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Indonesia Defence Forum

I was wondering what is the name of those triangular steel bar in english...now i know "lifting eyes". Tq.

Yes i was thinking the same thing. That is why i said by looking at the placemet of the lifting eyes there are two different Medium Tank models. The placement of the front lifting eyes should be like the Medium Tank in the background. The more accurate one is the model in the background. Btw i'm guessing that these models are made by 3D Printing right?

8x8 APC.

yep, either it's 3D print or scratch-build but seeing the detailing level and that 8x8 APC work in progress state looks like it is a 3D printed model, well scratch-build doesn't always ends up looks good anyways (cue PT. PAL's display model :p).
 
Photo credit : TSM

On the background, anyone know which subs is it?
 

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150 Entrepreneurs from Indonesia, Slovakia discuss cooperation
Kamis, 18 Oktober 2018 19:32 WIB - 0 Views

Reporter: Azis Kurmala

2012080508.jpg

Director General of American and European Affairs of Foreign Ministry of the Republic of Indonesia, Muhammad Anshor. (ANTARA photo)

Jakarta (ANTARA News) - A total of 150 entrepreneurs from Indonesia and Slovakia have communicated to discuss mutually beneficial cooperation in the leading sectors of the food industry, biotechnology, metals and engineering, wood products, energy, and defense of both countries.

In cooperation with the Indonesian Chamber of Commerce and Industry (Kadin), Slovakian Investment and Trade Development Agency (SARIO), and Slovakian Embassy, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs organized the Indonesia-Slovakia Business Forum, in Jakarta (Oct 12) based on a statement from Directorate of Europe II of the Foreign Affairs Ministry received here on Thursday.

The Business Forum was officially opened by Director General of American and European Affairs, Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Indonesia, Muhammad Anshor, along with Director General of Economic Cooperation, Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Slovakia, Dusan Matulay.

Both directors general underlined that bilateral economic cooperation will increase if entrepreneurs of both countries interacted more and expanded their networks.

Employers can likewise work together to produce certain goods and services according to the advantages they have for further marketing in third countries. The main event of the Business Forum was the activity of business matching conducted after the presentation by BKPM, Indonesian Food and Beverage Association (GAPMMI), and SARIO.

Some 23 Slovak companies participating in the Business Forum included Asseco, As Trade Krupina, Db Biotech, Decent Group, Deltaway, Eden, Eurex Slovakia, Jt Partner, Koliba Trade, Mlyn Pohronsk? Ruskov, Pps Detva, Tomax Bratislava, Sonne Crystal, Proma Sk, M&M Tatry S.R.O., Bmm Plus, Tatrapenta, Zbop, T-Industry, ?trbsk? Pleso, Psg Plus S.R.O., Msm Group, and Ng Aviation.

From the Indonesian side, some 50 entrepreneurs and representatives from relevant ministries and institutions, including the Ministry of Trade, Ministry of Industry, Ministry of Transportation, Ministry of Defense, Ministry of Communication and Information, Ministry of Agriculture, and the BKPM took part in the Business Forum.

Indonesian-Slovakia bilateral relations have been ongoing since 1993 after the peaceful separation of Czech and Slovakia from the Czechoslovakian Federation.

At this time, cooperation between the two countries had developed in various sectors including energy, defense, education, agriculture, trade and investment, as well as tourism.

In the trade sector, both nations` total trade value reached US$60-70 million per year. Meanwhile, in the investment sector, Slovak investors invested $100-300 thousand in Indonesia, especially in the tourism sector.

For socio-cultural cooperation, there were several sectors developing: tourism and educational cooperation.

For the tourism sector, an annual increase was recorded in the number of tourists from Slovakia to Indonesia. In 2017, some 8,368 Slovakian tourists had visited Indonesia.

This figure was much higher than 6,629 visitors recorded in 2016 and 5,331 travelers in 2015.

Every year, Indonesia offers Darmasiswa Scholarships and Indonesian Art and Culture Scholarships to Slovaks, and 234 Indonesian alumni in Slovakia have been recorded from both programs.

Reporting by Azis Kurmala
Editing by Fardah, Bustanuddin


Editor: Bustanuddin

COPYRIGHT © ANTARA 2018

Chezch bring their trainer Aircraft maker
 
Not sure where to post this, but since its about Disaster management....


_______________________
Why Indonesia is right to limit NGOs post-disaster
October 18, 2018
6 min read

The devastating earthquake and tsunami in Sulawesi, Indonesia, have shocked people around the world. Images of the earth liquefying, the terrifying screams as people watch a tsunami engulf the shore, and the wreckage left behind have led to a global outpouring of support and responses from aid agencies and NGOs.

Last week, Indonesia’s disaster coordination agency (Badan Nasional Penanggulangan Bencana, or BNPB) issued guidelines on the involvement of foreign aid workers, stating that they needed to conduct all activities through local partners, and be registered with government agencies.

The announcement has surprised the humanitarian sector at large, and some have called it confusing. World Vision Australia’s Tim Costello said it was “very strange”. Amnesty International Indonesia have labelled it “a sad example of bureaucracy trumping humanity”.

The official announcement is helpfully written in English in an infographic on Twitter.


Regulations for International NGOs qim to provide assistance in Central Sulawesi Province.


The same Twitter account has posted images of shelter tents with Chinese characters on them, retweeted World Food Program photos of Australian aid shipments, celebrated Canadian aid supplies arriving, and been thankful for JICA supplies. The World Bank and UN have visited, with the former offering a US $1 bn package. It’s not a response that is turning its back on international relief, contrary to some commentators.

Following criticism, the policy on foreign aid workers and volunteers was further clarified:

“Letting foreigners enter disaster-hit areas without limitations and clear management would just give the country’s task force more work,” said BNPB spokesperson Sutopo Purwo Nugroho.

Sutopo told reporters 22 nationals had been asked to leave due to not having the necessary expertise, and having failed to register with the Ministry for Foreign Affairs or their respective embassies.

“There’s no harm in [volunteers] coming, as long as they meet our requirements. What’s so hard about reporting?”

To those who are trying to frame this as foolhardy, or a political decision due to upcoming elections, issues of sovereignty, or a move to protect Indonesia’s apparently fragile sense of nationalism, there is a real need to take a step back.

Indonesia is quite experienced in dealing with natural disasters. It is a country where a substantial amount of aid has been invested in building local capacity to do so. And after the Boxing Day tsunami hit Aceh in 2004, it is also quite experienced in dealing with the hodge-podge of do-gooders that rock up when big disasters unfold.

The Australian Council for International Development’s (ACFID’s) response has been balanced, noting the pressures of a huge influx of international actors on government and the need to work with local agencies rather than to take over. It also noted that its members have not reported problems from the rules in their responses. (However some NGOs from abroad have told media they couldn’t get access.)

It seems that Indonesia’s intention was not to kick out experienced international NGOs, many of which have substantive national offices in Indonesia with predominantly national staff (and a quick Google shows they are currently very active), nor to boot out relevant technical experts. It is to try to exercise some kind of control over the cavalcade of randoms who might not be all that helpful, may have niche interests and who are not coordinating with government. In other words, those acting from self-interest.

BNPB has a solid reason for wanting to exercise some degree of control, based on past experience. For those who have forgotten some of what went on during the aftermath of the 2004 tsunami, here’s a quick reminder.

  • A boat building program for local fisherman built boats that were unsuitable for use at sea (pdf, p. 23) This was part of a larger explosion of boat building programs that led to a risk of overfishing (pdf).
  • Child trafficking of ‘orphans’ (here and here).
  • Too many new houses were built in some areas, or not built appropriately for local needs [pdf], leading to ‘ghost villages’ still uninhabited ten years after the tsunami.
  • An influx of unwanted items, like expired or inappropriate drugs and too manyprosthetic limbs.
  • The capacity of local NGOs was decimated by the influx of international actors, who poached a lot of their staff.
  • High inflation.
(Robin Davies’ powerful pieces on his time in Aceh in the immediate aftermath of the tsunami are also well worth reading for perspective on the challenges in response to a large-scale disaster.)

Life in Aceh has well and truly resumed after mass devastation. In that sense, aid worked. But there was a lot of wastage and questionable behaviour, which is what BNPB seems keen to avoid.

As someone who spent several years living in Indonesia, working mostly in the media, friends and former colleagues have been reporting from the ground in Palu and Donggala (a mix of Australian and Indonesian nationals, which seems relevant to note). The stories and images are heart-wrenching. It’s understandable that people want to help.

But the one thing they have all noted is the incredible generosity of local people. The kindness. The resilience. The problem-solving.

Those may sound like clichés, but they aren’t hard to believe if you’ve spent time in this part of the world. And it makes sense to build on the good that is left.

Of course there is a need for an urgent response in Palu and Donggala, and of course there is immediate suffering to address. The rebuilding task is huge.

No government-coordinated response to a major disaster will ever be perfect. In six months or a year there will be many lessons learned on what could have been done better. There will always be particularly Indonesian quirks about an Indonesian disaster response (like the fact that West Sumatra always sends heaps of beef rendang…). The response is already being criticised.

But harnessing local capacity makes sense. People in the sector go on about it all the time – including at the World Humanitarian Summit in 2016, where “localisation”, as it is called, was adopted as one of the major objectives in humanitarian responses world-wide.

And for the rest of us, without any useful skills in disaster recovery to offer the good people of Palu and Donggala, we should just give money.
______________________________________________

For all those out there sick and tired of reading that Indonesia's gov is denying aid because of incompetence, stupidity, arrogance, and politics.

No, granted we aren't perfect, but Indonesia is capable, and some foreign NGOs are just a pain in the ***.

Btw: Yet another example of Amnesty International kicking up a fuss in order to justify getting donations.
 
Not sure where to post this, but since its about Disaster management....


_______________________
Why Indonesia is right to limit NGOs post-disaster
October 18, 2018
6 min read

The devastating earthquake and tsunami in Sulawesi, Indonesia, have shocked people around the world. Images of the earth liquefying, the terrifying screams as people watch a tsunami engulf the shore, and the wreckage left behind have led to a global outpouring of support and responses from aid agencies and NGOs.

Last week, Indonesia’s disaster coordination agency (Badan Nasional Penanggulangan Bencana, or BNPB) issued guidelines on the involvement of foreign aid workers, stating that they needed to conduct all activities through local partners, and be registered with government agencies.

The announcement has surprised the humanitarian sector at large, and some have called it confusing. World Vision Australia’s Tim Costello said it was “very strange”. Amnesty International Indonesia have labelled it “a sad example of bureaucracy trumping humanity”.

The official announcement is helpfully written in English in an infographic on Twitter.


Regulations for International NGOs qim to provide assistance in Central Sulawesi Province.


The same Twitter account has posted images of shelter tents with Chinese characters on them, retweeted World Food Program photos of Australian aid shipments, celebrated Canadian aid supplies arriving, and been thankful for JICA supplies. The World Bank and UN have visited, with the former offering a US $1 bn package. It’s not a response that is turning its back on international relief, contrary to some commentators.

Following criticism, the policy on foreign aid workers and volunteers was further clarified:

“Letting foreigners enter disaster-hit areas without limitations and clear management would just give the country’s task force more work,” said BNPB spokesperson Sutopo Purwo Nugroho.

Sutopo told reporters 22 nationals had been asked to leave due to not having the necessary expertise, and having failed to register with the Ministry for Foreign Affairs or their respective embassies.

“There’s no harm in [volunteers] coming, as long as they meet our requirements. What’s so hard about reporting?”

To those who are trying to frame this as foolhardy, or a political decision due to upcoming elections, issues of sovereignty, or a move to protect Indonesia’s apparently fragile sense of nationalism, there is a real need to take a step back.

Indonesia is quite experienced in dealing with natural disasters. It is a country where a substantial amount of aid has been invested in building local capacity to do so. And after the Boxing Day tsunami hit Aceh in 2004, it is also quite experienced in dealing with the hodge-podge of do-gooders that rock up when big disasters unfold.

The Australian Council for International Development’s (ACFID’s) response has been balanced, noting the pressures of a huge influx of international actors on government and the need to work with local agencies rather than to take over. It also noted that its members have not reported problems from the rules in their responses. (However some NGOs from abroad have told media they couldn’t get access.)

It seems that Indonesia’s intention was not to kick out experienced international NGOs, many of which have substantive national offices in Indonesia with predominantly national staff (and a quick Google shows they are currently very active), nor to boot out relevant technical experts. It is to try to exercise some kind of control over the cavalcade of randoms who might not be all that helpful, may have niche interests and who are not coordinating with government. In other words, those acting from self-interest.

BNPB has a solid reason for wanting to exercise some degree of control, based on past experience. For those who have forgotten some of what went on during the aftermath of the 2004 tsunami, here’s a quick reminder.

  • A boat building program for local fisherman built boats that were unsuitable for use at sea (pdf, p. 23) This was part of a larger explosion of boat building programs that led to a risk of overfishing (pdf).
  • Child trafficking of ‘orphans’ (here and here).
  • Too many new houses were built in some areas, or not built appropriately for local needs [pdf], leading to ‘ghost villages’ still uninhabited ten years after the tsunami.
  • An influx of unwanted items, like expired or inappropriate drugs and too manyprosthetic limbs.
  • The capacity of local NGOs was decimated by the influx of international actors, who poached a lot of their staff.
  • High inflation.
(Robin Davies’ powerful pieces on his time in Aceh in the immediate aftermath of the tsunami are also well worth reading for perspective on the challenges in response to a large-scale disaster.)

Life in Aceh has well and truly resumed after mass devastation. In that sense, aid worked. But there was a lot of wastage and questionable behaviour, which is what BNPB seems keen to avoid.

As someone who spent several years living in Indonesia, working mostly in the media, friends and former colleagues have been reporting from the ground in Palu and Donggala (a mix of Australian and Indonesian nationals, which seems relevant to note). The stories and images are heart-wrenching. It’s understandable that people want to help.

But the one thing they have all noted is the incredible generosity of local people. The kindness. The resilience. The problem-solving.

Those may sound like clichés, but they aren’t hard to believe if you’ve spent time in this part of the world. And it makes sense to build on the good that is left.

Of course there is a need for an urgent response in Palu and Donggala, and of course there is immediate suffering to address. The rebuilding task is huge.

No government-coordinated response to a major disaster will ever be perfect. In six months or a year there will be many lessons learned on what could have been done better. There will always be particularly Indonesian quirks about an Indonesian disaster response (like the fact that West Sumatra always sends heaps of beef rendang…). The response is already being criticised.

But harnessing local capacity makes sense. People in the sector go on about it all the time – including at the World Humanitarian Summit in 2016, where “localisation”, as it is called, was adopted as one of the major objectives in humanitarian responses world-wide.

And for the rest of us, without any useful skills in disaster recovery to offer the good people of Palu and Donggala, we should just give money.
______________________________________________

For all those out there sick and tired of reading that Indonesia's gov is denying aid because of incompetence, stupidity, arrogance, and politics.

No, granted we aren't perfect, but Indonesia is capable, and some foreign NGOs are just a pain in the ***.

Btw: Yet another example of Amnesty International kicking up a fuss in order to justify getting donations.
yeah harvesting data for the next proposal and program for international donor, selling social program to international corporate, we should more smart with this kind of game, total 40% are not for benefeceries is for their own program management LOL
 
Wiranto Panggil Kemendag dan PTDI Bahas Pembelian Sukhoi

2417f914-ce89-47e5-8cf5-24d2c4ee9c8a_169.jpeg

Foto: sukhoi.ord

Jakarta - Menteri Koordinator Bidang Politik Hukum dan Keamanan (Polhukam) Wiranto memanggil sejumlah pejabat untuk rapat pagi ini. Hadir dalam kegiatan ini di antaranya Direktur Jenderal Perdagangan Luar Negeri Kementerian Perdagangan (Kemendag) Oke Nurwan dan Direktur Utama PT Dirgantara Indonesia (PTDI) Elfien Goentoro.

Rapat dimulai pada pukul 10.00 WIB. Awak media sempat memasuki ruang rapat untuk mendengar agenda rapat dari Wiranto.

Wiranto mengatakan, rapat kali membahas proyek kerjasama pembuatan pesawat tempur Korea Fighter eXperiment dan Indonesia Fighter eXperiment (KFX dan IFX). Lalu, dia mengatakan, rapat ini juga membahas pembelian pesawat Sukhoi SU-35 dari Rusia.


"Kita membahas pembelian pesawat Sukhoi S-35," ujarnya membuka rapat, Jumat (19/10/2018).

Usai membuka rapat tersebut, awak media diminta untuk meninggalkan ruangan rapat.

Sebagai informasi, kerja sama KFX dan IFX rencananya dimulai tahun 2022. IFX akan diproduksi PTDI dan purwarupanya diharapkan uji coba pada 2020.

Untuk pembelian Sukhoi S-35, Indonesia rencananya akan membeli pesawat itu sebanyak 11 pesawat. Dua pesawat di antaranya akan tiba pada tahun depan.

"Alutsista masih menggunakan yang dulu belum ada penambahan kecuali Sukhoi. Sukhoi akan tiba di Indonesia pada 2019 nanti (sebanyak) 2 unit," kata Kepala Pusat Penerangan dan Komunikasi Kementerian Pertahanan Brigadir Jenderal (TNI) Totok Sugiarto di Restoran D'Cost, Jalan Abdul Muis, Jakarta Pusat (10/9/2018). (zlf/zlf)

https://finance.detik.com/industri/...ahas-pembelian-sukhoi?tag_from=wp_nhl_judul_6

Government is having discussion with Trade Ministry and PTDI regarding KFX/IFX and Sukhoi 35.
 
Jumat 19 Oktober 2018, 12:36 WIB

Pemerintah Negosiasi Ulang Pembelian Jet Tempur KFX/IFX dengan Korsel
Yulida Medistiara - detikNews

fb8f96fe-14d5-485b-9c9c-c5c04ed3e530_169.jpeg
Foto: Grandyos Zafna
lg.php

Jakarta - Menko Polhukam Wiranto mengatakan Indonesia akan meminta negosiasi ulang terkait pengembangan pesawat tempur Korean Fighter Xperiment/Indonesia Fighter Xperiment (KFX/IFX) dengan Pemerintah Korea Selatan. Negosiasi ulang itu dengan pertimbangan kondisi ekonomi Indonesia saat ini.

"Ini berlanjut terus program yang multiyears, tapi dengan kondisi ekonomi nasional, maka presiden memutuskan untuk bukan membatalkan tapi renegotiate atau negosiasi ulang bagaimana posisi Indonesia bisa lebih ringan untuk masalah-masalah yang menyangkut dengan pembiayaan," kataWiranto, usai rapat koordinasi, di kantornya, Jl Medan Merdeka Barat, Jumat (19/10/2018).

Wiranto mengatakan pemerintah akan membentuk tim untuk membahas poin-poin negosiasi ulang pengembangan pesawat tersebut. Tim itu nantinya akan diketuai Wiranto sendiri.

"Tentunya ini akan berdampak kepada bagaimana agreement yang lalu yang kita sudah bicarakan. Hari ini kita merapatkan karena Presiden memperintahkan untuk Polhukam mengetuai untuk tim renegosiasi ini kepada pihak Korea Selatan," kata Wiranto.

Wiranto berharap dalam waktu setahun, pembahasan negosiasi ulang ini akan diselesaikan. Adapun beberapa poin yang akan dinegosiasikan adalah pembiayaan, ongkos produksi, alih teknologi dan Hak Kekayaan Intelektual.

"Banyak hal kita bicarakan masalah kemampuan pembiayaan dari Indonesia, masalah kemungkinan prosentase-prosentase development cost sharingnya berapa, lalu cost produksinya berapa lalu alih teknologinya kepasa Indonesia bagaimana, keuntungan HKI Hak Intelektual kita bagaimana, lalu pemasarannya bagaimana. Ini banyak sekali nggak bisa dalam satu jam kita selesaikan," ujarnya.

Wiranto menjelaskan proyek kerja sama pembuatan pesawat tempur KFX/IFX ini dimulai dari riset hingga produksi. Ia menjelaskan program ini merupakan kerjasama jangka panjang.

"Beberapa waktu lalu memang kita kan ada program, itu program jangka panjang dengan suatu saat dimulai kerjasama researchnya dulu, membuat prototipenya dulu, baru produksinya," pungkasnya.
(yld/mae)

Indonesia asks for KFX / IFX cooperation to be re-negotiated on :
1. Development cost sharing percentage
2. Production cost
3. Transfer of Technology
4. Copy right share benefit
5. Marketing plan and share
 
I hope KFX/IFX still continue, Indonesia should think like China where even during poor condition they keep funding their strategic defense project like jet fighter, missile, submarine, etc. It is the cost we need to take to be a great nation.

I hope we also raise oil price as soon as possible to boost government spending so that we can fund our research program. Enough thinking about power too much.
 


Ryamizard attends ASEAN Defense Ministers Meeting in Singapore
Jumat, 19 Oktober 2018 17:29 WIB - 0 Views

Reporter: antara

IMG-20181019-WA0022.jpg

Indonesian Defense Minister Ryamizard Ryacudu (three from left) took a picture together with ASEAN Defense Ministers in the 12th ASEAN Defense Ministers Meeting (ADMM), at Shangri-la Hotel, Singapore, Friday (10/19/2018). (Ministry of Defense's Public Communication Center)

Singapore (ANTARA News) - Indonesian Defense Minister Ryamizard Ryacudu attended ASEAN Defense Ministers Meeting (ADMM) and ADMM Plus 2018 at Shangri-la Hotel in Singapore on Friday.

The two-day meeting which will end on Saturday brings together 10 ADMN member states and eight ADMN Plus member states.

The 10 ADMN member states are Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam, while the eight ADMN Plus member states are Australia, China, the United States, Japan, India, New Zealand, Russia and Korea.

The meeting will discuss developments in bilateral and multilateral relations among the countries, regional issues, counter-terrorism, disaster mitigation, and the South China Sea, among others.

ADMN is a discourse and cooperation partner in the defense and security field. Since it was set up in 2006, it has initiated defense and security cooperation in Southeast Asia.

ADMN aims to create Confidence Building Measures (CBM) among ASEAN member states. After it was established, the new term and concept of defense cooperation was introduced in ASEAN, namely defense diplomacy.

The ADMN inaugural meeting was held in Kuala Lumpur on May 9, 2006. The second ADMN was held in Singapore on November 14, 2006; the third ADMN in Pattaya on February 26-27, 2009; and the fourth ADMN in Hanoi on May 11, 2010.

ADMM also has organized retreats to exchange views informally, including those held in Bali on March 24, 2007, in Bangkok on November 3, 2009 and in Hanoi on October 11, 2010.

The Hanoi meeting was prioritized in the first meeting as ADMN-Plus which spoke of the involvement of external powers (non-ASEAN member states).

ADMN is a manifestation of the newest breakthrough in ASEAN defense establishment which emerged in the 10th ASEAN Summit held in Vientiane on November 29, 2004.

Reporting by Syaiful Hakim
Editing by Suharto, Fardah Assegaf
Editor: Heru Purwanto

COPYRIGHT © ANTARA 2018
 
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