Dan Indonesia sudah ditinggalkan penjajah Belanda sejak tahun 1949..

--- In [email protected], jack_fanotona@... wrote:
>
> Sama lah kang sur, indo ngurus papua aceh dll jg kaga becus! Mang lu pikir 
> indon bagus yah urus negara
> 
> Sent from my BlackBerry®
> powered by Sinyal Kuat INDOSAT
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: "suryana" <gsuryana@...>
> Sender: [email protected]
> Date: Thu, 2 Aug 2012 19:02:05 
> To: <[email protected]>
> Reply-To: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: [proletar] TIMOR-LESTE: Alcohol-fuelled violence a growing 
> concern
> 
> Masyarakat Timor Leste sudah kena kibul PBB, dikira dengan merdeka bisa 
> menjadi negara mapan, alih alih menjadi negara mapan, malah bikin pusing 
> negara pendukungnya.
> Bila kemerdekaan diraih dengan cara curang maka hasil akhir akan lebih 
> hancur.
> 
> Aku termasuk WNI yg bila diberikan wewenang jauh ke  depan, Timor Leste akan 
> aku hilangkan dari peta, dan akan dijadikan sebagai kabupaten thok, tidak 
> lagi propinsi, apalagi negara terlalu goblok masyarakatnya dalam memahami 
> apa itu bermasyarakat di negara, dan gobloknya memang dipiara sejak dulu 
> oleh para uskup sialan.
> 
> Masyarakat Timor leste menjadi tambah berantakan dan tanggung jawabnya ada 
> di si uskup sialan belo, dia yg bikin masyarakat Timor menjadi pemabokan, 
> dan PBB jug harus bertanggung jawab.
> karena membela pemilu curang.
> 
> ----- Original Message ----- 
> From: "holy uncle" <holyuncle@...>
> 
> 
> ***One of the common problems, he said, is that unemployed youths are stuck 
> in a cycle of alcohol and violence. In Timor-Leste,unemployment among young 
> people is estimated at over 40 percent, and approximately 16,000 young 
> people enter the labour market each year. The problem is expected to grow, 
> with 41 percent of the population under 15 years old, according to 
> government data.
> 
> ***Hari depan NKRI makin cerah, PBB perlu membantu Timor Leste kembali ke 
> pangkuan NKRI...
> 
> TIMOR-LESTE: Alcohol-fuelled violence a growing concern
> 
> DILI, 1 August 2012 (IRIN) - National police and NGOs in Timor-Leste have 
> noted an uptick in alcohol-fuelled violence, especially among unemployed 
> youths.
> 
> Vidal Campos Magno, now 29, grew up surrounded by conflict, was a teenager 
> during the final years of the Indonesian occupation of Timor-Leste, and then 
> went through the turmoil that followed the 1999 referendum for independence.
> 
> “I was involved in the fighting. I remember hanging around with friends, 
> then we’d plan to go and hurt this person or that person. We had to fight 
> because of the political situation.”
> 
> It wasn’t until he was accepted into university that Magno decided to 
> change 
> what he calls his “bad behaviour”. Now a project coordinator at Ba 
> Futuru, a 
> local peace-building organization, he draws on his experiences to help young 
> people, including former gang members and ex-prisoners.
> 
> One of the common problems, he said, is that unemployed youths are stuck in 
> a cycle of alcohol and violence. In Timor-Leste,unemployment among young 
> people is estimated at over 40 percent, and approximately 16,000 young 
> people enter the labour market each year. The problem is expected to grow, 
> with 41 percent of the population under 15 years old, according to 
> government data.
> 
> “There’s a lot of youth unemployment and sometimes young people hang 
> around 
> and drink alcohol, then go to the main road to fight each other or throw 
> rocks at cars. This is their reality,” said Magno.
> 
> An analysis of drug and alcohol issues in the Pacific by the Australian 
> National Council on Drugs in 2008-2009 concluded that “alcohol is still a 
> substance of concern” in Timor-Leste, but noted a lack of official data.
> 
> The most recent national data reported to the World Health Organization 
> (WHO) was in 2006, before a political crisis displaced more than 100,000 
> people, a tense and violent presidential poll in 2007, and a presidential 
> assassination attempt in February 2008.
> 
> There are no government-funded rehabilitation facilities for people addicted 
> to drugs or alcohol, but Pradet, a national mental health NGO, was one of 
> the first groups to provide treatment. It has offered community awareness 
> workshops to prisoners, police and community leaders since 2009, funded by 
> AusAID.
> 
> Pradet director Manuel dos Santos told IRIN drug use was still a relatively 
> small problem, but there are fears that it could increase. “Our border does 
> not have a secure system for controlling drugs, so people are consuming more 
> and more, but there’s no specific research to find out how much.”
> 
> The regional office of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) in Bangkok, 
> Thailand, which oversees Timor-Leste, has no record of drug use or seizure 
> trends in the country.
> 
> A December 2010 policy brief by a national conflict-monitoring NGO, Belun, 
> found a “worrying degree of drug use”, including the consumption of 
> sabu-sabu, an illegally manufactured amphetamine, and korneta, a plant that 
> creates a feeling of euphoria.
> 
> Dangers unknown
> 
> Dos Santos said most people in Timor-Leste are unaware that over-consumption 
> of alcohol is harmful. “Many who participate in the training are surprised 
> when they find out about the negative impacts of alcohol. Before they 
> receive the information, they say they used to keep drinking until they fell 
> asleep.”
> 
> He said workshop participants had recommended creating defined places to 
> sell alcohol, introducing a law restricting children from buying alcoholic 
> drinks, and increasing the tax to make such drinks more expensive.
> 
> There are no regulations for the alcohol content in drinks, and no age 
> restrictions on purchasing them. The popular local palm wine (tua mutin) and 
> palm brandy (tua sabu) are both sold in recycled plastic bottles along the 
> roadsides.
> 
> In Timor-Leste, drinking alcohol is part of tradition so if you sit down 
> with two or three people, they feel they must drink.
> 
> “In Timor-Leste, drinking alcohol is part of our tradition, so if you sit 
> down with two or three people, they feel they must drink. But sometimes it 
> causes accidents and sometimes it causes fights,” said Domingos Maia, the 
> drug and alcohol trainer of the National Police of Timor-Leste (PNTL).
> 
> Domestic violence
> 
> The police link alcohol to domestic violence. “Often we see fathers and 
> husbands fighting with their families after drinking too much alcohol,” 
> Maia 
> said.
> 
> The most recent demographic survey by the Ministry of Health, in 2010, did 
> not track alcohol or drug consumption, but found alcohol was a significant 
> factor in domestic violence. Of the women who experienced domestic violence, 
> 60 percent said their husbands “get drunk very often”, compared to 26 
> percent who said their husbands did not drink alcohol at all.
> 
> In 2009, Belun started tracking alcohol-related violence through an Early 
> Warning Early Response Monitoring System, set up with the assistance of 
> Columbia University, New York, after noting a rise in alcohol-fuelled 
> violence.
> 
> Constantino Escollano Brandao, a research and policy specialist at Belun, 
> said alcohol is often a catalyst for violence caused by underlying problems. 
> “For young people [this] could be the stress of finding a job, social 
> jealousy, or not being able to afford to stay in school.”
> 
> In the eastern district of Ermera, known for its celebration of the annual 
> coffee harvest in July, drunkenness and causing trouble while drunk have 
> been banned since February 2012, under a traditional form of law and order 
> known as Tara-bandu.
> 
> Fines start at US$25. “Since the Tara-bandu there has been a positive 
> change 
> because the number of parties has been limited, and the sanctions discourage 
> drunken people from causing problems,” Brandao told IRIN.
> 
> In the capital, Dili, where alcohol and drugs are readily accessible, youth 
> coordinator Magno said the answer is not prohibition or punishment, but 
> education.
> 
> “Many young people are stuck in a very negative mindset and it’s not easy 
> to 
> change their bad behaviour… but to reduce the violence we also have to 
> reduce the alcohol.”
> 
> mw/pt/he
> Theme (s): Children, Conflict, Economy, Health & Nutrition,
> 
> [This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]
> http://www.irinnews.org/Report/95997/TI ... ng-concern
> 
> [ 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>




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