Remarks late Tuesday by Coordinating Minister for the People's Welfare Aburizal 
Bakrie that coverage of the floods was "exaggerated", "We see that victims are 
still laughing", the minister said.  "Don't make it as if we're facing 
doomsday, like what we see on your station", he said to a journalist from SCTV.


komentar korban banjir atas omongan aburizal yang sangat menghina...

Badar, a resident of Tanah Abang, "Nobody affected by a disaster can really 
laugh.  We might be laughing because we are trading jokes among us, but believe 
me, we are not laughing because we are happy with the condoitions.  How can we 
really laugh if our houses are underwater?".

Nurjanah, "There is time to laugh and there's time to cry.  The minister didn't 
see that they are crying inside.  The President should fired this kind of state 
official who cannot share what common people like us feel.  Many people are 
complaining about the government's sluggish efforts in handling the relief", 

Sutoni, "At least he could show some respect.  It is so easy for him as a rich 
man and as a state official to give away money, which might not even reach the 
people who really need it".

(Sumber The Jakarta Post)



============



Officials have no empathy for flood victims

T. Sima Gunawan, Jakarta


As floods continued to cripple the Greater Jakarta on Tuesday, a Cabinet 
minister made a shocking statement that could hurt people's common sense.

"Don't blow up the reports on flood out of proportion," Coordinating Minister 
for People's Welfare Aburizal Bakrie told reporters. "It should be handled 
properly, but don't react as if the doomsday is coming."
If this is not enough to make your blood boil, let's hear his next statement as 
seen on SCTV footage. "If you see the victims... they are still laughing," 
Aburizal added, grinning.

The words came out from his mouth in response to mounting criticism over the 
government's failure to anticipate the floods, thought to be the worst ever to 
hit Jakarta as it swamped around 70 percent of the capital's territory. 
Hundreds of thousands of people in Jakarta and its buffer zones have been 
displaced, lost their properties. Economic losses resulting from the disaster 
may reach trillions of rupiah due to the massive damage done on public 
facilities, infrastructure, not to mention the business opportunities lost.

Floods started to hit Greater Jakarta on Wednesday. At the beginning, the water 
only inundated the riverbanks and the city outskirts like Bekasi and Tangerang. 
More and more people were affected by the floods as heavy rains continued and 
Jakarta was finally paralyzed on Friday. In some area water started to recede 
early this week, but many parts of the city were still flooded.

Televisions, radio stations and newspapers extensively reported the disaster. 
For the whole week it became the headlines in the media. Some televisions aired 
breaking news and updated stories from time to time. Stories of flood victims 
along with huge photos were printed on the front page as well as other pages of 
the newspapers.

All the media ran sad stories about the tragedy. Millions of people lived in 
the dark and fell short of clean water as the state electricity company PLN cut 
the power in some 750,000 houses while the city water company failed to serve 
66 percent of its customers. As the water also inundated telecommunication 
network, thousands of phone lines did not work and the Internet was disrupted.

Many roads were closed as the floodwater was too high for vehicles to pass, 
causing severe traffic jams in most part of the city, including on the toll 
roads.  The monstrous floods smashed shanties and modest houses of along the 
riverbanks but also exclusive residential areas like those in Kelapa Gading, 
which was one of the hardest hit areas.  But the most saddening news was that 
as of Tuesday, more than 50 people had died due to flood-related incidents like 
illness or being drowned and electrocuted.

The floods have left some 500,000 people homeless. Most of them are living in 
temporary shelters with poor sanitation and lack of food. They are now prone to 
diarrhea, leptospirosis and skin and other diseases.
The facts speak for themselves. Every aspect of the flooding could have made 
the headlines. Why should the media exaggerate the scale of the disaster? In 
reality, the flooding and its effects were so bad, sad, and awful that there 
was no chance for the media to blow the disaster out of proportion.

The fact that the accusation against the media came from one of the ministers 
responsible for handling the disaster is difficult to believe, let alone to 
accept.  Aburizal also urged the media not to report the disaster as if it were 
akin to doomsday.

Excuse me, Mr. Minister?

It is quite clear that he was not affected by the floods. He did not seem to be 
the slightest bit worried about the effects of the disaster. But for many 
people, the flooding felt like the end of the world.  The pain was unbearable, 
but Aburizal was not aware of this. "... they are still laughing," he said. 
Some children, indeed, looked happy playing in the water. Some people might 
also laugh in an attempt to console themselves, even though they are crying in 
their hearts.

Aburizal could hear them laughing, but he did not hear the crying of people who 
have been made homeless and lost their belongings, and even their loved ones or 
friends.  The latest controversial statement should raise questions about 
whether Aburizal, whose family owns PT Lapindo Brantas, which has been blamed 
for triggering the mud-volcano disaster in Sidoarjo, East Java, has a sense of 
humanity or any sort of empathy for the flood victims.

Aburizal is not alone.

It seems that many other high-ranking officials lack compassion for the 
unfortunate victims. Instead of taking action to alleviate the people's 
suffering, many officials have tried to avoid their responsibilities and shift 
the blame to others.  Jakarta's governor, Sutiyoso, was quick to say that the 
flooding was a natural phenomenon. He argued that as Jakarta was situated on a 
low-lying plain dissected by 13 rivers flowing down from the mountains of West 
Java, it was Jakarta's neighboring local authorities that were responsible. 
This was because they had permitted the uncontrolled construction of villas and 
other buildings in resort areas. He also blamed the central government for not 
providing enough money for the building of the East Flood Canal, which is 
expected to help prevent flooding.

His deputy, Fauzi Bowo, who is running in the Jakarta gubernatorial election 
later this year, concurred with his boss's view, saying that what happened in 
Jakarta was a natural disaster and that there was no way to prevent it. Floods 
happened everywhere in the world, he argued.

No government officials admitted to having failed to anticipate the floods and 
take the necessary steps to deal with the disaster. Despite what they say, 
however, they clearly have learned nothing from the big floods that swamped the 
city in 2002, and failed to heed to the meteorologists, who warned that the 
similar incident could take place five years later.

Instead of dredging and cleaning up the rivers, and improving the drainage 
system, the Jakarta administration has continued to allow the construction of 
new shopping malls, office buildings, luxury apartments and residential 
complexes. The rivers are becoming shallower and narrower, while the extent of 
Jakarta's green areas is continuing to shrink.

No one can prevent torrential rains, but the effects can be minimized.


The writer is a journalist. She can be reached at [EMAIL PROTECTED]

=======================


 
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