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15
February

International observers monitoring the election conduct at a polling station in Jimbaran, Badung District, Bali, Wednesday (February 14, 2024). ANTARA/Ni Putu Putri Muliantari/nbl.

 

 

 

VOInews, Jakarta: International observers monitored the election conduct at Polling Station No. 13, operated by an all-woman team, in Jimbaran Village, Badung District, Bali, under the General Elections Commission's (KPU's) Election Visit Programme.

Zahir Hassan, a Malaysian Parliament member who participated in the monitoring group, commended the election conduct observed in Bali. He also highlighted the high participation of women at the polling station.

“I am also convinced that the election conduct proceeded well, smoothly, and transparently because of the presence of the candidates' representatives (as witnesses),” Hassan stated here on Wednesday.

He also admitted to being amazed that Indonesian voters received five different ballot papers to vote for the president-vice president pair and members of the House of Representatives (DPR), Regional Representative Council (DPD), and regional legislatures at the province and city and district levels.

“In comparison, Malaysian voters will receive at most two ballot papers at one election. I think it is huge, and it will be a huge success if (the election is) organized properly,” the observer from Malaysia stated.

House of Representatives (DPR) Secretariat General’s deputy for parliamentary proceedings, Suprihatini, remarked that the observer group comprising 11 representatives from international organizations visited Polling Station No. 13 in Badung.

Meanwhile, the other group of observers in Bali monitored the election conduct at Polling Station No. 29 in Ungasan Village, also in Badung District, and at Polling Station No. 9 in Penglipuran Village, Bangli District.

“In total, 33 observers from 17 countries and international parliamentary organizations (observed the election in Bali),” Suprihatini revealed.

Moreover, Jimbaran village-level election organizing chief I Wayan Muliwan spoken of sensing pride that foreign observers monitored the election conduct in the village.

“The monitoring (allows) them to understand our election system, especially at the polling station operated by an all-women team that emphasized gender equality where men and women are not discriminated by their capability,” Muliwan stated.

Apart from the election conduct, the official also expressed hope that international observers would also spotlight Bali’s natural beauty when they return to their home country.

 

Source: ANTARA

15
February

A man stands in the ruins of a building that was destroyed during Israeli bombardment in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip on February 14, 2024, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian Hamas militant group. (Photo by MOHAMMED ABED / AFP)

A man stands in the ruins of a building that was destroyed during Israeli bombardment in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip on February 14, 2024, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian Hamas militant group. (Photo by MOHAMMED ABED / AFP)

 

 

VOInews, Jakarta: The leaders of Australia, Canada and New Zealand on Thursday warned Israel against a potentially "catastrophic" ground ofensive in the southern Gazan city of Rafah, amplifying a growing chorus of international concern.

 

 

Urging Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu "not to go down this path", the trio of Commonwealth nations issued a rare joint statement expressing deep and growing worry about Israel's prosecution of the months-long war.

 

 

"About 1.5 million Palestinians are taking refuge in the area, including many of our citizens and their families," the group of US allies said. 

 

"An expanded military operation would be devastating. We urge the Israeli government not to go down this path. There is simply nowhere else for civilians to go."

 

 

In the face of mounting international pressure and a death toll that Gaza authorities say has now topped 28,000, Netanyahu has vowed to press ahead.

 

 

He has promised Israeli forces will soon conduct a "powerful" operation in Rafah -- a city filled with countless Gazans displaced by fighting elsewhere in the territory.

 

 

Israel believes that Hamas operatives responsible for the October 7 attacks that killed around 1,160 people in Israel are holed up in the area, along with some of an estimated 130 hostages seized by the Palestinian Islamist group.

 

Source : AFP

14
February

Salah satu TPS di Srengseng Sawah Kecamatan Jagakarsa (FOTO:VOI/AHMAD FAISAL)

 

VOInews, Jakarta: Indonesians began voting for a new president on Wednesday, with three candidates battling to lead Southeast Asia's biggest economy and the third-largest democracy in the world. The relocation of the archipelago's capital from Jakarta to Nusantara on the island of Borneo and the fight against corruption are two key issues in the election that will determine who succeeds President Joko Widodo afer a decade in power.

 

Here are the candidates:

 

- Prabowo Subianto

 

Prabowo Subianto, 72, of the Advanced Indonesia Coalition is the frontrunner in the contest, with polls projecting he will win a majority. He currently serves as defence minister afer losing to Widodo in the 2014 and 2019 elections.

 

Schooled internationally, the defence chief is a retired military general who was fired in 1998 for allegedly ordering the kidnapping of tens of pro-democracy activists in unrest following the fall of Suharto.

 

Together with President Widodo's 36-year-old son Gibran Rakabuming Raka as his vice presidential candidate, Subianto has been outspoken about carrying on the incumbent leader's policies. Subianto has pledged to eradicate childhood stunting due to malnutrition by ofering free lunch to students, one of his most popular campaign programmes. While the prevalence of stunting has been falling, it remained at 21.6 percent in 2022.

 

The defence chief has also committed to maintaining a nickel ore export ban imposed by Widodo to increase national income from the mining sector and turn Indonesia into a developed nation.

 

"In less than two years, our income has increased 10 times to $33.3 billion because of this," Subianto said at a campaign event.

 

He has also changed his public persona to woo voters, using a slick social media strategy that has seen videos of him dancing go viral. It has transformed his image from a figure of strength to what some users have called a "cute grandpa".

 

- Anies Baswedan

 

Former Jakarta governor Anies Baswedan has portrayed himself as the anti-establishment candidate in Indonesia's presidential campaign, climbing to second place in polls on the back of a message that includes opposing a costly relocation of the capital to Borneo. That line of attack has seen his stock rise, and he is now polling in second as the main challenger to Subianto.

 

Anies Baswedan, 54, is nominated by a coalition in which his National Democratic Party is supported by two Islamic parties. He is popular with conservative Muslims and Islamists in the Muslim-majority country. Baswedan has repeatedly claimed democracy has sufered under Widodo's rule. The former minister of education also opposes the idea of moving the capital to Borneo. 

 

Baswedan has promoted pouring money into more than a dozen existing cities to boost economic equality instead of developing a new capital from scratch. However, Baswedan previously courted controversy in Jakarta's 2017 governor election when he faced Christian candidate Basuki Tjahaja Purnama and was accused of stoking religious divides.

 

- Ganjar Pranowo

 

Ganjar Pranowo pushed his humble background to emerge as a leading Indonesian presential candidate, but his campaign has flared out in the lead-up to the election.

 

The former governor of Central Java for two terms, Pranowo was seen as Subianto's main opponent afer being nominated as the candidate for a coalition led by Widodo's ruling Indonesia Democracy of Struggle Party (PDI-P). Baswedan has since overtaken him in the polls, however.

 

The 55-year-old silver-haired politician is focusing on bread-and-butter issues, prioritising access to healthcare, housing and food. He has picked current chief security minister Mahfud MD as his running mate and put corruption eradication high on his campaign agenda.

 

Like Subianto, he is promising to carry on Widodo's policies, including moving the capital. Pranowo and Mahfud are the only candidates who have experience in three areas of power: legislative, executive and judicial. Initially viewed as the presidential frontrunner, he lost support over his opposition to Israel's participation in the FIFA Under-20 World Cup last year, which Indonesia was set to host but lost the rights over the issue.

 

Sumber : AFP

01
February

 

 

VOInews, Jakarta: The Overseas Election Supervisory Committee (Panwaslu) in Singapore went directly to residential areas of Indonesian citizens (WNI) in the country to socialize the rules that apply so that the general election runs orderly and peacefully.

"What we often do is direct socialization down to the pockets of the community," Panwaslu Singapore Chairperson Nandha Handharu told ANTARA on Thursday (1/2/2024).

 

Nandha Handharu also said that Panwaslu always prioritizes socialization about the rules and prohibitions in elections, both those that apply in Indonesia and in Singapore, so that Indonesian citizens there do not violate election rules and Singapore government rules and participate in elections peacefully.

 

"For example, it is prohibited to document (voting in the voting booth), prohibited to campaign outside the campaign time, prohibited to campaign in places of worship, in government places. Then, about the neutrality of ASN, members of the TNI, Polri, and so on," he said.

 

Meanwhile, Nandha said that in Singapore, there are 106,515 people registered in the Permanent Voters List (DPT) to take part in the vote which will be held on February 11, 2024.

 

"In Singapore's regulations, there is a Public Order Act, which prohibits every citizen from voicing their political aspirations without permission from the local government," said Nandha.

 

Meanwhile, Nandha said that in Singapore, there are 106,515 people registered in the Permanent Voters List (DPT) to take part in the vote which will be held on February 11, 2024.

 

ANTARA