Singapore said Wednesday it had sent a security team to Jakarta to discuss Indonesian police findings that the city-state could have been the target of a terror attack plot. The Ministry of Home Affairs said the team from the Internal Security Department was in talks with the Indonesian police about the findings, which included a map of Singapore’s train network discovered in the home of Ahmad Sayid Maulana, a terror suspect killed last week.
The Straits Times newspaper said the underground train station on Singapore’s Orchard Road shopping belt — frequented by foreign tourists, expatriate workers and locals — had been circled on the map. It also quoted an unnamed Indonesian police investigator as saying that Singapore “obviously” was a target of an attack and that the suspects had planned to enter the city-state through neighbouring Malaysia.
“We are aware of the items recovered and the speculations and possibilities that the terrorists could have been planning an attack against Singapore, and we are investigating,” a Ministry of Home Affairs spokeswoman told AFP.
“We should also keep in mind that Singapore has been and remains a target for terrorists and we must always maintain our vigilance.”
The Internal Security Department handles security threats from “international terrorism, foreign subversion and espionage”, according to its website. Maulana had been identified in an International Crisis Group report last month as a suspect who had planned attacks on police headquarters in Jakarta and surveyed sites for militant training camps in Indonesia.
The Straits Times said the 36-year-old was shot dead by Indonesia’s elite anti-terror squad Detachment 88 during a raid in East Jakarta on May 12. A map of an airport in the city of General Santos in the southern Philippine island of Mindanao was also among the items found in Maulana’s house, the report said.
John Harrison, a security analyst at Singapore’s S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, said the city state was a prime target chiefly because it is an ally of Western countries.
“Certainly, Singapore remains a tier one target for the JI,” he told AFP, referring to the Southeast Asia-based terror network Jemaah Islamiyah.
“It’s because of Singapore’s position as an ally of the United States and other Western nations,” he said.
“You have a concentration of Western interests,” he said, pointing to the numerous multinational corporations based in the city-state as well as foreign embassies.
Wednesday, May 19, 2010
Monday, May 3, 2010
Australian Timber Co Overcome in Indonesia
Australia has ensured the commitment of aid to Indonesia worth 40 million Australian dollars through the International Forest Carbon Initiative or the International Forest Carbon Initiative. Such assistance is part of aid worth 200 million U.S. dollars and include Kalimantan Forests and Climate Partnership which aimed to cut greenhouse gas emissions caused by deforestation.
"This is a wise way in which each country must play a role in solving the climate problem. Australia and Indonesia is working hard to overcome this problem," said the Australian Climate Change Minister Penny in an interview with Kompas.com on during the Australia-Indonesia Conference in Sydney, Friday (20 / 2).
Penny Wong describes his country as developed countries need to establish a framework for cooperation and policy with developing countries like Indonesia for the successful international campaign to tackle climate change. Seriousness is demonstrated by the Australians to abandon its ally, the United States, which has so far not ratified the Kyoto Protocol.
Through the International Forest Carbon Initiative, Australia to help Indonesia demonstrate how to reduce greenhouse gas emissions caused by deforestation and logging. Grants worth 30 million Australian dollars has been allocated for Kalimantan Forest and Climate Partnership.
Projects in the forest area Kapuas, Central Kalimantan, was aimed at testing the market-based approach in reducing greenhouse gas emissions by protecting and restoring 100,000 hectares of peat forest. This project is expected by the Indonesian certainly can create new jobs directed to the preservation of peat forest.
Australia is also helping Indonesia set up the National Carbon Accounting System as well as national policy and strategy. Assistance worth 10 million Australian dollars is intended to reduce deforestation as well as forming satellite surveillance to reduce forest fires and systems to support participation in international carbon trading market.
"Australia and Indonesia also is reviewing other projects on demonstrating how to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, but the territory has not been determined by the Government of Indonesia," said Penny Wong. "Australia is taking the role of incentives from the company collects domestic and funds to provide technical support for developing countries like Indonesia in this matter," he added.
"This is a wise way in which each country must play a role in solving the climate problem. Australia and Indonesia is working hard to overcome this problem," said the Australian Climate Change Minister Penny in an interview with Kompas.com on during the Australia-Indonesia Conference in Sydney, Friday (20 / 2).
Penny Wong describes his country as developed countries need to establish a framework for cooperation and policy with developing countries like Indonesia for the successful international campaign to tackle climate change. Seriousness is demonstrated by the Australians to abandon its ally, the United States, which has so far not ratified the Kyoto Protocol.
Through the International Forest Carbon Initiative, Australia to help Indonesia demonstrate how to reduce greenhouse gas emissions caused by deforestation and logging. Grants worth 30 million Australian dollars has been allocated for Kalimantan Forest and Climate Partnership.
Projects in the forest area Kapuas, Central Kalimantan, was aimed at testing the market-based approach in reducing greenhouse gas emissions by protecting and restoring 100,000 hectares of peat forest. This project is expected by the Indonesian certainly can create new jobs directed to the preservation of peat forest.
Australia is also helping Indonesia set up the National Carbon Accounting System as well as national policy and strategy. Assistance worth 10 million Australian dollars is intended to reduce deforestation as well as forming satellite surveillance to reduce forest fires and systems to support participation in international carbon trading market.
"Australia and Indonesia also is reviewing other projects on demonstrating how to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, but the territory has not been determined by the Government of Indonesia," said Penny Wong. "Australia is taking the role of incentives from the company collects domestic and funds to provide technical support for developing countries like Indonesia in this matter," he added.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)