Showing posts with label Police. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Police. Show all posts

Friday, July 9, 2010

Pertamina Says Oil Spill All Mopped Up as Police Probe Negligence Angle

Jakarta Globe, July 09, 2010, Candra Malik,Arientha Primanita& Fidelis E Satriastanti

State oil and gas company Pertamina has succeeded in siphoning almost all of the crude oil that spilled into a river in Blora, Central Java, following a leak at its local fuel depot, an executive said on Thursday.

The leak, which police say might have been caused by negligence on the part of an officer on duty at the depot, on Wednesday sent thousands of liters of crude into the nearby Ledok River, covering it for kilometers in a thick layer of oil.

Fires, the causes of which were not yet known, also broke out on the surface, but the main blazes have already been extinguished, officials say.

Basuki Trikora Putra, Pertamina vice president of corporate communications, confirmed the oil spill and said that the company had carried out the necessary cleanup actions.

“We’ve managed to extract almost 95 percent of the spilled oil using a pump,” Basuki said.

“There were fires [at the site] for a while but we’ve managed to douse most of them.

“We’ll conduct an audit to see whether there are any external and internal causes for the accident, besides technical issues,” he said, adding the company had not yet calculated its losses.

On Thursday, some areas of the river still spewed thick smoke, a local policeman said, but the smoke did not prevent several residents from nearby settlements from trying to scoop the oil from the surface for use at home.

Some residents told reporters there that they planned to use the oil as fuel for cooking.

Blora Police Chief Adj. Comr. Isnaini Ujiarto told the Jakarta Globe that police were helping Pertamina officials from the depot to “localize this incident.”

“Fortunately, the depot is in the middle of a teak forest, far from any settlement, so to date there have been no reports of casualties,” Isnaini said.

Pertamina has contained the spill on the surface of the river and used oil pumps to siphon the crude into tankers, he said.

He added that an inspection of the storage facilities in the depot showed that although the fuel tanks were old and rusted, dating back to the Dutch colonial era, there was no sign of a leak.

Police, he said, suspect negligence on the part of an employee at the depot, who might have forgotten to close down a valve on time, causing the crude oil to flow into the river.

Police are questioning workers at the depot but have yet to name a suspect, he said.

As a precaution, police have closed access to the river from the three villages closest to the location of the spill — Ledok, Gagahan and Pojok Watu — to prevent people from scooping up the fuel, Isnaini said.

Berry Nahdian Furqon, executive director of the Indonesian Forum for the Environment (Walhi), urged the directors of Pertamina to evaluate their management and technology, pointing out that similar accidents had hit the company in the past.

“This is not the first time that there’s been a leak, so there should be a thorough investigation of the officials, and the directors of Pertamina should take full responsibility,” Berry said, adding that the incident showed how safety issues in the oil and gas industry were often ignored.

Pertamina should also be responsible for all costs stemming from the incident, including cleaning up the river, repairing other environmental damage and compensating villagers affected by the oil spill, he said.

Under the 2009 Environmental Protection and Management Law, heavy penalties can be imposed on corporations or institutions found to have caused environmental pollution.

Imam Hendargo, a senior official at the State Ministry for the Environment, said a team from the district environmental office had been dispatched to the site to investigate the leak and assess the damage.


Related Article:

Monday, May 10, 2010

Officer: I Saw Susno Take the Bribe Over Fish Farm

Jakarta Globe, Farouk Arnaz, May 09, 2010

Susno Duadji arriving at National Police headquarters in this file photo.
(JG Photo/Safir Makki)

A middle-ranking police officer said on Sunday he witnessed former National Police chief of detectives Comr. Gen. Susno Duadji take a bribe from suspected major case broker Sjahril Djohan in December 2008.

“I saw it,” former narcotics detective Adj. Sr. Comr. Syamsurizal Mokoagouw told the Jakarta Globe. “I bumped into Sjahril at Susno’s house on Jalan Abu Ferin in Fatmawati [South Jakarta]. I was there to report to Susno prior to my departure for the Netherlands on a methamphetamine-smuggling investigation.”

Syamsurizal added police have summoned him as a witness in the probe into the alleged Rp 500 million ($55,000) bribe.

“I told the investigators everything I saw,” he said. “I’m willing to testify against Susno, and I’m not afraid of anything because what I’ve said is true.”

He said he saw Sjahril hand Susno a brown paper bag, but did not see its contents. Sjahril is alleged to have bribed Susno on behalf of the co-owner of a fish farm who was seeking a police probe into his business partner for embezzlement.

“Since the case came to light, I’ve understood that the money was a bribe,” Syamsurizal said.

According to copies of police dossiers obtained by the Globe three weeks ago, Sjahril, who was declared a suspect in mid-April, told investigators he had personally handed over the bribe to Susno at the latter’s home in December 2008.

Sjahril said that Syamsurizal had happened to be there. Sjahril said he was acquainted with the officer from his stint as a consultant at the National Police’s Narcotics Directorate in East Jakarta, where Syamsurizal served between 2006 and 2008.

Sjahril, according to the dossiers, said the money came from Haposan Hutagalung, a lawyer representing a Singaporean businessman identified only as Mr Hoo. Hoo had previously pressed charges against his business partner, Anwar Salamah, for allegedly embezzling 11 million Singapore dollars from their joint-venture arowana farm in Riau.

“Mr Hoo felt the police investigators were ineffective, so Haposan sought my help to speed things up,” Sjahril said. “I was close to Susno, so I used that relationship to help Haposan.”

Susno is scheduled for questioning at police headquarters this morning as a witness after failing to appear last Thursday.

“I’ve given my explanation to this allegation on my personal Web site, www.susnoduadji.com,” he told the Globe on Sunday. “Check it out there.”

In his statement, Susno reiterates his innocence and denies ever taking a bribe from Sjahril.

“It is impossible that I took a bribe because the [arowana] case remains in limbo even now,” the site says. “The prosecutors say their dossier on it is not yet complete.” Susno adds that one of his superiors was a stakeholder in the farm, but does not elaborate.

Susno also says on his site that he will show up for questioning today but will demand details of the case before proceeding with the questioning.

A police source working on the case told the Globe earlier that police were close to arresting Susno on charges of bribery, no matter the outcome of his questioning.

Related Article:

Susno evades questioning while police reveal new case


Friday, April 30, 2010

Police chase shipwreck treasure hunter

Bagus BT Saragih, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Fri, 04/30/2010 9:48 AM

Facing jail ... Queensland treasure hunter Mike Hatcher. (brisbanetimes)


Authorities are hunting Michael Hatcher, a foreign shipwreck treasure hunter believed to be operating in Indonesian waters.

Maritime Affairs and Fisheries Minister Fadel Muhammad said Thursday he dispatched a joint investigation team to pursue Hatcher.

“I have received many reports about [Hatcher] and his illegal activities. I told my men to monitor Hatcher’s movements at sea,” Fadel told The Jakarta Post.

National Police chief detective Comr. Gen. Ito Sumardi confirmed a team of water police had been assigned to arrest Hatcher.

“We have identified his boat. We are now monitoring his activities,” Ito said.

Fadel said he did not know Hatcher very well. “But since I began serving as a minister in 2009, [Hatcher’s] name has been mentioned as a famous treasure hunter,” the Golkar politician said.

Hatcher has been widely known as a shipwreck treasure hunter since the 1980s.

Hatcher is believed to be an Australian national, but reports say he may hold both British and Australian passports.

His main area of operations is reportedly the Malacca Strait between Sumatra and Malaysia, Bangka-Belitung, Java, and in the South China Sea near Thailand.

According to Endro Soebekti Sadjiman, the coordinator of NGOs grouped in the National Assets Rescue Consortium, Hatcher’s latest operation was in Blanakan waters, Subang regency, West Java.

Endro said he believed Hatcher was after porcelain from the Ming dynasty.

“A porcelain plate or bowl from that era could fetch US$20,000. If there are thousands down there, just imagine the losses the state may suffer [if they’re stolen],” he said.

According to the consortium, Hatcher went to Blanakan following his recent discovery of the wreck of a Dutch ship named De Geldermalsen in East Bintan, Riau Islands, from which he recovered Chinese porcelain that was sold at auction in Amsterdam for $20 million.

“There are many other ‘Hatchers’,” Endro claimed.

Head of the National Committee of Excavation and Utilization of Valuable Objects from Sunken Ships at the ministry, Aji Sularso, said the joint team of investigators began hunting Hatcher two months ago.

The team comprises officers from the water police, Navy, police, and civil servant investigators from the Culture and Tourism Ministry.

“Hatcher is smart. He moves quickly and unpredictably if he thinks we’re on to him,” Aji told the Post.

The 2002 Cultural and Heritage Law stipulates that illegal treasure hunting is punishable by up to five years in prison and Rp 50 million ($5,500) in fine.

“Hatcher can also be charged under the Criminal Code on theft of state assets,” Aji said.

Aji said the government had identified 493 shipwreck sites across Indonesia, many of which have been looted.

“Most of the ships were Dutch, Chinese, and Portuguese which sank in the 1600s,” he said.

According to Aji, there are currently six companies permitted to salvage underwater treasure.

The law states that half of the haul’s proceeds belong to the state.

Related Articles:

Treasure Hunter Resurfaces to Deny Theft Allegations

Deep sea plunder: Gold Coast salvager in shipwreck row

Government Investigating Foreign 'Treasure Hunter' After New Discovery


Tuesday, April 6, 2010

37 illegal immigrants captured in Jakarta Bay

Hasyim Widhiarto, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Tue, 04/06/2010 4:25 PM

Thirty-seven male Afghan nationals were captured by patrolling officers from Jakarta Police's water police division in waters off Bidadari Island in Jakarta Bay early Tuesday and admitted they were heading to Australia to look for political asylum.

Jakarta Police spokesman Sr. Comr. Boy Rafli Amar said the officers found the illegal immigrants floating in two fishing boats crewed by two Indonesian nationals identified as Ending and Ardun.

"We are still questioning them to find out how they entered Indonesian waters and which route they used," Boy said, adding that the illegal immigrants now came under the division’s jurisdiction.

Boy said the police were now coordinating with UNHCR representatives in Jakarta to decide the future of the asylum seekers.

"But it is almost certain they will be deported from Indonesia," he said.

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Customs seizes boat carrying explosive materials

Antara News, Wednesday, March 17, 2010 20:28 WIB

Jakarta (ANTARA News) - Tanjung Balai Karimun Customs patrol has seized a boat carrying 60 tons of ammonium nitrate and 2000 bags of used clothes from Malaysia in the South China Sea.

The boat was seized early Tuesday morning with a total loss on the state estimated at Rp3 trillion, the office`s spokesperson , Evy Suhartantyo, said here on Wednesday.

"The immaterial loss is related to security namely the discovery of the explosive material while the economic loss is connected with the discovery of the used clothes," he said.

It all happened when customs patrol boat BC 3002 caught KLM Pratama Jaya carrying more than 2,400 25-kg bags of the explosive material and 500 bags of used clothes in the South China Sea.

The Indonesian-flagged ship with 14 crew on board and Syukur as its skipper was traveling to Ambon and Kendari when it was seized.

Customs boat BC 6003 meanwhile seized KLM Intan Sari I carrying more than 1,500 used clothes in the Natuna Sea.

The boat also raised an Indonesian flag with 10 crew on board and Hamid as its skipper.

"We cannot as yet be able to tell details about them as they are still being investigated," the regional head of the special customs office of Kepulauan Riau, Nasar Salim, said.

He said his men had seized the boats believably because they did not have customs documents.

Monday, February 8, 2010

Indonesia Admits People-Smuggling Role

Jakata Globe, February 07, 2010


Government officials have acknowledged that Indonesian citizens are continuing to play a role in smuggling people to Australia.


On Sunday, Teguh Wardoyo, a director at a Foreign Affairs Ministry unit tasked with protecting the nation’s citizens overseas, admitted that many Indonesians were still involved in people smuggling, in particular to the country’s southern neighbor.


The admission follows the charging by an Australian court on Friday of an Indonesian for allegedly smuggling people into the country.


According to a statement released by the Australian Federal Police, the man faces a maximum penalty of 20 years in jail and/or a fine of 220,000 Australian dollars ($109,036).


“The AFP charged the man with one count of facilitating the bringing of non-citizens into Australia” of five or more people, the statement said.


Teguh said that the ministry had been assisting the man in the Western Australian city of Perth, but said they could not interfere with the ongoing legal process the man was facing.


“We have to respect the legal process in Australia,” he said.


The man was detained on Nov. 14 last year when the vessel he was on was blocked by a Royal Australian Navy patrol boat operating under the control of the Customs and Border Protection Command, southwest of Ashmore Reef.


Over the past three years, Australian patrol boats have stopped at least seven boats filled with asylum seekers. The latest was carrying 181 passengers and four crew members.


As in previous cases, the passengers of the captured boats were transported to Australian Immigration’s detention center on Christmas Island where they underwent security, identity and health checks, as well as interviews to establish their reasons for wanting to enter Australia.


The Indonesian Consulate in Perth said the boats bringing asylum seekers to Australia were often captained and manned by Indonesians.


According to its Web site, AFP has charged 94 people, including a number of Indonesians, for human trafficking offenses since September 2008.


An Australian Embassy spokeswoman said Australian Ambassador for People Smuggling Peter Woolcott had visited Jakarta last week in an effort to increase cooperation between the two countries in tackling the problems of human trafficking.


The spokeswoman said that during the visit, Woolcott met with the Foreign Affairs Ministry and immigration officials, as well as the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, and the International Organization for Migration. 


JG, Antara


Monday, December 28, 2009

Indonesia stops 17 asylum seekers

Bigpond News, Monday, December 28, 2009, 04:22am


Indonesian police have detained in East Java 17 Afghan and Iraqi asylum seekers bound for Australia.

Indonesian police say they have detained in East Java province 17 Afghan and Iraqi asylum seekers who were trying to reach Australia.


The men - 14 Afghans and three Iraqis - were arrested early Sunday at the coast in Sidoarjo district, district police chief Muhammad Iqbal told Agence France-Presse.


'A wooden boat was waiting there to take them to Australia. We managed to get to the migrants before they could get on to the boat,' he added.


'They had no documents on them and they wanted to go to Australia to seek asylum,' Iqbal said.


'We are still questioning the migrants. We suspect they were brought here by people smugglers,' he added.


Indonesia is a key staging point for smugglers taking Afghans, Sri Lankans and other nationals on a perilous sea journey to Australia.


Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd is under intense political pressure over the issue after a surge in arrivals via Indonesia this year.


Related Article:


47 Sri Lankan Asylum Seekers Leave Indonesia for Australia, Romania


Sunday, December 27, 2009

President to establish border agency

The Jakarta Post, Sat, 12/26/2009 12:48 PM


JAKARTA: President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono will establish the National Agency on Border Management (BNPP) to better manage the country's border areas with neighboring countries.



Home Ministry spokesman Saut Situmorang told Antara on Friday that the new agency would be established based on a presidential decree to be issued in January.


The new agency, Situmorang said, will coordinate border management issues with all related ministries and agencies including Home Ministry and Foreign Ministry.


The new agency will also coordinate with local administrations in the border areas.


Indonesia shares 3,137-kilometer land borders with three countries, Malaysia, Papua New Guinea and Timor Leste.


Indonesia also shares sea borders with Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam, the Philippines, India, Palau, Australia, Papua New Guinea and Timor Leste. - JP



Saturday, November 21, 2009

Indonesia Confiscates Explosives at Sea


Indonesian special forces soldiers demonstrate anti-terror skills last month in Denpasar, Bali. Seventeen crewmen from a seized boat carrying explosive materials are being questioned for possible links to terrorism, authorities said. (Photo: Made Nagi, EPA)

Officials say they have confiscated 75 tons of an explosive material being shipped from Malaysia to Indonesia and are investigating possible links to terrorism.


Customs official Nasar Salim says the ammonium nitrate was found on a ship captured in the South China Sea. Ammonium nitrate can also be used as fertilizer, but Salim says 95 percent of the material imported into Indonesia is used in explosive devices.


He says possible links to terrorists are being investigated.


Salim said Friday that 17 crewmen are being questioned while police search for the shipment's owner.


Indonesia has been ravaged by terrorist attacks in recent years that killed more than 250 people. Bombings at two Jakarta hotels in July killed seven people and wounded more than 50.


AP


Tuesday, November 17, 2009

RI stepping up efforts to fight illegal fishing

Antara News, Tuesday, November 17, 2009 18:13 WIB


Jakarta (ANTARA News) - The Maritime Affairs and Fisheries Ministry (DKP) is working closely with the coordinating minister for political, legal and security affairs to fight illegal, unregulated, unreported (IUU) fishing practices in the country, a cabinet minister said.


"I have met with the coordinating minister. He promised to consult the president over the efforts to combat IUU fishing practices," DKP Minister Fadel Muhammad said.


Fadel said that with a close cooperation in cracking down on IUU fishing practices with the coordinating minister, the arrests of poachers in Indonesian waters or in Indonesia`s exclusive economic zones could be made by the navy officers or by the water police.


He hoped that civilian investigators (PPNS) of the DKP would concentrate on supervising marine resources such as fish and coral reefs.


"But it would all depend on the president. We will wait and see its developments later. What I want is that our supervision should be directed on this so that I can focus on handling the welfare of fishermen," he added.


He said that the problem of restricted supervision facilities to crack down on IUU fishing practices would be resolved together with the coordinating minister.


The Ministry of Maritime Affairs and Fisheries (DKP) under its new chief, Fadel Muhammad, has come up with an ambitious plan to raise fish production by over 300 percent and `transform` the country into the world`s biggest fish production center in the coming five years.


"Indonesia should become a center of fish production so that it could control the world`s fish trade," the minister said on Monday.


Sunday, October 25, 2009

Morowali residents still missing in ship incident

The Jakarta Post | Sun, 10/25/2009 8:10 PM


Four residents of Morowali, Central Sulawesi were still missing as of Sunday afternoon after their boat was overturned and sunk in the waters between Samarengga and Koikola islands five days earlier.


Antara state news agency reported that Yusdin, Eko, Rendy and Tombo were still missing.


“We found Wasisa who survived the incident. We are still looking for four people,” Winardi, the head of operations at the Morowali Police, said in Palu on Sunday.


He added that more than 20 people including personnel from the local police office and administration were searching for the missing people.


“We will continue searching until next week and hopefully we will find them,” he said.


Head of the Morowali Resort Police AKBP Deden Garnada said a huge wave had hit a ship carrying residents from Menui Island who were fleeing their villages, fearing a tsunami, after a 5.8-magnitude earthquake jolted their island last Friday and Sunday.


“They panicked at that time and boarded a ship that would carry them to Sulawesi,” Deden said.


He added his office suspected that there were too many people onboard the ship, which was probably a major factor in the incident.


“Fifty people boarded a ship that was meant to only carry 30 people,” he said.


Three residents died in the incident. (ewd)



Wednesday, April 8, 2009

41 illegal ports in Batam make way for illegal entry: Authorities

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Wed, 04/08/2009 7:21 PM


Illegal ports have provided means for illegal immigrants to enter Indonesia, immigration director general Basyir Ahmad Barmawi said on Wednesday, as quoted by tempointeraktif.com.


According to reports there are 41 illegal ports in Batam. These have been used not only by smugglers but also human traffickers, particularly from abroad.


"We will deal with illegal immigrants with the help of various other institutions," Batam administration officer I Wayan Subawa said.


Illegal immigrants come under the authority of the Foreign Ministry. (amr)


Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Tanjung Perak police foil fertilizer smuggling attempt

Surabya, East Java (ANTARA News) - Police at Surabaya`s Tanjung Perak Port on Tuesday foiled an attempt to smuggle 4,000 tons of fertilizer worth Rp25 billion to Vietnam.


A port police spokesman, Adjunct Senior Commissioner Gagas Nugraha, said the MV Hoang Phuang Star with the fertilizer in its hold was nabbed when the ship was still berthed at Tanjung Perak`s Zamrud pier.


"At first, we were suspicious about the ship, and in an investigation we found 1,863 tons of fertilizer without legal documents inside the ship," Nugraha said.


He said in a follow-up investigation , the police found a document of PT Prima Mulya Abadi to export 4,000 tons of fertilizer worth Rp25 billion to Vietnam.


But in reality, the owner of the fertilizer was not PT Prima Mulya Abadi but PT Multimas Chemindo which obtained the fertilizer from PT Sentana Adidaya Pratama which had imported the commodity from Canada.


The police afterward named Suanto, director of PT Multimas Chmindo; Jhoni Eko Saputro, director of PT Prima Mulyo Abadai; and Benny Juansyah, director of PT Sentana Adidaya, as suspects.


Besides holding the suspects, the police also nabbed the Vietnamese-flagged ship and seized 4,000 tons of KCL fertilizer along with several documents.


Friday, March 27, 2009

Thai Police Misreport Finding U.K. Tourist’s Remains in Sea

Bloomberg, Suttinee Yuvejwattana and Daniel Ten Kate


March 27 (Bloomberg) -- Thai police said they received a false report that the body of a U.K. tourist murdered with a hammer three days ago was found in the Andaman Sea near an island where he and his wife had stopped during a boating trip.


“We haven’t found the body yet,” Virat Onsong, a district police chief in Satun province, which borders Malaysia about 970 kilometers (603 miles) south of Bangkok, said by telephone today. Hundreds of police, navy and fishing boats are still searching for the remains of Malcolm Robertson, he said.


Earlier today Police Colonel Woradee Karawanan said the remains of Richardson, 64, were found near Koh Dong, an island in Satun province, where the couple had stopped on a trip through Southeast Asia. The report turned out to be incorrect, he said later.


The murder, which occurred as Robertson’s wife Linda was tied up, has attracted attention from the U.K. press. Linda Robertson survived the attack by the three Myanmar workers, who were caught by police and confessed shortly after they fled the couple’s boat in a dinghy with computers and mobile phones.


The three attackers, who were in search of food at the time, were charged with burglary today, Virat said. They can’t be charged with murder unless a body is found, he added.


“It was such a bizarre situation because it was like the three boys were having a picnic,” Linda Robertson told the British Broadcasting Corp. in a video posted on its Web site.


The three suspects in the case were “water jumpers” who quit their jobs on a fishing boat by jumping into the sea and fleeing to the island, Woradee said. They were in search of food when they approached the couple’s yacht, he added.


“They are not pirates, they were starving,” Woradee said.


To contact the reporters on this story: Suttinee Yuvejwattana in Bangkok at suttinee1@bloomberg.net, Daniel Ten Kate in Bangkok at dtenkate@bloomberg.net


Related Article:


Bloodshed on Mr Bean: lifetime trip turned to terror



Thursday, March 26, 2009

30 detained after boat chase

The Star/Asia News Network, Thu, Mar 26, 2009


KOTA TINGGI, MALAYSIA: Some 30 illegals, including five women and two little girls, from Indonesia have been detained by marine police after a 30-minute boat chase off the waters of Pulau Lima in Kota Tinggi.


Marine police officers tracked down the boat carrying the Indonesians at 11.30pm on Tuesday after receiving a tip-off from the public.


Southern Region marine police chief Asst Comm Mohd Khamsani Abd Rahman said the boat sped off after police ordered it to stop for inspection..


Police managed to corner the boat after 30 minutes, he said. ACP Mohd Khamsani said the boat's 28-year-old captain was also detained, adding:


"The illegals, aged between one and 48, are being investigated under Section 6(3)(c) of the Immigration Act for not possessing valid travel documents and Section 5(2) of the same Act for entering the country illegally.


"We have also seized the boat. We appreciated the information by the public that led to the arrests," he said.


Anyone with information have been urged to contact the police hotline at 07-221 2999 or the nearest police station.


Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Illegal fishing

The Jakarta Post , Jakarta | Wed, 03/18/2009 4:27 PM



Illegal fishing: The South Sulawesi water police gathered on Wednesday various illegal fishing tools confiscated from 15 fishermen operating within the Pangkajene and South Sulawesi waters. The Police has also confiscated two sail boats, 344 detonators and ammonium nitrate. The fishermen are currently being questioned at the South Sulawesi police office. (JP/Andi Hajramurni)