- published: 18 Sep 2007
- views: 307672
- author: journeymanpictures
6:31
Irian Jaya: The Biak Massacre - Indonesia
November 1998 We show evidence of the Indonesian military's murder of civilians in July 19...
published: 18 Sep 2007
author: journeymanpictures
Irian Jaya: The Biak Massacre - Indonesia
November 1998 We show evidence of the Indonesian military's murder of civilians in July 1998, who dared to support the Free West Papua movement. Since Indonesia took control of Irian Jaya in the mid-1960s, people in Biak have dreamt of independence. Many support the OPM -- the rag-tag 'Free West Papua' guerrillas. But with their homemade weapons and rusting rifles, they have posed a limited threat to the Indonesian military. Yet in July, emboldened by the fall of Suharto, people in Biak raised the OPM's flag -- with tragic consequences. Displaying his wounds to the camera this man recalls the nightmare: "We heard the forces coming up...in front of us there were six bodies, all with bullet wounds. There was blood everywhere." Secret videotape shows those walls peppered with bullets with personal belongings scattered everywhere. Business consultant, Rebecca Casey remembers the gunfire. But the worst atrocity may have occurred at sea. The OPM claim that over 100 people were herded onto Indonesian ships. There are stories of rape, torture and murder with the bodies being thrown into the sea. Indonesian officials deny it occurred claiming bodies that washed ashore were victims of the massive tidal wave that struck 11 days later. But from the people of Biak there are plenty of witnesses who attest to a brutal massacre. Produced by ABC Australia Distributed by Journeyman Pictures
- published: 18 Sep 2007
- views: 307672
- author: journeymanpictures
11:15
Riz Khan - Indonesia votes - 07 July 09 - Part 1
On Wednesday, July 8, the third most populous democracy in the world after India and the U...
published: 08 Jul 2009
author: AlJazeeraEnglish
Riz Khan - Indonesia votes - 07 July 09 - Part 1
On Wednesday, July 8, the third most populous democracy in the world after India and the US goes to the polls. It is only the second time Indonesians will vote directly for a president since its transition to democracy after the fall of Suharto. Can the current president convince Indonesians that he should be the one to continue the economic progress and reforms he started or will nationalistic fervor push one of the other two candidates to the front?
- published: 08 Jul 2009
- views: 771
- author: AlJazeeraEnglish
10:09
Suharto Fights Back - 46 minute documentary - trailer
For more information, visit: www.journeyman.tv A strong film on the anti-Suharto protests ...
published: 16 Jul 2008
author: journeymanpictures
Suharto Fights Back - 46 minute documentary - trailer
For more information, visit: www.journeyman.tv A strong film on the anti-Suharto protests and the army's support for him in the days before he stepped down. After devastating and deadly riots in Indonesia the question on everybody's lips is whether the people can convince the army to join them. We have an exclusive interview with one of the country's most powerful military men, General Prabowo, who has been linked with the Muslim 'Green' faction which wants to seize power for itself. Amien Rais, leader of the 28 million strong opposition Muhammadiyah party, talks of the strength of his supporters to force Suharto to clean up his act. The head of the IMF in Jakarta tells of his frustrations in dealing with Suharto. The IMF demanded that some of the nepotism and cronyism stop, but Suharto has clearly been consolidating his family's position. His daughter Titiek rebuts questions with a regal air. Her multi-billion plan to build the world's longest bridge was blocked by the IMF. In a multi-story car park the military prepare for another food riot. Mothers are arrested as they protest about the soaring cost of baby milk. They hand the soldiers flowers as a symbol of 'People's Power', the Philippines movement where the army sided with the people to topple the President. Produced by ABC Australia Distributed by Journeyman Pictures April 1998
- published: 16 Jul 2008
- views: 24287
- author: journeymanpictures
11:14
Riz Khan - Indonesia votes - 07 July 09 - Part 2
On Wednesday, July 8, the third most populous democracy in the world after India and the U...
published: 08 Jul 2009
author: AlJazeeraEnglish
Riz Khan - Indonesia votes - 07 July 09 - Part 2
On Wednesday, July 8, the third most populous democracy in the world after India and the US goes to the polls. It is only the second time Indonesians will vote directly for a president since its transition to democracy after the fall of Suharto. Can the current president convince Indonesians that he should be the one to continue the economic progress and reforms he started or will nationalistic fervor push one of the other two candidates to the front?
- published: 08 Jul 2009
- views: 362
- author: AlJazeeraEnglish
0:58
The Tech Awards 2003 Laureate, Radio News Agency 68H
thetechawards.thetech.org Country: Indonesia Region of Impact: Southeast Asia www.thejakar...
published: 18 Aug 2011
author: TheTechMuseum
The Tech Awards 2003 Laureate, Radio News Agency 68H
thetechawards.thetech.org Country: Indonesia Region of Impact: Southeast Asia www.thejakartapost.com Project Description: Since the fall of Suharto in Indonesia in 1998, Radio News Agency 68H has employed satellite connections to bring news, independent of government, to the thousands of island communities in Indonesia. This private news agency works to provide not just access to information, but also the chance to exchange information. For the people in Indonesia, this means not just being able to hear news, but also being able to get information about and engage in discussions about important issues such as health, environment, human rights, and law. Problem Addressed: The population of Indonesia is scattered over thousands of islands. This geography, along with a restrictive authoritarian government, has led to the development of isolated, uninformed communities. Lacking sufficient communications infrastructure, the country needed a cheap and effective way to reach large numbers of people in urban and remote rural areas. Technology Solution: Radio News Agency 68H has bridged the gap between satellite and terrestrial technology, allowing this free and open new source to be heard on even the most inexpensive of radios. 250 of the 1000 radio stations in Indonesia now receive the news in digital form and rebroadcast it to ordinary radio receivers among the population. They have also has created a national call-in program for the first time in the country's history. About ...
- published: 18 Aug 2011
- views: 16
- author: TheTechMuseum
8:40
Democracy Now! - 7/8/09 - Indonesian President Implicated in 2002 Murder Coverup (part 1 of 3)
Declassified Docs Implicate Indonesian President Yudhoyono in Coverup of 2002 Murders of A...
published: 08 Jul 2009
author: mediagrrl9
Democracy Now! - 7/8/09 - Indonesian President Implicated in 2002 Murder Coverup (part 1 of 3)
Declassified Docs Implicate Indonesian President Yudhoyono in Coverup of 2002 Murders of American Teachers in West Papua In Indonesia, exit polls show incumbent president Yudhoyono, has a clear lead in the countrys second direct presidential election since the fall of the Suharto dictatorship over a decade ago. Newly declassified documents implicate Yudhoyono in the cover-up of the Indonesian militarys role in the 2002 murders of two Americans and an Indonesian in West Papua. We speak a Papuan human rights activist who worked with the Indonesian police and FBI to investigate the murders. She now lives in exile in Australia and in a Democracy Now! exclusive is speaking out on the investigations for the first time. We also speak with cultural anthropologist, Eben Kirksey, and with John Miller of the East Timor and Indonesia Action Network.
- published: 08 Jul 2009
- views: 625
- author: mediagrrl9
1:25
Quality of life worsens in Indonesia - 28 May 2008
Al Jazeera's Step Vaessen finds out what people in Java feel about life 10 years after Suh...
published: 28 May 2008
author: AlJazeeraEnglish
Quality of life worsens in Indonesia - 28 May 2008
Al Jazeera's Step Vaessen finds out what people in Java feel about life 10 years after Suharto's fall.
- published: 28 May 2008
- views: 11504
- author: AlJazeeraEnglish
11:15
Riz Khan - Indonesia votes - 07 July 09 - Part 1 - Hot Latest News
On Wednesday, July 8, the third most populous democracy in the world after India and the U...
published: 18 Jul 2012
author: HotLatestNews
Riz Khan - Indonesia votes - 07 July 09 - Part 1 - Hot Latest News
On Wednesday, July 8, the third most populous democracy in the world after India and the US goes to the polls. It is only the second time Indonesians will vote directly for a president since its transition to democracy after the fall of Suharto. Can the current president convince Indonesians that he should be the one to continue the economic progress and reforms he started or will nationalistic fervor push one of the other two candidates to the front? - Hot Latest News - Watch more on fastlatestnews.com
- published: 18 Jul 2012
- views: 4
- author: HotLatestNews
11:15
Riz Khan - Indonesia votes - 07 July 09 - Part 2 - Hot Latest News
On Wednesday, July 8, the third most populous democracy in the world after India and the U...
published: 18 Jul 2012
author: HotLatestNews
Riz Khan - Indonesia votes - 07 July 09 - Part 2 - Hot Latest News
On Wednesday, July 8, the third most populous democracy in the world after India and the US goes to the polls. It is only the second time Indonesians will vote directly for a president since its transition to democracy after the fall of Suharto. Can the current president convince Indonesians that he should be the one to continue the economic progress and reforms he started or will nationalistic fervor push one of the other two candidates to the front? - Hot Latest News - Watch more on fastlatestnews.com
- published: 18 Jul 2012
- views: 7
- author: HotLatestNews
8:22
Democracy Now! - 7/8/09 - Indonesian President Implicated in 2002 Murder Coverup (part 2 of 3)
Declassified Docs Implicate Indonesian President Yudhoyono in Coverup of 2002 Murders of A...
published: 08 Jul 2009
author: mediagrrl9
Democracy Now! - 7/8/09 - Indonesian President Implicated in 2002 Murder Coverup (part 2 of 3)
Declassified Docs Implicate Indonesian President Yudhoyono in Coverup of 2002 Murders of American Teachers in West Papua In Indonesia, exit polls show incumbent president Yudhoyono, has a clear lead in the countrys second direct presidential election since the fall of the Suharto dictatorship over a decade ago. Newly declassified documents implicate Yudhoyono in the cover-up of the Indonesian militarys role in the 2002 murders of two Americans and an Indonesian in West Papua. We speak a Papuan human rights activist who worked with the Indonesian police and FBI to investigate the murders. She now lives in exile in Australia and in a Democracy Now! exclusive is speaking out on the investigations for the first time. We also speak with cultural anthropologist, Eben Kirksey, and with John Miller of the East Timor and Indonesia Action Network.
- published: 08 Jul 2009
- views: 272
- author: mediagrrl9
6:26
Right to development - Media - freedom and responsibility
visit us on-line: hetv.org Since the fall of the Suharto government in Indonesia, there ha...
published: 09 Nov 2007
author: healthtubeorg
Right to development - Media - freedom and responsibility
visit us on-line: hetv.org Since the fall of the Suharto government in Indonesia, there has been a virtual explosion in the number of new publications and media outlets. But despite greater legal freedoms, not everything is well with the media. Along with continued threats to their operations from political groups unhappy with criticism, Indonesian journalists are also under pressure because of poor salaries, cutthroat competition for audiences, and the increasing commercialization of the information business. (Indonesia) Civil and Political Rights - UNESCAP's A Matter of Rights - A video series exploring the Right to Development.
- published: 09 Nov 2007
- views: 415
- author: healthtubeorg
1:55
Chinese Buddhists and National Armed Forces Work Together in
Indonesian-Chinese Buddhists are holding social events to help the poor. They are joined b...
published: 02 Jul 2009
author: NTDTV
Chinese Buddhists and National Armed Forces Work Together in
Indonesian-Chinese Buddhists are holding social events to help the poor. They are joined by the Indonesian National Armed Forces. Hundreds of Jakartas poor and needy line up in front of the Ekayana Buddhist Center to receive aid. No less than 500 packets have been prepared for them by the Chinese Buddhist community in Jakarta. Five doctors are also on hand to give free medical check-ups and medicine. Members of the Indonesian National Armed Forces are also on the scene to help distribute the packets. [Colonel Nugroho Budi, Indonesian National Armed Forces]: We are helping poor people. We know that nowadays poor people are facing hard conditions as a result of the global economic crisis. Cooperation in an activity like this one between the Indonesian National Armed Forces and a minority community is still a rare sight in Indonesia. During the new era of the Suharto regime from 1966 to 1998, government officials discriminated against ethnic Chinese Buddhists. Such treatment caused mental stress for the Buddhists and an unwillingness to open themselves up to government officials. After the fall of the Suharto era in 1998, Indonesia began to open up to reform. Many new laws are being drafted to erase much of the discrimination against Indonesias minority communities. [Kunardy, Ekayana Buddhist Center]: The Indonesia National Armed Forces and ourselves are working together for the public interest. The special meaning from todays activity is that we can increase mutual ...
- published: 02 Jul 2009
- views: 1135
- author: NTDTV
10:09
A Dictator Bows Out - 42 minute documentary - trailer
For more information, visit: www.journeyman.tv This dramatic film charts, blow by blow, th...
published: 16 Jul 2008
author: journeymanpictures
A Dictator Bows Out - 42 minute documentary - trailer
For more information, visit: www.journeyman.tv This dramatic film charts, blow by blow, the fall of a dictator. On the morning of May 21st, 1998, students crowd around the TV in the parliament they have occupied to hear President Suharto announce his resignation. Amid cheers, cries and prayers, a dictator was gone. On May 12th, six young men were shot dead by the army. A day later, Jakarta - Indonesia, was on fire. A total of 4000 shops and supermarkets were burned down or looted. Over 400 bodies were found. Muslim leader Dr Amien Rais tells nervous parliamentarians Suharto must go. Right outside the students have begun their occupation of the parliament. When Rais emerges, he's greeted like a hero. That night there is a powerful and emotive mass memorial for the students killed at Trisakti. Tense days follow as the world waits for Suharto to strike back. Respected Muslim leader, Abdurachman Wahid pleads with the President. The constitution would protect him, Suharto told him. On May 20th Amien Rais tells his supporters not to demonstrate. The students in the parliament decide to remain inside. Many of the aging Suharto's old cronies urge him to step down. But not until 17 ministers offer their resignation does he get the message. 'He was a crook, a hypocrite' says Amien Rais. Produced by ABC Australia Distributed by Journeyman Pictures May 1998
- published: 16 Jul 2008
- views: 4336
- author: journeymanpictures
4:19
Democracy Now! - 7/8/09 - Indonesian President Implicated in 2002 Murder Coverup (part 3 of 3)
Declassified Docs Implicate Indonesian President Yudhoyono in Coverup of 2002 Murders of A...
published: 08 Jul 2009
author: mediagrrl9
Democracy Now! - 7/8/09 - Indonesian President Implicated in 2002 Murder Coverup (part 3 of 3)
Declassified Docs Implicate Indonesian President Yudhoyono in Coverup of 2002 Murders of American Teachers in West Papua In Indonesia, exit polls show incumbent president Yudhoyono, has a clear lead in the countrys second direct presidential election since the fall of the Suharto dictatorship over a decade ago. Newly declassified documents implicate Yudhoyono in the cover-up of the Indonesian militarys role in the 2002 murders of two Americans and an Indonesian in West Papua. We speak a Papuan human rights activist who worked with the Indonesian police and FBI to investigate the murders. She now lives in exile in Australia and in a Democracy Now! exclusive is speaking out on the investigations for the first time. We also speak with cultural anthropologist, Eben Kirksey, and with John Miller of the East Timor and Indonesia Action Network.
- published: 08 Jul 2009
- views: 251
- author: mediagrrl9
Vimeo results:
38:22
Independent Documentary Photography in ASEAN: From the Fall of Marcos to the Digital Boom
I am basically a researcher focusing on photography in Southeast Asia (ASEAN). As an exten...
published: 22 Jun 2011
author: Zhuang Wubin
Independent Documentary Photography in ASEAN: From the Fall of Marcos to the Digital Boom
I am basically a researcher focusing on photography in Southeast Asia (ASEAN). As an extension of that interest, I write, curate and photograph. In this talk, I will look at the development of independent documentary photography in Southeast Asia since 1986. The year is significant because it signaled the start of the gradual breakdown of the dictatorial structures in place within the region--something that has always influenced the production of documentary photography around the world. The next two significant shifts occurred during the Asian Financial Crisis and the boom of digital technology. In this very brief overview, I will highlight key individuals and initiatives within Southeast Asia that have seized upon these changes to produce poignant works about the societies where they come from. In this sense, I am primarily interested in documentary photographers working independently in their country-of-origin, fueled by a burning desire to make thoughtful and intelligent comments about her or his environment.
10:01
Max Lane discusses ‘Aksi’ and the rise of unionism in Indonesia, with Asialink
In the following video Asialink asks writer and lecturer Max Lane the following questions:...
published: 21 Apr 2010
author: Asialink Video
Max Lane discusses ‘Aksi’ and the rise of unionism in Indonesia, with Asialink
In the following video Asialink asks writer and lecturer Max Lane the following questions:
1. Please introduce your new book, ‘Unfinished Nation’ and explain your motivations for writing it.
2. (30’’) Please detail your personal participation with the People’s Democratic Party in the mid 1990s.
3. (1’12’’) Can you explain the importance of ‘aksi’ (political action) in the fall of General Suharto?
4. (3’42’’) To what extent is ‘aksi’ still alive in Indonesia, and in what manifestations?
5. (5’23’’) In your view, what are three key characteristics of Indonesia’s current Party system that outsiders should understand?
6. (8’22’’) What about political action outside the parliamentary sphere?
Max Lane spoke to Asialink prior to his lecture for the Asia Institute at the University of Melbourne, on Thursday 15th April.
Max Lane is a writer and lecturer on Indonesian politics, history and literature and Southeast Asian affairs. He has published (in both English and Indonesian) a high-profile text on modern Indonesia (Unfinished Nation: Indonesia before and after Suharto, Verso, 2008), translated the works of Indonesia’s most important writer (Pramoedya Ananta Toer) and its most important dramatist (W.S.Rendra) , and lectured in university courses at universities in the region, including the University of Sydney and Gadjah Madah University in Jogjakarta, Indonesia.
For more information on Max, visit http://maxlaneonline.com/
Youtube results:
5:49
Indonesian refugee takes deportation fight public, accepts sanctuary at Highland Park church
Though he is a fugitive from the law, Saul Timisela is hiding in plain sight. In an act of...
published: 27 Mar 2012
author: tvjersey
Indonesian refugee takes deportation fight public, accepts sanctuary at Highland Park church
Though he is a fugitive from the law, Saul Timisela is hiding in plain sight. In an act of public defiance, the 45-year-old Indonesian refugee failed to report to US Immigration and Customs Enforcement in Newark earlier this month to be deported. Instead, Timisela, one of an estimated 80 Indonesian Christians living in New Jersey who fled religious persecution in Indonesia, accepted sanctuary at the Reformed Church of Highland Park. The Rev. Seth Kaper-Dale has championed the cause of Indonesian Christians, many of whom fled murderous riots targeting ethnic Chinese Christians after the fall of long-time dictator Suharto in 1998. Dozens settled in the Avenel section of Woodbridge. In addition to working with the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Kaper-Dale helped craft HR 3590, the Indonesian Family Refugee Protection Act, which has 15 cosponsors and is now before the House judiciary committee. The proposed law would allow some Indonesians a chance to reopen their asylum claims. In the meantime, Kaper-Dale has offered refuge in the church to others facing imminent deportation. (Video by Nyier Abdou/The Star-Ledger)
- published: 27 Mar 2012
- views: 719
- author: tvjersey
0:49
2010 WSOP - Darus Suharto
Former November Niner Darus Suharto is struggling for a cash here at the 2010 WSOP but tha...
published: 25 Jun 2010
author: pokergamingcom
2010 WSOP - Darus Suharto
Former November Niner Darus Suharto is struggling for a cash here at the 2010 WSOP but thankfully he has video poker to fall back on.
- published: 25 Jun 2010
- views: 179
- author: pokergamingcom
3:18
High price of speaking up in Indonesia - 27 May 2008
Many of the thousands of political opponents imprisoned under former Indonesia president S...
published: 27 May 2008
author: AlJazeeraEnglish
High price of speaking up in Indonesia - 27 May 2008
Many of the thousands of political opponents imprisoned under former Indonesia president Suharto's rule were released after he was toppled from the presidency, but 10 years after his fall, people are once again being jailed for expressing their opinions. Al Jazeera's Step Vaessen speaks to a man jailed for life for waving a flag.
- published: 27 May 2008
- views: 12822
- author: AlJazeeraEnglish
5:27
Peter Schiwy [1] Fall of the Berlin Wall
Held by Udayana University and the Konrad Adenauer Stiftung in Bali, a Seminar on the Berl...
published: 12 Feb 2012
author: wimar2
Peter Schiwy [1] Fall of the Berlin Wall
Held by Udayana University and the Konrad Adenauer Stiftung in Bali, a Seminar on the Berlin Wall (IPeter Schiwy) and parallel with the end of Soeharto rule in Indonesia (Wimar Witoelar) speaks on Indonesian case.
- published: 12 Feb 2012
- views: 35
- author: wimar2