Sea skirmish and bedroom abuse reignite old spat between Indonesia and Malaysia
Stephen Fitzpatrick, Jakarta correspondent | June 02, 2009
Article from:  The Australian

RELATIONS between Indonesia and Malaysia, lukewarm at the best of times, have 
turned outright hostile after navy vessels skirmished on their northeastern sea 
border and a minor Jakarta starlet fled a Malaysian royal husband she called 
"perverted".

Although the two countries have not been to war since the early 1960s, 
newspapers and gossip TV were abuzz over the two events - unrelated, yet viewed 
by most through a single nationalist prism.

In the first, a Malaysian fast-attack craft entered Indonesian waters in the 
Sulawesi Sea on Saturday, and according to military headquarters, was moments 
away from being fired on. The vessel was chased back into Malaysian waters, off 
Sabah state in the north of Borneo island.

Jakarta claimed it was the ninth such encroachment this year in the oil-rich 
disputed territory of Ambalat.

"We would remind them that Ambalat is in our waters," Air Vice-Marshall Sagom 
Tamboen, from military central command in Jakarta, said ominously.

But it was the soap-opera tale of teenage model Manohara Odelia Pinot's flight 
from alleged sexual slavery that gave the international spat its salacious 
edge. The more aggrieved among Indonesia's commentariat took the chance to 
throw one of their favourite epithets at their northern neighbour: 
"Maling-sia", literally "thieving Malaysians".

The 17-year-old Indonesian-American student fled to Jakarta on Sunday from 
Singapore, where she had been visiting her ill father-in-law, the Sultan of 
Kelantan state, telling stories of a dramatic midnight escape.

There were elements of a spy drama, including co-operation between Singapore, 
Jakarta and Washington, and a desperate bid for freedom in the hotel elevator 
as royal minders tried to stop her from running. Manohara appeared at a media 
conference in Jakarta wearing the uniform of a paramilitary group called Laskar 
Merah Putih, or Red-and-White Force - for the colours of the Indonesian flag - 
and surrounded by the group's members.

The organisation has form in stirring up anti-Malay sentiment, evoking through 
its name nationalist dreams stretching back to the post-World War II anti-Dutch 
independence struggle.

Manohara is a perfect foil for such chauvinism: she was named by Harper's 
Bazaar magazine as "one of Indonesia's 100 precious women" and is a former 
consort of society heir Adindra Bakrie, playboy son of wealthy Welfare Minister 
Aburizal Bakrie.

That she is of mixed blood presents no obstacle to the nationalist myth: so are 
most Indonesian beauty queens.

But it was her underage marriage last year to Tengku Muhammad Fakhry, a prince 
of the Kelantan royal family, that set the gossip-meters ticking.

Manohara's mother Daisy Fajarina - accused by some of being a gold-digger who 
auctioned her daughter to the highest bidder - started making noises about 
ill-treatment at the prince's hands. Manohara fled to Jakarta in December but 
was enticed back early this year with the promise of an expenses-paid 
pilgrimage to Mecca. This began what she claimed was the "trauma" of her 
kidnapping while in Saudi Arabia, and return to sexual bondage at the hands of 
her "perverted" husband. "I didn't have my human rights - women's rights, all 
my rights were taken away," she said. "I got sexually abused, physically 
abused, mentally abused."

She claimed to have photographic evidence of physical torture, including razor 
slashes to the nipples.

For now, Manohara says she just wants to return to school. Presumably 
international relations will be off the curriculum.

http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,25571120-2703,00.html


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