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SpiritualpREneurship, Dai Pun Bisa Punya Omset 4 Milyar?

SpiritualpREneurship, Dai Pun Bisa Punya Omset 4 Milyar?
mohon prioritaskan kenali resiko sebelum mengikuti bisnis ini.
informasi dari http://www.bisnisheri.com

Sahabat Rasulullah SAW ternyata Kaya Raya lewat PROPERTI
Umar ra memiliki 70.000 properti, Utsman ra memiliki properti sepanjang wilayah Aris dan Khaibar, belum lagi sahabat seperti Abdurrahman bin ‘Auf, Amru bin Ash, Zubair bin Awwam, Mu’awiyah, dll. Andalah pewarisnya. Hanya jika Anda tahu caranya.

Dai muda ini sempat terkatung-katung di Malaysia, menjadi tukang cuci dengan gaji harian lebih rendah dari tukang kenek bangunan. Namun kini, nasibnya berubah drastis. Bisnis properti yang digeluti anggota MUI Depok ini berkembang sangat pesat. Hanya dalam 2,5 tahun Metro TV menjuluki perusahaannya sebagai Developer Syariah pertama di Indonesia. Kini, “The Orchid Realty” memiliki omset 4 M sebulan. Lihat websitenya di http://www.orchid-realty.com.

Fenomena keterpurukan ekonomi ummat membuat Nasrullah, S.Si, NLP berpikir dan mencari hikmah rahasia kesuksesan bisnis propertinya dengan menggali prinsip-prinsip hidup yang selama ini diyakininya yaitu Al-Quran, sunnah dan sejarah sahabat Nabi kemudian memadukannya dengan ilmu manajemen modern. Semuanya diformulasikan dalam sebuah konsep yang beliau beri nama spriritualpREneurship.

Kini spriritualpREneurship telah menjadi bahan seminar dan training profesional selama 2 hari dengan tarif sampai lebih dari 5 juta rupiah. Selain seminar, beliau juga menyebarkan idenya lewat internet di SpriritualpREneurship.com agar daya jangkaunya lebih luas. Semuanya demi sebuah cita-cita agar ummat Islam berdaya.. dan tentu menjadi KAYA.

Materi SpiritualpREneurship berisi rahasia-rahasia tersembunyi yang memuat esensi besar tentang hakikat harta dan rizqi Allah. Menggali bagaimana para sahabat dan ulama-ulama masa lalu mengambil sumber terbaiknya. Semuanya diringkas dalam sebuah teori bernama: SpiritualpREneurship, The Power of Islamic Financial Freedom.

Liputan Metro TV

SpiritualpREneurship lebih fokus dalam pembahasan bisnis properti. Bagaimana Anda bisa menjadi kaya raya dengan properti apapun profesi Anda, pengusaha atau karyawan. Di sini Anda akan terpukau, ternyata bisnis properti tidak sesulit yang Anda bayangkan. Asalkan Anda tau caranya. Semuanya pengalaman pribadi yang tidak perlu diragukan lagi akurasinya.

Materi dikemas dalam bentuk DVD, e-book dan audiobook. DVD seminar dengan durasi 8 jam ini akan dikirim ke alamat Anda melalui kurir. Film seminar ini dikemas sangat profesional bukan homemade quality. Saya jamin sangat mencerahkan intelektual dan spiritual Anda. Sangat saya rekomendasikan.

Silakan klik www.spiritualpreneurship.com?id=bisnisheri untuk mengetahui lebih lanjut dan dapatkan bonus e-book dan software dengan nilai total lebih dari $500.

November 19, 2008 Posted by | indonesia, Jakarta, sap | Leave a comment

Indonesian SAP Blog

http://harrypoe.wordpress.com HR
http://www.firmansyah.net
http://me.i-gan.com
http://adhiwibowo.wordpress.com Belajar SAP
http://belajar-fico.blogspot.com
http://belajar-abap.blogspot.com Online Training
http://ardhian.wordpress.com
http://belajarerp.blogspot.com
http://www.erpweaver.com
http://ivandarmawan.wordpress.com
http://youngplato.blog.dada.net
http://www.komputer-teknologi.net
http://supriman.wordpress.com
http://e-mory-indonesia.blogspot.com
http://humasuii.multiply.com
http://iorboaz.blogspot.com/
http://freddy-halim.blogspot.com
Lain-lain:
Rekomendasi Blog Situs II SAP
USAID Buat Draft UU MIGAS 2000: Indonesia Dijajah AS?

November 10, 2008 Posted by | computer-top, indonesia, Jakarta, sap | 2 Comments

Shopping in Jakarta

PC Computers, Accessories, Laptop/Notebook, UMPC, Printer, Service and Repair, Servers, Computer Office Equipment, laptop batteries, network installation, spare parts, periferal, PDA, PDA Phone, Pocket PC, recovery for Hardisk, Ink Refill, Batteries and power supply adaptor

More information http://aroundsap.blogspot.com/2007/08/shopping-in-jakarta.html

Dusit Mangga Dua Mall

2nd Floor:

Sinar Biru +6221-6598233 lt2, 2nd Floor
Invia: Office supplier computer 6597574 lt2
Apollo notebook 6000353
Elicom 62302442
Megadata pratama
Infinity computronics center 62302272 lt2

Comdex 6243315 backup specialist lt2,

1st Floor:

Powertech +6221-6268154 notebook services lt1
Procom proffesional 6254341 lt1
Cd softwares application 6297086
Columbia computers 6126812

Nusa prima 6127650 lt1
Indoprima ltd 62302277
Mikrotek ltd 6128283 video editing, network, 2years warranty for all products
Digital system 62302116

Semanggi Mall

Floor IIB/2B

Tiki
Tokopda.com: PDA, PDAphone, palm, PocketPC 25539822
Sis care, pda services
Semesta computers: canon authorized services, notebook and PCs, peripheral
K2 bookstore 68740224
Daoer ulang craftshop
Vindo comics 92911241
Its 9 Factory outlet, genuine leather
Pustaka kalyana, 91991320
Little thing

Ambassador Mall, Mega Kuningan

3rd Floor:

1. Use office equipmnt, computer printer consumable, lt 3 no 26
2. Telecom center Handphone, refill box lt 3 no 24 tlp 5762773
3 lenovo lt 3
4 samsung mobile lt 3
5 toshiba lt 3
6 sony ericsson nokia lg mobile lt 3
7 aneka digital shop, Camera lt 3 no8 57939581
8 Refill printertape, Veneta system, Refill box, Acaciana,
9 Delta notebook Lt3 no61 tlp 5762422
10 lc ambassador 57939573 laptop bekas
11 bintang notebook: 5762507 services, laminating salon
12 asia notebook 57933557 servicse, refill for batteries, power supply adaptor
13 zion computer 5762404 sales, service
14 fortuna notebook 57939525
15 delta notebook 5762422 lt3
16 primajaya computer 57933333 lt2 no34
17 KPN computer 57931030 hardware, software development, maintenance lt2 no 54
17 bazaar notebook 57939589
18 Iwata computer 5762413
19 laptop Citi 57939625
20 DMS
21 Bestbuy Computer: laptop Fujitsu +6221-57939569 LifeBook/ Stylistic
22
23 ganesha computer 57930999
24 refill alvacia, oliser lt2
25 vaio
26 lt1 borne computindo: 5762418 service for display monitor, printers
27 IT galeri
28 unikreatif komputrans 5764074 LCD, notebook,HD recovery
29 Ferdy computer 5762964
29 refill veneta, saveprint
31 Insight Notebook Center

August 25, 2007 Posted by | computer, indonesia, Jakarta, shopping, Uncategorized | , , , | Leave a comment

BSM Internet Banking

Pengalaman Mencoba http://dirgaa.com/archives/mencoba-bsm-net-banking.html

Secure Login to BSM Net Banking https://bsmnet.syariahmandiri.co.id/cms/index.php

Pengalaman Shar-e Banking http://dirgaa.com/archives/shar-e-pin-dan-tin-yang-salah-cetak.html

Program Santunan Anak Asuh dengan Laporan Kuitansi http://snba1992.wordpress.com/05program/ (Bisa menggunakan Internet Banking) misalnya http://snba1992.wordpress.com/category/02-kwitansi-transfer/

other Indonesian internet banking:

http://www.syariahmandiri.co.id

http://www.bankmandiri.co.id dari Bank Mandiri (click Login atau Aktivasi User di kanan tengah)

http://www.klikbca.com from BCA (clickbca)

http://www.lippobank.co.id dari Bank Lippo (click Login di bawah LBNetBank kanan tengah)

other Islamic Bank:

– bank Muamalat Indonesia – BMI

– bank syariah Mandiri – BSM : 240 service outlets and 57 branch (2008)

– bank BNI Syariah

– bank syariah BRI

– bank syariah Mega (bank Mega syariah) to add 210 branch in end of 2008

– bank Niaga Syariah – BNS

Transfer Online (Cepat dan seketika) dari BSM ke akun bank berikut ini dg biaya biasanya Rp 5000 (ke BSM sendiri gratis) maksimal sekali transfer sekitar 6jt lebih atau dalam sehari 10jt lebih secara online. Cukup cepat bila dibandingkan dari bank lain.

ABN Amro
Agroniaga
American Express
ANK
Artos
Bank DKI
Bank DKI Syariah

Bank Nagari
Bank Of Tokyo Mitsubishi
Bank Riau
BCA
BII
BII Syariah
BNI
BNI Syariah
BPD Aceh

BPD Bali
BPD Bengkulu
BPD DIY
BPD Jabar
BPD Jabar Syariah
BPD Jambi
BPD Jateng
BPD Jatim
BPD Kalsel

BPD Kalsel Syariah
BPD Kaltim
BPD Lampung
BPD Maluku
BPD NTB
BPD NTT
BPD Papua
BPD Sulsel
BPD Sultra

BPD Sulut
BPD Sumsel
BPD Sumut
BPD Sumut Syariah
BRI
BRI Syariah
BTN
BTN Syariah
BTPN

Buana
Bukopin
Bukopin Syariah
Bumi Arta
Bumiputera
Capital Indonesia
Commonwealth
Danamon
Danamon Syariah

Ekonomi
Ekskutif
Ganesha
Hagabank Indonesia
Hagakita
Hongkong & Shanghai (HSBC)
HS 1906
IFI

IFI Syariah
Ina Perdana
Indomonex
Jasa Jakarta
Kesawan
Lippo
Mandiri
Maspion
Mayapada

Mayora
Mega
Mestika Dharma
Muamalat
CIMB Niaga
Niaga Syariah
NISP
Nusantara Parahyangan
Panin

Permata
Permata Syariah
Sinarmas
Syariah Mega
UIB
UOB Indonesia
Victoria

http://shariahbank.blogspot.com
http://aroundsap.blogspot.com/

August 24, 2007 Posted by | banking, indonesia, shopping | 1 Comment

Indonesian Computer Festival FKI 2009 2010

Pameran FESTIVAL KOMPUTER INDONESIA (FKI) 2009 2010 http://www.festivalkomputer.com

In 6 cities of Indonesia:

Timing : 10–14 June 2009 10.00–21.00 WIB

Ticket fee : yes estimated Rp 5000

Location :

* Jakarta : Hall A, Hall B , Cendrawasih Hall, Plenary Hall – Jakarta Convention Center (Balai Sidang / Jakarta Convention Center http://www.jcc.co.id)

* Bandung : Bandung E-Tronical Mall

* Semarang : DP Mall

* Yogyakarta : Grand Bima – Jogja Expo Center

* Surabaya

* Makasar : Celebes Convention Center

Other event in same time: “Indonesia Cellular Show (ICS) 2009”

Exhibitors offered computer and IT solutions such as software, hardware, accessories, internet provider and more while famous Indonesian brands such as Axioo, Forsa, Ion, Wearness, Byon, Zyrex, Mugen.

Other Exhibition Events

Transportation: Taxi Bluebird (recommended for safety), Busway public transport

June 11, 2007 Posted by | computer, computer-top, indonesia, Jakarta, shopping | 1 Comment

Middle East Investment in Indonesia, biggest muslim country


Indonesia is good place for investment?

Indonesia is the world’s fourth most populous country. Investment planning and realization:

Etisalat from UAE for Excelcomindo Pratama, telecommunication

Qatar Telecom (QTel) from Qatar for Indosat, telecommunication

Q-Tel and Etisalat

MOU: Ras Al Khaimah Investment Authority, or Rakia, and RAK Minerals and Metals Investments (RMMI) from UAE for The government of the South Sumatra province, industry and infrastructure.
Saudi Telecom (STC) from Saudi Arabia for Maxis’ Indonesia, telecommunication (Axis)

Pending: Bin Laden (Bin Ladin) Group from Saudi Arabia for agriculture sector

Emaar Properties in Lombok and Drydock project in Batam

ERA Star Dubai and Itochu Corp for Pertamina’s oil project in Balikpapan; US$1,7 billion

Dubai Aerospace Enterprises (DAE) for Garuda airplane funding; US$359 million

National Commercial Bank Arab Saudi for Bank Muamalat

Islamic Payment System Sdn Bhd with PT Pos Indonesia

Planned to invest: Al-Barakah, Qatar Islamic Bank,Kuwait Financing House, Al- Raji, Tadamun Bank

Fraud / Indikasi Penipuan investasi: penjualan dinar Irak di Indonesia (Iraqi Dinar)

Sector: Agro Industry, Islamic banking, Infrastructure, agriculture, forestry, mining, oil and gas, energy, education, nuclear energy, defense system, aircraft, information and technology, tourism, furniture, heavy industry, contractor

Forum: Forum Ekonomi Islam Dunia (World Islamic Economic Forum/WIEF) 5th 2009

Issue: Arab possibly has small investment in Indonesia and not quite care of it, there is no relation that the biggest moslem country has to be the biggest investment from Arab, however for humanity reason Indonesian still supports some Arabian freedom effort from terrorist and invader nation, Indonesia shares the risk of their threat eventhough not share profit.

November 16, 2006 Posted by | indonesia, Jakarta, shopping | Leave a comment

Is Indonesia good place for Arab investment?

summary in http://www.asiafinest.com

I looked up on Indonesia’s gdp both nominal and ppp and found out that Indonesian economy was actually moving faster than some asean members.
In ’98 indonesian gdp per capita was only around US600 but the gdp per capita on 2008 surprisingly had reached US 2,142 which is more than tripled compare to ten years ago. really surprising me coz it’s not that easy to bring up gdp percapita of a nation with 240 million population in short period of time.
god bless indonesia!!

INDONESIA

Recent economic indicators: 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008

GDP (US$bn) (current prices): 234.8 257.0 285.9 364.4 432.9 488.1
GDP PPP (US$bn) ©: 603.2 650.2 705.2 767.5 837.8 906.7
GDP per capita (US$): 1,100 1,188 1,304 1,641 1,925 2,142
GDP per capita PPP (US$) ©: 2,825 3,005 3,217 3,456 3,725 3,979

Real GDP growth (% change YOY): 4.8 5.0 5.7 5.5 6.3 6.1

source: http://www.dfat.gov.au/geo/fs/indo.pdf

GDP / Capita year on year: 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009

GDP nominal per capita (US$): 1,100 1,188 1,304 1,641 1,925 2,357 2,724

GDP PPP per capita (US$): 2,825 3,005 3,217 3,456 3,725 4,675 5,368

Indonesia’s GDP per capita to surpass US$2,700 by 2009

Jakarta (ANTARA News) – The government and the House of Representatives (DPR) are looking into the possibility of raising the country`s gross domestic product (GDP) to Rp5,275.9 trillion by relying on exports and investments.

“With the GDP reaching that amount, our per capita GDP has actually exceeded US$2,700. But it seems that we were still at the level of middle income countries,” Syahrial Loetan, secretary of the state minister for national development planning/chief secretary of the National Development Planning Agency (Bappenas), said on Monday.

Hopefully, non-oil/non-gas exports would be the main foreign exchange earner while natural resources would be the main factor to attract investments next year, he said.

“But we must keep in mind that the improving economy will make the people`s consumption stronger,” he said.

The Rp5,275.9 trillion GDP could be achieved if the economy grew by 6.2 percent and the inflation rate reached 6.5 percent, he said.

After all, being at the level of middle income countries would make it difficult for Indonesia to obtain very soft loans, he said.

“Today, almost all loans are available only under commercial schemes,” he said.

According to official data, the country`s macro assumptions in the year up to May 2008 show the economic growth rate was recorded at 6.3 percent, the inflation rate at 10.4 percent, the interest rate on Bank Indonesia Certificates (SBI) for three-month deposits at 8.1 percent, the rupiah`s exchange rate at Rp9,254 per dollar, Indonesian crude prices (ICP) at US$104.8 a barrel, oil production at 922,500 barrels per day, fuel consumption at 16.4 million kiloliters.

In the the revised 2008 state budget, the target of economic growth rate for 2008 has been set at 6.4 percent, inflation rate 6.5 percent, interest rate on SBI for three-month deposits 7.5 percent, the rupiah`s exchange rate Rp9,100 per dollar, ICP US$95 a barrel, oil production 927,000 barrels per day, and oil consumption 35.5 million kiloliters.(*)

Indonesia As the New India

This stable democracy with a hot market economy resembles another Asian giant in the 1990s.
By George Wehrfritz | NEWSWEEK

Jakarta today could be any of Asia’s 21st-century boomtowns. The malls buzz, traffic snarls and modern office towers dominate the skyline. It all feels profoundly normal—but that’s big progress in a place that, barely ten years ago, seemed destined for ruin. Following the fall of longtime strongman Suharto, and with Indonesia reeling from the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis, many analysts feared that Asia’s third-biggest country (population: 235 million) would go the way of Yugoslavia. Instead, it has become a cohesive, robust and exuberantly democratic moderate Muslim nation. Things are so buoyant that Indonesia invites comparison to another Asian giant: India.

Both remain corrupt, chaotic and excruciatingly complex. Yet each is also an attractive emerging economy, and in India’s case, a star of the developing world. Could Indonesia be next? Its economy grew by 6.3 percent last year, the main stock exchange ranks among the world’s best performers since 2003 and last year foreign direct investment nearly tripled, to a respectable $4 billion. All of which resembles India in the 1990s, when reforms kick-started a potentially massive economy—though outsiders barely noticed until the IT sector took off and growth passed 8 percent. In Indonesia, the key sectors are energy, mining and soft commodities like rubber, palm oil and cocoa. And in an exclusive interview, President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono says he sees no inherent reason why a big democracy like his can’t grow as fast China, which has posted 10 percent growth rates in recent years.

That would put Indonesia on a lot of magazine covers. In fact, the country already looks better than India in two ways: its per capita income ($3,348) is a third higher, and thanks to Jakarta’s fiscal austerity, it now boasts one of the lowest debt ratios in the world. “After ten years of restructuring, Southeast Asia’s largest economy is in great shape,” says Nicholas Cashmore, CLSA’s country head and chief researcher in Jakarta.

Indonesia’s political turnaround has been just as dramatic as its economic one. The president, known universally as SBY, is a former general who was elected in mid-2004 and has since become the country’s most effective democratic leader. In four years, he has helped Indonesia roll up its terrorist problem and rebuild from the 2004 tsunami. Less appreciated (but more enduring), he has backed a profound political decentralization program, empowering hundreds of local administrations. Jakarta now rules by consensus, not decree. This has its downsides: it makes it impossible to railroad through big national development projects of the sort China is famous for. As SBY himself admits, “in many circumstances, we face local communities that don’t agree with government projects, so we have to convince them. I do not think the system is wrong. In a democracy like ours, change, reform and resistance are normal.”

The country’s largest parties now basically agree on economic policy and the need to reduce corruption, improve the rule of law and make government more efficient. Key democratic institutions—including a free press, impartial courts and a legislature chosen by voters—are remarkably robust, and the once all-powerful military has largely removed itself from politics. Meanwhile, regional autonomy has triggered economic booms at the periphery, in contrast to the typical Southeast Asian model. “From the U.S., the U.K. or even Hong Kong,” writes Cashmore, “it is difficult to comprehend the magnitude of Indonesia’s potential [or] appreciate just how much more there is to the country beyond Jakarta.” By his calculation, greater Jakarta now accounts for just 15 percent of Indonesia’s GDP, a relatively small share compared to other Asian capitals.

Indonesia’s accomplishments are all the more impressive when you remember how far and fast the country has come. The fall of Suharto’s New Order (a highly centralized system that vested absolute power in the dictator and his cronies) 10 years ago was accompanied by a financial meltdown so severe that the IMF had to step in. Indonesia also faced fierce separatist insurgencies, Christian-Muslim violence and Islamic extremism underscored by the 2002 Bali bombing. The country seemed to be teetering on the brink of wholesale disintegration. Yet today, as Australian National University economist Andrew MacIntyre and the Asia Foundation’s Douglas Ramage argued in a recent report, observers should start thinking of Indonesia “as a normal country grappling with challenges common to other large, middle-income, developing democracies—not unlike India, Mexico or Brazil.”

In some ways Indonesia’s democracy is even more sophisticated than those other states’. Take decentralization. Jakarta, like New Delhi, oversees national defense, internal security, finance, foreign policy and the justice system. But unlike the Indian government, Indonesia’s—thanks to two “big bang” reform packages passed in 2001 and 2006, and supported by SBY—must now coordinate most other activities through the country’s 33 provinces and nearly 500 local administrations, where popularly elected leaders make policy, manage two thirds of all civil servants and oversee everything from schools to economic development. As World Bank economists Wolfgang Fengler and Bert Hofman observe in a soon-to-be-published study, Indonesia has turned itself from “one of the most centralized countries in the world into one of the more decentralized ones.”

To see what that means on the ground, follow the money. Under a new fiscal system implemented in 2001, regions are allocated a huge slice of the country’s budget to spend more or less as they please. POOR AND REMOTE AREAS RECEIVE THE MOST PERCAPITA, and those with abundant natural resources get shared extraction revenues. According to the World Bank, regional governments in Indonesia now account for 36 percent of all public expenditures, compared with an average of just 14 percent in all developing countries. And locals can promote whatever agendas they choose. “This is the real revolution,” says Erman Rahman, who heads the World Bank’s local governance initiatives in the country. Regions with proactive leaders have become laboratories of experimentation from which innovative anti-corruption, public-health and economic-growth initiatives have emerged. For his part, SBY has enabled this process by maintaining macroeconomic discipline and political stability. And his support for local autonomy has undermined separatism, extremism and communal violence.

One regional pioneer, Gamawan Fauzi, took power in West Sumatra’s Solok region in 2001 and quickly created a one-stop shop for government services, replacing an opaque and complex web of offices and brokers. Fauzi’s concept was to bring all government services under a single roof, post set fees, promote autopayment and guarantee prompt service as a means of rooting out corruption. And it has worked: the model has since been emulated across Indonesia, and Transparency International reports that corruption, while still high, has been reduced substantially.

Other local leaders have earned fame by initiating innovative new programs. Gede Putrayasa, who heads the poorest of nine regencies on the tourist island Bali, won office in 2001 on a pledge to provide universal medical insurance and free education. The latter proved relatively easy (he simply waived the 5,000 rupiah monthly fees), but improving health care without breaking the local budget was tougher. Under the old system, funds went to hospitals and local administrators, who did things like stockpile pharmaceuticals procured from companies that paid kickbacks. Putrayasa’s innovation: provide every local household free health insurance that compensates clinics for services actually provided. “There’s not a big savings,” says Putrayasa, “but everyone is covered and the efficiency is much better because there is no longer any corruption.”

Such reforms have stimulated economic growth. Putrayasa’s health-care and education initiatives (as well as a jobs program that sends underemployed rice farmers to Japan) have reduced the local poverty rate fourfold to just 5.5 percent today. Better local governance has also made Indonesia a major beneficiary of the global soft commodity boom. Together, the value of its four largest crops—rubber, coconut, palm oil and cocoa—rose from $2.3 billion in 2000 to an estimated $19 billion in 2008, CLSA calculates. That’s thanks to local leaders like Fadel Muhammad, governor of the hardscrabble province of Gorontalo on the island Sulawesi, who turned his constituents into the country’s best corn farmers by deploying teams of agricultural consultants; providing subsidized seeds, fertilizers and rental machinery to farmers; and giving cash rewards to village leaders who boost yields. Since 2002, Gorontalo’s poverty rate has shrunk from 49 to 29 percent.

Of course, decentralization has its problems. Analysts and watchdog groups say that while the number of effective leaders in the 500 local administrations has spiked from a handful to 50 or more under SBY, they are sometimes particularly effective at blocking necessary national reforms and projects. The result, says Ramage, is that progress will be “evolutionary, not revolutionary.” For example, the Trans Java highway, which would link Jakarta with Indonesia’s second-largest city, Surabaya, was launched in 2004 with a target completion date of 2009, but is still only 10 percent done because of local opposition.

Nonetheless, Indonesia has already become a beacon of stability in Southeast Asia and the Islamic world. Its antiterrorism campaign—Indonesia has shut radical madrassas, established an effective counterterrorism force and cracked down hard on suspected cells, while also avoiding human-rights abuses—is seen as a model for the region. And as the world’s most populous Muslim country, Indonesia’s democratization has implications from Morocco to Mindanao in that it exemplifies an alternative to zealotry, intolerance and extremism. “Indonesia is not immune to radicalism we see worldwide, but this is exactly why we must maintain our identity as a moderate, tolerant nation,” says Yudhoyono. “It enables us to prevent a clash of civilizations.”

SBY is likely to win re-election next year, but even if he loses, analysts don’t expect any sharp change in policy, because all the major political camps in Jakarta agree on the current reform blueprint. Even India does not enjoy that kind of stable consensus on how to catch China.

With Greg Hunt in Hong Kong

© 2008

Middle East, Europe, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Riyadh, Doha, Al Khor, Al Wakrah, Al Khuwayr, Ar Ru’ays, Ar Rayyan, Ras Laffan, Dukhan, Umm Sa’id, Umm Salal ‘Ali, Umm Bab, and Umm Salal Muhammad,

Afif · Arar · Abha · Abqaiq · Al-Bahah · Bisha · Buraydah · Dammam · Dhahran · Diriyah · Duba · Ha’il · Hafar Al-Batin · Hofuf · Al Jawf · Jeddah · Jizan · Jubail · Khamis Mushait · Al-Kharj · Khobar · Al Majma’ah · Mecca (Makkah) · Medina · Najran · Qatif · Ras Tanura · Khafji · Riyadh (capital) · Ta’if · Tabuk · Unaizah · Yanbu’ al Bahr
Abu Dhabi, Ajman, Dubai, Fujairah, Ras al-Khaimah, Sharjah, Umm al-Quwain,
Oman: Muscat, Matrah and Sur, and Salalah
Iran: Tehran, Teheran, Mashhad, Isfahan, Karaj, Tabriz, Shiraz

November 14, 2006 Posted by | indonesia, Jakarta, shopping | 1 Comment

Ini Dia Skenario terbunuhnya Nasrudin v.s. Antasari Azhar, Rhani Juliani

Keanehan dan berbagai fakta muncul seputar terbunuhnya Nasruddin (N direktur PRB – Putra Rajawali Banjaran) dan tertuduhnya Antazari Anhar (AA) serta cerita disekitar Rani Yuliani (RJ) caddie golf. Mana sikap anda dan yang anda percaya??

Beragam sikap masyarakat terhadap  keaneahan dan fakta2 tsb adalah sbb

  • tidak terlalu mempercayai AA sebagai otak pembunuhan
  • meyakini AA terlibat sedikit atau banyak dari rekam jejak AA dalam seleksi ketua KPK
  • menganggap polisi hebat dalam mengungkap kasus ini atau menganggap AA bertindak terlalu bodoh

Keanehan menurut masyarakat

  • seandainya cerita ttg cinta segi tiga benar, AA yang sangat mengerti hukum berbuat dg skenario yang terlalu sederhana : membunuh di keramaian, melibatkan banyak saksi yang terlibat pembunuhan (sampai 9 orang). Bagi yang ragu dg ini, beranggapan pembunuhan memang diharuskan begitu agar sengaja bisa diketahui dalam jangka waktu tak terlalu lama
  • kejaksaan dg sigap mengumumkan AA sebagai tersangka ketika pemanggilan AA oleh polisi masih sebagai saksi, Kejaksaan seperti sudah memiliki bukti sebelum saksi
  • AA mengirim ancaman kepada N (bukan ancaman pembunuhan), diikuti dg terjadinya pembunuhan N. AA yang sering terlibat dg intel penyadapan SMS dll, ternyata bertindak sangat bodoh tidak sesuai bidang pekerjaannya
  • pembunuh bayaran dengan mudahnya menyerahkan diri ke polisi dg alasan merasa dibohongi

Sementara beberapa hal yang nampaknya bisa jadi fakta

  • terjadi cinta segitiga antara N, AA, dan RJ
  • RJ merupakan istri siri dari N
  • AA pernah bertemu RJ di suatu hotel
  • AA memiliki banyak musuh terutama koruptor yang dengan senang hati membantu kejatuhan AA dan bahkan membuat skenario kejatuhannya
  • jatuhnya AA akan ada pengaruhnya terhadap kinerja dan image KPK, musuh2 AA yang sebagian besar kelompok koruptor akan balas dendam
  • N melaporkan beberapa kecurigaan kejadian korupsi di RNI
  • ada usaha mengalihkan perhatian dari mencari pembunuh N, kepada mencari hubungan RJ dan AA dan kemudian dihubungkan ke otak pembunuhan N

 

 

Ada juga rumor sbb

  • rumor ada wanita yang dijadikan senjata untuk menjebak pejabat, termasuk dalam skenario ini
  • rumor AA merupakan titipan PDIP dan Golkar, agar meredam banyaknya kejadian anggota partai mereka ditahan akibat korupsi. Rumor ini katanya didukung beberapa bukti orang dekat partai tertentu malah tidak diproses lebih lanjut kasus korupsinya
  • rumor AA akan dicalonkan seb cawapres karena AA dianggap pihak netral  dan tokoh terkenal anti korupsi
  • rumor N terlibat korupsi di perusahaan BUMN yg berujung pemaksaan kpd AA untuk menghapus N dari daftar target KPK
  • rumor korupsi di RNI yang dilaporkan oleh N kepada KPK
  • rumor konspirasi: bos PT RNI terancam dibui oleh AA, PT RNI memiliki beberapa anak perusahaan yang salah satu orangnya (N) dikorbankan untuk menjebak AA
  • rumor AA memang tahan dari godaan harta dan tahta, tapi kemungkinan AA tak tahan godaan jebakan wanita, termasuk oleh RJ seb caddy cantik
  • rumor banyaknya pengacara AA menunjukkan besarnya dukungan beberapa partai politik thd AA

 

http://rani-juliani.blogspot.com/

http://smsplus.blogspot.com/2007/12/antasari-titipan-golkar-pdip.html

http://www.indoflyer.net/forum/tm.asp?m=337529

May 5, 2006 Posted by | indonesia | Leave a comment

DRC Project Implementation

DRC  Implementation Step:

1. preparation
2. simulation
3. test
4. go live
5. support

May 3, 2006 Posted by | disaster recovery, indonesia | Leave a comment