify for the first time in 31 years but are two goals down after losing 5-3 to neighbours Sudan in the last month. Algeria, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Ghana, Mali, Nigeria and Tunisia are well placed to advance to the finals.

Reuters

LONDON - England midfielder Frank Lampard has been ruled out the 2014 World Cup qualifier against San Marino with a knee injury, the Football Association said on Thursday.

England face the European minnows on Friday, four days before a sterner test against joint Group H leaders Poland.

“Frank Lampard has returned to his club for further treatment and will not be available for England’s FIFA World Cup qualifier with San Marino,” the FA said on their website (www.thefa.com).

“The Chelsea midfielder will return to the England squad on Sunday for assessment ahead of the away qualifier with Poland on Tuesday.”

The injury to vice captain Lampard has opened a debate as to who will lead out England at Wembley on Friday, with usual captain Steven Gerrard suspended for the match.

The two most likely candidates to fill the role are Man-chester United striker Wayne Rooney and Manchester City goalkeeper Joe Hart.

England’s Frank Lampard acknowledges the support-ers at the end of his team’s match against Ukraine

during their 2014 World Cup qualifying soccer match at Wembley stadium in London September 11 , 2012.

Reuters

LONDON - Cardiac arrest survivor Fabrice Muamba has been invited by FIFA president Sepp Blatter to Zurich next month to discuss a possible role with world soccer’s governing body.

The former Bolton Wander-ers midfielder collapsed on the pitch during an FA Cup quarter-final against Tottenham Hotspur in March and his heart stopped beating for 78 minutes. He re-covered but was forced to retire as a player in August.

Speaking to reporters at the Leaders in Football business convention in London he said he now found going to matches tough emotionally, but was attracted to a career in sports

politics.“I like this kind of side of it,

making decisions,” the former England Under-21 player said. “I have a meeting with Sepp Blatter next week (Oct. 30), hopefully he can get a job for me.”

Muamba, who was given a Brazil No.9 shirt by World Cup winner Ronaldo earlier in the day, said he was recovering well but still suffers from memory lapses.

“As far as I’m aware the doctor told me it would take me about a year for my memory to get back to normality, how it was before,” Muamba said. “But I try not to think about it too much. I try to enjoy my life and enjoy my family.”

Cardiac arrest survivor Muamba weighs up FIFA options

England’s Lampard ruled out of San Marino match

REUTERS/Darren

Staples

Eto’o back as Cameroon seek

to prevent upset

Anzhi’s Samuel Eto’o reacts after scoring against Young Boys during the Europa League soccer match at the Lokomotiv stadium, in Moscow, Rus-sia, on Thursday, Oct. 4, 2012.

Reuters

CAPE TOWN - Striker Samuel Eto’o returns to the Cameroon side as they attempt to prevent elimination from the African Nations Cup at the hands of the island archipelago of Cape Verde in the final round of qualifiers this weekend.

AP Photo/Ivan Sekretarev

Page 11: Edisi 12 Oktober 2012 | International Bali Post
Page 12: Edisi 12 Oktober 2012 | International Bali Post

Bali News Friday, October 12, 2012 5InternationalFriday, October 12, 201212 International

Associated Press

MADRID — The dilemma facing the Spanish government has become more acute following a downgrade of the cash-strapped country’s credit rating.

Late Wednesday, Standard & Poor’s cut its rating on Spain’s debt by two notches to BBB-, leaving the country on the cusp of junk status. That’s important because it potentially makes it more expensive for the Spanish government to borrow money.

As well as citing the deepening economic recession in Spain and rising levels of social discontent, the agency said the government’s “hesitation” in requesting help was “potentially raising the risks to Spain’s rating.”

Though S&P’s warning may nudge the Spanish government to make a bailout request sooner than later, rival agency Moody’s has indicated it may cut its rating on Spain in the event of a bailout request.

“It would appear that when it comes to the rating Spain is a bit between a rock and a hard place,” said Gary Jenkins, managing director of Swordfish Research.

Financial markets responded negatively Thursday to the overnight develop-ments and Spain’s main IBEX stock index was underperforming its counterparts in Europe, trading 1 percent lower in early trading. Meanwhile, the yield on the country’s 10-year bond spiked 0.10 percentage point higher to 5.88 percent, an indication of mounting investor unease.

Last month, the European Central Bank announced a new plan to keep a lid on the borrowing costs of indebted countries like Spain. It said it would buy unlimited amounts of debt of struggling European countries. However, the governments first need to apply for bailout and so far the Spain’s has balked at the prospect.

Instead, the government, led by Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, has introduced a series of austerity and labor measures in a bid to bring down its deficit and convince investors it can manage its finances without outside help.

If the Spanish government continues down that path, it will have to do so with a debt rating, near, or even, below junk status.

Though it has raised around 90 percent of the money it needs to service its debts in 2012, Spain will soon be confronted with the prospect of having to tap investors for around 200 billion ($258 billion) in 2013.

“Not easy to raise that kind of money with that kind of rating when the economic data is likely to come in worse than government forecasts,” said Swordfish’s Jenkins.

Speaking at a financial con-ference in Tokyo on Thursday, Geithner said the Obama admin-istration would strive to resolve by the end of the year the impasse with the Congress that threatens to impose a so-called “fiscal cliff” of tax increases and deep spending cuts if the two sides do not reach agreement.

The U.S. has been relatively successful in managing to clean up the mess left by the 2008 fi-nancial crisis while not starving the economy of credit, Geith-ner said. Growth has dragged, though, due to the European crisis and severe drought across the U.S.

“We’ve been relatively suc-cessful in doing these reforms in a way that didn’t starve the economy of credit,” he said.

Growth has averaged just over 2 percent a year since 2009, low-er than the 3 percent to 4 percent that many had forecast, he said. Geithner put the impact from the European slowdown at up to 1 percentage point of GDP growth and from this year’s drought at about 0.5 point.

“Those two factors alone ex-

plain the difference,” he said.“From my perspective, the

U.S. economy is doing signifi-cantly better than anybody had reason to expect, not just because of the magnitude of the crisis but because of the size of the force of the shocks that hit the U.S. economy,” Geithner said, pointing to the European debt morass and two spells of surging oil prices.

The Obama administration did well to act aggressively and early on financial reforms and recapitalizing financial institu-tions, Geithner said, though he acknowledged there was much work ahead, especially on reforming housing finance — which was at the heart of the collapse in 2008.

“Mortgage credit in the United States is tighter than it needs to be,” Geithner said.

Progress made in getting the economy back on track could be undone, economists have warned, if Washington fails to deal effectively with the so-called “fiscal cliff.”

Christine Lagarde, manag-ing director of the International

Monetary Fund, urged that the U.S. take “decisive action” on the issue.

Geithner acknowledged the urgency of the problem, saying the Obama administration in-tends to try to resolve its standoff with the Republican-controlled Congress over spending limits by the end of the year. The aim is to draw up a set of reforms that could be phased in over time.

If the impasse is not resolved by 2013, tax increases and deep spending cuts amounting to up to 4 percent of GDP will take effect, walloping the U.S. economy. The IMF has urged the U.S. to raise the ceiling on the level of debt the government can issue, which is capped by law and avoid a show-down similar to that in August 2011, when a similar impasse went unresolved until the U.S. almost defaulted on its debt.

Deferring the problem is not a “responsible strategy,” Geithner said.

“It might feel like an easy path at the moment but it will still leave a set of big questions hanging over the country. I don’t think that will help.”

AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner

Geithner: US economy growing despite headwindsAssociated Press

TOKYO — U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said Thursday that financial reforms and other actions in response to the global crisis are yielding results, helping the U.S. economy to grow at a pace better than there was reason to expect.

AP Photo/Daniel Ochoa De Olza

Protestors gather near Parliament demonstrating against austerity mea-sures announced by the Spanish government in Madrid, Spain, Saturday, Sept. 29, 2012. Tens of thousands of Spaniards and Portuguese rallied in the streets to protest enduring deep economic pain from austerity cuts.

Spanish bailout dilemma gets more acute

Antara

BANDUNG - Thousands of striking workers took to the street blocking roads in this West Java capital leading to the office of the city mayor here on Thursday.

The strike followed nation wide strike earlier this month with the same demand of the abolition of outsourcing system of labor recruitment.

“This is only one percent of workers in Bandung. Our demand is abolition of outsourcing system and pay hike,” Adjat Sudrajat, the chairman of the Bandung unit of the Indonesian labor union (SBSI), said.

The workers are members of various labor unions in Bandung including SBSI, SPSI, SPN, FK-PTDI, SPFKK, etc. joining in what they called Labor Communication Forum.

Adjat said under the outsourcing system the workers have weak bargaining positions facing their employers.

“Any time we could be dismissed without separation pay,” he said.

The government has pledged to improve the system of labor recruitment.

“In my opinion, poverty reduc-tion has always been the priority since independence, starting from Soekarno, and then followed by Soe-harto, Habibie, Abdurahman Wahid, and Megawati. Therefore, the duty must be continued,” he said here on Wednesday.

“The number of people whose earnings are above the national aver-age per capita income is rising,” the President noted.

“But the poverty issue still both-ers me. Even though the number of

people living below the poverty line has decreased to approximately 20 or 30 million, I think it`s still quite an enormous number,” he added.

Therefore, President Yudhoyono said, the central government should work together with regional govern-ments, state enterprises and private companies in order to eradicate poverty.

He pointed out that poverty could also be reduced through sustainable economic growth.

“Therefore, everybody’s agenda

should be to reduce poverty and improve the welfare of the poor,” the head of state said.

“Only then we will discover how important economic growth is for creating jobs and fulfilling the basic needs of the nation`s people,” he stated.

“I am again underlining the ur-gency for state enterprise leaders to contribute to Indonesia`s economic growth by stepping up efforts to increase investment,” the President added.

Reuters

LONDON/SINGAPORE - Telephones and email accounts belonging to Indonesia’s influential Bakrie clan have been hacked, a Bakrie official said, pointing to unspecified “suspicions” likely to further strain relations with fellow investors in UK miner Bumi Plc.

News that Bakrie communications were infiltrated over several months comes just a day before the board of London-listed Bumi - created by the family and financier Nat Rothschild - meets in Singapore to discuss progress in an inquiry into potential financial irregularities at its Indonesian operations.

The probe, still ongoing and being led by a London law firm, began after an anonymous whistleblower passed documents to independent directors on the Bumi board. Most of the allegations of impropriety, expected to total more than $500 million, relate to Indonesian affili-ate Bumi Resources, the flagship Bakrie company and Indonesia’s largest coal producer.

“We are aware that our email servers and telephones have been compromised or “hacked” and we have reported this to the Indone-sian National Police, Cyber Crime Unit,” Christopher Fong, Bakrie Group Senior Vice President, said on Wednesday.

He added the group had “strong suspicions” about who was behind the attacks on the family’s own calls and emails and those of family-owned companies, but declined to comment further.

One source familiar with the situation said the attacks had been carried out over two months and suspicions were centering on hackers based in France. The source gave no further detail.

The inquiry into potential financial irregularities has battered Bumi’s languishing shares and frayed already tense relations among investors in Bumi Plc, particularly between the family and Indone-sian tycoon Samin Tan, who pulled the Bakries back from default last year with a $1 billion investment, only to watch the value of his shares crumble.

The Bakries and Tan each hold half of a 47.6 percent stake in Bumi Plc, after Tan helped the Bakries stave off default by buying a 23.8 percent holding. However, sources have said he is “furious” with the Bakries, after watching the value of his investment plunge.

After news of the probe into the Indonesian operations and par-ticularly part-owned Bumi Resources, Bumi Plc’s shares, already hit by weak thermal coal prices, dropped to a low of 119.54 pence - compared with a high of over 10 times that after the coal miner re-listed as Bumi in June last year.

The current share price is also a fraction of the value Tan himself, who borrowed heavily to fund the deal, agreed to buy in.

Rothschild, whose own relations with the Bakries soured after he sent a letter last year calling for a “clean up”, owns 12 percent. He was ousted as co-chairman in March but remains a director and is expected to attend Thursday’s board meeting.

Antara

BEIJING - Indonesia is the sec-ond biggest destination of Chinese investment in the Southeast Asian region, according to the Chinese Trade Ministry.

China`s overseas direct investment (ODI) in Indonesia reached US$590 million in the first seven months of this year, the head of the international trade and economic cooperation department at the Chinese Trade Ministry, Jiang Jiqing said here on Wednesday.

“Hopefully, the figure will continue

to increase in line with the Chinese government`s go global policy which encourages Chinese investors to invest overseas,” he said at a seminar on in-vestment opportunities in Indonesia.

Meanwhile, Indonesian Ambas-sador to China and Mongolia Imron Cotan said Chinese investment in Indonesia is still relatively small.

“With its foreign exchange reserves reaching US$3.5 trillion, China`s in-vestment in Indonesia which reached US$1.2 billion in 2011 has not reflected its real potential,” he said.

The Chinese investment in Indone-

sia is still far below that of Singapore, Japan, South Korea and The Nether-lands, he said.

“Ideally, Chinese investment in Indonesia should increase by US$2 billion per year,” he said.

As Southeast Asia`s largest econo-my which has gross domestic product of around US$1 trillion, coupled with conducive investment climate and stable macro economic policy and political situation and endowed with abundant natural resources, Indonesia is promising destination of foreign investment, he said.

FOTO ANTARA/M Risyal Hidayat

Homeless people doing their daily activity. President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has stated that the reduc-tion of poverty in the country must be the next government`s top priority.

Poverty reduction must be top priorityAntara

YOGYAKARTA - President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has stated that the reduction of poverty in the country must be the next government`s top priority.

RI is China`s second biggest investment destination

Bakries say phones, emails hacked

Thousands of workers resume strike in Bandung

BUSINESS

Page 13: Edisi 12 Oktober 2012 | International Bali Post

Bali News International4 Friday, October 12, 2012 Friday, October 12, 2012 13International RLDWWarns of threat....

The Kuta attacks 10 years ago plunged Indonesia -- which has the world’s largest number of Muslims -- into the war on militancy and battered Bali’s tourist-reliant economy.

Tourism to Bali, which is dominated by Australian visitors, was just beginning to recover in 2005 when another suicide blast killed 20 people as they dined at the beachfront Jimbaran district.

Today, Bali’s fortunes have recovered fully and Indonesia has won praise for a crackdown on militants that has left all the leading Bali perpetrators either executed, killed by police or jailed.

The nation has not seen a major attack since 2009 when blasts at two five-star hotels in Jakarta killed nine, and more than 700 JI members have been killed or put behind bars.

Bali is on track to lure a record one million Australian arrivals this year as tourists flock back to the Hindu-majority island, which is renowned for its pristine beaches, wild night-life and welcoming locals.

But despite the apparent recovery, the 2002 atrocity is seared into the memory of Indo-nesians -- 38 of whom perished in the blasts -- and Wednesday’s terror threat rekindled dark memories of the previous attacks.

“Bali used to be safe but you never know anymore,” said hotel developer Boy Harlin, whose friend was badly burned in the 2002 bombings.

“I’m in the hospitality industry and all my buyers ran away after the attacks, so another attack is the last thing I want to happen.”

For many Australians the bombings were a direct attack on their country.

“This memorial is just another step in the journey, because it’s something that will never go away,” said Keith Pearce, 65, who flew from Perth with around 30 members of his Australian Rules football club which lost seven young men.

“Each year when we have an anniversary, you look into the boys’ eyes and you can see it’s still very raw for them.”

There are also fears that although crippled, Jemaah Islamiyah is far from defeated, with old names cropping up in new terror cells that aspire to impose an Islamic caliphate across Southeast Asia by violent means.

“The current threat in Indonesia is at a dif-ferent scale from what it was a decade ago,” International Crisis Group Southeast Asia proj-ect director Jim Della-Giacoma told AFP.

“But recent police raids on suspected terrorists show that the threat continues and that there’s still a lot of radical thought and ideology.”

A ceremony will be held Friday at a park in Jimbaran followed by a ground-zero memorial in Kuta.

Former Australian Prime Minister John Howard, U.S. Ambassador to Indonesia Scot Marciel and diplomats from elsewhere are expected to attend. Hundreds of survivors of the bombings and victims’ family members will also gather.

“It is better not to underestimate. ... It is better to carry out an excessive security ar-rangement rather than being defeated,” said Bali police Chief Maj. Gen. Budi Gunawan. “At stake is the image of Indonesia’s police.”

After a massive crackdown on Muslim ex-tremists, terrorist attacks aimed at foreigners in Indonesia have been largely replaced in recent years by smaller, less deadly strikes targeting the government.

From page 1

Boston-bound Yongda Huang Harris, 28, was arrested Friday on suspicion of transporting hazardous materials on a flight from Japan, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials said Tuesday.

Harris is a U.S. citizen whose permanent residence is in Boston and he had recently begun living and working in Japan, of-ficials said.

He has been charged with one count of transporting hazardous materials, which carries a maximum penalty of up to five

years in prison.Harris drew suspicion when U.S. Cus-

toms and Border Protection officers at LAX noticed he was wearing a bulletproof vest and flame retardant pants under his trench coat, triggering a formal investigation by Homeland Security special agents.

In a search of Harris’ checked luggage, numerous suspicious items were uncov-ered, including a hatchet, a collapsible ba-ton, a biohazard suit, a full-face respirator and billy clubs.

The smoke grenade was subsequently x-rayed by the Los Angeles Police Department’s bomb squad, and officers said the device fell into a category that is prohibited on board pas-senger aircraft by the United Nations.

“Depending on the conditions when it is ignited, the smoke grenade, made by Com-mando Manufacturers, could potentially fill the cabin of a commercial airplane with smoke or cause a fire,” federal officials said in the release.

Attempts to reach Harris’ family in Boston and other associates were unsuc-cessful.

An investigation is ongoing.Harris is expected to make an initial

appearance in federal court Tuesday af-ternoon.

Associated Press

VATICAN CITY — Pope Benedict XVI is marking the 50th anniversary of the Second Vatican Council, the church meetings he attended as a young priest that brought the Catholic Church into the mod-ern world but whose meaning is still hotly debated.

Benedict was celebrating Mass on Thursday in St. Pe-ter’s Square and later will greet churchmen, including a dozen original Vatican II par-ticipants, re-enacting the great procession into St. Peter’s that launched the council in 1962.

The anniversary comes as the church, beset by recent scandals, is fighting what it sees as a wave of secularism erasing the Christian heritage of the West and competition for souls from rival evangeli-cal churches in Latin America and Africa.

The pope has spent much of his pontificate seeking to cor-rect what he considers the mis-interpretation of Vatican II.

Pope Benedict XVI arrives to conduct mass to open

the year of faith at the Vati-can October 11, 2012.

Departement of Home-land Security police officers keep an eye on planes at the Los Angeles International Airport Wednesday,

Oct. 10, 2012.

AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes

Man arrested after smoke grenade found in luggage Associated Press

LOS ANGELES — A man dressed in body armor was arrested by federal officials at Los Angeles International Airport after a smoke grenade, knives, a gas mask, leg irons, body bags and a variety of weapons were discovered in luggage.

Pope marks 50th anniversary of Vatican II

REUTERS/Stefano

Rellandini

Denpasar (Bali Post) –The commitment of Denpasar

City to take action and arrang-ing illegal advertisement boards seen by Indonesia Advertisement Company Union (P3I) Bali still half hearted or even ignoring as they keep on publishing new permits on crowded advertising places such as seen at Teuku Umar that has been an electronic shops center now has a new ad-vertisement board built when actually in the pilot project of advertisement arrangement by Cleanliness and Grounds Agency (DKP) was not to produce any new permits since 2010. “We think government is not serious, as up to now there hasn’t been any clear action taken in viola-tions on advertising such as at Teuku Umar which ideally has 25 billboardsm now has 40 with dis-tance minimal 50 meters each,” P31 Bali Head, Roy Guritno Wicaksono, stated in Denpasar last Wednesday (10/10), “There has been arrangement going on

but it is getting worse instead.”A letter has been sent to the

Agency on arranging construction of billboards by making a model of the arrangement. At least four billboards were built after the stoppage at 2010 yet P3I don’t want to comment too far as this is the city’s government authority. Business Section of the Union, A.A.Md. Gede Sudiadnyana, also thinks that this is not what it is suppose to be. “It shouldn’t be half hearted, it should be clear ac-tions so Denpasar City is cleaner and beautiful also comfortable from all those advertisements that shouldn’t be where they are,” Sudiadnyana exclaimed.

Meanwhile Head of the re-sponsible agency, I Ketut Wisada, did say before a disciplinary on stopping illegal advertisements have been a routine and not just a response after a complain. The agency also took action at Gatot Subroto Street up to east, Toh-pati, Akasia cross way and along Hayam Wuruk Street. (kmb27)

Residents who urgently needed clean water and had water storage like those at Tamansari hamlet should purchased water from the seller bringing tank truck. A tank truck of water containing 5,000 liters was purchased at IDR 150,000 by residents. It was re-vealed by the hamlet chief I Gede Daryana not long ago when met at his village.

Daryana said that most villag-ers among the 900 families at his hamlet were poor. They did not have water storage because the cost of making it was expensive. The water storage with capacity of 10 cubic meters of water could spend up to IDR 30 million. “Majority of our residents do not have water storage. If they afford to purchase water during this crisis, it will be kept in an emergency pond layered with tarpaulin,” he said.

Other than residents at West Tianyar, according to a legislator of Karangasem House from West Tianyar, Nyoman Oka Antara, the clean water crisis in the dry season was also faced by most people on Kubu mountain area. They regularly

lived through clean water crisis in dry season.

As observation, the residents at Lebah Bongli and Bejug Batudawa Kaja also faced clean water crisis. They purchased clean water from water seller by tank truck coming to 5,000 liters at IDR 200,000. “They are poor families who do not have water storage and purchase water from the water seller. It is then kept in an emergency pond layered with tarpaulin,” said hamlet chief of Apadsari, Tulamben village, Wayan Putra.

Oka Antara said the pond project was less effective in addressing the crisis of clean water happen-ing regularly during dry season in Kubu. As evidence, Oka Antara said the pond spending the budget worth IDR 4 billion remained dry during dry season. The water in the pond at Sebudi Selat, Puragae, Daya ham-let at Ban village (Kubu), Nangka and Yehkori hamlet (Bebandem), Batudawa Kaja and Muntig had totally dried up.

“Although there are ponds built with costly budget, the residents constantly face clean water crisis. I

think it will be more effective if the community groups are given water storage aid. It costs cheaper and can be worked on through mutual assistance. If rainwater in the stor-age has run out, the storage can be used to keep water supplies from the government or philanthropists. In short, it will be much cheaper,” said Oka Antara.

He said if the fund of govern-ment assistance worth IDR 4 billion was used to build water storage and worked on independently by the recipient groups, then it would cover more residents and be more effective.

Oka Antara regretted the tank truck given by the Bali Govern-ment for Karangasem Regency, was claimed and used only by particular party cadres in Karangasem to sup-ply clean water in Kubu subdistrict. “Supposedly, the tank truck given by the Bali Government can be managed independently, should not be claimed to supply clean water by the ruling political party cadres in Karangasem,” said Oka Antara, Chairman of Commission B of the Karangasem House when hosting the visit of Deputy Governor of Bali, AA Puspayoga, few days ago at West Tianyar in conjunction with the development of water storage. (bud)

Semarapura (Bali Post)—Commitment of the govern-

ment to build the agricultural sector is only a discourse. So far, there have been no government programs that can preserve the farmland in Bali. The govern-ment is unable to maintain the farmland, let alone do extensifi-cation. By degrees, the farmland will diminish and local people leave the agriculture due to loss of farmland.

Every year, the farmland dwindles. Nothing can stem the land conversion, so that the farmland is getting narrower in keeping with the reluctance of young generation to become a farmer. By referring to the data of land use in Klungkung Regency, the chart of farmland acreage in Klungkung within the past four years has fallen sharply. From 3,888 hectares of paddy fields in Klungkung in 2008, it has re-duced to 3,845 hectares in 2011. It means that within a period of four years the smallest regency in Bali has lost 43 hectares of paddy fields. Will there be any land ex-pansion next year? Apparently, it is impossible.

In 2008, the land conversion occurred to 12 hectares, consist-ing of 8 hectares at Subak Jero Kuta, Tempek Ayung in Klung-

kung subdistrict and 4 hectares at Subak Sampalan Baler Margi in Dawan subdistrict. Later in 2011, the existence of farmland in Klungkung was increasingly worrying. Within a year, 31 hectares of paddy fields van-ished after the land conversion. This time, two hectares of land conversion happened at Subak Lepang, Dlod Banjarangkan and Lunjungan in Banjarangkan subdistrict, while in Klungkung subdistrict it scattered in the area of Gembalan, Selat, Akah, Selisihan, Kawan, Manduang, Pegending, Toya Cau, Toya Hee and Pegatepan Hee happened to 29 hectares.

The Head of Klungkung Ag-riculture, Plantation and For-estry Agency, Wayan Muliarta, seemed reluctant to comment last Wednesday regarding the farm-land conversion in his territory. It had been attempted to visit him for several times but he was not in the office. When contacted via phone, he did not answer.

In the future, the presence of wetland should get protection in the form of real programs of the government so as not to be continuously eroded by other interests. Otherwise, farmers will lose their cultivated rice fields in the future. (kmb31)

IBP/File

A farmer is trying to cultivate a dry land in West Tianyar village, Kubu subdistrict, Karangasem.

West Tianyar residents face water crisis

RESIDENTS of West Tianyar village, Kubu subdistrict, Karan-gasem, are now on the peak of water crisis. Water storage built by people and used to keep rain water during the last rainy season has dried out.

Farmland in Klungkung getting narrower

City Government half hearted sanctioning illegal adverts

Page 14: Edisi 12 Oktober 2012 | International Bali Post

3Friday, October 12, 201214 InternationalInternational Bali NewsScience Friday, October 12, 2012

This is Antarctica, the polar op-posite of the Arctic. While the North Pole has been losing sea ice over the years, the water nearest the South Pole has been gaining it. Antarctic sea ice hit a record 7.51 million square miles in September. That happened just days after reports of the biggest loss of Arctic sea ice on record.

Climate change skeptics have seized on the Antarctic ice to ar-gue that the globe isn’t warming and that scientists are ignoring the southern continent because it’s not convenient. But scientists say the skeptics are misinterpreting what’s happening and why.

Shifts in wind patterns and the giant ozone hole over the Antarctic this time of year — both related to human activity — are probably behind the increase in ice, experts say. This subtle growth in winter sea ice since scientists began measuring it in 1979 was initially surprising, they say, but makes sense the more it is studied.

“A warming world can have complex and sometimes surpris-ing consequences,” researcher Ted Maksym said this week from an Australian research vessel sur-

rounded by Antarctic sea ice. He is with the Woods Hole Oceanograph-ic Institution in Massachusetts.

Many experts agree. Ted Scam-bos of the National Snow and Ice Data Center in Colorado adds: “It sounds counterintuitive, but the Antarctic is part of the warming as well.” And on a third continent, David Vaughan of the British Ant-arctic Survey says that yes, what’s happening in Antarctica bears the fingerprints of man-made climate change.

“Scientifically the change is nowhere near as substantial as what we see in the Arctic,” says NASA chief scientist Waleed Abdalati, an ice expert. “But that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t be paying attention to it and shouldn’t be talking about it.” Sea ice is always melting near one pole while growing around the other. But the overall trend year to year is dramatically less ice in the Arctic and slightly more in the Antarctic.

It’s most noticeable in Sep-tember, when northern ice is at its lowest and southern ice at its high-est. For over 30 years, the Arctic in September has been losing an average of 5.7 square miles of sea

ice for every square mile gained in Antarctica.

Loss of sea ice in the Arctic can affect people in the Northern Hemisphere, causing such things as a higher risk of extreme weather in the U.S. through changes to the jet stream, scientists say. Antarctica’s weather peculiarities, on the other hand, don’t have much effect on civilization.

At well past midnight in Ant-arctica, where it’s about 3 degrees, Maksym describes in a rare ship-to-shore telephone call from the R.V. Aurora Australis what this extra ice means in terms of climate change. And what it’s like to be out studying it for two months, with the nearest city 1,500 miles away.

“It’s only you and the pen-guins,” he says. “It’s really a strik-ingly beautiful and stark landscape. Sometimes it’s even an eerie kind of landscape.”

While the Arctic is open ocean encircled by land, the Antarctic — about 1.5 times the size of the U.S. — is land circled by ocean, leaving more room for sea ice to spread. That geography makes a dramatic difference in the two polar climates.

Experts: Global warming means more Antarctic iceAssociated Press Writer

WASHINGTON — The ice goes on seemingly forever in a white pancake-flat landscape, stretching farther than ever before. And yet in this confounding region of the world, that spread-ing ice may be a cockeyed signal of man-made climate change, scientists say.

AP Photo/NSIDC, University of Colorado

This handout photo provided by NSIDC, University of Colorado, taken in Oct. 2003, shows the Ant-arctic sunlight illuminating the surface of the sea ice, intensifying the effect of the fracture lines.

The newest singing sensation in the animal kingdom? Mice. The creatures not only sing ultrasonic melodies high above sopranos, dis-tinct from their regular squeaks, but they also learn new tunes from each other, researchers report today (Oct. 10).

Song learning is known to exist in humans, dolphins, songbirds and parrots, but the new research overthrows a 50-year assumption that mouse vocalizing is inborn and instead shows that mice have a rudimentary vocal system to control their vocal cords and learn new tunes.

“The mouse brain and behavior for vocal communication is not as primitive and as innate as myself and many other scientists have considered it to be,” senior author Erich Jarvis, a neurobiologist at Duke University, told LiveScience. “Mice have more similarities in their vocal communication with humans than other species like our closest relatives,” Jarvis added, referring to chimpanzees.

Generally, vocalizing comes from a coordinated effort between the brain’s motor cortex, which controls voluntary muscles, and the vocal cords in the larynx. Jarvis and colleagues found a rudimentary indirect connection in mice between the two, absent in chimpanzees and monkeys.

The findings may also impact human speech disorders such as those found in autism, commonly studied in mice genetically engineered to mimic the disorders.

Singing new songs

Jarvis, who studies how language works and evolves, set out to demonstrate and verify that mice didn’t have brain connections to learn singing behavior.

In their study, the researchers destroyed the motor control region in mice and then tested their singing abilities. The altered mice could still sing, “but they weren’t able to modulate or stay on pitch on their songs as they were before,” Jarvis said. [10 Cool Facts About the Brain]

The inborn ability to vocalize is built into the brain stem of mice, whereas pitch modulation and melody comes from the rudimentary motor control center, Jarvis hypothesized.

Next, the researchers wanted to determine just how modifiable these songs were. Previous research had shown male mice become mini-Pavarottis when sexually excited by the female scent. But the new research suggests mice are able to mimic new songs.

Singing Mice Can Change Their Tune

WASHINGTON — It sounds like a scene from a TV show: Some-one sends a discarded coffee cup to a laboratory where the unwitting drinker’s DNA is decoded, predicting what diseases lurk in his or her future.

A presidential commission found that’s legally possible in about half the states — and says new protections to ensure the privacy of people’s genetic information are critical if the nation is to realize the enormous medical potential of gene-mapping.

Such whole genome sequencing costs too much now for that ex-treme coffee-cup scenario to be likely. But the report being released Thursday says the price is dropping so rapidly that the technology could become common in doctors’ offices very soon — and there are lots of ethical issues surrounding how, when and with whom the results may be shared.

Without public trust, people may not be as willing to allow scien-tists to study their genetic information, key to learning to better fight disease, the report warns.

“If this issue is left unaddressed, we could all feel the effects,” said Dr. Amy Gutmann, who chairs the Presidential Commission for the Study of Bioethical Issues.

Mapping entire genomes now is done primarily for research, as scientists piece together which genetic mutations play a role in various diseases. It’s different than getting a lab test to see if you carry, say, a single gene known to cause breast cancer.

Gutmann said her commission investigated ahead of an anticipated boom in genome sequencing as the price drops from thousands today to about $1,000, cheaper than running a few individual gene tests.

Bioethics panel urges more gene privacy protectionAssociated Press Writer

Bali Post

DENPASAR - Other than anti-rabies vaccine (VAR), the Bali Health Agency also provides anti-rabies serum (SAR) to handle the rabies cases in Bali. After being unavailable for long time, now Bali has 283 vials of anti-rabies serum distributed throughout Bali. It was revealed by the Head of Bali Health Agency, Ketut Suarjaya, when contacted.

According to him, such amount of anti-rabies serum had been distributed to each regency/mu-nicipality where 30 vials were distributed to Buleleng, Jembrana (15 vials), Tabanan (25 vials), Ba-dung (5 vials), Denpasar (25 vials), Gianyar (30 vials), Klungkung (25 vials), Bangli (35 vials) and Karangsem (30 vials), while the remaining 63 vials were used for buffer stock.

Providing anti-rabies serum, added Suarjaya, was to overcome the bite of animal rabies carrier located at hazardous parts of the body from the shoulder upward. As known, rabies took time to get to the brain. The speed to reach the brain highly depended on the location, depth and distance of the wound from the head. Administra-tion of the anti-rabies serum was usually undertaken to patients bitten by dog whose wound lo-cated on the shoulder upward with the assumption that virus would quickly reach the brain because position of the wound was very close to the head.

Meanwhile, Secretary of the Rabies Treatment Team of Sanglah Hospital, Ken Wirasandhi, admit-ted that Sanglah Hospital had no inventory of anti-rabies serum at the moment. “If we need, we will request it to the Bali Health

Agency,” explained Wirasandhi. He added the use of anti-rabies serum was usually very rare as the bite wound on the shoulder upward caused by animal rabies carrier rarely happened. By and large, the dog bite victim injured on the foot or hand.

The anti-rabies serum itself, added Ken, had difference from the anti-rabies vaccine. Anti-rabies serum was a ready-to-use rabies immune system, while the anti-rabies vaccine was a matter serving to trigger the body to be immune against rabies. In terms of its function, the anti-rabies serum certainly gave a faster immune ef-fect on rabies virus than anti-rabies vaccine.

Unfortunately, since it was expensive and only available overseas, in Indonesia the anti-rabies serum was only given to the victim whose location of dog bite was very close to the head. According to Ken, administra-tion of the anti-rabies vaccine to dog bite injuries so far in Bali was still effective. “Of the many cases of dog bite in Bali, administration of the anti-rabies vaccine was still effective. This can be seen where none of the dog bite victims undergoing a complete administration of anti-rabies vaccine has been exposed to rabies,” said Ken.

For patients of rabies suspect who died usually had a history of dog bite injuries without un-dergoing a treatment or obtain-ing the anti-rabies vaccine.

Other than anti-rabies serum, the Bali Health Agency had also prepared approximately 34,334 vials of anti-rabies vaccine that were expected to meet the needs of anti-rabies vaccine in Bali for a year. (san)

Russian Division Head of the HPI Bali, Nengah Archana, said the arrival of Russian tourists to Bali was previously dominated by the middle to upper class. Now, the Russian tourists who jazzed up the Island of the Gods were dominated by middle to lower class tourists.

“The arrival of lower-class Rus-sian tourists to Bali is also a result of the MICE tourism program. Russian tourist arrivals do occur en masse, but the quality of Russian tourists that spend holidays in Bali has been declining,” said Nengah Archana on Wednesday (Oct 10).

According to him, the phenom-enon of decline in quality happened to Russian tourists who vacationed in Bali had taken place since 2011. Such condition was indicated by the decline in the purchase of tour pack-ages by Russian tourists through travel agencies.

“Aside from not purchasing a tour package through travel agen-cies, the Russian tourists simply choose to stay in hotel without tak-ing any tour package,” he said.

He said that Russian tourists who wanted to travel predominantly rented a motorbike instead of pur-chasing a tour package. Those who took advantage of rental services

were not only repeater guests, but also those traveling to Bali for the first time.

“Apparently, they are willing to take risks of travelling by renting a bike, or using freelance transport services,” he said.

Archana alleged the courage of Russian tourists to travel by them-selves in Bali happened because it was easy to get global information about Bali through the Internet though it was not fully correct. “Particularly, the more valid in-formation about Balinese culture can be obtained from the Russian tourist guides coalesced into the HPI Bali,” he said.

Meanwhile, Chairman of the Tourism Industry Association of Indonesia (GIPI) of Bali, Ngurah Wijaya, assessed the degradation of tourists coming to Bali did not only happen to Russian tourists, but also to the entire tourism mar-kets. Quality could be measured by two benchmarks, namely the length of stay and tourist expendi-tures. The existing data indicated that length of stay of tourists since the past 10 years tended to shift to 3-4 days only and their spending power only reached about USD 100 per day.

“Now, the foreign tourist visit amounts to 2.5 million per year. However, their spending is low reaching only USD 100 per person with a length of stay up to 3 days,” he said.

Such conditions, assessed Ngu-rah Wijaya, happened in harmony with the shifting concept of Bali tourism from segmented tourism to mass tourism. To that end, the Bali tourism should change the paradigm of mass tourism into segmented tourism. Development of the segmented tourism would boost the economic growth of Bali in the whole.

“The appropriate tourism for Bali is not mass tourism, but seg-mented tourism that can draw tour-ists who can spend something more such as spiritual, cultural, golf and other tourism. To that end, we are encouraging the government to create segmented tourism,” he explained.

The development of segmented tourism, added Ngurah Wijaya, would also have an impact on the economic and social welfare improvement. With a high level of spending and long stay, their consumption would automatically increase, too. (kmb27)

Quality of Russian travelers shiftsBali Post

DENPASAR - Quantitatively, the number of Russian tourists coming to Bali increases from year to year. However, the Indonesian Tourist Guides Association (HPI) of Bali assesses the presence of the Russian market qualitatively tends to decrease.

Tourists visit shop at Seminyak, Badung Regency, Bali Island. Quantitatively, the number of Russian tourists coming to Bali increases from year to year. However, the Indonesian Tourist Guides Associa-tion (HPI) of Bali assesses the presence of the Russian market qualitatively tends to decrease.

Bali provides 283 vials of anti-rabies serum

IBP/Photo Document

A man getting anti-rabies vaccine (VAR) at one of Bali’s hos-pitals. Other than anti-rabies vaccine (VAR), the Bali Health Agency also provides anti-rabies serum (SAR) to handle the rabies cases in Bali.

Page 15: Edisi 12 Oktober 2012 | International Bali Post

InternationalFriday, October 12, 20122 Friday, October 12, 2012 15International Activities

Bali News

Founder : K.Nadha, General Manager :Palgunadi Chief Editor: Diah Dewi Juniarti Editors: Gugiek Savindra,Alit Susrini, Alit Sumertha, Daniel Fajry, Mawa, Sri Hartini, Suana, Sueca, Sugiartha, Wirya, Yudi Winanto Denpasar: Dira Arsana, Giriana Saputra, Subrata, Sumatika, Asmara Putra. Bangli: Pujawan, Buleleng: Adnyana, Gianyar: Agung Dharmada, Karangasem: Budana, Klungkung: Bali Putra Ariawan. Ja-karta: Nikson, Hardianto, Ade Irawan. NTB: Agus Talino, Izzul Khairi, Raka Akriyani. Surabaya: Bambang Wilianto. Development: Alit Purnata, Mas Ruscitadewi. Office: Jalan Kepundung 67 A Denpasar 80232. Telephone (0361)225764, Facsimile: 227418, P.O.Box: 3010 Denpasar 80001. Bali Post Jakarta, Advertizing: Jl.Palmerah Barat 21F. Telp 021-5357602, Facsimile: 021-5357605 Jakarta Pusat. NTB: Jalam Bangau

No. 15 Cakranegara Telp. (0370) 639543, Facsimile: (0370) 628257. Publisher: PT Bali Post

EvEry Temple and Shrine has a special date for it annual Ceremony, or “ Odalan “, every 210 days according to Balinese calendar, including the smaller ancestral shrine which each family possesses. Because of this practically every few days a ceremony of festival of some kind takes place in some Village in Bali. There are also times when the entire island celebrated the same Holiday, such as at Galungan, Kuningan, Nyepi day, Saraswati day, Tumpek Landep day, Pagerwesi day, Tumpek Wayang day etc.

The dedication or inauguration day of a Temple is con-sidered its birth day and celebration always takes place on the same day if the wuku or 210 day calendar is used. When new moon is used then the celebration always happens on new moon or full moon. The day of course can differ the religious celebration of a temple lasts at least one full day with some temple celebrating for three days while the celebration of Besakih temple, the Mother Temple, is never less than 7 days and most of the time it lasts for 11 days, depending on the importance of the occasion.

The celebration is very colorful. The shrine are dressed with pieces of cloths and sometimes with brocade, sailings, decorations of carved wood and sometimes painted with gold and Chinese coins, very beautifully arranged, are hung in the four corners of the shrine. In front of shrine are placed red, white or black umbrellas depending which Gods are worshipped in the shrines.

In front of important shrine one sees, besides these umbrellas soars, tridents and other weapons, the “umbul-umbul”, long flags, all these are prerogatives or attributes of Holiness. In front of the Temple gate put up “Penjor”, long bamboo poles, decorated beautifully ornaments of young coconut leaves, rice and other products of the land. Most beautiful to see are the girls in their colorful attire, carrying offerings, arrangements of all kinds fruits and colored cakes, to the Temple. Every visitor admires the grace with which the carry their load on their heads.

Balinese Temple Ceremony

Calendar Event for September 1 through October 17, 20121 Sep Saniscara Pon Dunggulan Pura Segara JembranaPura Dalem Gede Losan Klungkung

2 Sep Redite Wage Kuningan Pura Dalem Tegal Tamu Sekarmukti-BalubulanPura Kubayan Umagunung Sempidi-Badung3 Sep Soma Keliwon Kuningan Pura Dasar Gelgel-KlungkungPura Pasek Tohjiwa Sawah/Selemadeg-TabananPura Pemerajan Agung Benawah Kangin-GianyarPura Panti Pasek Gelgel Pelapuhan-Busungbiu BulelengPura Kahyangan Tulus Desa Apuan.8 Sep Saniscara Keliwon Kuningan Pura Taman Pule Mas-UbudPura Ularan Takmung-KlungkungPura Bukitjati Gulingan-Kawan BangliPura Dalem TegehePura Dalem TahakPura Dalem BatuajiPura Dalem Tegaljaya-BatubulanPura Jenengan Maspahit Cemenggaon-SukawatiPura Dalem Guwang-SukawatiPura Sadha KapalPura Sakenan Sakenan SeranganPura Pekendungan Kediri-TabananPura Pasek Gaduh Grokgak Gede TabananPura Dalem Sanding TampaksiringPura Dalem Purnajati Tanjung Puri Tanjung Periuk JakartaPura Dalem Tenggaling Guliang-BangliMr. Dukuh Tetek Peguyangan-DenpasarPura Agung Blambangan BanyuwangiPura Dalem Agung Sri Nararya Kresna Kepakisan Gelgel -KlungkungDesa Adat Munggu (Mekotekan) Mengwi-BadungPura Panti Paksebali-Klungkung (Perang Jempana)Pura Penataran Agung MargoweningDesa Balong garut Sidoarjo, Jawa Timur2 Oct Anggara Wage Pahang Pura Batu Madeg(Meru Tumpang Sanga) BesakihPura Hyang Tibha i Batuan Sakah3 Oct Buda Keliwon Pahang Pura Luhur Puncak Padang Dawa Baturiti TabananPura Silayukti Padangbai-Karangasem.

Pura Aer Jeruk SukawatiPura Dangin Pasar Batuan-SukawatiPura Penataran Batuyang-BatubulanPura Desa Lembeng Ketewel-SukawatiPura Pasek Bendesa Dukuh Kediri-TabananPura Kawitan Dalem Sukawati GianyarPura Kresek Banyuning BulelengPura Puseh Bebandem-KarangasemMerajan Pasek Kubayan-GajiMerajan pasek Gelgel Jeroan Abang-Songan.Merajan Pasek Subrata Temaga TemagaMerajan Pasek Gelgel Bungbungan Gelgel BungbunganSad Kahyangan Batu Medahu Swana Nusa PenidaPura Buda Kliwon Penatih-DenpasarPura Penataran Dukuh Nagasari Bebandem KarangasemPura Pasek Bendesa Tagtag PaguyanganPura Pulasari Sibang Gede AbiansemalPura Batur Sari UbudPura Penataran Agung Sukawati8 Oct Soma Keliwon Krulut Pura Pasel Gelgel Kekeran Mngwi BadungMerajan Pasek Subadra Kramas-Gianyar13 Oct Hari Tumpek Krurut Pura Pasek Gelgel Br Tengah BulelengPura Dalem Pemuteran Jelantik Tojan - KlungkungPura Pedarmaan Bhujangga Waisnawa BesakihPura Taman Sari Desa Gunungsari Penebel TabananPura Dalem Tarukan Bebalang BangliPura Benua Kangin BesakihPura Merajan Kanginan Besakih14 Oct Redite Umanis Merakih Pura Parangan Tengah Banjar Ceningan Kangin - LembonganPura Dalem Celuk Sukawati - Gianyar17 Oct Buda Wage Merakih Pura Bendesa Mas Kepisah PedunganPura Natih Banjar Kalah - BatubulanPura Desa Silakarang SingapaduPura dalem Petitenget Kerobokan - KutaPura Dalem Pulasari Samplangan - GianyarPura Kubayan Kepisah Pedungan Denpasar SelatanPura Pasek gelgel Banjar Tanahpegat - TabananPr. Paibon Banjar Bengkel Sumerta - DenpasarPura Pasek Lumintang DenpasarPr. Panti Penyarikan Medahan Sanding - TampaksiringPr. Pasar Agung Banjar Dauh Peken Kaba-kaba - Tabanan

19 Deluxe Pool Villas (265m) exude an idyllic appeal in the tranquil surroundings. Soft fur-nishings in a simple yet tasteful style create an atmosphere of warmth and cosines. The private plunge pool and gazebo for in-villa massage treatments are added luxuries for guests’ daily indulgence.

The 5 Royal Pool Villa are fashioned like the Deluxe Pool Villas and the 480m compound houses two villas instead of one. A common patio area encourages relaxing evening chats and in-villa dining.

All villas are well equipped with modern con-veniences, ideal for discerning executive types and vacationing couples to lounge around and unwind in maximum comfort, inviting you into a memorable holiday experience.

Furama Vilas & SpaIBP

The Furama vilas & Spa, Bali is nestled amidst padi fields in the Banjar Bindu district in mountainous Ubud, covering over 2000m2 verdant lands. Accessible to the popular Ubud market via the resort’s free shuttle service, the Concierge can also arrange for transportation to other tourist attractions based on guest’s needs.

IBP/File Photo

Denpasar (Bali Post) –It seems to be a serious matter now that West Denpasar

has been targeted a lot with the walls holing modus. Three building walls have been a victim and a safe is targeted with recent one at Libbi Plaza and Gunung Agung Book Shop, Teuku Umar Street, Denpasar, last Wednesday (10/10) yet it seemed nothing is taken this time. “Only files were seen scattered, there are two holes, 60 centi-meters at Libbi Plaza while 30 centimeters at Gunung Agung Book Shop,” police source stated.

According to the officer, it is strongly suspected that these similar incidents are done by the same people. No cash were taken this time, only Sprite drink and fruits were consumed. It was a security in Libbi Plaza, Ketut Sri Utama, who was coming in for work at 6.45 am local time witnessed it first. What’s weird, the employee door was locked from the inside so then Utama went through the front door. Utama reported to the police and then holes were found. One of the holes were next to a cashier desk and safe place which means one of the robbers could be someone from the company or knowing well the place condition as it’s impossible to know if it’s someone who doesn’t know the area. (kmb21)

Meanwhile, a much different condi-tion was seen in the complex of Sari Boga II night market. The number of traders offering special food of Gianyar compared to outside traders was nearly balanced. The remaining traders sold clothing, toys, original tapes and pirated CDs.

Desak Anom, 42, from Gianyar town selling typical traditional food of Gianyar looked slightly happy when approached by visitors. Since the age of ten, Desak Anom had help her mother, Niang Temon, sell rice, por-ridge, assorted vegetables with grated coconut spices and seafood.

In her memory, before the night market traders were as busy as today, there were only two traders. Then, the traders increased and repeatedly moved. Originally, most traders in the night market sold traditional food. It brought in a special appeal

to truck drivers and other visitors to come by. Economic transactions with small business were going on until late night.

Such activities kept going on until she got married and opened her own business. When met on Tuesday night (Oct 9), Desak Anom said the increas-ing number of traders and uncertain people’s purchasing power made her income uncertain, too. During low season, of the 25 kg of rice prepared, sometimes it stayed a quarter. She peddled from early afternoon until 1:00 a.m. on the following day.

Even though the competition among the traders was getting tighter with the entry of outside food, for Desak Anom selling traditional food was a blessing. Amidst the increasing insistence, she remained to serve traditional food. By selling food, at least until closing the stall she could obtain IDR 2 million.

“If lacking of visitors, my earnings may reach IDR 1 million. Such amount can only cover the amount of capital,” she explained.

It is one of the illustrations on the presence of night market traders exist-ing in Gianyar Regency. Though the overall number of traders in the night market cannot be ascertained, based on the deposit of the generally gener-ated revenue (PAD) from daily levies, it can be known that Gianyar Regency has five night markets.

Those night markets are located in Ubud, Gianyar town, Sukawati, Semebaung, and Blahbatuh. From the five night markets as indicated by the data of the regional revenue agency (Dispenda) up to August 2012 as presented by the Spokesperson of Gianyar Government, contributions to the regionally generated revenue reached IDR 17,718,900. (dar)

Gianyar (Bali Post)—A banyan tree in the area of Dalem Puri Sukawati temple

suddenly drew the attention of local residents. It happened because the appearance of a reddish-furred ape had been a spectacle of residents. Besides, right in the cranny under the banyan tree was also found a mask resembling a Sidakarya mask on Wednesday (Oct 10).

One of the residents, Ida Bagus Dira, said the appearance of the ape and discovery of the Sidakarya mask were just known three days ago. As information compiled, the ap-pearance of the red ape was known by a worker who was repairing the temple on Tuesday (Oct 9). The worker was surprised by the appearance of the ape from the banyan tree. After seeing the red-furred ape, the worker reported it to the local village apparatus.

Village apparatuses and residents eventually thronged to see the appearance of the ape. Such appearance was then at-tributed to the existence of the sacred banyan tree. Even, at that time the village apparatus and residents were surprised by the discovery of Sidakarya mask under the root of banyan tree.

A leadership of Dalem Puri Batuan temple, Dewa Made Oka Bawa, said the location was previously never occupied by a herd of apes. Before the discovery of the Sidakarya mask and appearance of the ape, it was the location of Merajapati shrine (upstream of cemetery). However, after the banyan tree uprooted, the Merajapati shrine was relocated to the current location. For clarity, it would be consulted first, he explained. (kmb16)

IBP/File

Gianyar Market

Attempt to survive by serving traditional foods

ALIGNING of blue-roofed stalls began to embellish the parking lot of Gianyar Market and parking space in front of the shopping complex located on Jalan Ngurah rai, Gianyar. At that time, it was 3:00 p.m. One by one the entourage of night market traders arrived and immediately opened their stall. Along the parking space on Jalan Ngurah rai were seen 23 beautifully arranged stalls offering traditional specialties. Only two stalls were seen to sell assorted salads and side dishes.

Red ape draws attention of residents

Libbi Plaza and Gunung Agung shop robbed

Page 16: Edisi 12 Oktober 2012 | International Bali Post

Reports involving the “certain movement” of terrorists have been received, said Bali Police Brig. Gen. I Ketut Untung Yoga Ana. He said that security had been tightened at all entry points to the resort island prior to the event, and that snipers would be placed around

memorial sites.“We have prepared a maximum

security arrangement, even for the post-commemoration,” he said. He declined to provide any specific details about the threat.

However, an intelligence official said information about a potential

threat first surfaced prior to Oct. 1, the anniversary of a second Bali bombing in 2005 that killed 20 people at restaurants. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media.

Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard is scheduled to attend Fri-day’s event remembering the Oct. 12, 2002, attacks that blasted two Bali nightclubs. The bombs killed 202 people, including 88 Australians and seven Americans. The attack was carried out by Jemaah Islami-

yah, an al-Qaida-linked group.Gillard is due to give an address

to commemorate the Australians who were among the victims of the strike against the Sari Club and Paddy’s Bar in the Indonesian tour-ist island’s nightlife strip of Kuta.

Asked in Sydney whether she was concerned about travelling to Bali, Gillard said: “I do want to be in Bali for the 10-year commemo-rations.

“Families will be travelling there. It will be a day in which we pay our respects and remember

what that moment was like for Australians.”

Friends and families of victims have poured into Bali for Fri-day’s service, some meeting at the “ground zero” site of the attacks or laying flowers at an adjacent stone memorial inscribed with the names of the dead.

A group of regular police stood guard next to the Kuta memorial on Wednesday afternoon with armed police patrolling the beach area, an AFP photographer saw.

WEATHER FORECASTFriday, October 12, 201216

Friday, October 12, 2012

16 Pages Number 205 4th year

e-mail: [email protected] online: http://www.internationalbalipost.com. http://epaper.internationalbalipost.com.

Price: Rp 3.000,-I N T E R N A T I O N A L I N T E R N A T I O N A L

PAgE 13

Dps 23 - 32

Entertainment

PAgE 4

Continued on page 13

PAgE 7

But at the film’s premiere later in the evening, guitarist Jimmy Page set the record straight, sort of, about a potential reunion. “I think it’s disappointing for people when the answer is no,” Page said. But he later added: “That’s what it is now.”

“Celebration Day” covers their 2007 reunion concert at London’s 02 Arena. Original members Plant, Page and John Paul Jones, as well as Jason Bonham, the son of the late John Bonham, played the one-time tribute concert to honor Atlantic Records founder Ahmet Ertegun.

“Once the idea was proposed, ‘Would we do the concert?’ It had to be Jason,” Page said. Since the death of Bonham in 1980, the band has played only a handful of gigs, with the 2007 tribute concert being the last time. The group enlisted the younger Bonham, a suc-cessful drummer in his own right, to play with the band.

On the red carpet, Bonham said he understands why the fans want some-thing more from the band, but feels there’s good reason to put it to rest. “I think it’s probably frustrating to the public when they see how good it is, and they go, ‘Why won’t you do anymore?’ They don’t get it,” Bonham said. “But you know what, there’s a time, and for me it’s when John Bonham was in Led Zeppelin.”

Jones, the band’s bassist, eloquently said all the band’s energy went into that performance. “We focused on the show and that was it. Fortunately it was on film,” Jones said.

Page was conscious of Led Zeppelin’s uninspired performance at the Atlantic Records’ 40th anniversary concert in 1988. So the band rehearsed for about six weeks before the London show.

“You have to understand, any other group would be a doing a warm-up gig, and then they would have like two or three concerts in a row. We could have done more than one, with the demand, but we only had one shot and we had to be super-duper confident on it, and it went well,” Page said.

During a news conference earlier in the day, the band became uncomfort-able with a question about “anticipating something bigger for the band.”

Associated Press Writer

MINEOLA, N.Y. — Police were called to Lindsay Lohan’s child-hood home in suburban New York on Wednesday morning after a report of a fight between the troubled actress and her mother. It was the third run-in involving the actress and New York po-lice officers in the past several weeks.

Nassau County Police Insp. Ken-neth Lack said officers were called around 8 a.m. Wednesday to the Mer-rick, Long Island, home where the 26-year-old starlet grew up. Her mother

Dina lives in the home with some of her other children. An investigation revealed “no criminality,” according to Lack. Police did not release details on the subject of the argument.

Celebrity website TMZ first report-ed the dispute. Lohan publicist Steve Honig declined to comment.

She was involved in a New York City police investigation about two weeks ago. She alleged a man had assaulted her in a New York hotel, but charges against the man were later dropped. In mid-September, she was accused of clipping a pedestrian

with her car outside a nightclub and driving away. She was given a ticket and was scheduled to appear in court Oct. 23.

Honig said previously he expects those allegations to be proven false. The actress was also involved in a car accident in California this summer that sent her and an assistant to a hospital, but didn’t result in serious injuries for anyone. The accident remains under investigation.

Lindsay Lohan, mom in reported dispute at NY home

In this May 9, 2012 photo shows actress Lindsay Lohan at the

A&E Networks 2012 Upfront at Lincoln

Center in New York.

AP Photo/Starpix, Kristina

Bumphrey, file

Jimmy Page says ‘no’ to Led Zeppelin reunion

Associated Press Writer

NEW YORK — Led Zeppelin will not be reuniting anytime soon. That message came through loud and clear Tuesday with sarcasm, stoic silence and even the occasional barb at reporters who dared to ask. Just the mention of the topic set off lead singer Robert Plant at a news conference for the band’s upcoming concert film, “Celebration Day.”

Photo by Dario Cantatore/Invision/AP

Musicians Jason Bonham, Robert Plant, Jimmy Page and John Paul Jones attend the “Led Zeppelin: Celebration Day” premiere at the Zieg-feld Theater on Tuesday, Oct. 9, 2012 in New York.

REUTERS/Beawiharta

An Indonesian policeman stands guard at the 2002 Bali bombing memorial monument, ahead of the 10-year anniversary of the incident in Kuta, Bali resort island October 11, 2012. Indonesian police have warned of possible attacks on commemorations for the tenth anniversary of bomb blasts on the island of Bali and have brought in reinforcements to protect the thousands due to attend, including Australia’s prime minister.

Warns of threat before Bali anniversaryAssociated Press/Agence France-Press

DENPASAR — Indonesian police warned of a possible ter-rorist threat targeting dignitaries planning to commemorate Friday’s 10th anniversary of the Bali bombings, raising the country’s security alert to its highest level.

Eto’o back as Cameroon seek to prevent upset

Man arrested after smoke grenade found in luggage

West Tianyar residents face water crisis