Aceh jadi amburadul karena peranan Hasan Tiro yg warga negara asing 
memaksakan otonomi khusus dan akhirnya jadi tanah jajahan AS dan 
kehidupannya pun tidak lebih baik.
Irian tidak bisa disamakan dengan Aceh, mirip dengan Timor Leste mabuk dan 
korupsi sudah membudaya, dan diperparah lagi oleh AS yg terus menerus 
melakukan provokasi agar Irian lepas dari Indonesia.

Di Pilpres 2009 Megawati dijanjikan menang bila mau melepas Irian, dan 
Megawati menolak karena sadar dan tahu Irian termasuk kunci ekonominya AS, 
akibatnya Pilpres menjadi amburadul kecurangannya sangat sistimatis, kita 
lihat sampai 2014, apakah Irian masih bisa betah dan tidaknya, karena deal 
dengan SBY sudah berjalan.

Masyarakat Irian terdiri dari puluhan suku dengan sosial kemasyarakatannya 
saling berbeda, dan yg ingin merdeka malah Amerika, sangat jelas kekerasan 
sengaja dibentuk dan dibenturkan, mana ada masyarakat Irian menjadi 
geryliawan bermodalkan busur dan tombak sedang korban matinya kena tembak.

Posisi geologis Irian sangat sulit utk dijadikan pulau yg layak didalam 
infrastrukturnya, selain bergunung gunung sehingga banyak tebing curam ( 
posisi seperti ini yg membuat suku di Irian menjadi sulit bersatu.
Dibandingkan dengan Kalimantan dan Sumatra, dana yg turun dari pusat ke 
Irian jauh lebih tinggi, sayangnya dana tersebut tidak dipakai dengan baik.

Yg pasti Irian jauh lebih baik dibandingkan dengan PNG, di PNG situasi dan 
kondisinya jauh lebih parah, baik di infrastruktur, kemasyarakatan sampai 
dengan pendidikan, Irian jauh lebih maju.

----- Original Message ----- 
From: <[email protected]>


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" <[email protected]>
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" <[email protected]>


***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

[




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