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Translation of taiwanese news article related to bali bombings http://www.ettoday.com/2002/10/14/91-1363095.htm Regarding the Bali bombing incident, the two opposition parties accused the government of not fulfilling its party to protect the Taiwanese citizens. The government parliamentary chief Mr. Eu had said that before the act. 11 evening he knew that there was going to be a terrorist incident in Bali. But the government did not inform its thousands plus Taiwanese citizens holidaying in Bali about it at that time and failed in its responsibility to protect the Taiwanese people. The Taiwanese government should have declared Bali a terrorist region and evacuated immediately its citizens who were on holidays there. Now that the bomb blast had happened, resulting in one missing Taiwanese citizen together with hundred plus other people already killed. The opposition parties leaders as well as the Defence Ministry professional representative have blamed the government of not fulfilling its duty to protect its people and therefore neglecting its duty. Opposition Leader James Soong went on to say that if the government has prior information about the Bali terrorist acts, they should be given credit for such a excellent intelligence breakthrough. But if the government really did know, why didn't they alert the thousand strong Taiwanese on holidays in Bali? Why was there no evacuation plan in effect, why special airplanes had not been sent to fly them home then - this is a major mistake! ! Defence Ministry professional representative Mr. Lim now would like the government to declare Bali island a terrorist area, even to the extent of classifying some regions of South East Asia a dangerous zone, as well as to discourage Taiwanese from visiting these places and instituting proper evacuation procedures now. He said the Taiwanese government should follow the example of USA and French government which have declared BaIi and parts of South East Asia as dangerous regions. Nationalist party secretary general Mr. Lee questioned the government failure to inform in advance its citizens about the terrorist incident if it already has prior intelligence information about its happening. He appealed to tile government to set up an anti-terrorist branch because the Bali incident indicated that terrorists are not only striking in America. but the rest of the world. [statement by
propagandamatrix.com
"Opposition slams foreign ministry for slow reaction" Original Link: http://www.etaiwannews.com/Taiwan/2002/10/15/1034643430.htm 2002-10-15 / Taiwan News, Staff Reporter / By Jessie Ho Two opposition parties yesterday expressed dissatisfaction at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs' reaction to the bomb attack on the Indonesian resort island of Bali, and they urged the government to take immediate responsive measures. Despite the fact that the bombing in Bali caused many deaths and injuries, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs did not move immediately to list Indonesia as a highly dangerous area or restrict travel to that country, but only issued a safety warning to travelers from Taiwan. Kuomintang
legislative leader Lee Chuan-chiao pointed out that the incident had exposed
the DPP government's poor crisis
According to Lee, the worst part is that the government did not issue a warning because the United States government asked it not to disclose the information. "The KMT's priority is the safety of our people - not America's national interests." He also called on the government to establish an anti-terrorism crisis management team. Meanwhile, People First Party legislative leader Shen Chih-hwei asked the government to assist in the return of Taiwan nationals currently in Indonesia. She said she would like to commend Premier Yu Shyi-kun (???) for obtaining advance information on the terrorist attack, but on the other hand would like to condemn him for not warning the Taiwanese people to stay away from danger. ---------------------------------------------
Government admits it knew of terrorist threat to Bali Owen
Bowcott and Michael White , John Aglionby in Bali and David Fickling in
Sydney
Thousands
of British tourists and residents living in Indonesia were urged by the
foreign secretary last night to consider leaving the country unless their
presence was absolutely essential.
Downing Street officials who had earlier spoken of "no specific threat picked up in relation to Bali that weekend" modified it to the extent of confirming that a number of specific target areas had been identified, including six places in Indonesia, one of them Bali. Following Australia's lead in advising its citizens to quit the predominantly Muslim state, Jack Straw warned there could be further terrorist attacks on western targets similar to the bombing of two nightclubs in Bali which killed at least 186 people last Saturday. As many as 4,000 Britons are registered as residents with the embassy in Jakarta and thousands more are thought to be on holiday at any one time on the sprawling archipelago of islands which constitutes Indonesia. The Foreign Office said that non-essential embassy staff and some dependents would be flown home shortly. Mr Straw said: "As soon as we heard of the atrocity ... we recommended against all travel to Bali and all but essential travel to elsewhere in Indonesia. In the light of further information and consideration, [we are now advising] against all travel to Indonesia [and recommending] that all British citizens should consider leaving Indonesia if their presence is not essential. "British citizens who remain should exercise extreme caution, especially in public places, including pubs, restaurants, bars, schools, places of worship, outdoor recreational venues and other locations frequented by foreigners." Earlier, at a cabinet meeting, the prime minister told colleagues he was certain more attacks were being planned. "We can't predict when they will strike next, we can't predict where they will strike next," he said. "But we have to be honest about this that there will be further attacks." Officials were adamant, however, that it would be impossible to "act on every bit of static around the system that you happen to pick up" and that all such information - and travel warnings - had been placed on Foreign Office and US state department websites. Mr Blair later admitted that if the authorities acted on every "generic threat ... essentially the terrorists would close down the world". But
he also conceded that "non-specific, broad-based" information about Indonesia
had referred to six places or regions, ranging Bali to the larger neighbouring
islands of Sumatra and Jakarta.
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link Here's
the most disturbing information to be
Sick of the Sound of My Own Voice Journal of a Futurist, October 21, 2002 Bali Low: body parts piled on tin Numbness & gloom pervade my spirit in the wake of the bombings in Bali, a place many westerners think of as a second home. Yet so unlike home, this tropic tourist Xanadu, where family, community, magic, religion and the arts hold sway with wild relish, despite the buzzing of Hondas, the barking of dogs, the flash of daggers at midnight. As the smoke cleared, it was heartening to hear how the ethos of mateship and the courage of backpackers spirited the wounded from the inferno. The beefy Aussie jocks tearfully reminding us to remember the sufferings of “these beautiful Balinese people”. The righteous on-camera anger of relatives and survivors sticking it up the Australian Government for dragging their heels over providing consular help. No flag waving, no calls to bomb Mecca. Our Prime Minister, John Howard, finally hopped on a plane and behaved like a statesman. His everyday self, that cold, malicious robot, fell away. Howard spoke with warmth and sensitivity, his words aiming to unify. The Balinese wounded were airlifted to our hospitals. Others chose this moment to settles scores. The thought
police laid into the cosmic cartoonist, Michael Leunig, whose decades of
quirky insights will remain pertinent long after their own leaden accusations
have turned to dust. Last Xmas, Leunig had apparently played around in
print with the notion that Osma bin Laden might actually be a human being,
one even deserving of compassion. Such naked spiritual conjecture flies
over the heads of our ASIO wannabe pundits, who build their careers on
the distorted files they compile on their enemies.
Alternative Visions of War
If a tenth of the energy the Whitehouse puts into its plans to control the destiny of Bagdad was spent crafting a fair minded peace resolution in the Middle East, most terrorists would call it a day. The one ray of hope is the breathtaking grit of the Israeli refuse-niks, the soldiers who refuse to serve in the occupied territories. “Our army’s policies create a hot bed of terrorism”, one of them said on Sunday night’s brilliant SBS doco, It Is No Dream. These brave souls are motivated not by ideology, but by their own eyes. They have seen soldiers commit murder, day after day. Apartheid is public policy. The press is supine. The Supreme Court has declined to rule on the policy of liquidations. This is a group that speaks the language of truth - the former victims are today’s victimisers. And so the cycle repeats. I doubt if there is a single Palestinian suicide bomber who has not lost a loved one by foul means. Not even US strategists believe that terror networks can
be crushed with battle ships & cluster bombs. In 1999, while at a conference
in Washington hosted by the World Future Society, I listened to a riveting
presentation on tomorrow’s war by Dr Steven Metz of the US Army War College:
Metz laid out several alternatives: 1 Orthodox war, 2 Barbarian war, 3
Tech war, (sub-divided into Robowar, Nanowar, Biowar & Psychowar).
The fourth alternative was Net War, defined as “coercive violence used
by complex networks against states, corporations, non-state organizations
or each other”. In this scenario, traditional state-on-state war “declines
in effectiveness and significance” . Battles between organized militaries
are rare. In Net War, the dominant form of combat is “infrastructure attacks”.
In such a scenario, said Dr Metz, “state militaries will be hard pressed
to understand and counter networked enemies”. These words are no longer
conjecture.
A Perfect Date with the CIA
However, the Bourne Identity is not entirely without interest. The movie’s portrait of the CIA is so vicious that even I find it over the top. Perhaps John Pilger was a script consultant. By now I suspect pirated copies are screening at Al Q’aida training camps, with a somber voice intoning, “these are the kind of terrorist thugs who are holding the world to ransom”. All CIA operatives are depicted as deranged serial killers who are happy to blow away innocent old ladies, fellow agents and the heads of African nations. Even if it was half true, a just government would freeze it funds and send its staff to Camp X-ray. There’s a lot more to say about Bali, but I’m sick of
the sound of my own voice. As a treat, let’s close with a strong voice
from Asia. This comes from the New Straits Times , Malaysia, written by
Rehman Rashid, whose puritan sentiments I reject. However, his fiery eloquence
is educative:
Why bomb the Sari Club?
Everybody knew the Sari Club. It had been there about 15 years, sopping up the dregs of the Kuta night, where the carousing begins in the early evenings at the chi-chi Legian end of the strip, then cascades down the drag in seven water-falls of deepening drunkenness to debouch onto Kuta Beach and sprawl snoring at the dawn, or sink into the strip's last sump, the Sari Club. It was well known. If you couldn't score anywhere else, you could score at the Sari Club. To that rickety firetrap would lurch the last of the night's purblind drunken foreigners. Almost entirely white foreigners, at that, because the Sari Club did not welcome locals, and charged them Rp50,000 for entry while foreigners got in free. The Sari Club and Paddy's Irish Pub on Poppies Lane, where
the other Kuta bomb went off, were the only clubs on the strip to do that.
Even foreigners with local girlfriends had to pay for them. It wasn't race
discrimination; black, brown or yellow foreigners were allowed in. Unless
they looked like Indonesians.
Choking Haze Never Reached Her Skies
Among the reasons Bali was enjoyed even by people who enjoy being hideously drunk is that it was a somehow safe and protected place. No matter what happened anywhere and everywhere else in Indonesia, Bali was fine. The island seems always to have dwelt within a force-field. Indonesia's murderous crazes did not cross Bali's waters, just as its choking hazes never reached her skies. Bali's principal involvement with recent political history
was in roundly endorsing Megawati Sukarnoputri's candidacy for president
last year, thereby being no more trouble to her than to anyone else.
A Hint of Mystery; a Certain Darkness
In exchange, the foreigner would protect Bali with love and currency. Bali feels ancient, almost primal, but modern Balinese art was schooled by early 20th-century European romantics such as Walter Spies and Rudolf Bonnet. The Kecak trance dance - a tourist favourite - was adapted and choreographed in 1931 by Spies and one Baron Victor von Plessen, to add excitement to a film they made entitled, Island of the Demons. (That later became the more widely known Gods.) Generations of court musicians and Balinese dancers have grown up with the nightly performances for tourists at the Puri Saren in Ubud, where forthcoming temple ceremonies, weddings and funerals are advertised by flyer. Bali offered these charms and wonders to the West in a manner the West itself was able to specify. It was all here; all the exotic sensuality of the Malay archipelago, its oldest myths and legends and most graceful arts, in settings of near-miraculous natural beauty, plus all the nightlife you could drink. There is even a hint of mystery; a certain darkness. Most
of Bali is off-limits to casual tourism.
A Small, Mean, Corrosive Act
Light and dark are literally woven into the fabric of the saput poleng, the ubiquitous chequered cloth of Balinese ritual. Bali can be a forbidding place for the disrespectful. This is not to say that those who planted the Kuta bombs were Balinese. They might have been outsiders who neither knew nor cared that they parked their Kijang outside the worst place in town. It wasn't even a very big bomb. None of the three that exploded in Bali last Saturday night - the two in Kuta and a third outside the US consulate in Denpasar - was a large or sophisticated device. Nor was the fourth bomb that exploded 1,400km away outside the Philippine Consulate in Manado, northern Sulawesi. The Sari Club bomb was the biggest of them, but it didn't have to be much more than a large grenade: it exploded outside a flimsy two-storey wooden firetrap stocked with cylinders of cooking gas and wadded with human beings soaked in flammable liquids. It could have been sheer bad luck for the 500 people in and around the Sari Club in Kuta last Saturday night. If that particular place was specifically targeted, however, there may have been something personal in the choice. Which would mean this may not have been the work of a global terrorist network, conspiracy or alliance, but a smaller, meaner act; an act of local vengeance. No doubt tapping the corrosive new resources of the global "War on Terrorism" for the material and gumption for mischief, but basically assailing local grievances. The Bali bombings may be linked to global affairs only in that America's blunderous new war is giving every garden-variety thug, hoodlum, malcontent and troublemaker in the world an excuse to make trouble and blame it on the Americans, the Muslims, the Elders of Zion, Osama Bin Laden, corrupt politicians, capitalism, globalisation, drunken Caucasians in general or the bossa nova, for all they care. It's called anarchy, and it is the antithesis of the global conspiracy of organised evil the American axis needs so badly to seek and destroy. While the Western alliance tilts at shadows, the real beast is abroad and feeding on the remains of governments. October 16/02. Phew. In a few days I’ll add links related to this journal
entry and more, warmest, R. ends
Thanks to Richard Neville and Rehman Rashid for
this work.
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