16
Page 6 16 Pages Number 116 8 th Year e-mail: [email protected] online: http://www.internationalbalipost.com. http://epaper.internationalbalipost.com. Price: Rp 3.000,- I N T E R N A T I O N A L News can also be heard in “Bali Image” at Global Radio FM 96.5 from 9.30 until 10.00 am. Listen to Global Radio FM at http:// globalfmbali.listen2my- radio.com or live video streaming at http://radioglobalfmbali.com and http:// ustream.tv/channel/global-fm-bali. Monday, June 20, 2016 European history hovers close to reverse gear Page 13 EgyptAir black boxes badly damaged, likely to prolong probe Messi scores in Argentina’s win; Chile routs Mexico 7-0 “The natural disasters were triggered by heavy rain which fell since Saturday afternoon until mid night,” Sutopo Purwo Nugroho, the head of the Data and Information Center of the BNPB, said in a press statement here on Sunday. The districts/municipal cities which were hit by the floods and landslides in Central Java were Purworejo, Banjarnegara, Kendal, Sragen, Purbalingga, Banyumas, Sukoharjo, Kebumen, Wonosobo, Pemalang, Klaten, Magelang, Wonogiri, Cilacap, Karanganyar and Kota Solo. Sutopo said the disaster also caused damage to tens of houses bur- ied by landslides and thousands of others inundated by flood waters. Most of the dead victims were found in Purworejo District. Five residents of Karangrejo village of Loano subdistrict were buried by landslides while nine others (non local residents) were also found dead. Rescue workers are still searching for those being buried by landslides. “When a small landslide blocked the road in the location, three pas- senger of a truck tried to move away the rocks. Behind the truck were several motorcyclists. All of a sudden a major landslides happened and buried the vehicles and people on the road. Nine dead victims have been evacuated,” Sutopo said. Landslides also took place in Donorati village of Purworejo District where 15 residents were reported missing. Two were killed in Sidomulyo and Pacekelan vil- lages, four were still missing. In Jelog village, Kaligesing, two were reported missing and tens of houses were buried by landslides. Floods as a result of the overflow of Bogowonto River in Purworejo District claimed the lives of four and caused two others missing. In Kebumen District, hundreds of houses were inundated and one resident was killed. Six were found dead in the landslides in Sampang Village, Sempor Subdistrict. Landslides also occurred in Banjarnegara District, killing six people and causing damage to tens of houses. The Regional Disaster Mitigation Agency (BPBD) is still carrying out emergency response. It is assisted by various sides including police and military personnel.(ant) MANGUPURA - As a barometer of world tourism, Ba- dung district becomes the primary choice of migrants to settle. Moreover, the migrant communities are no longer from the districts across Bali but also from outside Bali, such as Java. The Badung Population and Civil Registry Office noted that the number of population registered in the district reaches 462,036 people with the migrant of 4,131 people. The Head of the Badung Population and Civil Registry Office, I Nyoman Soka, justified if the population of mi- grants in the richest district are dominant from outside Bali. They predominantly live in Kuta and South Kuta. Target... Continued on page 2 Floods, landslides kill 24 people in Indonesia JAKARTA - A total of 24 people were killed and 26 others were reported missing in floods and landslides that hit 16 dis- tricts in Central Java, the National Disaster Mitigation Agency (BNPB) said. AP Photo Villagers walk through the area affected by landslides in Banjarnegara, Central Java, Indonesia. Sunday, June 19, 2016. An Indonesian official said dozens of people have been killed by flooding and landslides in central Java and many others remain missing. Badung tourism targeted by local migrants

Edisi 20 Juni 2016 | Internasional Bali Post

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I N T E R N A T I O N A L 16 Pages Number 1168th year

e-mail: [email protected] online: http://www.internationalbalipost.com. http://epaper.internationalbalipost.com.

Price: Rp 3.000,-

I N T E R N A T I O N A L

News can also be heard in “Bali Image” at Global Radio FM 96.5 from 9.30 until 10.00 am. Listen to Global Radio FM at http://globalfmbali.listen2my-

radio.com or live video streaming at http://radioglobalfmbali.com and http://ustream.tv/channel/global-fm-bali.

Monday, June 20, 2016

European history hovers close to reverse gear

Page 13

EgyptAir black boxes badly damaged, likely to prolong probe

Monday, June 20, 2016

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18 Ramayana Cafee Jl. D.Tamblingan 19 Smirnof Cafee Jl. D.Tamblingan Sanur20 Legwa Hotel Jl. D.Tamblingan Sanur21 Nu Laser Cafee Jl. D.Tamblingan Sanur22 Ganesa Book Jl. D.Tamblingan Sanur23 All For Daiving Jl. D.Tamblingan Sanur24 Barocca Jl.Petitenget 17 DKerobokan25 Lantern Jl.Petitenget 17E Kerobokan 26 Shearlock Jl.Petitenget 17C Kerobokan Klod27 Cafe Degan Jl.Petitenget 9 Kerobokan Klod28 Kopi Made Jl. Raya Puputan No. 106 Dps 29 Dimsum Manan Jl. Raya Niti Mandala Renon No 148 30 Furama Jl. Raya Niti Mandala No. 148 Renon31 Warung Subah Renon Jl. Mohamad Yamin No.1832 Ayam Betutu khas Gilimanuk Jl. Merdeka No.88 Renon33 Bali Bakery Jl. Hayam Wuruk 184 Denpasar

You can find International Bali Post at:

Messi scores in Argentina’s win; Chile routs Mexico 7-0

U.S. Magistrate Judge Steven Locke in Central Islip, New York, on Thursday said DiCaprio must be made available for questioning, which was opposed by Viacom Inc’s Paramount Pictures Corp, Di-Caprio’s Appian Way Productions and other defendants.

The plaintiff, Andrew Greene, sued in 2014 for more than $50 mil-lion, claiming that he was defamed in the film through the portrayal by actor P.J. Byrne of a morally and ethically challenged character named Nicky “Rugrat” Koskoff.

Paramount has said Koskoff was a “composite character” inspired by multiple individuals, including Greene.

DiCaprio, 41, played Jordan Bel-fort, a stock swindler who founded Stratton Oakmont and whose 2007 memoir was a basis for the film. Greene was a childhood friend of

Belfort.In opposing a deposition, defense

lawyers said DiCaprio did not write the screenplay, and that there was no claim he had any role in deciding whether alleged defamatory content

should be included in or excluded from the film.

Greene’s lawyers said they had already questioned Scorsese and screenwriter Terence Winter, and that both testified that they met regularly with DiCaprio to discuss the “Wolf” script.

Louis Petrich, a lawyer for the defendants, declined to comment.

The film was nominated for five Academy Awards, including DiCaprio as best actor, Scorsese

as best director and Winter for the screenplay, but did not

win any.Locke’s order does not

say when DiCaprio will be questioned.

The case is Greene v Paramount Pictures Corp et al, U.S. District Court, East-ern District of New York,

No. 14-01044. (rtr)

Leonardo DiCaprio is ordered deposed over ‘Wolf of Wall Street’

Leonardo DiCaprio, best actor nominee for his role in “The

Wolf of Wall Street,” arrives at the 86th

Academy Awards in Hollywood, Cali-

fornia, U.S. on March 2, 2014.

LOS ANGELES - A federal judge has ordered actor Leonardo DiCaprio to be deposed in a defamation lawsuit brought by a former Stratton Oakmont executive over his alleged depiction in the 2013 Martin Scorsese film “The Wolf of Wall Street.”

“The natural disasters were triggered by heavy rain which fell since Saturday afternoon until mid night,” Sutopo Purwo Nugroho, the head of the Data and Information Center of the BNPB, said in a press statement here on Sunday.

The districts/municipal cities which were hit by the floods and landslides in Central Java were Purworejo, Banjarnegara, Kendal, Sragen, Purbalingga, Banyumas,

Sukoharjo, Kebumen, Wonosobo, Pemalang, Klaten, Magelang, Wonogiri, Cilacap, Karanganyar and Kota Solo.

Sutopo said the disaster also caused damage to tens of houses bur-ied by landslides and thousands of others inundated by flood waters.

Most of the dead victims were found in Purworejo District. Five residents of Karangrejo village of Loano subdistrict were buried by

landslides while nine others (non local residents) were also found dead. Rescue workers are still searching for those being buried by landslides.

“When a small landslide blocked the road in the location, three pas-senger of a truck tried to move away the rocks. Behind the truck were several motorcyclists. All of a sudden a major landslides happened and buried the vehicles and people on the road. Nine dead victims have been evacuated,” Sutopo said.

Landslides also took place in Donorati village of Purworejo District where 15 residents were

reported missing. Two were killed in Sidomulyo and Pacekelan vil-lages, four were still missing.

In Jelog village, Kaligesing, two were reported missing and tens of houses were buried by landslides. Floods as a result of the overflow of Bogowonto River in Purworejo District claimed the lives of four and caused two others missing.

In Kebumen District, hundreds of houses were inundated and one resident was killed. Six were found dead in the landslides in Sampang Village, Sempor Subdistrict.

Landslides also occurred in Banjarnegara District, killing six

people and causing damage to tens of houses.

The Regional Disaster Mitigation Agency (BPBD) is still carrying out emergency response. It is assisted by various sides including police and military personnel.(ant)

M A N G U P U R A - As a barometer of world tourism, Ba-dung district becomes the primary choice of migrants to settle.

Moreover, the migrant communities are no longer

from the districts across Bali but also from outside Bali, such as Java. The Badung Population and Civil Registry Office noted that the number of population registered in the district reaches 462,036 people with the migrant of 4,131 people.

The Head of the Badung Population and Civil Registry Office, I Nyoman Soka, justified if the population of mi-grants in the richest district are dominant from outside Bali. They predominantly live in Kuta and South Kuta.

Target...Continued on page 2

Floods, landslides kill 24 people in Indonesia

JAKARTA - A total of 24 people were killed and 26 others were reported missing in floods and landslides that hit 16 dis-tricts in Central Java, the National Disaster Mitigation Agency (BNPB) said.

AP Photo

Villagers walk through the area affected by landslides in Banjarnegara, Central Java, Indonesia. Sunday, June 19, 2016. An Indonesian official said dozens of people have been killed by flooding and landslides in central Java and many others remain missing.

Badung tourism targeted by local migrants

Page 2: Edisi 20 Juni 2016 | Internasional Bali Post

International2 15International Activities

Founder : K.Nadha, General Manager :Palgunadi Chief Editor: Gugiek Savindra Editors:Agus Toni, Daniel Fajry, Mawa, Sueca, Sugiartha, Yudi Winanto Denpasar: Dira Arsana, Giriana Saputra, Subrata, Sumatika, Asmara Putra. Bangli: Suasrina, Buleleng: Dewa kusuma, Gianyar: Manik Astajaya, Karangasem: Budana, Klungkung: Dewa Farendra. Jakarta: Nikson, Hardianto, Ade Irawan. NTB: Agus Talino, Izzul Khairi, Raka Akriyani. Surabaya: Bambang Wilianto. Office: Jalan Kepundung 67 A Denpasar 80232. Telephone (0361)225764, Facsimile: 227418, P.O.Box: 3010 Denpasar 80001. Bali Post Jakarta, Advertizing: Jl.Palmerah Barat 21F. Telp 021-5357602, Facsimile: 021-5357605 Jakarta Pusat. NTB: Jalam Bangau No. 15 Cakranegara Telp. (0370) 639543, Facsimile: (0370) 628257. Publisher: PT Bali Post

Monday, June 20, 2016Monday, June 20, 2016

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COVER STORY“The population growth in Ba-

dung has already far declined when compared to previous years. Indeed they mostly live in the area of tour-ism, such as Kuta, South Kuta and Mengwi,” said Nyoman Soka.

According to him, the problem encountered in suppressing the migrant population in Badung is the issue of migration from outside because the birth rate is actually very small. This proves that population growth control program through family planning program is quite successful mainly by delaying the age of marriage.

“Nevertheless, we continue to make coordination with relevant parties, such as municipal police to discipline migrants. Moreover, we often carry out misdemeanor at each village because it also has special task officers,” he said.

The Municipal Police of Badung also tightens the control on its terri-tory. “We will carry out supervision against the migrants,” said the Chief of the Badung Municipal Police, I Ketut Martha.

According to him, his agency also has its own program in tackling the

growing population of migrants in the territory.

“We constantly make field inspec-tion against the migrants scheduled every month, unless there are reports outside the schedule. Besides, we carry out patrols to find out the condi-tions in the field,” he said.

Earlier, Deputy Chairman of the Advisory of Chamber of Commerce and Industry (Kadin) Bali, Wayan Jondra, stated that the high role of migrants in filling in the existing job opportunities in Bali is inseparable from the government’s ignorance that does not give a sign in absorb-ing labor.

“Only few local labor of Bali is absorbed. To that end, it is required a grand scenario so that we cannot employ Balinese people just because they have identity card of Bali, but must be made in specific ways. For example, they must understand about the culture of Bali specified in the cer-tification with excellence,’ he said.

According to him, the government must provide more specific certifica-tion agency to include cultural criteria and an understanding on the concept of Tri Hita Karana. “We have to own a certification guaranteeing them. For example, they understand about the culture and implement the Tri Hita Karana. This is the importance

on the existence of a grand scenario supported by all stakeholders, the executive and the legislative,” he explained.

To realize it, according to him, a system must be established preceded with a commitment between the em-ployers and the government.

Employers should sincerely in-volve the local workforce. “If this is not applied, it will result in serious social impact. There has been an offense among Balinese workers because they only get lower position while the top position is occupied by non-Balinese and even by foreign-

ers,” he said.According to him, this gap may

not be ignored as such because if it is allowed to drag on quite a long time will have social impacts. It is feared to cause friction in society causing Bali no longer to be quiet, safe and comfortable.

“If this happens, surely those having investment in Bali will suffer losses. That’s why the investors must realize that stability in Bali needs to be maintained with the involvement of more local labor. At the same time, we still need people from outside Bali to back up,” he said.

He mentioned that the effort to involve local workforce in every sec-tor needs to be supported by issuing a gubernatorial regulation or regional bylaw, so that the legal protection of labor utilization in Bali is clear. “Of course, these efforts should be followed up with regulations, at least with gubernatorial regulation, if a business entity or entrepreneur invests in Bali or if it does not employ at least 80 percent of the local com-munity, their permit can be revoked. Of course, the Balinese people here refer to the certified ones,” he ex-plained. (kmb27)

From page 1Target...

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When interviewed at her home on Saturday (Jun.18), Parniasih revealed that fabric sokasi is relatively a new creation. This kind of sokasi has begun to be produced by craftsmen in Bangli since last year. In addition to Penida hamlet, the fabric sokasi now becoming a trend in the mar-ket is also produced by a number of artisans at several hamlets like the Tegalasah, Tembuku and some other in the Susut and Bangli subdistrict.

Parniasih said when compared to the motif of other sokasi prod-ucts, the making of fabric sokasi is easier. The fabrics widely used include brocade and Balinese woven fabric. In order to look more beautiful, on the edge of the fabric is also filled with gem ribbon. To glue the fabric and ribbon on the edge of the sokasi, Parniasih takes advantage of gun adhesive so that the layers of fab-ric and ribbon on the sokasi is not easily flaking off when cleaning.

“When compared to batik sokasi, the fabric is more easily made. Each day I can make up to 50 pieces,” she said.

He added that like the sokasi with batik and gold leaf painting motif she ever made the fabric sokasi she yields have also been widely marketed to a number of areas in Bali, like Denpasar. The selling price is relatively cheap compared to sokasi of other motif, ranging from IDR 40,000-IDR 60,000 depending on the size and type of the fab-ric used to embellish the sokasi. “For the time being, this fabric sokasi remains the best-selling in the market,” she said.

If the trend of gold leaf paint-ing sokasi can last up to six years, she predicted the trend of fabric sokasi will be able to survive up to three years. “Just like the kebaya, fabric sokasi will remain to change in accordance with the ever-changing trends,” she added. (kmb40)

IBP/Dayu Rina

Wayan Parniasih, the maker of Sokasi

IBP/File

Tourists are crowded on Kuta Beach, one of the famous tourism destinations in Badung.

Becomes a trend, fabric sokasi in high demand

BANGLI — A number of innovations and creations continue to be made by sokasi (obla-tion basket) craftsmen in Bangli so that the products yielded can keep consumers interested.

If few years ago craftsmen embellished their sokasi with gold leaf painting and batik motif, since the past year the craftsmen develop new creations where they embellish their sokasi

product with fabric of various motifs and colors. This creation is made by one of the sokasi makers at Penida Kelod hamlet, Tembuku, Wayan Parniasih.

Into The Blue, With Blue Marlin

Page 3: Edisi 20 Juni 2016 | Internasional Bali Post

14 InternationalTravelingMonday, June 20, 2016 3International Bali News Monday, June 20, 2016

As seen on Wednesday (Jun. 15), a dozen of cattle seemed to run wild in the grass land. On the back of this area, there are actually many cages used to take care of the cattle. According to residents, previously the cattle were even released to enter the museum area.

But after the fence of museum was refurbished, the cattle run wild in the site area (outside the fence of the museum).

Headman of Gilimanuk, I Gede Ngurah Widiada, told reporters that about two months ago the cattle owners already agreed not

to graze their cattle in the area of the site. At least 14 residents have agreed with the witness of local non-commissioned police officer (Babinkamtibmas).

They have promised to im-pound their cattle. However, the cattle seem to have been released again. Village authority will summon the cattle owners. And this time, strict sanctions will be imposed. Stubborn cattle owners will be penalized with the sanc-tion as set forth in the Regional Bylaw with a fine of IDR 5 mil-lion. (kmb26)

BARCELONA - A stroll down the yogurt aisle of any grocery store will tell you that probiotics are good for the human digestive system and can promote a healthy gut. But did you know that they can also help make better wine? In Spain’s remote Priorat region, 80 miles southwest of Barcelona, a winery called Morlanda is us-ing probiotics to grow stronger, healthier grape vines.

While Priorat’s gnarly old vines produce some of Spain’s most re-vered wines -- intense and powerful reds made from Garnacha (Gren-ache) and Cariñena (Carignane) grapes -- that wasn’t always the

case. The area’s vineyards suffered years of neglect during the reign of Fascist dictator Francisco Franco, until after his death in 1975. Priorat was nearly forgotten as a wine re-gion until the late 1980s, when a vi-sionary band of vintners dedicated themselves to revitalizing it.

The region has made a remark-able turnaround in the last 15 years, but even so, Priorat’s mountainous terrain presents significant chal-lenges to both grape vines and vineyard workers.

“The tortuous geography of this area means that the vineyards have to be cultivated on slopes so steep that it is necessary, in some cases, to build terraces,” said Judit Llop, Morlanda’s winemaker and vine-yard manager since 2003. “Some of these terraces are so narrow that two rows of vines barely fit and me-chanical access is impossible.”

What’s more, due to the rocky soil and hot, dry climate, “The vines are weak and consequently result in rather poor harvests, with very low grape yields,” she added.

Years of chemical treatments have further weakened the soil, leading Llop to seek out new ways to bring it back to life. “Our vineyard philosophy starts with the health of the soil, and for this reason we started to investigate how we could regenerate it,” she said. “We wanted to increase soil biodiversity and encourage micro-

bial activity.”In 2013, with the resources

of Morlanda’s parent company, the Freixenet Group, behind her, Llop began a probiotics trial with the Universitat Rovira i Virgili in nearby Tarragona, designed to im-prove the soil and boost the plants’ immune systems. Sprayed onto the vineyard floor and plants, the pro-biotics make it easier for the vines to assimilate micronutrients.

“Treatment of the soil in the fall is very important and is known as ‘vaccination,’” she said. “The positive microorganisms, resistant to low temperatures, will mineral-ize the organic waste -- leaves, dry grass and branches -- and prepare the soil with the micro and macro elements necessary for plant veg-etation.”

Probiotics are applied again before flowering, this time to the plants themselves. “This period is the hardest in their development,” Llop said. “Vines make a huge effort to vegetate while they are maximizing exposure to attacks by diseases. Therefore, during this time, positive microflora is given to the plant for protection and to pre-vent the development of parasitic and harmful microflora.”

The third treatment happens after bloom, when grape clusters are formed, and the fourth is done during the grapes’ ripening phase. (rtr)

HAVING been inaugurated earlier this year, one of the two village health buses of Gianyar has been dormant in the parking area of Kebo Iwa Stadium. This condition was known around a week ago. In the meantime, the Gianyar Health Agency admit-ted that it had contacted the insurance company to repair the bus.

As observation of Bali Post on Wednesday afternoon (Jun. 15), both village health buses of Gianyar district were seen to be parked in the parking area of Kebo Iwa Stadium. One of the buses was parked very close to the east side facing west. Then, another bus was parked rather away facing east. It is estimated to have been after operation.

There is information men-tioning that only one of the two village health bus has been operated for more than a week around Gianyar district. In the meantime, another bus is out of order, so that it is neglected in the parking lot of the Kebo Iwa Stadium.

Surely this condition is de-plored considering that the vil-lage health bus of Gianyar district was just inaugurated late Febru-ary 2016. Previously, there was a discourse if the buses would be alerted at two locations, namely in Ubud and Blahbatuh subdis-trict. But in reality the two buses have long been parked in the area

of Kebo Iwa Stadium.Chief of the Gianyar Health

Agency, Ida Ayu Dwi Cahyani, justified that the two village health buses of Gianyar have not been operated since last week, so that only one bus can provide roving health services around the region of the art. “I have received a report last Thursday if the bus does not operate because the officer feels uncomfortable. So, there are worries if something bad happens when operated,” she said when contacted via telephone.

Responding to this condition, this woman familiarly addressed Dayu Cahyani claimed to have contacted the insurer for an im-mediate repair. She added that since the health bus was newly purchased a few months ago, the government of Gianyar still has a warranty. “I have informed the insurer and it will be imme-diately checked. Since the bus is still new, it remains to have a warranty,” she said.

The roving village health bus is equipped with medical equipment, supporting facili-ties of general check-up, dental examination, electrocardiograph (ECG), visual inspection with acetic acid (IVA), emergencies to health promotion through the audio-visual. “For the time be-ing, a village health bus is suffi-cient to provide health services,” she said. (kmb35)

Spanish Priorat Vineyard Gets Probiotic Boost

IBP/olo

Archeological site of Gilimanuk located at the edge of Gilimanuk Bay is now taken advantage by residents for grazing cattle.

Cattle run wild in the area of Gilimanuk site

NEGARA - Archeological site of Gilimanuk located at the edge of Gilimanuk Bay is now taken advantage by residents for grazing cattle. Previously the village authority has actually disciplined and asked the residents of cattle owner not to graze their cattle. The empty land area connecting the Gilimanuk Bay tourism area to the Museum of Antiquities is required in order to be clean.

IBP/kmb35

One of the two village health buses of Gianyar has been dor-mant in the parking area of Kebo Iwa Stadium.

Newly inaugurated in February 2016,

Health bus has gone dormant

Page 4: Edisi 20 Juni 2016 | Internasional Bali Post

Bali News International4 Monday, June 20, 2016 13InternationalMonday, June 20, 2016

The schedule of the 38th Bali Art FestivalMonday, 20th June 2016Time : 08.00 A.MLocation : Cita Kelangen HallProgram : Workshop

Time : 11.00 A.MLocation : Ayodya Open StageProgram : Music, Dance and Song Arts Performances Lampung by Jung Sarat Production, Denbatas Village Tabanan Regency

Time : 17.00 P.MLocation : Angsoka Open StageProgram : Cak Kolaborasi Performance Arts by SDN. 6, Batubulan Village, Sukawati sub-distric, Gianyar Regency

Time : 20.00 P.M.Location : Ayodya Open StageProgram : Balinese Dance Treatical by Gita Bandana Praja Group, Banjar Belaluan Sadmerta, Dangin Puri Kauh village, Denpasar City

Time : 20.00 P.M.Location : Wantilan HallProgram : Ramayana Shadow Puppets Children level axhibition by P-Luk Jiner art community, from Baluk village, Jembrana Sub-distric, Jembrana Regency

Time : 20.00 P.M.Location : Ksirarnawa HallProgram : Documentary Film Bali Competition Screening

Time : 20.00 P.MLocation : Wantilan HallProgram : Arja Prembon peformance by Arja Prembon Kakul Gondang Group, Banjar Dangin Uma, Kaba-kaba Village, Tabanan Regency

Time : 20.00 P.M.Location : Ardha Chandra AmphitheatreProgram : Women Gong Kebyar exhibition featuring from Seni Aswini Kembar, Banjar Kerta Sari, Panjer Village, South Denpasar Sub-dictric, Denpasar City and Women Gong Tunjung Mekar group Besang Kangin Village, Klungkung Regency

ROME - Italians began voting on Sunday for mayors of their largest cities in a ballot that will test Prime Minister Matteo Renzi’s popularity and could hand control of Rome to the anti-establishment 5-Star Move-ment (M5S).

Virginia Raggi, a 37 year-old law-yer from the M5S, was in pole position to seize the scandal-plagued capital from Renzi’s Democratic Party (PD) and become its first female mayor.

The PD took a bruising in the first round of voting on June 5. Italy’s four biggest cities are among 126 towns holding run-offs between first and second-placed candidates after none won more than 50 percent backing.

Attention is focused on Rome, fi-nancial hub Milan and the traditional PD stronghold Turin as 8.6 million people - just under a fifth of the total electorate - cast their vote.

Raggi won 35.2 percent in the first round, pushing Renzi’s candidate Ro-berto Giachetti into second place with a campaign promising to fight graft and privilege.

“Today we need two things: honesty and courage,” Raggi tweeted early on Sunday, quoting 20th century socialist politician and former president Sandro Pertini. Conquering Rome would be a big victory for M5S, which has capital-ised on widespread frustration with tra-ditional parties as the left and right have been tainted by corruption scandals.

Persistent weakness in the euro zone’s third-largest economy has also fuelled frustration. M5S has promised universal income support for the poor and a referendum on membership of the euro.

Renzi has said the vote will not hurt his left-right coalition government, but a bad showing will put him under pres-

sure in his already divided party ahead of a referendum in October on which he has staked his political future.

The most politically significant contest for Renzi is in Milan, where he backed Giuseppe Sala, head of the 2015 Expo World Fair. Sala emerged from the first round barely a percent-age point ahead of centre-right rival Stefano Parisi. In Turin, prominent PD incumbent Piero Fassino came out ahead in the first round but faces an unexpectedly tough challenge from M5S. In Bologna, another leftist bas-tion, the PD is expected to hold off the anti-immigrant Northern League.

Naples is a lost cause for the PD, whose candidate was knocked out in the first round. Italy’s third-biggest city looks set to give a second term to former prosecutor Luigi de Magistris, who has declared it a “Renzi-free zone”. (rtr)

The official didn’t elaborate on how long the repairs would take but said if this cannot be done in Egypt, the so-called “black boxes” would be sent abroad. The official who spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn’t authorized to speak to the media.

With the wreckage of the Airbus A320 some 3,000 meters under water, the cockpit voice and flight data recorders are vital for piec-ing together the last moments of the flight, which plunged into the sea between the Greek island of Crete and the Egyptian port city of Alexandria on May 19, killing all 66 on board.

Earlier in the day, Egypt’s inves-tigation commission said the flight data recorder had been pulled out of the sea, a day after the cockpit voice recorder was also recovered. Both were brought to Cairo for analysis.

The memory units inside the recorders can provide key data, in-cluding the last conversations inside the cockpit, information about auto-pilot mode or even smoke alarms. They might also give answers to why the pilot made no distress call before the crash.

Experts say the data, combined with previously obtained satellite and radar images, debris analysis, the plane history and the pilots’ records, can shed light on the most

possible scenarios. No militant group has claimed bringing down the aircraft.

“We will be having a wealth of information that helps the investi-gators eliminate some possibilities while giving priority to others,” said Hani Galal, an Egyptian aviation expert. He is not involved in this crash investigation but has taken part in other similar probes.

Both France and the United States are sending investigators to Cairo to help with the probe.

EgyptAir Flight 804 en route to Cairo from Paris disappeared May 19 from radar at about 2:45 a.m lo-cal time, just as it had entered Egyp-tian airspace. Radar data showed the aircraft had made violent moves after cruising normally in clear skies, plummeting from 38,000 feet (11,582 meters) to 15,000 feet (4,572 meters). It disappeared when it was at an altitude of about 10,000 feet (3,048 meters).

Leaked flight data indicated a sensor had detected smoke in a lavatory and a fault in two of the plane’s cockpit windows in the final moments of the flight. Egypt’s civil aviation minister, Sherif Fathi, has said that terrorism is a more prob-able cause than equipment failure or some other catastrophic event.

Families of the victims are losing hope the remains of their loved ones

can be recovered intact from the seabed so long after the crash but knowing what had caused it could bring closure.

“Finding answers to our many questions will give us some relief,” said Malek Zayada, speaking over the phone from the Sudanese capital, Khartoum. His brother, Moham-

med Saleh Zayada, a 62-year-old UNESCO scholar who specialized in translation and history, was one of the passengers on the doomed flight.

Vessel John Lethbridge, con-tracted by the Egyptian government to search for the wreckage, pulled the data recorder out of the sea in stages, according to Friday’s state-

ment from the Egyptian committee. On Thursday, the committee said that the voice recorder was also pulled out of the water but had been damaged.

“The analysis might take several weeks,” depending on the condition of the recorders’ memory units, the committee said. (ap)

EgyptAir black boxes badly damaged, likely to prolong probe

CAIRO — The voice and data recorders from the EgyptAir plane that crashed into the Mediterranean nearly a month ago are “extensively damaged” and will need repairs before they can be analyzed, an Egyptian official said Friday, dampening hopes for quick answers as to what caused the disaster.

AP Photo/Thomas Ranner, File

This August 21, 2015 file photo shows an EgyptAir Airbus A320 with the registration SU-GCC taking off from Vienna International Airport, Austria. The cockpit voice recorder of the doomed EgyptAir plane that crashed last month killing all 66 people on board has been found and pulled out of the Mediterranean Sea, Egypt’s investigation committee said on Thursday, June 16, 2016.

Italy elects mayors in vote that will test PM Renzi

REUTERS/Grigory Dukor

Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi delivers a speech during a session of the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum 2016 (SPIEF 2016) in St. Petersburg, Russia, June 17, 2016.

SINGARAJA - The opportunities to cultivate shallot can be seen from the fertility of soil in a region. Buleleng district, for instance, has excellent potential in agricultural commodities like shallot having been cultivated in Bangli district.

Cultivation of shallot commodity is conducted by Bank Indonesia (BI) in 2016 at 13 demonstration plots and clusters throughout Bali. The shallot developed in Buleleng is a concerted effort in reducing inflation and increas-ing people’s economy in the region through a food security program. In the future, the price of shallot is promis-ing in the market so that it is required a comprehensive guidance to shallot farmers in North Bali. “We assess that Buleleng is one of the centers in the region to cultivate shallot in Bali,” said Chief Representative of Bank Indone-sia Bali, Dewi Setyowati, Wednesday (Jun. 15) at Subak Yangai, Bungkulan, Sawan subdistrict.

Her institution noted that shal-lot production of Buleleng reached 18.4 tons per hectare. In other words, Buleleng has contributed by 93.30 percent of the total shallot production throughout Bali. Such opportunities should be encouraged by relevant agencies so that the production volume can be increased from the current results. “When seeing from the cur-rent potential, we are more motivated to help develop shallot commodity through new technologies applied in agriculture,” she said.

She added that amid the slow-down in the global and national economy, Bali’s economy can still grow by 6.04 percent (yoy) in the first quarter of 2016 and goes higher than the previous quarter reaching 5.96 percent (yoy). “This is far above the national economic growth of 4.92 percent (yoy),” she added.

Overall in 2016, the economy of Bali is estimated to grow in the range of 6.08 percent and 6.84 percent (yoy). The welfare of farmers in relation to the exchange value of farmer (NTP) in Bali in the first quarter of 2016 re-mained at 104.86, showing a decrease when compared to the fourth quarter of 2015 recorded to reach 105.13.

In the meantime, the Head of the Buleleng Agriculture and Livestock Agency, Nyoman Swatantra, repre-senting Regent Putu Agus Surad-nyana explained that his institution supports the development of shallot commodity through organic prac-tices. It is based on the consideration of restricted group and the availabil-ity of water through social program of the BI 2015. “In the future, we expect the success in agricultural demonstration plot can encourage the increase in the number of farm-ers implementing shallot cultivation through organic method and then it can be implemented at the level of wider area,” he said. (kmb34)

Ismail, 44, a man from Banyu-wangi who found the jar, said that when digging the ground he felt a hard object. He thought it was a big stone, but after digging deeper he was trying to lift the object. In fact, it is an ancient jar containing perforated coins.

Because it weighs about 25 kg,

Ismail then asked the help of local people to lift it and reported the findings to Taman hamlet chief, Ida Bagus Arnawa.

According to Ismail, there was something strange when the jar was found. Even though it was found without a lid, no soil came into the jar. “The perforated coins remain

clean and tidy, do not contain any soil,” said Ismail.

Now, the jar is secured in the Taman meeting hall, Batuagung, Jembrana. A number of residents came one after another to have a closer look at the ancient jar. It has not been known yet known how the jar can be in the region of Taman hamlet.

“We save first the jar in the meet-ing hall. For the next measures, we’ll discuss it in our village meet-ing,” explained Ida Bagus Arnawa. (kmb)

IBP/kmb

A worker of pipeline excavation project on Saturday after-noon (Jul. 18) discovered ancient jar containing hundreds of perforated coins in the area of roadside at Taman hamlet, Batuagung, Jembrana.

Project worker finds ancient jar holding perforated coins when digging

NEGARA - A worker of pipeline excavation project on Sat-urday afternoon (Jul. 18) discovered ancient jar containing hundreds of perforated coins in the area of roadside at Taman hamlet, Batuagung, Jembrana. Such findings caused people of Batuagung village, Jembrana, to be fussy.

Buleleng potential to develop shallot commodity

IBP/net

The opportunities to cultivate shallot can be seen from the fertility of soil in Buleleng district.

Page 5: Edisi 20 Juni 2016 | Internasional Bali Post

Indonesia Today Monday, June 20, 2016 5InternationalMonday, June 20, 201612 International

BUSINESS

Up since dawn, they had worked through an 80-degree day that was just beginning to cool off. Now, Pittman, a paralegal with the Farmworker Unit of Legal Aid of North Carolina, wanted to get their attention.

The health care law passed in 2010 requires you to have health insurance, she told them in Span-ish. If you don’t get it, she said, you could be fined. “Cuánto cuesta?” said one worker, wanting to know the cost.

These farmworkers, living in the United States legally through the H-2A visa program, must be insured, like most U.S. citizens and legal residents. But reaching them is an uphill battle. They live in cinder block homes built by employers in isolated areas. They work long days, and often, a full week.

The majority come from Mexico to work in Florida, Georgia and North Carolina. The countdown clock starts when they enter the country. They have just 60 days to learn about coinsurance and copayments, and decide whether to purchase a high- or low-deductible plan.

Alexis Guild, a migrant health policy analyst at Farmworker Jus-tice, an advocacy group based in Washington, said North Carolina has been “very successful” in en-rolling H-2A farmworkers, thanks to a yearslong partnership among various nonprofits and health cen-ters.

In the camp near Dunn, about one-third of the 31 residents showed up for Pittman’s presentation, gathering in a small dining room with two picnic tables and cement floors.

The cost of health insurance depends on the type purchased, income and family size, Pittman told them. Some people don’t have monthly payments; others could pay $40 per month. Consider, she added, that this year’s fine is $695 or 2 percent of wages, whichever is greater.

Antonio Flores, of Veracruz, said he worried about the cost. He is in the U.S. for six months and has a wife and son to support. Like other farmworkers based in North Carolina, he makes $10.72 per hour. “Would I need to pay the fine?” said

Flores, 29.It’s a difficult question because

some workers qualify for an ex-emption or are offered insurance through their employer.

Mackenzie Mann, a health edu-cator with North Carolina Farm-workers Project, said the only way to be sure is to fill out a form. On a recent Wednesday, Mann and a co-worker traveled through a narrow road to a camp in Angier, where workers were waiting for them with insurance letters and payment questions.

On its way to surpass last year’s enrollment totals, the group has signed up about 150 workers since February and they still have two months to go.

First in line at the camp was Apolinar Castillo, of Zacatecas, Mexico, who got a bill in the latest batch of mail he received from his boss. Castillo, 44, said that after 15 years toiling in the nation’s fields he didn’t think twice about paying $10.55 per month for health insur-ance. “I feel confident that, if there is an emergency, I can dial 911 and use my (insurance) card,” Castillo said. After some confusion, Castillo was told that he had already made the monthly payment and the bill he had was old.(ap)

In this photo provided by Alejandra Can-cino, taken May 24, 2016, a sam-ple insurance card used dur-ing a presenta-tion, in Newton Grove, N.C. Even season farmworkers in the United States legally get health insurance, but reaching them can be an uphill battle.

Uphill battle to get seasonal farmworkers health insurance

DUNN, N.C. — Some seasonal agricultural workers were finishing a meal after a long day of planting sweet potato seeds when Julie Pittman pulled into to their camp.

Alejandra Cancino via AP

Rights groups have criticized Indonesia’s treatment of the 44 men, women and children and the Aceh provincial government’s plan to aban-don them in international waters.

The migrants were being sheltered in tents after being allowed off their boat Saturday during rough weather.

Ahmad Samadan, chief of the local immigration office, said au-thorities still plan to tow the migrants into international waters once further repairs to the vessel are completed.

“They are being sheltered ashore,” he said. “We still have our initial plan of towing them back to sea.”

The group was trying to reach

the Australian territory of Christmas Island when their boat’s engine mal-functioned off the coast of Indonesia’s Sumatra island. They had been at sea for about a month after leaving from India in the Indian-flagged boat. Amnesty International has said the minority Tamils may have been flee-ing persecution in Sri Lanka.

Officials from the International Organization for Migration and the United Nations’ refugee agency have been denied access to the migrants. Earlier in the week, po-lice fired a warning shot when six women tried to leave the beached vessel. Some of the migrants ap-

pealed for a new boat, saying theirs was in bad condition.

“Please help us, this ship is not good. We are going to die with this boat,” Fakky Sharen, a 34-year-old migrant traveling with his wife and 18-month-old son, said Saturday dur-ing an exchange with lawmaker Nasir Djamil, who visited the group.

A 22-year-old woman who identi-fied herself as Artika said she was very afraid because of the boat’s condition and wanted to be as-sisted by UNHCR, the U.N.’s refugee agency.

Indonesia last year opened its doors to stateless Muslim Rohingya boat people fleeing persecution in Myanmar, but officials have said the current situation is different because the migrants are trying to reach Aus-tralia.(ap)

JAKARTA - An Indonesian Coordinating Minister for Political, Security and Legal Affairs, Luhut Binsar Pandjaitan said here on Thursday that the government wishes to settle alleged cases of human rights violations in Papua definitively.

“I will meet all community elements, including religious figures, students, military and police officials and also non-governmental or-ganizations. The government wishes to show to the world that we are serious and transparent in settling the cases. There is no engineering,” he said at Sentani airport in Jayapura, Papua.

He said the process has been going well. The integrated team that was set up in May 2016 to handle alleged cases of human rights violations in Papua and West Papua provinces has been assigned to collect data, information and analysis and it will submit its report to the President. Minister Luhut said in a written statement received here that day that a team had indeed been set up by the National Commission on Human Rights (Komnas HAM) in 2011 and this integrated team was set up by the government and was aimed at helping accelerate the settlement of the cases.

“The integrated team has defined the criteria for a human right violation. The criteria have been formulated transparently, and are measurable with impartiality. Based on the criteria, out of 22 reported cases, three could be categorized as human right violations, namely the Wasior, Wamena and Paniai cases,” he said, adding that he had never intervened in the process of work of the team.

Minister Luhut said whoever is declared guilty by the team will face judicial process. “Whoever he is, be they community members or law enforcement officials. In principle, whoever is declared guilty will be taken through a judicial process,” he said.

To assure that the process is transparent, he said he had invited New Zealands Ambassador to Indonesia, Trevor Matheson, Solomon Ambassador Salana Kalu, Fiji Ambassador S.T. Cavuilati and Papua New Guinea Ambassador Peter Ilau to Papua.

“Their presence here is to make the international community see what we have been doing. They are not a fact-finding team,” he said.

When asked about the rejection of the team by a Komnas HAM Commissioner, Minister Luhut said he had received confirmation from Komnas HAM Chairman Nur Kholis that this is a matter of a personal view and not the decision of Komnas HAM.

“When he was contacted by our staff, Pak (Mr) Nur Kholis said the decision of Komnas HAMs plenary meeting is to establish a working task force that will help Nur Khlis and Ibu (Mrs) Zandra Mambrasar to work for Papua together with the governments team,” he said.

With regards to reports about more than 1,000 people being ar-rested while conducting a demonstration to protest the governments team, Papua Regional Police Chief Paulus Waterpauw denied this, saying, “There has never been any arrest made. We only asked them to disperse.”

During his visit to the office of the Financial Service Authority (OJK) in Jayapura, Minister Luhut and the Head of the National Plan-ning Board, Sofyan Djalil, had been briefed on OJK activities so far. OJK has emphasized on financial education and boosting economic development in Papua.

On the occasion, Minister Luhut also expressed support for the development of entrepreneurship in the coffee, cocoa and palm oil plantation sectors. He advised OJK to set a target and find indigenous business cadres. Minister Luhut plans to visit Wamena, Manokwari and Merauke while in Papua.(ant)

SURABAYA - Indonesian navys combat task force has detained nine Philippines boats indulging in il-legal fishing in the waters along the Indonesia-Philippines border. “The boats were seized in different sea operations,” the commander of the Eastern Fleet Commands task force, Commodore I.N.G Ariawan, said here on Saturday.

The operations included Benteng Ambalat-16 Operation (in the waters

along the Indonesia-Malaysia border), the Benteng Tuna-16 Operation (in the waters along the Indonesia-Philippines border), Benteng Kanguru-16 (in the waters along the Indonesia-Timor Lester-Australia border) and Siaga Yudha Operation. These were carried out to check combat readiness in the Indonesian eastern region and were carried out from May till mid-June.

During the operations, the task force deployed KRI Badau (BDU-

841), KRI Sura (SRA-802) and KRI Karel Satuit Tubun (KST-356). “They have caught and detained nine Philip-pine boats fishing in the Indonesian Exclusive Economic Zone without any document issued by the Indone-sian government,” Ariawan stated.

The Philippine boats that have been seized are: KIA Robert Jon Fishing GT 15, KM Santo Nino Jon OI GT 22, Sun Nicholas GT 20, Kkury Guapa GT 15, FB/LB Twin J-105 GT 40, F/BCA

Nano Aqua-4 GT 30, FB/LB Rashell DH 101 GT 35, FB Yareyo 291 GT 88 and F/B Rashell GT 125.

“The boats have been taken to the naval bases that were the closest --- Lantamal XIII/TRK, Lanal Ternate and Lanal Morotai --- for further investigation,” he added.

Ariawan pointed out that the suc-cess was proof that patrol units under the task force (Gupurla) were able to carry out their duties professionally.

“We hope operations like these can be continued so that the security and sovereignty of the Indonesian territorial waters is well protected,” he stressed.

The navy and the ministry of fish-eries and marine resources had also cooperated to conduct an operation against illegal “rumpon” (fish catch-ing device) in Sulawesi Sea in the Indonesia-Philippine EEZ border on June 12-14.(ant)

Rights violation cases in Papua to be settled definitively: Minister Pandjaitan

AP Photo/Heri Juanda, File

FILE - In this June 17, 2016 file photo, Indonesian officials load food supplies onto a boat carrying Tamil migrants which have been stranded on the beach in Lhoknga, Aceh province, Indonesia.

Indonesia lets migrants ashore after week on stranded boat

LHOKNGA — Indonesia allowed a group of Tamil migrants from Sri Lanka to come ashore in Aceh province on Saturday after confining them to their stranded boat for a week, but is in-sisting they’ll be towed out to sea once the vessel is repaired.

Navy forces seize nine Philippine fishing boats for poaching

NEW DELHI — The governor of India’s central bank said Saturday that he will not seek a second term and will return to academia when his term ends in September.

Raghuram Rajan’s announcement ends speculation over whether Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government will give him another three-year term with India’s economy growing at an impressive 7.5 percent. That made India the world’s fastest-growing major economy, overtaking China’s growth in the January-March quarter.

Rajan was appointed the Reserve Bank of India’s governor by the previous Congress party government three years ago. Some leaders of Modi’s Hindu nationalist party recently criticized him for adopting a hard line against inflation despite pressure to cut interest rates to push India’s economic growth.

Subramanian Swamy, a lawmaker from the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party, has attacked Rajan for his hawkish stance on interest rates, and questioned whether Rajan was “mentally, fully Indian as he holds a U.S. green card,” according to the Press Trust of India news agency.

Since becoming head of the central bank, Rajan has been on leave as a professor of finance at the University of Chicago.

In a message to his bank staff on Saturday, Rajan said that when he took office, the Indian currency was plunging daily, inflation was high and growth was weak.

His agenda for action, including a new monetary framework and raising of foreign exchange reserves, helped halve inflation and allowed savers to earn positive real interest rates on deposits after a long time, he said. “We have also been able to cut interest rates by 150 basis points after raising them initially,” he added.

India’s inflation rate averaged 7.7 percent from 2012 through 2015, reaching an all-time high of 11.16 percent in 2013 and a record-low 3.69 percent in July last year, according to government statistics.

Rajan, who was chief economist at the International Monetary Fund from 2003 to 2007, said in his message, “I am an academic and I have always made it clear that my ultimate home is in the realm of ideas.” He also said he “will, of course, always be available to serve my country when needed.”(ap)

India’s central bank governor says he won’t seek 2nd term

AP Photo/Rafiq Maqbool, File

FILE- In this April 5, 2016 file photo, Reserve Bank of In-dia (RBI) Governor Raghuram Rajan addresses a press conference in Mumbai, India. Rajan issued a statement on Saturday, June 18, 2016 saying that he’ll quit and return to academia when his term ends in September.

Page 6: Edisi 20 Juni 2016 | Internasional Bali Post

6 International

W RLDMonday, June 20, 2016

Even if the British step back from the brink on Thursday, the bruising legacy of the debate, the growing trend of national ref-erendums on EU issues and the backlash against globalization and internationalized elites on both sides of the Atlantic will not fade away any time soon.

How far and how fast contagion may spread in case of a Brexit vote, no one can know. Just don’t expect it to stop with one major country walking away from the EU.

European Council President Donald Tusk, a historian and for-mer Polish prime minister who took

part in the struggle to overthrow Soviet-imposed communist rule in eastern Europe and join the EU, was both a witness and an actor in that history.

Tusk, who knows from personal experience what it means to be on the wrong side of a wall or border, warned last week: “Brexit could be the beginning of the destruc-tion not only of the EU but also of Western political civilization in its entirety.”

He is equally aware that if Brit-ish Prime Minister David Cameron succeeds in turning public opinion in the final days and winning the

referendum, his tactics of demand-ing a renegotiation of EU member-ship terms using a plebiscite as leverage are bound to tempt politi-cians in other countries.

In private, there is anger at Cameron among EU leaders and diplomats who feel he has played Russian roulette with Europe’s fu-ture in a failed bid to end civil war in his own party.

In case of a Brexit, EU found-ers Germany and France will work to shore up the remaining EU and put forward new projects in security and defense. But their lack of agreement on how to strengthen the euro zone - and the prospect of anti-EU populists gaining in elections in those coun-tries next year - makes any big integration initiative impossible for now. (rtr)

ORLANDO - Funerals for two of the 49 victims killed in the shooting at a nightclub in Florida were marked by tense scenes on Saturday, as an impatient driver was accused of injuring two law enforcement officers and one burial took place under the watch of anti-gay protesters.

Two Osceola County Sheriff’s deputies on motorcycles were injured at the funeral procession for Jean Carlos Mendez in Kis-simmee, Florida, some 20 miles (32 km) south of Orlando, when a driver cut through the cortege and struck them with her car, accord-ing to a statement on the sheriff’s Facebook page.

The deputies were taken to the hospital, where both were in stable condition, said the sheriff’s spokes-woman, Twis Lizasuain.

At the funeral of another victim, Christopher Leinonen, at a church close to the center of Orlando, a handful of protesters from the Kansas-based anti-gay Westboro Baptist Church stood silently for about 45 minutes. They were blocked from view of those at-tending the funeral by about 200 counter-protesters, who cheered when the Westboro members left.

Members of the Orlando Shake-speare Theater used large “angel wings,” measuring 8 feet wide and reaching 3 feet over shoulder height, to block out the protesters. The wings, made of white cloth

and plastic piping by volunteers from the theater’s costume and set shops, first surfaced at the 1998 funeral of Matthew Shepard, a gay man murdered in Wyoming.

The shooting in Orlando con-tinued to reverberate around the world. More than a thousand people attended a candle-light vigil in Berlin to show solidarity with the victims of the attack and their fami-lies. The Brandenburg Gate, long a symbol of division in the city, was lit up in rainbow colors, according to pictures posted on Twitter under the hashtag #berlinfororlando.

Authorities are still investigat-ing what motivated Omar Mateen to kill 49 people at the popular gay nightclub Pulse in the early hours of last Sunday, perpetrating the deadli-est mass shooting in modern U.S. history. Mateen was later killed in a shoot-out with police.

The shooting has sparked a new push for gun control legislation and Congress is expected to vote on proposals starting next week, including one on stopping people on terrorism watch lists from buy-ing guns.

Democrats, including President Barack Obama, are framing gun restrictions as a national secu-rity issue after Mateen professed loyalty to Islamist militants. But authorities believe he was “self-radicalized” and acted without any direction from outside net-works. (rtr)

REUTERS/Alvin Baez

A horse-drawn carriage carries the coffin of Angel Candelario, one of the victims of the shooting at the Pulse night club in Orlando, during his funeral procession in his hometown of Guanica, Puerto Rico, June 18, 2016.

Tension at funerals for Orlando victims with protest, irate driver

European historyhovers close

to reverse gear

REUTERS/PETER NICHOLLS

A slogan of the ‘Vote Leave’ campaign is projected onto the White Cliffs of Dover in southern England, urging people to support leaving the EU, March 11, 2016.

BRUSSELS - European history may be about to go into re-verse. If Britain votes to leave the European Union, it will likely start a process of fragmentation of the political and security structures on which the post-World War Two and post-Cold War European order was built.

Page 7: Edisi 20 Juni 2016 | Internasional Bali Post

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TABANAN - Belimbing Village is one of the tradi-tional Balinese villages situated about 600 meter above sea level surrounded by good temperature located in Tabanan Regency, west part of Bali Island. It is about 30 km from Denpasar Town or 2 hours drives by car. The village is well featured by the wonderful natures with panorama view in particular with rice terrace. Belimbing Village own the fertile land with some of tropical plantation thrive in this area includes durian,

coffee, clove, rambutan, mangosteen and much more. The magnificent view of rice terrace with Batukaru Mount as a backdrop has captivated the tourist to come and enjoy this panorama. Rice Paddy Trekking is one of the tourist attractions can be done at this site by exploring the pure natures, rice field and see the local farmer who working in the field. It is strategically lo-cated beside of the main road from Tabanan to Pupuan town by passing Antasari Village.

Belimbing Rice Terrace

THE two best storylines of the National Basketball Association season will produce only one happy ending in Sunday’s all-or-nothing NBA Finals Game Seven between Stephen Curry and the Warriors and LeBron James and the Cavaliers.

James and Curry have won six league MVP Awards between them but that will not help them at Oracle Arena when Golden State strive to cap the NBA’s greatest single season and the Cavs set out to end Cleveland’s 52-year title drought.

The city of Cleveland has not had a professional team sports title since the NFL Browns in 1964, and James left the Miami Heat to return to his home state two years ago on a mis-sion to deliver a championship.

“I’m going to give everything

that I got,” four-time MVP James told reporters at the Oracle Arena in Oakland, Calif. on Saturday.

James has shown what he has to offer in the last two games, when facing elimination trailing 3-1 in the best-of-seven, twice scoring 41 points. Cavaliers coach Tyronn Lue said James simply has to be himself. “He’s very capable of being special every night.”

James, playing in the Finals for a sixth year in a row including four in Miami, did not view Game Seven as pressure-packed.

“It’s an opportunity for us to do something special,” said James.

Golden State has already done something special, producing the best regular season record (73-9) ever in the NBA.

But failing to crown that achieve-ment with another title, after beating the Cavs in six games last year in the Finals, would suck the joy out of an otherwise wondrous campaign.

Curry agreed with team mate Klay Thompson that losing the NBA Finals would make the season a “failure”.

“That was our goal from the be-ginning. We had two other chances already and haven’t gotten it done,” Curry said on Saturday.

“We have 48 minutes to do it, so if we come up short we’ll all be very, very, very disappointed.”

It would also brand the Warriors as the first NBA Finals team to squander a 3-1 lead. All 32 other teams that led 3-1 won the title. (rtr)

After 17 hours, Swiss driver Se-bastien Buemi was at the front of the field in the number five Toyota TS050 with Britain’s Mike Conway a close second in the Japanese manufacturer’s number six car.

The number two Porsche, with Switzerland’s Neel Jani at the wheel, was seconds behind with all three

frontrunners lapping at a similar pace.

Porsche’s number one car was effectively out of contention after a long stay in the pits around midnight as mechanics wrestled with high water temperatures.

The car -- shared by Australian Mark Webber, New Zealand’s Bren-

don Hartley and Germany’s Timo Bernhard -- was 30th and 38 laps down.

“We have been plugging away and putting in consistent lap times through the night, without taking unneces-sary risks,” said Britain’s Anthony Davidson, who shares the number five Toyota with Buemi and Japan’s Kazuki Nakajima.

“It’s a long race and we’ve got to stay in the fight all the way to the end. Everyone has done a good job so far; we’ll keep pushing.”

Japan’s Kamui Kobayashi, in the number six Toyota, lost precious seconds during his night stint when he made contact with a GT car.

Porsche and stablemates Audi have each entered only two cars instead of three in the main LMP1 category for cost-cutting reasons in the wake of parent company Volkswagen’s diesel emissions scandal.

Last year’s race was won by Ger-many’s Nico Hulkenberg, New Zea-lander Earl Bamber and Britain’s Nick Tandy but none of them are driving in

the main LMP1 category this time.Hulkenberg is competing in Sun-

day’s European Formula One Grand Prix in Baku for Force India.

Porsche, who returned to Le Mans with a works team in 2014 for the first time in 16 years, are the most success-ful manufacturer with 17 titles. Toyota have yet to finish higher than second.

The race, now in its 84th edition, also marks the return of Ford in the GTE Pro category with the U.S. manufacturer locked in a battle with Ferrari. (rtr)

Bob Donnan-USA TODAY Sports

Cleveland Cavaliers forward LeBron James (23) blocks a shot by Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry (30) during the fourth quarter in game six of the NBA Finals at Quicken Loans Arena.

Curry, LeBron in all-or-nothing Game 7

Toyota lead Le Mans into the morningLE MANS - Toyota led the Le Mans 24 Hours sportscar race

into the morning on Sunday after a close battle with champi-ons Porsche through the night at the Sarthe circuit in western France.

AP Photo/Kamil Zihnioglu

The Toyota TS050 Hybrid No6 of the Toyota Gazoo Racing team driven by Mike Conway of Great Britain, Kamui Kobayashi of Japan and Stephane Sar-razin of France during the 84th 24-hour Le Mans endurance race, in Le Mans, western France, Sunday, June 19, 2016.

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98 Monday, June 20, 2016

Sp rtMonday, June 20, 2016

In Saturday’s other quarterfinal, Eduardo Vargas scored a career-high four goals and Edson Puch added two as Chile, the defending Copa America champions, routed Mexico 7-0.

Messi’s goal in the 60th minute gave Argentina a 3-0 lead and equaled the Argentine record for most international goals set by Gabriel Batistuta, according to Argentina’s governing body. The Barcelona star also took over the Copa America scoring lead with his fourth goal of the tournament.

Argentina now has two days to rest before playing the U.S. in Houston on Tuesday. The Ameri-cans have been off since beating Ecuador on Thursday.

With many in the Foxborough, Massachusetts, stadium wearing No. 10 from Messi’s national team and La Liga jerseys, the five-time FIFA Player of the Year started the game after playing a total of just 74 minutes in the three group stage matches. Just eight minutes in, he connected with Gonzalo Higuain on a long entry pass to make it 1-0.

“He knows that he’s a game-changing player,” Argentina coach Geraldo Martino said. “Every-body’s trying to cancel him. But he knows when to play one against

one. He knows when to pass the ball to other players.”

Higuain scored again in the 28th to make it 2-0. Messi then padded the lead in the 60th after taking a pass from Nicolas Gaitan just out-side the 6-meter box.

Venezuela finally beat Argen-tina goalkeeper Sergio Romero in the 70th minute when Salomon Rondon headed the ball in, nick-ing the post on the way. But Erik Lamela scored a minute later to make it 4-1.

Argentina is 6-2-2 against the U.S., with the teams last playing to a 1-1 draw in a 2011 friendly in New Jersey. The last American win was in a 1999 friendly.

Recovering from a back in-jury, Messi sat out the group stage opener this year and played just 29 minutes against Panama — but still managed to record a hat trick. He came on as a second-half substitute in the group stage finale against Bolivia.

Messi played the entire game on Saturday, despite getting a scare when he was taken down from be-hind in the first half and was slow to get up.

In Santa Clara, California, thou-sands of Mexico’s frustrated “fa-naticos” were already long gone by the time El Tri’s worst defeat

in a competitive match finally ended, along with its team-record unbeaten streak at 22 matches. It occurred almost a year to the day since Mexico’s previous loss, to Ecuador in the Copa group stage.

Vargas scored the first goal of his big night in the 44th, five min-utes after an offside call cost him another score, then added goals in the 52nd, 57th and 74th. “Everyone knows that we are the champions and today we showed it,” Vargas said.

Chile matched its scoring total from the entire three-game group stage. La Roja advances to take on Colombia in the semifinals Wednesday in Chicago.

El Tri’s worst competitive loss had been 6-0 to Germany in the group stage of the 1978 World Cup. Mexico was also beaten 8-0 by England in a 1961 friendly.

“First, I’d like to offer my most heartfelt apologies to the Mexican fans,” Mexico coach Juan Carlos Osorio said. “Today was a shame-ful presentation, an accident that happens in soccer. Obviously, there are bigger tragedies, but speaking in terms of sports, today was a very, very poor showing on our part.”

Mexico’s fans still regularly used their traditional homophobic chant, even after being urged to stop by tournament organizers, national sport officials and players, especially in the wake of the recent shooting deaths of 49 people at a gay nightclub in Orlando, Florida.(ap)

SAINT-MARTIN-DE-RE — Croatia may be without one of its best players for its toughest match at the European Championship. Luka Modric is nursing a muscle injury and is doubtful to play in the decisive Group D match against defending champion Spain on Tuesday.

Spain has already advanced to the round of 16, but Croatia needs at least a draw at Stade de Bordeaux to secure second place without depending on other results.

The Croats are second in the group with four points, two behind Spain and three ahead of the Czech Republic. Turkey has yet to earn a point. Croatia would still be likely to advance as one of the best third-place teams regardless of Tuesday’s results.

Modric got hurt in the second half of the 2-2 draw against the Czech Republic on Friday, when Croatia relinquished a two-goal lead late in the game to miss a chance to clinch its berth in the knockout stage.

“We will wait to see his condi-tion and then decide whether he will play or not,” Croatia coach Ante Cacic said about Modric. “We are building the team around him and we are limited without him.” Cacic also may not be able to count on forward Mario Mandzukic because of a muscle injury.

The Croatian soccer federation said both players underwent tests on Saturday and results didn’t show any major injuries, but it was “still early” to know whether they would be fit to play on Tuesday. “The final decision will be made depending on their day-to-day recovery,” the federation said.

Modric is crucial for Croatia at midfield, helping the team de-fensively and offensively. Croatia collapsed in the game against the Czechs after the Real Madrid mid-fielder had to be substituted in the 62nd minute. He had scored Croa-tia’s winner in the opening match against Turkey with a remarkable long-range volley.

Modric is one of the Croatians

who play in the Spanish league, along with Madrid teammate Ma-teo Kovacic and Barcelona mid-fielder Ivan Rakitic.

Croatia hasn’t beaten Spain in 22 years. In their only previous competitive meeting, La Roja won 1-0 in the final group game at Euro 2012.

Spain safely advanced to the next round of this year’s competi-tion by beating the Czech Republic 1-0 and Turkey 3-0. It remains

unclear if Spain coach Vicente Del Bosque will rest some of the team’s regular starters on Tuesday. The coach said he will make his deci-sion closer to the match.

Spain midfielder Cesc Fabregas said the goal is to finish at the top of the group regardless of the eventual opponent in the knockout stage.

“This next game is very im-portant because it’s crucial for us to be first in the group. It will be determinant for the rest of the

tournament,” Fabregas said. “We got off to a good start. We have been playing well until now. But it’s still early.”

Two-time defending champion

Spain is unbeaten in 14 games at the European Championship and hasn’t conceded a goal since its opener in 2012, a 1-1 draw against Italy. (ap)

PARIS — After more fan dis-order in Marseille at the Euro-pean Championship, UEFA hit the Hungarian soccer federation with a range of disciplinary charges on Sunday. In a second case an-nounced by UEFA, a Portugal fan who ran on the field to get a selfie with Cristiano Ronaldo will cost his national soccer body a fine.

UEFA holds federations respon-sible for the behavior of their fans inside stadiums. In the Hungary case, UEFA said its disciplinary panel will meet Tuesday to judge charges of “crowd disturbances,” throwing objects and setting off fireworks.

Fans clashed with stewards and some police before the game when trying to climb a fence to enter a section behind one goal. Riot police then formed in lines in front a section of Hungary fans, in the same end of Stade Velodrome where Russians attacked England fans one week earlier.

Hungary fans then lit or threw flares or firecrackers during the na-

tional anthems, when Iceland was awarded a penalty kick, and after their team scored a late goal in a 1-1 draw. UEFA is likely to impose a fine, which could be more severe as it is the second case involving Hun-gary at Euro 2016 — the team’s first major tournament in 30 years.

An earlier charge followed Hungary fans setting off fireworks in Bordeaux at a 2-0 win over Austria.

The Portuguese soccer federa-tion can expect to pay a financial penalty for the fan’s determination to track down Ronaldo on Saturday after a 0-0 draw with Austria.

The man ran across half the field from behind one goal at Parc des Princes and caught up with Ron-aldo near the halfway line. Ronaldo gestured to a security official to stay back until the fan got the picture before being led away.

In a third case, UEFA charged the Belgian soccer federation for fans lighting and throwing fire-works during a 3-0 win over Ireland in Bordeaux on Saturday. (ap)

AP Photo/Claude Paris

French police give directions to Hungarian fans as they arrive at the Velodrome stadium before the Euro 2016 Group F soc-cer match between Iceland and Hungary in Marseille, France, Saturday, June 18, 2016.

UEFA charges Hungary for fan disorder at Euro 2016 match

REUTERS/Kai Pfaffenbach Livepic

Croatia’s Luka Modric is substituted by Mateo Kovacic

Croatia may be without Modric for match against Spain

AP Photo/Jeff Chiu

Chile’s Eduardo Vargas celebrates after scoring against Mexico during a Copa Amer-ica Centenario quarterfinal soccer match at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., Satur-day, June 18, 2016. Chile won 7-0.

Messi scores in Argentina’s win; Chile

routs Mexico 7-0LIoNEL MESSI made his first start of the Copa America

tournament and tied a national record with his 54th interna-tional goal as Argentina defeated Venezuela 4-1 on Saturday to set up a semifinal match against the United States.

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98 Monday, June 20, 2016

Sp rtMonday, June 20, 2016

In Saturday’s other quarterfinal, Eduardo Vargas scored a career-high four goals and Edson Puch added two as Chile, the defending Copa America champions, routed Mexico 7-0.

Messi’s goal in the 60th minute gave Argentina a 3-0 lead and equaled the Argentine record for most international goals set by Gabriel Batistuta, according to Argentina’s governing body. The Barcelona star also took over the Copa America scoring lead with his fourth goal of the tournament.

Argentina now has two days to rest before playing the U.S. in Houston on Tuesday. The Ameri-cans have been off since beating Ecuador on Thursday.

With many in the Foxborough, Massachusetts, stadium wearing No. 10 from Messi’s national team and La Liga jerseys, the five-time FIFA Player of the Year started the game after playing a total of just 74 minutes in the three group stage matches. Just eight minutes in, he connected with Gonzalo Higuain on a long entry pass to make it 1-0.

“He knows that he’s a game-changing player,” Argentina coach Geraldo Martino said. “Every-body’s trying to cancel him. But he knows when to play one against

one. He knows when to pass the ball to other players.”

Higuain scored again in the 28th to make it 2-0. Messi then padded the lead in the 60th after taking a pass from Nicolas Gaitan just out-side the 6-meter box.

Venezuela finally beat Argen-tina goalkeeper Sergio Romero in the 70th minute when Salomon Rondon headed the ball in, nick-ing the post on the way. But Erik Lamela scored a minute later to make it 4-1.

Argentina is 6-2-2 against the U.S., with the teams last playing to a 1-1 draw in a 2011 friendly in New Jersey. The last American win was in a 1999 friendly.

Recovering from a back in-jury, Messi sat out the group stage opener this year and played just 29 minutes against Panama — but still managed to record a hat trick. He came on as a second-half substitute in the group stage finale against Bolivia.

Messi played the entire game on Saturday, despite getting a scare when he was taken down from be-hind in the first half and was slow to get up.

In Santa Clara, California, thou-sands of Mexico’s frustrated “fa-naticos” were already long gone by the time El Tri’s worst defeat

in a competitive match finally ended, along with its team-record unbeaten streak at 22 matches. It occurred almost a year to the day since Mexico’s previous loss, to Ecuador in the Copa group stage.

Vargas scored the first goal of his big night in the 44th, five min-utes after an offside call cost him another score, then added goals in the 52nd, 57th and 74th. “Everyone knows that we are the champions and today we showed it,” Vargas said.

Chile matched its scoring total from the entire three-game group stage. La Roja advances to take on Colombia in the semifinals Wednesday in Chicago.

El Tri’s worst competitive loss had been 6-0 to Germany in the group stage of the 1978 World Cup. Mexico was also beaten 8-0 by England in a 1961 friendly.

“First, I’d like to offer my most heartfelt apologies to the Mexican fans,” Mexico coach Juan Carlos Osorio said. “Today was a shame-ful presentation, an accident that happens in soccer. Obviously, there are bigger tragedies, but speaking in terms of sports, today was a very, very poor showing on our part.”

Mexico’s fans still regularly used their traditional homophobic chant, even after being urged to stop by tournament organizers, national sport officials and players, especially in the wake of the recent shooting deaths of 49 people at a gay nightclub in Orlando, Florida.(ap)

SAINT-MARTIN-DE-RE — Croatia may be without one of its best players for its toughest match at the European Championship. Luka Modric is nursing a muscle injury and is doubtful to play in the decisive Group D match against defending champion Spain on Tuesday.

Spain has already advanced to the round of 16, but Croatia needs at least a draw at Stade de Bordeaux to secure second place without depending on other results.

The Croats are second in the group with four points, two behind Spain and three ahead of the Czech Republic. Turkey has yet to earn a point. Croatia would still be likely to advance as one of the best third-place teams regardless of Tuesday’s results.

Modric got hurt in the second half of the 2-2 draw against the Czech Republic on Friday, when Croatia relinquished a two-goal lead late in the game to miss a chance to clinch its berth in the knockout stage.

“We will wait to see his condi-tion and then decide whether he will play or not,” Croatia coach Ante Cacic said about Modric. “We are building the team around him and we are limited without him.” Cacic also may not be able to count on forward Mario Mandzukic because of a muscle injury.

The Croatian soccer federation said both players underwent tests on Saturday and results didn’t show any major injuries, but it was “still early” to know whether they would be fit to play on Tuesday. “The final decision will be made depending on their day-to-day recovery,” the federation said.

Modric is crucial for Croatia at midfield, helping the team de-fensively and offensively. Croatia collapsed in the game against the Czechs after the Real Madrid mid-fielder had to be substituted in the 62nd minute. He had scored Croa-tia’s winner in the opening match against Turkey with a remarkable long-range volley.

Modric is one of the Croatians

who play in the Spanish league, along with Madrid teammate Ma-teo Kovacic and Barcelona mid-fielder Ivan Rakitic.

Croatia hasn’t beaten Spain in 22 years. In their only previous competitive meeting, La Roja won 1-0 in the final group game at Euro 2012.

Spain safely advanced to the next round of this year’s competi-tion by beating the Czech Republic 1-0 and Turkey 3-0. It remains

unclear if Spain coach Vicente Del Bosque will rest some of the team’s regular starters on Tuesday. The coach said he will make his deci-sion closer to the match.

Spain midfielder Cesc Fabregas said the goal is to finish at the top of the group regardless of the eventual opponent in the knockout stage.

“This next game is very im-portant because it’s crucial for us to be first in the group. It will be determinant for the rest of the

tournament,” Fabregas said. “We got off to a good start. We have been playing well until now. But it’s still early.”

Two-time defending champion

Spain is unbeaten in 14 games at the European Championship and hasn’t conceded a goal since its opener in 2012, a 1-1 draw against Italy. (ap)

PARIS — After more fan dis-order in Marseille at the Euro-pean Championship, UEFA hit the Hungarian soccer federation with a range of disciplinary charges on Sunday. In a second case an-nounced by UEFA, a Portugal fan who ran on the field to get a selfie with Cristiano Ronaldo will cost his national soccer body a fine.

UEFA holds federations respon-sible for the behavior of their fans inside stadiums. In the Hungary case, UEFA said its disciplinary panel will meet Tuesday to judge charges of “crowd disturbances,” throwing objects and setting off fireworks.

Fans clashed with stewards and some police before the game when trying to climb a fence to enter a section behind one goal. Riot police then formed in lines in front a section of Hungary fans, in the same end of Stade Velodrome where Russians attacked England fans one week earlier.

Hungary fans then lit or threw flares or firecrackers during the na-

tional anthems, when Iceland was awarded a penalty kick, and after their team scored a late goal in a 1-1 draw. UEFA is likely to impose a fine, which could be more severe as it is the second case involving Hun-gary at Euro 2016 — the team’s first major tournament in 30 years.

An earlier charge followed Hungary fans setting off fireworks in Bordeaux at a 2-0 win over Austria.

The Portuguese soccer federa-tion can expect to pay a financial penalty for the fan’s determination to track down Ronaldo on Saturday after a 0-0 draw with Austria.

The man ran across half the field from behind one goal at Parc des Princes and caught up with Ron-aldo near the halfway line. Ronaldo gestured to a security official to stay back until the fan got the picture before being led away.

In a third case, UEFA charged the Belgian soccer federation for fans lighting and throwing fire-works during a 3-0 win over Ireland in Bordeaux on Saturday. (ap)

AP Photo/Claude Paris

French police give directions to Hungarian fans as they arrive at the Velodrome stadium before the Euro 2016 Group F soc-cer match between Iceland and Hungary in Marseille, France, Saturday, June 18, 2016.

UEFA charges Hungary for fan disorder at Euro 2016 match

REUTERS/Kai Pfaffenbach Livepic

Croatia’s Luka Modric is substituted by Mateo Kovacic

Croatia may be without Modric for match against Spain

AP Photo/Jeff Chiu

Chile’s Eduardo Vargas celebrates after scoring against Mexico during a Copa Amer-ica Centenario quarterfinal soccer match at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., Satur-day, June 18, 2016. Chile won 7-0.

Messi scores in Argentina’s win; Chile

routs Mexico 7-0LIoNEL MESSI made his first start of the Copa America

tournament and tied a national record with his 54th interna-tional goal as Argentina defeated Venezuela 4-1 on Saturday to set up a semifinal match against the United States.

Page 10: Edisi 20 Juni 2016 | Internasional Bali Post

Monday, June 20, 2016DestinationMonday, June 20, 201610 InternationalInternational

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TABANAN - Belimbing Village is one of the tradi-tional Balinese villages situated about 600 meter above sea level surrounded by good temperature located in Tabanan Regency, west part of Bali Island. It is about 30 km from Denpasar Town or 2 hours drives by car. The village is well featured by the wonderful natures with panorama view in particular with rice terrace. Belimbing Village own the fertile land with some of tropical plantation thrive in this area includes durian,

coffee, clove, rambutan, mangosteen and much more. The magnificent view of rice terrace with Batukaru Mount as a backdrop has captivated the tourist to come and enjoy this panorama. Rice Paddy Trekking is one of the tourist attractions can be done at this site by exploring the pure natures, rice field and see the local farmer who working in the field. It is strategically lo-cated beside of the main road from Tabanan to Pupuan town by passing Antasari Village.

Belimbing Rice Terrace

THE two best storylines of the National Basketball Association season will produce only one happy ending in Sunday’s all-or-nothing NBA Finals Game Seven between Stephen Curry and the Warriors and LeBron James and the Cavaliers.

James and Curry have won six league MVP Awards between them but that will not help them at Oracle Arena when Golden State strive to cap the NBA’s greatest single season and the Cavs set out to end Cleveland’s 52-year title drought.

The city of Cleveland has not had a professional team sports title since the NFL Browns in 1964, and James left the Miami Heat to return to his home state two years ago on a mis-sion to deliver a championship.

“I’m going to give everything

that I got,” four-time MVP James told reporters at the Oracle Arena in Oakland, Calif. on Saturday.

James has shown what he has to offer in the last two games, when facing elimination trailing 3-1 in the best-of-seven, twice scoring 41 points. Cavaliers coach Tyronn Lue said James simply has to be himself. “He’s very capable of being special every night.”

James, playing in the Finals for a sixth year in a row including four in Miami, did not view Game Seven as pressure-packed.

“It’s an opportunity for us to do something special,” said James.

Golden State has already done something special, producing the best regular season record (73-9) ever in the NBA.

But failing to crown that achieve-ment with another title, after beating the Cavs in six games last year in the Finals, would suck the joy out of an otherwise wondrous campaign.

Curry agreed with team mate Klay Thompson that losing the NBA Finals would make the season a “failure”.

“That was our goal from the be-ginning. We had two other chances already and haven’t gotten it done,” Curry said on Saturday.

“We have 48 minutes to do it, so if we come up short we’ll all be very, very, very disappointed.”

It would also brand the Warriors as the first NBA Finals team to squander a 3-1 lead. All 32 other teams that led 3-1 won the title. (rtr)

After 17 hours, Swiss driver Se-bastien Buemi was at the front of the field in the number five Toyota TS050 with Britain’s Mike Conway a close second in the Japanese manufacturer’s number six car.

The number two Porsche, with Switzerland’s Neel Jani at the wheel, was seconds behind with all three

frontrunners lapping at a similar pace.

Porsche’s number one car was effectively out of contention after a long stay in the pits around midnight as mechanics wrestled with high water temperatures.

The car -- shared by Australian Mark Webber, New Zealand’s Bren-

don Hartley and Germany’s Timo Bernhard -- was 30th and 38 laps down.

“We have been plugging away and putting in consistent lap times through the night, without taking unneces-sary risks,” said Britain’s Anthony Davidson, who shares the number five Toyota with Buemi and Japan’s Kazuki Nakajima.

“It’s a long race and we’ve got to stay in the fight all the way to the end. Everyone has done a good job so far; we’ll keep pushing.”

Japan’s Kamui Kobayashi, in the number six Toyota, lost precious seconds during his night stint when he made contact with a GT car.

Porsche and stablemates Audi have each entered only two cars instead of three in the main LMP1 category for cost-cutting reasons in the wake of parent company Volkswagen’s diesel emissions scandal.

Last year’s race was won by Ger-many’s Nico Hulkenberg, New Zea-lander Earl Bamber and Britain’s Nick Tandy but none of them are driving in

the main LMP1 category this time.Hulkenberg is competing in Sun-

day’s European Formula One Grand Prix in Baku for Force India.

Porsche, who returned to Le Mans with a works team in 2014 for the first time in 16 years, are the most success-ful manufacturer with 17 titles. Toyota have yet to finish higher than second.

The race, now in its 84th edition, also marks the return of Ford in the GTE Pro category with the U.S. manufacturer locked in a battle with Ferrari. (rtr)

Bob Donnan-USA TODAY Sports

Cleveland Cavaliers forward LeBron James (23) blocks a shot by Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry (30) during the fourth quarter in game six of the NBA Finals at Quicken Loans Arena.

Curry, LeBron in all-or-nothing Game 7

Toyota lead Le Mans into the morningLE MANS - Toyota led the Le Mans 24 Hours sportscar race

into the morning on Sunday after a close battle with champi-ons Porsche through the night at the Sarthe circuit in western France.

AP Photo/Kamil Zihnioglu

The Toyota TS050 Hybrid No6 of the Toyota Gazoo Racing team driven by Mike Conway of Great Britain, Kamui Kobayashi of Japan and Stephane Sar-razin of France during the 84th 24-hour Le Mans endurance race, in Le Mans, western France, Sunday, June 19, 2016.

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6 International

W RLDMonday, June 20, 2016

Even if the British step back from the brink on Thursday, the bruising legacy of the debate, the growing trend of national ref-erendums on EU issues and the backlash against globalization and internationalized elites on both sides of the Atlantic will not fade away any time soon.

How far and how fast contagion may spread in case of a Brexit vote, no one can know. Just don’t expect it to stop with one major country walking away from the EU.

European Council President Donald Tusk, a historian and for-mer Polish prime minister who took

part in the struggle to overthrow Soviet-imposed communist rule in eastern Europe and join the EU, was both a witness and an actor in that history.

Tusk, who knows from personal experience what it means to be on the wrong side of a wall or border, warned last week: “Brexit could be the beginning of the destruc-tion not only of the EU but also of Western political civilization in its entirety.”

He is equally aware that if Brit-ish Prime Minister David Cameron succeeds in turning public opinion in the final days and winning the

referendum, his tactics of demand-ing a renegotiation of EU member-ship terms using a plebiscite as leverage are bound to tempt politi-cians in other countries.

In private, there is anger at Cameron among EU leaders and diplomats who feel he has played Russian roulette with Europe’s fu-ture in a failed bid to end civil war in his own party.

In case of a Brexit, EU found-ers Germany and France will work to shore up the remaining EU and put forward new projects in security and defense. But their lack of agreement on how to strengthen the euro zone - and the prospect of anti-EU populists gaining in elections in those coun-tries next year - makes any big integration initiative impossible for now. (rtr)

ORLANDO - Funerals for two of the 49 victims killed in the shooting at a nightclub in Florida were marked by tense scenes on Saturday, as an impatient driver was accused of injuring two law enforcement officers and one burial took place under the watch of anti-gay protesters.

Two Osceola County Sheriff’s deputies on motorcycles were injured at the funeral procession for Jean Carlos Mendez in Kis-simmee, Florida, some 20 miles (32 km) south of Orlando, when a driver cut through the cortege and struck them with her car, accord-ing to a statement on the sheriff’s Facebook page.

The deputies were taken to the hospital, where both were in stable condition, said the sheriff’s spokes-woman, Twis Lizasuain.

At the funeral of another victim, Christopher Leinonen, at a church close to the center of Orlando, a handful of protesters from the Kansas-based anti-gay Westboro Baptist Church stood silently for about 45 minutes. They were blocked from view of those at-tending the funeral by about 200 counter-protesters, who cheered when the Westboro members left.

Members of the Orlando Shake-speare Theater used large “angel wings,” measuring 8 feet wide and reaching 3 feet over shoulder height, to block out the protesters. The wings, made of white cloth

and plastic piping by volunteers from the theater’s costume and set shops, first surfaced at the 1998 funeral of Matthew Shepard, a gay man murdered in Wyoming.

The shooting in Orlando con-tinued to reverberate around the world. More than a thousand people attended a candle-light vigil in Berlin to show solidarity with the victims of the attack and their fami-lies. The Brandenburg Gate, long a symbol of division in the city, was lit up in rainbow colors, according to pictures posted on Twitter under the hashtag #berlinfororlando.

Authorities are still investigat-ing what motivated Omar Mateen to kill 49 people at the popular gay nightclub Pulse in the early hours of last Sunday, perpetrating the deadli-est mass shooting in modern U.S. history. Mateen was later killed in a shoot-out with police.

The shooting has sparked a new push for gun control legislation and Congress is expected to vote on proposals starting next week, including one on stopping people on terrorism watch lists from buy-ing guns.

Democrats, including President Barack Obama, are framing gun restrictions as a national secu-rity issue after Mateen professed loyalty to Islamist militants. But authorities believe he was “self-radicalized” and acted without any direction from outside net-works. (rtr)

REUTERS/Alvin Baez

A horse-drawn carriage carries the coffin of Angel Candelario, one of the victims of the shooting at the Pulse night club in Orlando, during his funeral procession in his hometown of Guanica, Puerto Rico, June 18, 2016.

Tension at funerals for Orlando victims with protest, irate driver

European historyhovers close

to reverse gear

REUTERS/PETER NICHOLLS

A slogan of the ‘Vote Leave’ campaign is projected onto the White Cliffs of Dover in southern England, urging people to support leaving the EU, March 11, 2016.

BRUSSELS - European history may be about to go into re-verse. If Britain votes to leave the European Union, it will likely start a process of fragmentation of the political and security structures on which the post-World War Two and post-Cold War European order was built.

Page 12: Edisi 20 Juni 2016 | Internasional Bali Post

Indonesia Today Monday, June 20, 2016 5InternationalMonday, June 20, 201612 International

BUSINESS

Up since dawn, they had worked through an 80-degree day that was just beginning to cool off. Now, Pittman, a paralegal with the Farmworker Unit of Legal Aid of North Carolina, wanted to get their attention.

The health care law passed in 2010 requires you to have health insurance, she told them in Span-ish. If you don’t get it, she said, you could be fined. “Cuánto cuesta?” said one worker, wanting to know the cost.

These farmworkers, living in the United States legally through the H-2A visa program, must be insured, like most U.S. citizens and legal residents. But reaching them is an uphill battle. They live in cinder block homes built by employers in isolated areas. They work long days, and often, a full week.

The majority come from Mexico to work in Florida, Georgia and North Carolina. The countdown clock starts when they enter the country. They have just 60 days to learn about coinsurance and copayments, and decide whether to purchase a high- or low-deductible plan.

Alexis Guild, a migrant health policy analyst at Farmworker Jus-tice, an advocacy group based in Washington, said North Carolina has been “very successful” in en-rolling H-2A farmworkers, thanks to a yearslong partnership among various nonprofits and health cen-ters.

In the camp near Dunn, about one-third of the 31 residents showed up for Pittman’s presentation, gathering in a small dining room with two picnic tables and cement floors.

The cost of health insurance depends on the type purchased, income and family size, Pittman told them. Some people don’t have monthly payments; others could pay $40 per month. Consider, she added, that this year’s fine is $695 or 2 percent of wages, whichever is greater.

Antonio Flores, of Veracruz, said he worried about the cost. He is in the U.S. for six months and has a wife and son to support. Like other farmworkers based in North Carolina, he makes $10.72 per hour. “Would I need to pay the fine?” said

Flores, 29.It’s a difficult question because

some workers qualify for an ex-emption or are offered insurance through their employer.

Mackenzie Mann, a health edu-cator with North Carolina Farm-workers Project, said the only way to be sure is to fill out a form. On a recent Wednesday, Mann and a co-worker traveled through a narrow road to a camp in Angier, where workers were waiting for them with insurance letters and payment questions.

On its way to surpass last year’s enrollment totals, the group has signed up about 150 workers since February and they still have two months to go.

First in line at the camp was Apolinar Castillo, of Zacatecas, Mexico, who got a bill in the latest batch of mail he received from his boss. Castillo, 44, said that after 15 years toiling in the nation’s fields he didn’t think twice about paying $10.55 per month for health insur-ance. “I feel confident that, if there is an emergency, I can dial 911 and use my (insurance) card,” Castillo said. After some confusion, Castillo was told that he had already made the monthly payment and the bill he had was old.(ap)

In this photo provided by Alejandra Can-cino, taken May 24, 2016, a sam-ple insurance card used dur-ing a presenta-tion, in Newton Grove, N.C. Even season farmworkers in the United States legally get health insurance, but reaching them can be an uphill battle.

Uphill battle to get seasonal farmworkers health insurance

DUNN, N.C. — Some seasonal agricultural workers were finishing a meal after a long day of planting sweet potato seeds when Julie Pittman pulled into to their camp.

Alejandra Cancino via AP

Rights groups have criticized Indonesia’s treatment of the 44 men, women and children and the Aceh provincial government’s plan to aban-don them in international waters.

The migrants were being sheltered in tents after being allowed off their boat Saturday during rough weather.

Ahmad Samadan, chief of the local immigration office, said au-thorities still plan to tow the migrants into international waters once further repairs to the vessel are completed.

“They are being sheltered ashore,” he said. “We still have our initial plan of towing them back to sea.”

The group was trying to reach

the Australian territory of Christmas Island when their boat’s engine mal-functioned off the coast of Indonesia’s Sumatra island. They had been at sea for about a month after leaving from India in the Indian-flagged boat. Amnesty International has said the minority Tamils may have been flee-ing persecution in Sri Lanka.

Officials from the International Organization for Migration and the United Nations’ refugee agency have been denied access to the migrants. Earlier in the week, po-lice fired a warning shot when six women tried to leave the beached vessel. Some of the migrants ap-

pealed for a new boat, saying theirs was in bad condition.

“Please help us, this ship is not good. We are going to die with this boat,” Fakky Sharen, a 34-year-old migrant traveling with his wife and 18-month-old son, said Saturday dur-ing an exchange with lawmaker Nasir Djamil, who visited the group.

A 22-year-old woman who identi-fied herself as Artika said she was very afraid because of the boat’s condition and wanted to be as-sisted by UNHCR, the U.N.’s refugee agency.

Indonesia last year opened its doors to stateless Muslim Rohingya boat people fleeing persecution in Myanmar, but officials have said the current situation is different because the migrants are trying to reach Aus-tralia.(ap)

JAKARTA - An Indonesian Coordinating Minister for Political, Security and Legal Affairs, Luhut Binsar Pandjaitan said here on Thursday that the government wishes to settle alleged cases of human rights violations in Papua definitively.

“I will meet all community elements, including religious figures, students, military and police officials and also non-governmental or-ganizations. The government wishes to show to the world that we are serious and transparent in settling the cases. There is no engineering,” he said at Sentani airport in Jayapura, Papua.

He said the process has been going well. The integrated team that was set up in May 2016 to handle alleged cases of human rights violations in Papua and West Papua provinces has been assigned to collect data, information and analysis and it will submit its report to the President. Minister Luhut said in a written statement received here that day that a team had indeed been set up by the National Commission on Human Rights (Komnas HAM) in 2011 and this integrated team was set up by the government and was aimed at helping accelerate the settlement of the cases.

“The integrated team has defined the criteria for a human right violation. The criteria have been formulated transparently, and are measurable with impartiality. Based on the criteria, out of 22 reported cases, three could be categorized as human right violations, namely the Wasior, Wamena and Paniai cases,” he said, adding that he had never intervened in the process of work of the team.

Minister Luhut said whoever is declared guilty by the team will face judicial process. “Whoever he is, be they community members or law enforcement officials. In principle, whoever is declared guilty will be taken through a judicial process,” he said.

To assure that the process is transparent, he said he had invited New Zealands Ambassador to Indonesia, Trevor Matheson, Solomon Ambassador Salana Kalu, Fiji Ambassador S.T. Cavuilati and Papua New Guinea Ambassador Peter Ilau to Papua.

“Their presence here is to make the international community see what we have been doing. They are not a fact-finding team,” he said.

When asked about the rejection of the team by a Komnas HAM Commissioner, Minister Luhut said he had received confirmation from Komnas HAM Chairman Nur Kholis that this is a matter of a personal view and not the decision of Komnas HAM.

“When he was contacted by our staff, Pak (Mr) Nur Kholis said the decision of Komnas HAMs plenary meeting is to establish a working task force that will help Nur Khlis and Ibu (Mrs) Zandra Mambrasar to work for Papua together with the governments team,” he said.

With regards to reports about more than 1,000 people being ar-rested while conducting a demonstration to protest the governments team, Papua Regional Police Chief Paulus Waterpauw denied this, saying, “There has never been any arrest made. We only asked them to disperse.”

During his visit to the office of the Financial Service Authority (OJK) in Jayapura, Minister Luhut and the Head of the National Plan-ning Board, Sofyan Djalil, had been briefed on OJK activities so far. OJK has emphasized on financial education and boosting economic development in Papua.

On the occasion, Minister Luhut also expressed support for the development of entrepreneurship in the coffee, cocoa and palm oil plantation sectors. He advised OJK to set a target and find indigenous business cadres. Minister Luhut plans to visit Wamena, Manokwari and Merauke while in Papua.(ant)

SURABAYA - Indonesian navys combat task force has detained nine Philippines boats indulging in il-legal fishing in the waters along the Indonesia-Philippines border. “The boats were seized in different sea operations,” the commander of the Eastern Fleet Commands task force, Commodore I.N.G Ariawan, said here on Saturday.

The operations included Benteng Ambalat-16 Operation (in the waters

along the Indonesia-Malaysia border), the Benteng Tuna-16 Operation (in the waters along the Indonesia-Philippines border), Benteng Kanguru-16 (in the waters along the Indonesia-Timor Lester-Australia border) and Siaga Yudha Operation. These were carried out to check combat readiness in the Indonesian eastern region and were carried out from May till mid-June.

During the operations, the task force deployed KRI Badau (BDU-

841), KRI Sura (SRA-802) and KRI Karel Satuit Tubun (KST-356). “They have caught and detained nine Philip-pine boats fishing in the Indonesian Exclusive Economic Zone without any document issued by the Indone-sian government,” Ariawan stated.

The Philippine boats that have been seized are: KIA Robert Jon Fishing GT 15, KM Santo Nino Jon OI GT 22, Sun Nicholas GT 20, Kkury Guapa GT 15, FB/LB Twin J-105 GT 40, F/BCA

Nano Aqua-4 GT 30, FB/LB Rashell DH 101 GT 35, FB Yareyo 291 GT 88 and F/B Rashell GT 125.

“The boats have been taken to the naval bases that were the closest --- Lantamal XIII/TRK, Lanal Ternate and Lanal Morotai --- for further investigation,” he added.

Ariawan pointed out that the suc-cess was proof that patrol units under the task force (Gupurla) were able to carry out their duties professionally.

“We hope operations like these can be continued so that the security and sovereignty of the Indonesian territorial waters is well protected,” he stressed.

The navy and the ministry of fish-eries and marine resources had also cooperated to conduct an operation against illegal “rumpon” (fish catch-ing device) in Sulawesi Sea in the Indonesia-Philippine EEZ border on June 12-14.(ant)

Rights violation cases in Papua to be settled definitively: Minister Pandjaitan

AP Photo/Heri Juanda, File

FILE - In this June 17, 2016 file photo, Indonesian officials load food supplies onto a boat carrying Tamil migrants which have been stranded on the beach in Lhoknga, Aceh province, Indonesia.

Indonesia lets migrants ashore after week on stranded boat

LHOKNGA — Indonesia allowed a group of Tamil migrants from Sri Lanka to come ashore in Aceh province on Saturday after confining them to their stranded boat for a week, but is in-sisting they’ll be towed out to sea once the vessel is repaired.

Navy forces seize nine Philippine fishing boats for poaching

NEW DELHI — The governor of India’s central bank said Saturday that he will not seek a second term and will return to academia when his term ends in September.

Raghuram Rajan’s announcement ends speculation over whether Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government will give him another three-year term with India’s economy growing at an impressive 7.5 percent. That made India the world’s fastest-growing major economy, overtaking China’s growth in the January-March quarter.

Rajan was appointed the Reserve Bank of India’s governor by the previous Congress party government three years ago. Some leaders of Modi’s Hindu nationalist party recently criticized him for adopting a hard line against inflation despite pressure to cut interest rates to push India’s economic growth.

Subramanian Swamy, a lawmaker from the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party, has attacked Rajan for his hawkish stance on interest rates, and questioned whether Rajan was “mentally, fully Indian as he holds a U.S. green card,” according to the Press Trust of India news agency.

Since becoming head of the central bank, Rajan has been on leave as a professor of finance at the University of Chicago.

In a message to his bank staff on Saturday, Rajan said that when he took office, the Indian currency was plunging daily, inflation was high and growth was weak.

His agenda for action, including a new monetary framework and raising of foreign exchange reserves, helped halve inflation and allowed savers to earn positive real interest rates on deposits after a long time, he said. “We have also been able to cut interest rates by 150 basis points after raising them initially,” he added.

India’s inflation rate averaged 7.7 percent from 2012 through 2015, reaching an all-time high of 11.16 percent in 2013 and a record-low 3.69 percent in July last year, according to government statistics.

Rajan, who was chief economist at the International Monetary Fund from 2003 to 2007, said in his message, “I am an academic and I have always made it clear that my ultimate home is in the realm of ideas.” He also said he “will, of course, always be available to serve my country when needed.”(ap)

India’s central bank governor says he won’t seek 2nd term

AP Photo/Rafiq Maqbool, File

FILE- In this April 5, 2016 file photo, Reserve Bank of In-dia (RBI) Governor Raghuram Rajan addresses a press conference in Mumbai, India. Rajan issued a statement on Saturday, June 18, 2016 saying that he’ll quit and return to academia when his term ends in September.

Page 13: Edisi 20 Juni 2016 | Internasional Bali Post

Bali News International4 Monday, June 20, 2016 13InternationalMonday, June 20, 2016

The schedule of the 38th Bali Art FestivalMonday, 20th June 2016Time : 08.00 A.MLocation : Cita Kelangen HallProgram : Workshop

Time : 11.00 A.MLocation : Ayodya Open StageProgram : Music, Dance and Song Arts Performances Lampung by Jung Sarat Production, Denbatas Village Tabanan Regency

Time : 17.00 P.MLocation : Angsoka Open StageProgram : Cak Kolaborasi Performance Arts by SDN. 6, Batubulan Village, Sukawati sub-distric, Gianyar Regency

Time : 20.00 P.M.Location : Ayodya Open StageProgram : Balinese Dance Treatical by Gita Bandana Praja Group, Banjar Belaluan Sadmerta, Dangin Puri Kauh village, Denpasar City

Time : 20.00 P.M.Location : Wantilan HallProgram : Ramayana Shadow Puppets Children level axhibition by P-Luk Jiner art community, from Baluk village, Jembrana Sub-distric, Jembrana Regency

Time : 20.00 P.M.Location : Ksirarnawa HallProgram : Documentary Film Bali Competition Screening

Time : 20.00 P.MLocation : Wantilan HallProgram : Arja Prembon peformance by Arja Prembon Kakul Gondang Group, Banjar Dangin Uma, Kaba-kaba Village, Tabanan Regency

Time : 20.00 P.M.Location : Ardha Chandra AmphitheatreProgram : Women Gong Kebyar exhibition featuring from Seni Aswini Kembar, Banjar Kerta Sari, Panjer Village, South Denpasar Sub-dictric, Denpasar City and Women Gong Tunjung Mekar group Besang Kangin Village, Klungkung Regency

ROME - Italians began voting on Sunday for mayors of their largest cities in a ballot that will test Prime Minister Matteo Renzi’s popularity and could hand control of Rome to the anti-establishment 5-Star Move-ment (M5S).

Virginia Raggi, a 37 year-old law-yer from the M5S, was in pole position to seize the scandal-plagued capital from Renzi’s Democratic Party (PD) and become its first female mayor.

The PD took a bruising in the first round of voting on June 5. Italy’s four biggest cities are among 126 towns holding run-offs between first and second-placed candidates after none won more than 50 percent backing.

Attention is focused on Rome, fi-nancial hub Milan and the traditional PD stronghold Turin as 8.6 million people - just under a fifth of the total electorate - cast their vote.

Raggi won 35.2 percent in the first round, pushing Renzi’s candidate Ro-berto Giachetti into second place with a campaign promising to fight graft and privilege.

“Today we need two things: honesty and courage,” Raggi tweeted early on Sunday, quoting 20th century socialist politician and former president Sandro Pertini. Conquering Rome would be a big victory for M5S, which has capital-ised on widespread frustration with tra-ditional parties as the left and right have been tainted by corruption scandals.

Persistent weakness in the euro zone’s third-largest economy has also fuelled frustration. M5S has promised universal income support for the poor and a referendum on membership of the euro.

Renzi has said the vote will not hurt his left-right coalition government, but a bad showing will put him under pres-

sure in his already divided party ahead of a referendum in October on which he has staked his political future.

The most politically significant contest for Renzi is in Milan, where he backed Giuseppe Sala, head of the 2015 Expo World Fair. Sala emerged from the first round barely a percent-age point ahead of centre-right rival Stefano Parisi. In Turin, prominent PD incumbent Piero Fassino came out ahead in the first round but faces an unexpectedly tough challenge from M5S. In Bologna, another leftist bas-tion, the PD is expected to hold off the anti-immigrant Northern League.

Naples is a lost cause for the PD, whose candidate was knocked out in the first round. Italy’s third-biggest city looks set to give a second term to former prosecutor Luigi de Magistris, who has declared it a “Renzi-free zone”. (rtr)

The official didn’t elaborate on how long the repairs would take but said if this cannot be done in Egypt, the so-called “black boxes” would be sent abroad. The official who spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn’t authorized to speak to the media.

With the wreckage of the Airbus A320 some 3,000 meters under water, the cockpit voice and flight data recorders are vital for piec-ing together the last moments of the flight, which plunged into the sea between the Greek island of Crete and the Egyptian port city of Alexandria on May 19, killing all 66 on board.

Earlier in the day, Egypt’s inves-tigation commission said the flight data recorder had been pulled out of the sea, a day after the cockpit voice recorder was also recovered. Both were brought to Cairo for analysis.

The memory units inside the recorders can provide key data, in-cluding the last conversations inside the cockpit, information about auto-pilot mode or even smoke alarms. They might also give answers to why the pilot made no distress call before the crash.

Experts say the data, combined with previously obtained satellite and radar images, debris analysis, the plane history and the pilots’ records, can shed light on the most

possible scenarios. No militant group has claimed bringing down the aircraft.

“We will be having a wealth of information that helps the investi-gators eliminate some possibilities while giving priority to others,” said Hani Galal, an Egyptian aviation expert. He is not involved in this crash investigation but has taken part in other similar probes.

Both France and the United States are sending investigators to Cairo to help with the probe.

EgyptAir Flight 804 en route to Cairo from Paris disappeared May 19 from radar at about 2:45 a.m lo-cal time, just as it had entered Egyp-tian airspace. Radar data showed the aircraft had made violent moves after cruising normally in clear skies, plummeting from 38,000 feet (11,582 meters) to 15,000 feet (4,572 meters). It disappeared when it was at an altitude of about 10,000 feet (3,048 meters).

Leaked flight data indicated a sensor had detected smoke in a lavatory and a fault in two of the plane’s cockpit windows in the final moments of the flight. Egypt’s civil aviation minister, Sherif Fathi, has said that terrorism is a more prob-able cause than equipment failure or some other catastrophic event.

Families of the victims are losing hope the remains of their loved ones

can be recovered intact from the seabed so long after the crash but knowing what had caused it could bring closure.

“Finding answers to our many questions will give us some relief,” said Malek Zayada, speaking over the phone from the Sudanese capital, Khartoum. His brother, Moham-

med Saleh Zayada, a 62-year-old UNESCO scholar who specialized in translation and history, was one of the passengers on the doomed flight.

Vessel John Lethbridge, con-tracted by the Egyptian government to search for the wreckage, pulled the data recorder out of the sea in stages, according to Friday’s state-

ment from the Egyptian committee. On Thursday, the committee said that the voice recorder was also pulled out of the water but had been damaged.

“The analysis might take several weeks,” depending on the condition of the recorders’ memory units, the committee said. (ap)

EgyptAir black boxes badly damaged, likely to prolong probe

CAIRO — The voice and data recorders from the EgyptAir plane that crashed into the Mediterranean nearly a month ago are “extensively damaged” and will need repairs before they can be analyzed, an Egyptian official said Friday, dampening hopes for quick answers as to what caused the disaster.

AP Photo/Thomas Ranner, File

This August 21, 2015 file photo shows an EgyptAir Airbus A320 with the registration SU-GCC taking off from Vienna International Airport, Austria. The cockpit voice recorder of the doomed EgyptAir plane that crashed last month killing all 66 people on board has been found and pulled out of the Mediterranean Sea, Egypt’s investigation committee said on Thursday, June 16, 2016.

Italy elects mayors in vote that will test PM Renzi

REUTERS/Grigory Dukor

Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi delivers a speech during a session of the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum 2016 (SPIEF 2016) in St. Petersburg, Russia, June 17, 2016.

SINGARAJA - The opportunities to cultivate shallot can be seen from the fertility of soil in a region. Buleleng district, for instance, has excellent potential in agricultural commodities like shallot having been cultivated in Bangli district.

Cultivation of shallot commodity is conducted by Bank Indonesia (BI) in 2016 at 13 demonstration plots and clusters throughout Bali. The shallot developed in Buleleng is a concerted effort in reducing inflation and increas-ing people’s economy in the region through a food security program. In the future, the price of shallot is promis-ing in the market so that it is required a comprehensive guidance to shallot farmers in North Bali. “We assess that Buleleng is one of the centers in the region to cultivate shallot in Bali,” said Chief Representative of Bank Indone-sia Bali, Dewi Setyowati, Wednesday (Jun. 15) at Subak Yangai, Bungkulan, Sawan subdistrict.

Her institution noted that shal-lot production of Buleleng reached 18.4 tons per hectare. In other words, Buleleng has contributed by 93.30 percent of the total shallot production throughout Bali. Such opportunities should be encouraged by relevant agencies so that the production volume can be increased from the current results. “When seeing from the cur-rent potential, we are more motivated to help develop shallot commodity through new technologies applied in agriculture,” she said.

She added that amid the slow-down in the global and national economy, Bali’s economy can still grow by 6.04 percent (yoy) in the first quarter of 2016 and goes higher than the previous quarter reaching 5.96 percent (yoy). “This is far above the national economic growth of 4.92 percent (yoy),” she added.

Overall in 2016, the economy of Bali is estimated to grow in the range of 6.08 percent and 6.84 percent (yoy). The welfare of farmers in relation to the exchange value of farmer (NTP) in Bali in the first quarter of 2016 re-mained at 104.86, showing a decrease when compared to the fourth quarter of 2015 recorded to reach 105.13.

In the meantime, the Head of the Buleleng Agriculture and Livestock Agency, Nyoman Swatantra, repre-senting Regent Putu Agus Surad-nyana explained that his institution supports the development of shallot commodity through organic prac-tices. It is based on the consideration of restricted group and the availabil-ity of water through social program of the BI 2015. “In the future, we expect the success in agricultural demonstration plot can encourage the increase in the number of farm-ers implementing shallot cultivation through organic method and then it can be implemented at the level of wider area,” he said. (kmb34)

Ismail, 44, a man from Banyu-wangi who found the jar, said that when digging the ground he felt a hard object. He thought it was a big stone, but after digging deeper he was trying to lift the object. In fact, it is an ancient jar containing perforated coins.

Because it weighs about 25 kg,

Ismail then asked the help of local people to lift it and reported the findings to Taman hamlet chief, Ida Bagus Arnawa.

According to Ismail, there was something strange when the jar was found. Even though it was found without a lid, no soil came into the jar. “The perforated coins remain

clean and tidy, do not contain any soil,” said Ismail.

Now, the jar is secured in the Taman meeting hall, Batuagung, Jembrana. A number of residents came one after another to have a closer look at the ancient jar. It has not been known yet known how the jar can be in the region of Taman hamlet.

“We save first the jar in the meet-ing hall. For the next measures, we’ll discuss it in our village meet-ing,” explained Ida Bagus Arnawa. (kmb)

IBP/kmb

A worker of pipeline excavation project on Saturday after-noon (Jul. 18) discovered ancient jar containing hundreds of perforated coins in the area of roadside at Taman hamlet, Batuagung, Jembrana.

Project worker finds ancient jar holding perforated coins when digging

NEGARA - A worker of pipeline excavation project on Sat-urday afternoon (Jul. 18) discovered ancient jar containing hundreds of perforated coins in the area of roadside at Taman hamlet, Batuagung, Jembrana. Such findings caused people of Batuagung village, Jembrana, to be fussy.

Buleleng potential to develop shallot commodity

IBP/net

The opportunities to cultivate shallot can be seen from the fertility of soil in Buleleng district.

Page 14: Edisi 20 Juni 2016 | Internasional Bali Post

14 InternationalTravelingMonday, June 20, 2016 3International Bali News Monday, June 20, 2016

As seen on Wednesday (Jun. 15), a dozen of cattle seemed to run wild in the grass land. On the back of this area, there are actually many cages used to take care of the cattle. According to residents, previously the cattle were even released to enter the museum area.

But after the fence of museum was refurbished, the cattle run wild in the site area (outside the fence of the museum).

Headman of Gilimanuk, I Gede Ngurah Widiada, told reporters that about two months ago the cattle owners already agreed not

to graze their cattle in the area of the site. At least 14 residents have agreed with the witness of local non-commissioned police officer (Babinkamtibmas).

They have promised to im-pound their cattle. However, the cattle seem to have been released again. Village authority will summon the cattle owners. And this time, strict sanctions will be imposed. Stubborn cattle owners will be penalized with the sanc-tion as set forth in the Regional Bylaw with a fine of IDR 5 mil-lion. (kmb26)

BARCELONA - A stroll down the yogurt aisle of any grocery store will tell you that probiotics are good for the human digestive system and can promote a healthy gut. But did you know that they can also help make better wine? In Spain’s remote Priorat region, 80 miles southwest of Barcelona, a winery called Morlanda is us-ing probiotics to grow stronger, healthier grape vines.

While Priorat’s gnarly old vines produce some of Spain’s most re-vered wines -- intense and powerful reds made from Garnacha (Gren-ache) and Cariñena (Carignane) grapes -- that wasn’t always the

case. The area’s vineyards suffered years of neglect during the reign of Fascist dictator Francisco Franco, until after his death in 1975. Priorat was nearly forgotten as a wine re-gion until the late 1980s, when a vi-sionary band of vintners dedicated themselves to revitalizing it.

The region has made a remark-able turnaround in the last 15 years, but even so, Priorat’s mountainous terrain presents significant chal-lenges to both grape vines and vineyard workers.

“The tortuous geography of this area means that the vineyards have to be cultivated on slopes so steep that it is necessary, in some cases, to build terraces,” said Judit Llop, Morlanda’s winemaker and vine-yard manager since 2003. “Some of these terraces are so narrow that two rows of vines barely fit and me-chanical access is impossible.”

What’s more, due to the rocky soil and hot, dry climate, “The vines are weak and consequently result in rather poor harvests, with very low grape yields,” she added.

Years of chemical treatments have further weakened the soil, leading Llop to seek out new ways to bring it back to life. “Our vineyard philosophy starts with the health of the soil, and for this reason we started to investigate how we could regenerate it,” she said. “We wanted to increase soil biodiversity and encourage micro-

bial activity.”In 2013, with the resources

of Morlanda’s parent company, the Freixenet Group, behind her, Llop began a probiotics trial with the Universitat Rovira i Virgili in nearby Tarragona, designed to im-prove the soil and boost the plants’ immune systems. Sprayed onto the vineyard floor and plants, the pro-biotics make it easier for the vines to assimilate micronutrients.

“Treatment of the soil in the fall is very important and is known as ‘vaccination,’” she said. “The positive microorganisms, resistant to low temperatures, will mineral-ize the organic waste -- leaves, dry grass and branches -- and prepare the soil with the micro and macro elements necessary for plant veg-etation.”

Probiotics are applied again before flowering, this time to the plants themselves. “This period is the hardest in their development,” Llop said. “Vines make a huge effort to vegetate while they are maximizing exposure to attacks by diseases. Therefore, during this time, positive microflora is given to the plant for protection and to pre-vent the development of parasitic and harmful microflora.”

The third treatment happens after bloom, when grape clusters are formed, and the fourth is done during the grapes’ ripening phase. (rtr)

HAVING been inaugurated earlier this year, one of the two village health buses of Gianyar has been dormant in the parking area of Kebo Iwa Stadium. This condition was known around a week ago. In the meantime, the Gianyar Health Agency admit-ted that it had contacted the insurance company to repair the bus.

As observation of Bali Post on Wednesday afternoon (Jun. 15), both village health buses of Gianyar district were seen to be parked in the parking area of Kebo Iwa Stadium. One of the buses was parked very close to the east side facing west. Then, another bus was parked rather away facing east. It is estimated to have been after operation.

There is information men-tioning that only one of the two village health bus has been operated for more than a week around Gianyar district. In the meantime, another bus is out of order, so that it is neglected in the parking lot of the Kebo Iwa Stadium.

Surely this condition is de-plored considering that the vil-lage health bus of Gianyar district was just inaugurated late Febru-ary 2016. Previously, there was a discourse if the buses would be alerted at two locations, namely in Ubud and Blahbatuh subdis-trict. But in reality the two buses have long been parked in the area

of Kebo Iwa Stadium.Chief of the Gianyar Health

Agency, Ida Ayu Dwi Cahyani, justified that the two village health buses of Gianyar have not been operated since last week, so that only one bus can provide roving health services around the region of the art. “I have received a report last Thursday if the bus does not operate because the officer feels uncomfortable. So, there are worries if something bad happens when operated,” she said when contacted via telephone.

Responding to this condition, this woman familiarly addressed Dayu Cahyani claimed to have contacted the insurer for an im-mediate repair. She added that since the health bus was newly purchased a few months ago, the government of Gianyar still has a warranty. “I have informed the insurer and it will be imme-diately checked. Since the bus is still new, it remains to have a warranty,” she said.

The roving village health bus is equipped with medical equipment, supporting facili-ties of general check-up, dental examination, electrocardiograph (ECG), visual inspection with acetic acid (IVA), emergencies to health promotion through the audio-visual. “For the time be-ing, a village health bus is suffi-cient to provide health services,” she said. (kmb35)

Spanish Priorat Vineyard Gets Probiotic Boost

IBP/olo

Archeological site of Gilimanuk located at the edge of Gilimanuk Bay is now taken advantage by residents for grazing cattle.

Cattle run wild in the area of Gilimanuk site

NEGARA - Archeological site of Gilimanuk located at the edge of Gilimanuk Bay is now taken advantage by residents for grazing cattle. Previously the village authority has actually disciplined and asked the residents of cattle owner not to graze their cattle. The empty land area connecting the Gilimanuk Bay tourism area to the Museum of Antiquities is required in order to be clean.

IBP/kmb35

One of the two village health buses of Gianyar has been dor-mant in the parking area of Kebo Iwa Stadium.

Newly inaugurated in February 2016,

Health bus has gone dormant

Page 15: Edisi 20 Juni 2016 | Internasional Bali Post

International2 15International Activities

Founder : K.Nadha, General Manager :Palgunadi Chief Editor: Gugiek Savindra Editors:Agus Toni, Daniel Fajry, Mawa, Sueca, Sugiartha, Yudi Winanto Denpasar: Dira Arsana, Giriana Saputra, Subrata, Sumatika, Asmara Putra. Bangli: Suasrina, Buleleng: Dewa kusuma, Gianyar: Manik Astajaya, Karangasem: Budana, Klungkung: Dewa Farendra. Jakarta: Nikson, Hardianto, Ade Irawan. NTB: Agus Talino, Izzul Khairi, Raka Akriyani. Surabaya: Bambang Wilianto. Office: Jalan Kepundung 67 A Denpasar 80232. Telephone (0361)225764, Facsimile: 227418, P.O.Box: 3010 Denpasar 80001. Bali Post Jakarta, Advertizing: Jl.Palmerah Barat 21F. Telp 021-5357602, Facsimile: 021-5357605 Jakarta Pusat. NTB: Jalam Bangau No. 15 Cakranegara Telp. (0370) 639543, Facsimile: (0370) 628257. Publisher: PT Bali Post

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COVER STORY“The population growth in Ba-

dung has already far declined when compared to previous years. Indeed they mostly live in the area of tour-ism, such as Kuta, South Kuta and Mengwi,” said Nyoman Soka.

According to him, the problem encountered in suppressing the migrant population in Badung is the issue of migration from outside because the birth rate is actually very small. This proves that population growth control program through family planning program is quite successful mainly by delaying the age of marriage.

“Nevertheless, we continue to make coordination with relevant parties, such as municipal police to discipline migrants. Moreover, we often carry out misdemeanor at each village because it also has special task officers,” he said.

The Municipal Police of Badung also tightens the control on its terri-tory. “We will carry out supervision against the migrants,” said the Chief of the Badung Municipal Police, I Ketut Martha.

According to him, his agency also has its own program in tackling the

growing population of migrants in the territory.

“We constantly make field inspec-tion against the migrants scheduled every month, unless there are reports outside the schedule. Besides, we carry out patrols to find out the condi-tions in the field,” he said.

Earlier, Deputy Chairman of the Advisory of Chamber of Commerce and Industry (Kadin) Bali, Wayan Jondra, stated that the high role of migrants in filling in the existing job opportunities in Bali is inseparable from the government’s ignorance that does not give a sign in absorb-ing labor.

“Only few local labor of Bali is absorbed. To that end, it is required a grand scenario so that we cannot employ Balinese people just because they have identity card of Bali, but must be made in specific ways. For example, they must understand about the culture of Bali specified in the cer-tification with excellence,’ he said.

According to him, the government must provide more specific certifica-tion agency to include cultural criteria and an understanding on the concept of Tri Hita Karana. “We have to own a certification guaranteeing them. For example, they understand about the culture and implement the Tri Hita Karana. This is the importance

on the existence of a grand scenario supported by all stakeholders, the executive and the legislative,” he explained.

To realize it, according to him, a system must be established preceded with a commitment between the em-ployers and the government.

Employers should sincerely in-volve the local workforce. “If this is not applied, it will result in serious social impact. There has been an offense among Balinese workers because they only get lower position while the top position is occupied by non-Balinese and even by foreign-

ers,” he said.According to him, this gap may

not be ignored as such because if it is allowed to drag on quite a long time will have social impacts. It is feared to cause friction in society causing Bali no longer to be quiet, safe and comfortable.

“If this happens, surely those having investment in Bali will suffer losses. That’s why the investors must realize that stability in Bali needs to be maintained with the involvement of more local labor. At the same time, we still need people from outside Bali to back up,” he said.

He mentioned that the effort to involve local workforce in every sec-tor needs to be supported by issuing a gubernatorial regulation or regional bylaw, so that the legal protection of labor utilization in Bali is clear. “Of course, these efforts should be followed up with regulations, at least with gubernatorial regulation, if a business entity or entrepreneur invests in Bali or if it does not employ at least 80 percent of the local com-munity, their permit can be revoked. Of course, the Balinese people here refer to the certified ones,” he ex-plained. (kmb27)

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When interviewed at her home on Saturday (Jun.18), Parniasih revealed that fabric sokasi is relatively a new creation. This kind of sokasi has begun to be produced by craftsmen in Bangli since last year. In addition to Penida hamlet, the fabric sokasi now becoming a trend in the mar-ket is also produced by a number of artisans at several hamlets like the Tegalasah, Tembuku and some other in the Susut and Bangli subdistrict.

Parniasih said when compared to the motif of other sokasi prod-ucts, the making of fabric sokasi is easier. The fabrics widely used include brocade and Balinese woven fabric. In order to look more beautiful, on the edge of the fabric is also filled with gem ribbon. To glue the fabric and ribbon on the edge of the sokasi, Parniasih takes advantage of gun adhesive so that the layers of fab-ric and ribbon on the sokasi is not easily flaking off when cleaning.

“When compared to batik sokasi, the fabric is more easily made. Each day I can make up to 50 pieces,” she said.

He added that like the sokasi with batik and gold leaf painting motif she ever made the fabric sokasi she yields have also been widely marketed to a number of areas in Bali, like Denpasar. The selling price is relatively cheap compared to sokasi of other motif, ranging from IDR 40,000-IDR 60,000 depending on the size and type of the fab-ric used to embellish the sokasi. “For the time being, this fabric sokasi remains the best-selling in the market,” she said.

If the trend of gold leaf paint-ing sokasi can last up to six years, she predicted the trend of fabric sokasi will be able to survive up to three years. “Just like the kebaya, fabric sokasi will remain to change in accordance with the ever-changing trends,” she added. (kmb40)

IBP/Dayu Rina

Wayan Parniasih, the maker of Sokasi

IBP/File

Tourists are crowded on Kuta Beach, one of the famous tourism destinations in Badung.

Becomes a trend, fabric sokasi in high demand

BANGLI — A number of innovations and creations continue to be made by sokasi (obla-tion basket) craftsmen in Bangli so that the products yielded can keep consumers interested.

If few years ago craftsmen embellished their sokasi with gold leaf painting and batik motif, since the past year the craftsmen develop new creations where they embellish their sokasi

product with fabric of various motifs and colors. This creation is made by one of the sokasi makers at Penida Kelod hamlet, Tembuku, Wayan Parniasih.

Into The Blue, With Blue Marlin

Page 16: Edisi 20 Juni 2016 | Internasional Bali Post

Page 6

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Monday, June 20, 2016

European history hovers close to reverse gear

Page 13

EgyptAir black boxes badly damaged, likely to prolong probe

Monday, June 20, 2016

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Messi scores in Argentina’s win; Chile routs Mexico 7-0

U.S. Magistrate Judge Steven Locke in Central Islip, New York, on Thursday said DiCaprio must be made available for questioning, which was opposed by Viacom Inc’s Paramount Pictures Corp, Di-Caprio’s Appian Way Productions and other defendants.

The plaintiff, Andrew Greene, sued in 2014 for more than $50 mil-lion, claiming that he was defamed in the film through the portrayal by actor P.J. Byrne of a morally and ethically challenged character named Nicky “Rugrat” Koskoff.

Paramount has said Koskoff was a “composite character” inspired by multiple individuals, including Greene.

DiCaprio, 41, played Jordan Bel-fort, a stock swindler who founded Stratton Oakmont and whose 2007 memoir was a basis for the film. Greene was a childhood friend of

Belfort.In opposing a deposition, defense

lawyers said DiCaprio did not write the screenplay, and that there was no claim he had any role in deciding whether alleged defamatory content

should be included in or excluded from the film.

Greene’s lawyers said they had already questioned Scorsese and screenwriter Terence Winter, and that both testified that they met regularly with DiCaprio to discuss the “Wolf” script.

Louis Petrich, a lawyer for the defendants, declined to comment.

The film was nominated for five Academy Awards, including DiCaprio as best actor, Scorsese

as best director and Winter for the screenplay, but did not

win any.Locke’s order does not

say when DiCaprio will be questioned.

The case is Greene v Paramount Pictures Corp et al, U.S. District Court, East-ern District of New York,

No. 14-01044. (rtr)

Leonardo DiCaprio is ordered deposed over ‘Wolf of Wall Street’

Leonardo DiCaprio, best actor nominee for his role in “The

Wolf of Wall Street,” arrives at the 86th

Academy Awards in Hollywood, Cali-

fornia, U.S. on March 2, 2014.

LOS ANGELES - A federal judge has ordered actor Leonardo DiCaprio to be deposed in a defamation lawsuit brought by a former Stratton Oakmont executive over his alleged depiction in the 2013 Martin Scorsese film “The Wolf of Wall Street.”

“The natural disasters were triggered by heavy rain which fell since Saturday afternoon until mid night,” Sutopo Purwo Nugroho, the head of the Data and Information Center of the BNPB, said in a press statement here on Sunday.

The districts/municipal cities which were hit by the floods and landslides in Central Java were Purworejo, Banjarnegara, Kendal, Sragen, Purbalingga, Banyumas,

Sukoharjo, Kebumen, Wonosobo, Pemalang, Klaten, Magelang, Wonogiri, Cilacap, Karanganyar and Kota Solo.

Sutopo said the disaster also caused damage to tens of houses bur-ied by landslides and thousands of others inundated by flood waters.

Most of the dead victims were found in Purworejo District. Five residents of Karangrejo village of Loano subdistrict were buried by

landslides while nine others (non local residents) were also found dead. Rescue workers are still searching for those being buried by landslides.

“When a small landslide blocked the road in the location, three pas-senger of a truck tried to move away the rocks. Behind the truck were several motorcyclists. All of a sudden a major landslides happened and buried the vehicles and people on the road. Nine dead victims have been evacuated,” Sutopo said.

Landslides also took place in Donorati village of Purworejo District where 15 residents were

reported missing. Two were killed in Sidomulyo and Pacekelan vil-lages, four were still missing.

In Jelog village, Kaligesing, two were reported missing and tens of houses were buried by landslides. Floods as a result of the overflow of Bogowonto River in Purworejo District claimed the lives of four and caused two others missing.

In Kebumen District, hundreds of houses were inundated and one resident was killed. Six were found dead in the landslides in Sampang Village, Sempor Subdistrict.

Landslides also occurred in Banjarnegara District, killing six

people and causing damage to tens of houses.

The Regional Disaster Mitigation Agency (BPBD) is still carrying out emergency response. It is assisted by various sides including police and military personnel.(ant)

M A N G U P U R A - As a barometer of world tourism, Ba-dung district becomes the primary choice of migrants to settle.

Moreover, the migrant communities are no longer

from the districts across Bali but also from outside Bali, such as Java. The Badung Population and Civil Registry Office noted that the number of population registered in the district reaches 462,036 people with the migrant of 4,131 people.

The Head of the Badung Population and Civil Registry Office, I Nyoman Soka, justified if the population of mi-grants in the richest district are dominant from outside Bali. They predominantly live in Kuta and South Kuta.

Target...Continued on page 2

Floods, landslides kill 24 people in Indonesia

JAKARTA - A total of 24 people were killed and 26 others were reported missing in floods and landslides that hit 16 dis-tricts in Central Java, the National Disaster Mitigation Agency (BNPB) said.

AP Photo

Villagers walk through the area affected by landslides in Banjarnegara, Central Java, Indonesia. Sunday, June 19, 2016. An Indonesian official said dozens of people have been killed by flooding and landslides in central Java and many others remain missing.

Badung tourism targeted by local migrants