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[postlink]https://gustav-javamedia.blogspot.com/2009/09/soft-demand-for-cash-during-indonesias.html[/postlink]
Just 70 percent of the small bank notes prepared by the central bank for Ramadan and Idul Fitri actually went into circulation. (Photo: JG)


Bank Indonesia said demand for cash fell 14 percent during Ramadan and Idul Fitri, indicating that consumers had refrained from their usual full-tilt holiday spending sprees and that domestic demand, while still relatively strong, was starting to ease.

Only Rp 43 trillion ($4.5 billion) of the Rp 54.2 trillion in bank notes that the central bank had prepared for circulation were absorbed, the bank said.

“Last year [cash put into circulation] totaled Rp 50.3 trillion,” said Yopie D Alimuddin, the central bank’s deputy director for currency circulation.

Yopie said most of the bank notes flowing out of the banking system were small-denomination bills, but even demand for small notes was weaker than expected.

Only 70 percent of the small bills prepared for circulation during Ramadan and Idul Fitri were absorbed, he said.

Yopie said demand for bank notes was affected by economic growth, inflation, deposit interest rates and the value of the rupiah against the US dollar.

He said the appetite for cash usually increased if economic growth was strong, inflation was high, deposit rates were low and the rupiah was strong.

“Currently, inflation is quite low, interest rates have fallen and the currency is strong, so that should increase demand for cash,” he said.

Yopie added that noncash transactions also fell during the fasting month compared with last year, but he was unable to offer figures.

Eric Alexander Sugandi, an economist at Standard Chartered Bank, said domestic GDP growth would bottom out in the third quarter, but domestic consumption, while rising, would continue to slow in the months ahead compared with last year.

“Growth in domestic consumption in the third quarter this year is expected to be at 4 percent, lower than the 5.3 percent during the same period last year. Looking at declining optimism recorded in the August Consumer Confidence Index, we expect consumption to keep slowing for several months,” he said.

Bank Indonesia’s Consumer Confidence Index retreated 1.1 points to 114.3 points in August amid worries about short-term inflation, particularly for liquefied petroleum gas, electricity and road toll fees.

Although declining demand for cash is expected to have hit the retail sector, traditionally one of the most profitable sectors during Ramadan and Idul Fitri, some players remained confident about consumer demand.

Retailers expressed confidence in strong sales results despite the slowdown, saying consumers were still in relatively good shape.

“Despite demand for cash during Idul Fitri being weaker this year, we expect it would not bother our sales because people would still need primary goods whatever the conditions,” said PT Matahari Putra Prima spokesperson Roy Mandey.

Roy said sales from Ramadan and Idul Fitri contributed 10 percent to 15 percent of the company’s annual revenue.

“Although the crisis has hampered spending, we believe the retail business could maintain 15 to 20 percent growth, with store expansions,” he said.

Soft Demand for Cash During Indonesia's Fasting Month

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[postlink]https://gustav-javamedia.blogspot.com/2009/09/hamilton-cruises-to-checkered-flag-in.html[/postlink]

Singapore. Lewis Hamilton produced a masterful drive to win Sunday’s Singapore Grand Prix ahead of Timo Glock and Fernando Alonso as Jenson Button got more points on the board to shore up his championship lead.

Starting from first on the grid, Briton Hamilton led from start to finish in difficult driving conditions to take the checkered flag in his McLaren, 9.6 seconds ahead of the Toyota.

It was his second win of the season, after Hungary, and the 11th of his career.

Spain’s Alonso, who won here last year in controversial circumstances when Nelson Piquet Jr. deliberately crashed, brought some cheer to Renault with a hard-fought third to make the podium again.

That left Germany’s Sebastien Vettel to take fourth but it could have been much better.

The Red Bull driver was second and in a close-fought battle with Hamilton, but after pitting for a second time on lap 39, exited too quickly and incurred a drive-through penalty.

At least he finished one place ahead of championship leader Button, but with just three races left in the season, the gap between the two drivers is 25 points and Vettel’s chances of catching the Briton are disappearing.

Button now has 84 points with his Brawn GP teammate Rubens Barrichello 15 behind after ending sixth here under the lights.

Heikki Kovalainen in the second McLaren finished seventh and BMW Sauber’s Robert Kubica was eighth.

The Brawn pair now look certain to deliver the constructors’ championship to their eponymous team chief, Ross Brawn, in the outfit’s first season, with one of them likely to be crowned world champion.

The front row of the grid was always going to be decisive on the bumpy Marina Bay street circuit, where overtaking is difficult, and Hamilton made the most of starting on pole.

Nico Rosberg got past Vettel to be in second and Alonso had a storming start, powering to fourth from fifth.

Hamilton made no mistakes, though, protecting his lead to cruise to a well-deserved victory.


Agence France-Presse

Hamilton Cruises to the Checkered Flag in Singapore

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[postlink]https://gustav-javamedia.blogspot.com/2009/09/indonesias-hendra-and-markis-shine-at.html[/postlink]
Indonesia's Hendra Setiawan (left) and Markis Kido react after defeating compatriot Rian Sukmawan and Yonathan Suryatama Dasuki in the men's doubles final. (Toru Hanai, Reuters)


Either way the drought was over. The only question left on Sunday was who was going to hoist the trophy in Tokyo.

In the end it was men’s doubles world No. 1 team Markis Kido and Hendra Setiawan topping compatriots Rian Sukmawan and Yonathan Suryatama to put an end to the country’s eight-month Super Series title drought in the Japan Open final match on Sunday.

Markis and Hendra won 21-19, 24-22 to clinch the title.

Mixed doubles Nova Widianto and Liliyana Natsir picked up the country’s last Super Series title at the season opener in Malaysia in January.

“This is the moment I’ve been waiting for,” Markis told the Jakarta Globe in a text message. “We finally ended our title drought in Japan. I’m very happy.”

Japan marks the second title of the year for the pair after winning the Asian Championship crown in South Korea in April. The team had been sidelined for most of the season while Markis battled a knee injury and high-blood pressure.

In the men’s singles final, Indonesia fumbled the chance to leave Tokyo with another title when Taufik Hidayat lost 21-15, 21-12 to China’s Bao Chunlai.

Bao was simply too much for the Athens Olympic gold medalist, who seemed to lack his normal luster.

“I played patient. That’s why I won,” Bao said. “I expected it would be a tougher match, so I was surprised that I won in two games.”

Tokyo marked Bao’s fourth title of the season, following victories in the German Open, the Asian Championships and the Singapore Open.

China took two more Super Series titles with big wins in the women’s singles and doubles.

Wang Yihan retained her title after an easy win over compatriot Wang Xin, 21-8, 21-9. Wang said she had improved in every aspect of the game — strokes, physical strength and control of the shuttlecock — since she won her first Super Series victory in Tokyo last year.

Wang picked up her fifth crown of the season, with previous wins coming from the All England, German Open, Swiss Open and Macau Open.

China’s Ma Jin and Wang Xiaoli silenced the home crowd by defeating seventh seed Miyuki Maeda and Satoko Suetsuna, 21-19, 21-18.

But the biggest upset of the tournament came when unseeded Songphon Anugritayawon and Kunchala Voravichitchaikul of Thailand downed sixth-seeded Joachim Fischer Nielsen and Christinna Pedersen of Denmark, 13-21, 21-16, 22-20, in the mixed doubles final.

“I’m very happy, because this is the first time we won a title outside our country,” Songphon said.

He added that they were following in the footsteps of compatriots Sudket Prapakamol and Saralee Thungthongkam, who won the Japan Open mixed doubles final in 2005.

The next Super Series events are the Hong Kong Open and the China Open in November.

Indonesia's Hendra and Markis Shine at Tokyo Badminton Tourney

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[postlink]https://gustav-javamedia.blogspot.com/2009/09/malaysian-claim-to-gamelan-may-raise.html[/postlink]
Tensions between Indonesia and Malaysia over the issue of cultural thievery may not be resolved any time soon, as a Malaysian Web site was recently found to be claiming the gamelan as part of its cultural heritage.

Malaysia’s official Web site for cultural heritage, www.warisan.gov.my, lists gamelan in its national heritage section, in third place after the boria and zapin dances.

But music expert Remy Sylado told the Jakarta Globe that the gamelan has its roots in Javanese culture and dates back to the first Saka era (circa AD 230). That would mean gamelan was already in Java long before Borobudur Temple was built in Central Java during the 8th century.

Reached by the Globe by telephone, the deputy head of mission at the Malaysian Embassy in Jakarta, Amran Mohamed Zain, refused to comment on the Web site’s claim.

Indonesian Ministry of Culture and Tourism spokesman Turman Siagian said there had been no discussion regarding the list on the Malaysian Web site, which was last updated on May 13.

“We did not know about the list, but if I am not mistaken, the zapin dance also belongs to Indonesia,” he said. “We will discuss this matter soon.”

Remy said two Dutch researchers, Jaap Kunsp and Brandt-Buys, wrote about the gamelan in a book published in 1930, “The Music of Java,” which states that the gamelan has Javanese cultural roots.

“If the Javanese gamelan developed and was exported, its cultural roots are still undeniably Javanese,” he said.

However, gamelan expert Rahayu Supanggah told the Globe that Malaysia was within its rights to claim the gamelan as part of its cultural heritage, because the Malaysian gamelan is different from the Javanese version.

Rahayu added that the gamelan was not exclusive to Java, with many tribes on other islands, including Borneo, and in other countries having their own versions.

“The Malaysian gamelan has fewer instruments than the Javanese, and thus fewer players,” he said. “A Javanese gamelan needs 25 players, while a Malaysian gamelan needs only seven or eight players.”

Repertoire, scale and instrumentation are also different, he added.

Rahayu said Indonesians and Malaysians came from the same roots and thus shared many similarities in their traditional arts.

On Sept. 17, Malaysia’s state news agency, Bernama, reported that the country would study Unesco’s listing of batik as an Indonesian cultural heritage. The report said the Malaysian government wanted to ensure that the decision would not have a bearing on traditional batik making in the country.

In response, Turman Siagian from Indonesia’s Culture Ministry said, “They may react [to the listing], but we will get the recognition anyway.”

Malaysian Claim to Gamelan May Raise Tensions With Indonesia

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[postlink]https://gustav-javamedia.blogspot.com/2009/09/garuda-debt-to-fall-on-indonesian.html[/postlink]
If all the IPO proceeds go to Mandiri, says the bank's president-director, Garuda will not have the money it needs to expand.


Taxpayers may end up having to cover Rp 2.3 trillion ($237 million) in unpaid interest on PT Garuda Indonesia’s debts if the airline is to go public next year, PT Bank Mandiri said this week.

State-owned Mandiri, the country’s largest lender by assets, said on Wednesday that it would ask Garuda and the state to pay Rp 3.36 trillion in principal including interest, three times the bank’s initial estimate of Rp 1.01 trillion. The total takes into account an 18 percent annual rate.

“Our own rough calculation of Garuda’s debt is that it will stand at Rp 3.36 trillion by June 2010,” said Abdul Rachman, Mandiri’s director for special asset management. “This figure is based on 18 percent of internal rate return agreed on in 2001 when [Garuda and Mandiri] agreed to restructure the debt into mandatory convertible bonds.

“If Garuda’s initial public offering does not occur until after June, then that amount will increase,” Abdul added.

Mandatory convertible bonds have a redemption feature that requires the holder to convert them into the underlying common stock.

Garuda is planning an initial public offering in mid-2010, which the government hopes will generate $400 million in capital by selling as much as 40 percent of its equity. The plan to go public was approved by the House of Representatives last year.

Agus Martowardoyo, Mandiri’s president director, said that if all the IPO proceeds went to Mandiri, then Garuda would “not have the money to expand.” Therefore, “we will claim the rest from the government.”

Garuda management disagreed sharply with Mandiri’s figures, saying that the airline owed the bank just $100 million in principal, while the rest was the government’s responsibility as the carrier’s sole shareholder.

Emirsyah Satar, Garuda’s president director, said that based on the carrier’s accounting, the company only owed Mandiri $100 million.

“It’s a big mistake. Garuda does not owe Rp 3.36 trillion,” Emirsyah said. “The MCB must be paid with shares, not money.”

Emirsyah added that in 2001 the government, represented by the Financial System Stability Committee (KSSK), guaranteed Mandiri an 18 percent internal return rate for Garuda’s debt when it turned into mandatory convertible bonds.

“It will not come from Garuda, it will come from the shareholders,” Emirsyah said, adding that the breakdown of the MCB would have been that “from $100 million, Garuda will pay $5 million as goodwill and the rest will be converted into shares. There will be 967,000 shares for Mandiri, equal to Rp 967 billion.”

In 2001, Garuda restructured its $100 million outstanding debt to Mandiri over a period of five years, with the debt maturing in 2006 under an MCB scheme.

But in 2006, when Garuda offered Mandiri the opportunity to convert its loans into shares, the bank refused because the airline was unprofitable. The debt was extended until 2008.

The finalization of Garuda’s debt with Mandiri is vital for the company to go public. All of Garuda’s estimated $800 million is being restructured this year.

Garuda Debt to Fall on Indonesian Taxpayers?

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[postlink]https://gustav-javamedia.blogspot.com/2009/09/renault-race-fixing-scandal-raises.html[/postlink]
For the last month, Formula One has been traumatized by allegations from a back-of-the field driver that last September’s Singapore Grand Prix was fixed by a crash prearranged by the Renault racing team that enabled its lead driver to leap from a midfield position to an upset victory.

Many in the sport fear that if the allegation is proven it could be the equivalent of the 1919 World Series for Formula One: a scandal that tops all previous upheavals and one that rocks the already shaky finances of the sport, threatening billions of dollars of investment by some of the world’s largest auto companies and corporate sponsors.

Those fears appeared to be confirmed on Wednesday when the British-based Renault racing team — financed at a cost of $300 million a year by the Paris-based Renault company — announced it would not contest the race-fixing allegation when Formula One’s governing body, the International Automobile Federation (FIA), convenes a tribunal to hear the allegations in Paris on Monday.

“The Renault Formula One team will not dispute the recent allegations made by the FIA concerning the 2008 Singapore Grand Prix,” the team said in a statement.

The statement said the two men alleged to have set up the crash, both veterans of past championships, have left the team. Flavio Briatore, a 58-year-old Italian, was the team’s managing director, and Pat Symonds, a 55-year-old Englishman, was the team’s engineering director. In Paris, the federation announced it would go ahead with the tribunal. Possible penalties include banning Renault from the sport.

The day’s developments represented the greatest crisis in the history of a series that has cast itself as the pinnacle of international motor sport, and as a showcase for aerospace-style, groundbreaking technologies that Formula One insiders believe give their series an edge over the more tightly restricted, cost-conscious engineering formulas of Nascar and the Indy Car series that dominate American racing.

Formula One’s stability had been deeply shaken before this scandal by other occurrences, including a $100 million fine imposed on Britain’s McLaren-Mercedes racing team two years ago after it was found to have obtained secret technical documents from Italy’s Ferrari team .

Briatore announced last week that he had launched a lawsuit in France that said the crash allegations were part of an attempt by 24-year-old driver Nelson Piquet Jr. of Brazil and his father, Nelson, to “blackmail” the Renault team into keeping the younger Piquet as one of its two drivers. The younger Piquet was fired midway through this year’s 17-race schedule.

The Singapore race last year came close to the end of his first season in Formula One, when he was under heavy pressure from his team after a series of lackluster performances that had included crashes and an inability to match the speed of his teammate, Fernando Alonso of Spain, twice a winner of the Formula One championship with Renault.

Soon after his last race with Renault, the two Piquets approached the FIA with their allegations, details of which have been leaked in recent days to reporters covering Formula One, along with transcripts of FIA interviews with those involved. The two Brazilians said the younger Piquet had been told at a Singapore meeting with Briatore and Symonds that they wanted him to crash at a narrow spot on the track, shortly after an unusually early refueling stop by Alonso.

The plan, the Piquets said, was for debris from the crash to slow the field behind the safety car, allowing Alonso to seize the lead as the early front-runners made their own refueling stops.

As millions of television viewers around the world saw, Piquet crashed on the 14th lap of the nighttime race, after Alonso’s refueling stop on the 12th lap, bringing out the safety car. Alonso went on to win, as he did three weeks later in the Chinese Grand Prix, where there have been no suggestions of race fixing. Nothing in the leaked FIA documents showed Alonso was aware of the plans for the crash, and he has declined to comment, pending the Paris tribunal.

According to the leaked FIA documents, the younger Piquet said he was “in a very fragile and emotional state of mind” when he was asked to crash, because Briatore had refused to say whether his contract would be renewed for 2009.

Symonds was quoted in the documents as saying it was the younger Piquet who had raised the possibility of a crash. At another point, he was quoted as having told FIA investigators: “I have no intention of lying to you. I have not lied to you, but I have reserved my position just a little.”

For Formula One, the potential impact runs beyond the risk that Renault will be forced out of the series, or that Renault will quit the sport. The Paris tribunal will hear claims that the Renault managers organized the crash to snatch a victory that would persuade Renault bosses in Paris, looking for cost savings in the midst of a worldwide slump in car sales, not to pull out of Formula One.

Renault Race-Fixing Scandal Raises Concern for F1’s Future

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[postlink]https://gustav-javamedia.blogspot.com/2009/09/most-wanted-booming-jw-marriot-hotel.html[/postlink]Noordin M Top 'May Be' Among Terror Raid Dead: Indonesian Television


Southeast Asia’s most wanted terrorist Noordin M Top “could be” one of the casualties of the Thursday morning terrorism raid in Solo, Central Java, Indonesian television stations have reported.

The fingerprints of one of the victims allegedly matched with those of Noordin in a police database, reported television stations Metro TV, TV One and RCTI.

Confirmation of a fingerprint match and DNA test would probably take two or three days.

AFP reported that a decapitated corpse believed to be Noordin's was among four bodies recovered after the early morning raid on a village house, according to an officer from the elite Densus 88 antiterror squad.

Asked if one of the suspected dead militants was believed to be Noordin, the officer told AFP on the condition of anonymity: "Yes, it's 90 percent [certain]."


Southeast Asia’s most wanted terrorist Noordin M Top “could be” one of the casualties of the Thursday morning terrorism raid in Solo, Central Java, Indonesian television stations have reported.

The fingerprints of one of the victims allegedly matched with those of Noordin in a police database, reported television stations Metro TV, TV One and RCTI.

Confirmation of a fingerprint match and DNA test would probably take two or three days.

AFP reported that a decapitated corpse believed to be Noordin's was among four bodies recovered after the early morning raid on a village house, according to an officer from the elite Densus 88 antiterror squad.

Asked if one of the suspected dead militants was believed to be Noordin, the officer told AFP on the condition of anonymity: "Yes, it's 90 percent [certain]."

The four bodies arrived at the National Police Hospital in East Jakarta at 11:45 a.m. on Thursday for identification and autopsies.

National Police will hold a press conference on the raid at their Jakarta headquarters this afternoon.

Noordin M Top is one of the most wanted terrorists in the region. He is believed to be the mastermind of at least five terrorist attacks in Indonesia, including the Bali bombing and the attacks at two luxury hotels in Jakarta in July.

National Police Chief Bambang Hendarso Danuri refused to give any comment about the rumors.

“I am still waiting for the reports from the field,” Bambang said in Nagrek, West Java. The police chief was there to supervise Idul Fitri holiday safety preparations.

A senior government counterterrorism official told the Jakarta Globe that Noordin's death was still unconfirmed.

“We don’t know [for sure] and we don’t want to make the same mistake [as before]," the official said, referring to when Noordin was misreported as dead following a raid in Temanggung, Central Java, last month.

“We don’t know who these police sources are, or how dependable they are. We don’t dare go on the record at this time.”

MOST WANTED BOOMING JW MARRIOT HOTEL WAS DEAD

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[postlink]https://gustav-javamedia.blogspot.com/2009/09/rockets-simulated-lunar-landing-contest.html[/postlink]Rockets vie in simulated lunar landing contest

OS ANGELES – A privately built rocket vying for NASA prize money lifted off in the Mojave Desert and flew half of a simulated lunar lander mission Wednesday before an engine problem forced its developers to call off the attempt until next month.

The flight of Masten Space Systems' unmanned "Xombie" at Mojave Air and Space Port comes just days after another competitor, Armadillo Aerospace, qualified for the $1 million top prize with two flights in Texas.

The Northrop Grumman Lunar Lander Challenge is funded by NASA and presented by the X Prize Foundation, the group behind the $10 million competition won in 2004 by SpaceShipOne, the first privately developed manned rocket to reach space and prototype for a fleet of space tourism rockets.

The remotely controlled Xombie is competing for second-place in the first level of the competition, which requires a flight from one pad to another and back within two hours and 15 minutes. Each flight must rise 164 feet and last 90 seconds. How close the rocket lands to the pad's center is also a factor.

Level 2 requires 180-second flights and a rocky moonlike landing pad. The energy used is equivalent to that needed for a real descent from lunar orbit to the surface of the moon and a return to orbit, said Peter Diamandis, founder of the X Prize.

The Xombie made one 93-second flight and landed within 8 inches of the pad's center, according to Tom Dietz, a competition spokesman.

David Masten, president and chief executive of Masten Space Systems, said the first leg of the flight was perfect but an internal engine leak was detected during an inspection before the return flight.

"We saw a little bit of an issue ... in the engine and decided that the engine probably would not survive through another 90-second flight," he said.

The problem had occurred previously, usually after three or four engine firings, but was believed to have been fixed. Masten said the engine had been through a dozen firings without problems prior to Wednesday.

Masten nonetheless considered the flight a success.

"Other than that engine problem the vehicle was very well behaved," he said.

The rockets in the lander competition look like plumber's playthings — all pipes and tanks without the sleek fairings, fancy paint and decals seen on launch vehicles that carry satellites into orbit.

"If a rocket doesn't look like a flying propellant tank it's actually not a very efficient rocket," said John Carmack, the Armadillo Aerospace founder whose "Scorpius" rocket holds the lead in the lander challenge.

On Sept. 12, the Scorpius successfully made two flights in the Level 2 competition and will win the $1 million top prize if no other contender does better.

Last year, Armadillo won first place and $350,000 in the Level 1 competition.

In early October, Masten will try again to win the Level 1 second-place prize of $150,000 and, if possible, try to outdo Armadillo's performance in Level 2.

Still to be heard from is a team that calls itself Unreasonable Rocket. It and any other contenders have until Oct. 31 to attempt flights.

Diamandis said it remains a competition despite Armadillo's lead.

"I think that Armadillo has a number of years ahead of Masten and other companies in terms of their development, but it's not over till it's over," he said.

The real winners, he said, will be the public and NASA, which will have new technologies and development strategies to choose from.

"We're seeing the Apple and Microsoft of the rocket generation being developed right now," he said. "You have to remember these are companies that are building these rocket vehicles with a half a dozen people for pennies on the dollar."

Northrop Grumman is providing operational funding for the competition.

Rockets simulated lunar landing contest

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[postlink]https://gustav-javamedia.blogspot.com/2009/09/inter-draw-with-baeca-in-league.html[/postlink]Inter hold Barcelona in drab stalemate

MILAN, Italy (AFP) – Inter Milan held title-holders Barcelona to a 0-0 draw in their Champions League Group F opener at the San Siro on Wednesday in a match which failed to live up to pre-match hype.

The game was billed as a clash between Samuel Eto'o and Zlatan Ibrahimovic, both playing against the team they left only two months ago, but neither they nor talents such as Lionel Messi and Xavi could break the deadlock in a turgid stalemate.

Perhaps unsurprisingly for such a big match between two European heavyweights so early in the competition it was a cagey affair dominated by defences.

But that suited Inter boss Jose Mourinho.

"It's the beginning of the competition, it's the first match. It's not an easy group, it's no joke," he said. "There are other groups that seem like a joke and one without a single national champion, in ours there are four champions.

"It's a good point against the European champions who at the moment play the best football in Europe.

"I'm happy with the way we played, with the concentration. Defensively the game went well."

Barcelona coach Pep Guardiola said his team needed to create more to win the game but did not point the finger of blame at Ibrahimovic, who had a largely quiet game.

"Maybe we didn't have many chances but it's never easy to play against Italian teams. There's nothing more to it, we just didn't have many chances," he said.

"Ibrahimovic did well, he had a good chance in the first half. Less so in the second but it's never easy and he kept trying so I'm happy with him."

Barcelona were quickly into their running, passing the ball around confidently.

Messi needed only two minutes to work some space on the edge of the box but his shot was too close to Julio Cesar in the Inter goal.

The Spaniards were dictating play and Brazilian international Dani Alves released former Inter striker Ibrahimovic on eight minutes with a simple diagonal crossfield ball.

It was the chance the big Sweden forward must have been dreaming of in the build up to the game as he sought to silence the critics who jeered him on his return to the club he walked out on in the summer.

His first touch to control the ball on his chest was exquisite but the grandstand finish he craved did not materialise as he sliced his right-foot volley high and wide.

Alves was finding acres of space down the right as Sulley Muntari failed time and again to track him and the Brazilian picked out Messi with a cross but the little Argentine wizard's header lacked power.

It was almost the half hour mark when Inter managed to gain a foothold in the game and a long ball released Diego Milito who turned inside Gerard Pique but shot too close to Victor Valdes.

Moments later Eto'o teed up Wesley Sneijder but the former Real Madrid midfielder couldn't keep his shot down.

Barcelona should have gone in front on 41 minutes as an inch perfect Xavi chip over the defence picked out Alves, but his first touch took him backwards and he opted to play the ball back to Kader Keita rather than shoot, with the Malian midfielder screwing his effort well wide.

In the last minute of the half Messi cut in off the right wing in typical fashion but Cesar was equal to his shot.

Inter started the second half well with Sneijder firing just wide on 47 minutes but Barcelona quickly re-asserted control without creating more than a half chance.

Inter were still lively on the counter-attack and Eto'o released Milito on 66 minutes but the Argentine hesitated before setting up substitute Dejan Stankovic whose shot dipped just over.

Barcelona finally created a gilt-edged opportunity when Thierry Henry's scuffed shot on 73 minutes squeaked through to the edge of the six-yard box where both Messi and Alves ran onto it.

But the Argentine, over-stretching, nicked the ball off the better-placed Brazilian's foot and cleared the cross-bar.

inter draw with barca in league champions

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[postlink]https://gustav-javamedia.blogspot.com/2009/09/favorite-area-for-wealthy-young.html[/postlink]Washington, D.C. favorite area for wealthy young


NEW YORK (Reuters Life!) – Washington, D.C. has become the favorite area for wealthy young adults, with the nation's highest percentage of 25-34 year-olds making more than $100,000 a year, according to a new analysis.

Sixteen of the top 50 counties in the United States with the highest share of wealthy young people are in the Washington, D.C. area.

Loudoun county, which is part of the Washington metropolitan area, has 10 percent, or 10,327 young adults, making more than six figures -- more than San Francisco and New York in terms of percentage of the population.

.

"In 1990 you had a lot more concentration of this demographic in the heartland and in Texas, likely driven by the oil economy, and some of the agribusiness," Michael Mancini, of The Nielsen Company, said in a statement.

"But now, there is a densification of young money in major metros." he added.

Arlington County, in Virginia near Washington, D.C. captured the second spot, followed by San Francisco, Manhattan and Douglas County, which is situated between Denver and Colorado Springs in Colorado.

Just under 16 percent of households in the United States are headed by people aged 25-34 years old, whose median income is $49,754. Slightly more over than 13 percent in that age group earn more than $100,000 a year, according to Nielsen.

The overall national median income is $51,287. Highest incomes usually correlate to the highest earning years which are 45-54.

Nielsen compiled the rankings using information from the U.S. Postal service, and data on income, age and household size from Equifax, which compiles credit reporting data.

"It is all based on the percent of the population in the county that matches a demographic," Mancini explained in an interview.

The Washington D.C. area has become increasingly popular with young people during the last two decades, according to Nielsen.

Mancini believes part of the appeal of the Washington area is jobs in both the private and public sector. It also has strong education and healthcare institutions, a moderate climate and easy access to recreational facilities.

"What often happens is that those factors attract the young and educated who then end up staying," he explained.

Forsyth County in Georgia, which is part of the Atlanta metropolitan area, Alexandria City in Virginia, Delaware County north of Columbus, Ohio, Scott County in Minnesota and Broomfield County which is part of the Denver area, rounded out the top 10 counties.

favorite area for wealthy young

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[postlink]https://gustav-javamedia.blogspot.com/2009/09/un-report-on-gaza.html[/postlink]Israel fights 'perverse' UN report on Gaza


JERUSALEM (AFP) – Israel on Wednesday launched a global campaign to block what it said were the "perverse and noxious effects" of a UN report that accused it and Palestinian militants of war crimes during the Gaza offensive.

"We are going to deploy great diplomatic and political efforts on the international stage to block and contain the perverse and noxious effects of the Goldstone Commission report," foreign ministry spokesman Yigal Palmor told AFP.

"We fear this will be a hit to our image," he said. "But the recommendations of this report are so extreme that there is little chance that they will be followed on."

The Israeli leadership fears one recommendation in particular, according to local media -- that the UN Human Rights Council submits the report to the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, which could lead to charges being brought against senior Israeli officials involved in the war.


"The goal is to avoid a slippery slope which would lead Israel to the International Criminal Court in The Hague," the left-leaning Haaretz daily quoted a senior official as saying.

Reacting to the report, the Hamas rulers of Gaza called for Israeli leaders to be put on trial as war criminals.

The UN probe said both Israel and Palestinian groups committed war crimes and possible crimes against humanity during the 22-day war in December-January that Israel launched in response to rocket fire from the Palestinian enclave.

It reserved some of its harshest language for the actions taken by Israel against the civilian population in the densely-populated Gaza Strip.

The foreign ministry tore the document apart, claiming it "barely disguises its goal of instigating a political campaign against Israel."

Despite the report's accusations against Palestinian militants, Israel has painted it as one-sided by attacking the mandate that set up the Human Rights Council probe.

"The HRC mandate ... ignored Hamas' terrorist actions, focusing solely on the Israeli reaction," the foreign ministry said.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu huddled with his foreign minister and senior political and legal advisors late into the night on Tuesday after the report was released at the UN headquarters by Judge Richard Goldstone, a former war crimes prosecutor.

The premier, along with the Israeli president and defence minister, were to telephone their counterparts around the world in a bid to drive home Israel's claim that the report was one-sided and unbalanced, Haaretz said.

Both sides of the Gaza conflict criticised the report for putting them on the same footing.

"The report effectively ignores Israel's right of self-defence," the Israeli foreign ministry said, while Ismail Haniya, the prime minister of the Hamas government in Gaza, said that "one cannot put into the same category the legitimate defence of a people under occupation and the occupying force."

In a statement, Israeli President Shimon Peres said: "The authors do not distinguish between the aggressors and those who are defending themselves. This report grants legitimacy to terrorism and does not take into account Israel's right to defend Israel."

"Goldstone would not have written this report if his children were living in Sderot," the southern Israeli town that has borne the brunt of Gaza militant rocket fire over the years.

Israeli media were generally critical of the report and Goldstone.

The mass-selling Yediot Aharonot said the instinctive reaction to the report is "a polite invitation to kiss our rear end." But it also urged Israel to launch an independent inquiry, for moral reasons, and to help ward off international criticism.

UN report on Gaza

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[postlink]https://gustav-javamedia.blogspot.com/2009/09/giant-corn-harvest.html[/postlink]US farmers on verge of giant corn harvest

DES MOINES, Iowa – Darrel McAlexander has been farming for 43 years and he's never seen his corn crop look so good.

"This is probably the best corn crop I've raised," McAlexander said from his farm in the southwestern Iowa town of Sidney.

It's the same across the country as favorable weather has helped farmers produce what could be a huge harvest, with projections calling for 13 billion bushels. That would be just shy of the 13.04 billion bushels harvested in 2007.

The giant crop is good news for farmers and livestock producers, who should benefit from lower feed costs, but it probably won't make a big difference to the cost of groceries.

Although corn is a key ingredient in countless products, from Coke to corn flakes, most of a product's cost is tied to labor and transportation, not ingredients, said Kent Thiesse, a farm management analyst and vice president of MinnStar Bank in Lake Crystal, Minn.

"Depending on what you're looking at on the store shelf, less than 25 percent of the cost goes back to the base product," Thiesse said.

Ephraim Liebtag, senior economist with the U.S. Department of Agriculture's economics research service, agreed.

"The effect of corn changes on retail prices is pretty mild and at this point we don't see anyone predicting a major swing in corn prices," Liebtag said. "If there isn't a major swing there is no major impact and the effect will be pretty negligible for the consumer."

A drop in corn prices is a rare bit of good news for a pork industry that has been battered by pricey feed, a drop in demand due to the recession and unfounded concerns about their product's safety in the wake of the swine flu outbreak that has led other countries to limit imports.

"We have seen, over the past two years, production costs go way up — 70 percent of that is corn and soybean meal, so this would most definitely help pork producers," said Dave Warner, spokesman for the National Pork Producers Council.

The expected harvest has helped drive down corn prices from about $4.30 a bushel in early July to $3.17 currently. That's a drop from a peak price of more than $6.80 a bushel in mid-2008 when prices soared because of increases in ethanol production and demands by the livestock industry.

Doug Kleckner, who grows corn on his farm near St. Ansgar in northern Iowa, said the nearly $7 corn is coming back to "haunt us."

"It was nice for the time being, but it's driven a lot of our input costs up and now reality has set in — prices have come down but our input costs are still relatively high," said Kleckner, 61, who farms on land once owned by his grandfather.

The price decline, coupled with persistent high costs of fuel, fertilizer and equipment, isn't good news for farmers, but the huge expected yield should ensure this season remains profitable.

McAlexander, 65, said the weather deserves most of the credit.

"We've had ideal weather," he said. "We got it planted early, around the 12th of April, and we just had a decent growing season."

Lance Honig, chief of the crops branch at the National Agricultural Statistics Service, said record high yields are forecast for Iowa, Nebraska, South Dakota, Ohio, Kentucky, Pennsylvania and Georgia.

Yields range from 187 bushels per acre in Iowa to 143 bushels an acre in Georgia.

Despite the good news, farmers remain edgy because cool temperatures that have largely helped the crop also have delayed it by a few weeks. That increases dangers of an early frost.

"We're at the point where it's the biggest factor and depending on where you're at, guys are very anxious to see when the first frost occurs," Honig said. "I'm sure that's high on their list of concerns."

Average first frosts in the Corn Belt can range from as early as Sept. 20 in far northwestern Minnesota to Oct. 25 in Kentucky and the Ohio Valley region, said Harry Hillaker, the Iowa state climatologist.

Kleckner said his crop remains a couple weeks behind schedule and an early frost could lower his yields.

"We're getting short on moisture," he said. "A rain would help. It's unbelievable how many kernels of corn are in an acre and if they're nice and plump it makes a world of difference."

But Steve Wendel, 49, who grows corn on about 2,000 acres in northern Iowa near Mason City, said although an early frost is a concern, the recent dry, warm weather has been a big help.

"Where we're at it's not going to hurt us much," Wendel said, adding that this year's corn crop is among the best he's seen in his more than 20 years of farming.

McAlexander said he anticipates his yields to be 10-15 bushels higher than last year and he expects others will see similar results. At least for him, that will translate into money in the bank.

"We're not going to have a record year, but it should be a profitable year for us," he said.

giant corn harvest

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[postlink]https://gustav-javamedia.blogspot.com/2009/09/stand-outside-solar-system.html[/postlink]Found: Firm place to stand outside solar system

WASHINGTON – Astronomers have finally found a place outside our solar system where there's a firm place to stand — if only it weren't so broiling hot.

As scientists search the skies for life elsewhere, they have found more than 300 planets outside our solar system. But they all have been gas balls or can't be proven to be solid. Now a team of European astronomers has confirmed the first rocky extrasolar planet.



Scientists have long figured that if life begins on a planet, it needs a solid surface to rest on, so finding one elsewhere is a big deal.

"We basically live on a rock ourselves," said co-discoverer Artie Hatzes, director of the Thuringer observatory in Germany. "It's as close to something like the Earth that we've found so far. It's just a little too close to its sun."

So close that its surface temperature is more than 3,600 degrees Fahrenheit, too toasty to sustain life. It circles its star in just 20 hours, zipping around at 466,000 mph. By comparison, Mercury, the planet nearest our sun, completes its solar orbit in 88 days.

"It's hot, they're calling it the lava planet," Hatzes said.

This is a major discovery in the field of trying to find life elsewhere in the universe, said outside expert Alan Boss of the Carnegie Institution. It was the buzz of a conference on finding an Earth-like planet outside our solar system, held in Barcelona, Spain, where the discovery was presented Wednesday morning. The find is also being published in the journal Astronomy and Astrophysics.

The planet is called Corot-7b. It was first discovered earlier this year. European scientists then watched it dozens of times to measure its density to prove that it is rocky like Earth. It's in our general neighborhood, circling a star in the winter sky about 500 light-years away. Each light-year is about 6 trillion miles.

Four planets in our solar system are rocky: Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars.

In addition, the planet is about as close to Earth in size as any other planet found outside our solar system. Its radius is only one-and-a-half times bigger than Earth's and it has a mass about five times the Earth's.

Now that another rocky planet has been found so close to its own star, it gives scientists more confidence that they'll find more Earth-like planets farther away, where the conditions could be more favorable to life, Boss said.

"The evidence is becoming overwhelming that we live in a crowded universe," Boss said.

stand outside solar system

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[postlink]https://gustav-javamedia.blogspot.com/2009/09/rocket-attacked-for-bidden.html[/postlink]3 arrested for rocket attack during Biden visit

BAGHDAD – U.S.-Iraqi forces arrested three militants suspected of firing rockets at Baghdad's heavily fortified Green Zone, where visiting Vice President Joe Biden was spending the night, the U.S. military said Wednesday.

The rockets hit in the Green Zone on Tuesday evening, killing two Iraqi civilians, soon after Biden had retired for the night following meetings with American officials on the first day of his visit to Iraq.

A joint rapid-reaction force raided the launching site and, after coming under small arms fire, arrested three Iraqis along with three rocket rails believed to have been used to fire the shells, the U.S. military said in a statement.

The military did not


identify the men.

An Iraqi military officer, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the press, said the three men were picked up on the outskirts of the main Shiite district of Sadr City and are believed to be Shiite militants who broke away from anti-American cleric Muqtada al-Sadr's now dissolved Mahdi Army.

Shiite militants in the past have frequently fired rockets and mortars at the Green Zone, a district along the Tigris River where Iraqi government offices and the U.S. Embassy are located.

However, a Sunni insurgent group, the Mujahideen Army, also claimed responsibility for the attack in a statement Wednesday on Islamic militant Web sites, saying the rocket-fire was "a reception for Biden, the head of infidelity." The authenticity of the claim could not be confirmed.

The U.S. military said three 107mm rockets impacted around the Green Zone in Tuesday's attacks, while Iraqi police say a fourth rocket fell short and hit a residential building, killing two and injuring five others. The shells were initially identified as mortars on Tuesday.

On Wednesday, Biden was meeting with a broad spectrum of Iraqi officials in Baghdad, trying to help smooth political differences as the American military moves ahead with plans to pull troops out of the country.

He held talks first with parliament speaker Ayad al-Sammaraie, a senior member of the Iraqi Islamic Party, the country's largest Sunni political party.

The two sides discussed developments in the country's national reconciliation efforts with former Saddam loyalists and other Iraqi internal issues, al-Sammaraie's spokesman Omar al-Mashhadani told The AP. He gave no further details.

The American vice president was also meeting with Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, a Shiite, and Sunni leaders including Vice President Tariq al-Hashemi ahead of meetings with Kurdish officials on Thursday.

Over his three-day visit, Biden's main focus was expected to be plans for January elections and the ongoing violence in Iraq's north. As the number of bombings and other attacks declines elsewhere in Iraq, the north remains a battleground between Sunni Arab extremists and Iraqi and U.S. forces. Kurdish-Arab tension there also frequently flares into violence.

"The whole purpose is to see how we can be helpful, if we can, in helping them resolve the outstanding political issues they have to resolve internally, so that when the (security agreement) is fully implemented we leave a stable Iraq," he told reporters late Tuesday after meeting with Gen. Ray Odierno, the top U.S. commander in Iraq, and U.S. Ambassador Christopher Hill.

The U.S.-Iraqi security agreement calls for the withdrawal of American combat forces by the end of August, 2010 and of all U.S. troops by the end of 2011. Biden said that Odierno was optimistic that the readiness of Iraqi forces would allow the U.S. military to withdraw all combat forces next year according to plan, and then proceed with pulling out the remaining 50,000 troops by the end of the following year. There are now about 130,000 U.S. troops in Iraq.

Biden made his last visit to the country on July 4 to spend U.S. Independence Day with the troops. During that trip he also met with his son, Beau, who is an Army captain serving in Iraq.

A rocket attacked for bidden

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[postlink]https://gustav-javamedia.blogspot.com/2009/09/idul-fitri-news.html[/postlink]Post-Idul Fitri Evictions Planned For Jakarta


For many of the poorer residents of the country’s capital, the joyful euphoria of Idul Fitri will not last for long as the city administration plans to launch an extensive eviction program to clear land for public facilities, an official said on Friday.

“Structures that are in the way of planned railway lines, are under bridges or belong to squatters will be cleared,” said Albert, a public relations employee with the Jakarta administration, adding that the authorities were now in the process of informing those who will be affected by the plan. Albert did not say how many people would be affected.

Warung vendors and illegal settlers in the Bendungan Hilir area of Central Jakarta have said they had received eviction notices from the government, telling them not return to the capital after they go home for Idul Fitri as their structures would be razed on Oct. 3.

The South Jakarta administration is reported to have plans to remove street vendors in 10 subdistricts before Idul Fitri to clear streets in order to improve traffic flow.

Azas Tigor Nainggolan, an urban-poor activist from Forum Warga Kota Jakarta (Fakta), said vendor communities, such as fruit sellers in Pasar Minggu, had approached his group about the eviction notices.

But Azas said such threats and eviction notices were an annual occurrence. “It’s usual for public order officers [Tramtib] to threaten street vendors before the Lebaran holiday.”

Albert said that the evictions were part of Governor Fauzi Bowo’s five-year plan to alleviate the city’s traffic snarls and to tackle flood problems.

When asked about the plan, Fauzi offered a vague response, saying, “those who want to live in Jakarta have to obey the rules and have proper documentation.”

Albert said the various offices and agencies in the city administration would conduct their own operations to obtain land for their programs, either by purchasing private land or evicting illegal settlers from public property.

Though the plan has been in place since 2008, Albert said the eviction process was picking up steam this year to meet deadlines for transportation projects aimed at preventing total gridlock in the city by 2014.

Albert cited the Mass Rapid Transport project that would integrate the city’s current railroad network with newer ones, which were expected to be built by 2011. The city also plans to build more toll roads and bridges.

Agus Subardono, who heads the city’s housing agency, said that he had not heard of any eviction plans before Idul Fitri.

He said that if there were plans to evict people, each municipality or the related agency should coordinate with the housing agency.

“Victims of eviction have the opportunity to be resettled in low-cost apartments,” he said, adding that the prerequisites were that they held Jakarta identity cards and were classified as low-income earners.

Budi Widiantoro, head of the city’s Public Works Agency, in a text message to the Jakarta Globe, could not confirm whether eviction plans related to public infrastructure existed, but said there were certainly no immediate plans to clear squatters from river banks.

Jakarta’s rapid increases in population have been repeatedly blamed for the city’s problems. According to a World Bank report, around 250,000 people migrate to the Greater Jakarta area each year, giving rise to growing squatter communities where people have scant access to government services.

idul fitri news

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[postlink]https://gustav-javamedia.blogspot.com/2009/09/kpk-versus-police.html[/postlink]SBY Steers Clear of Spat Between Indonesia's Anti-Corruption Agency and Police
Despite rising tensions between the National Police and the Corruption Eradication Commission, President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has no intention of stepping in to resolve matters, a presidential aide said on Friday.

Capping months of open animosity between the two sides, the police on Friday questioned four commissioners from the antigraft body, also known as the KPK, as witnesses in a case of suspected bribery involving commission officials, businessman Anggoro Widjaja and his company PT Masaro Radiokom.

Meanwhile, the KPK has officially begun its investigation into how $200 million was withdrawn from troubled PT Bank Century when its funds had been frozen following its collapse and takeover by the government last year. A senior police officer is believed to be embroiled in the case.

Although the officer was only identified by his initials, SD, he is widely believed to be Susno Duadji, the National Police’s chief detective, who led the investigation into the scandal.

“Let the legal process continue in accordance with the rules of the game,” said Denny Indrayana, the president’s special adviser on legal affairs. “Evidence must speak for itself in legal matters. Justice is linked to evidence and the president will not enter that territory.”

Yudhoyono, he said, was well aware of the ongoing friction between the two agencies, but believed that it was merely a matter of “poor coordination.”

Denny said the president had reminded all sides that the country’s fight against corruption should not be affected.

“The steps taken in these cases should not weaken the corruption-eradication agenda. Whatever their differing positions, there should be a clear separation between the KPK and the police as institutions,” Denny quoted the president as saying.

He dismissed speculation that the two sides were using the cases to undermine each other.

“What we are talking about is not a matter of weakening the KPK or the police, but legal actions against individual violators of the law, wherever they come from, the KPK or the police,” Denny said.

The media over the past couple of months have played up the tensions between the two institutions as a fight between a cicak (gecko) and a buaya (crocodile), using Susno’s descriptions of the police as a large predator and the KPK a hapless lizard.

On Friday, Vice President Jusuf Kalla also waded into the debate, echoing the president’s sentiments that it had been blown out of proportion.

“No Indonesian citizen is above the law. Being investigated does not mean that the person concerned has done something wrong,” Kalla was quoted as saying by state news agency Antara.

The four KPK deputy chiefs summoned by the police — Chandra M Hamzah, Bibit Samad Rianto, M Jasin and Haryono Umar — were questioned on Friday following allegations by suspended KPK chief Antasari Azhar that Anggoro had admitted to him that he had bribed commission officials.

Anggoro’s company had been probed by the KPK for having bribed lawmakers to win a Ministry of Forestry project for the provision of radio equipment.

Meanwhile, the KPK is looking into how Boedi Sampoerna, a scion of the powerful Sampoerna family, managed to withdraw $200 million from Century despite a freeze on the bank’s funds. They said they found that the money had been released after a letter signed by a senior police officer had assured officials the funds were not problematic.

House Speaker Agung Laksono also aired his hopes that the two cases would not inflame lingering tensions between the two agencies, although any moves to quell the feud by freezing the cases would only hurt the public’s sense of justice.

KPK versus POLICE