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Sabtu, 10 Maret 2012

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Rabu, 07 Maret 2012

Contoh-contoh News Item


Pamekasan student wins math contest in Romania

Alyssa Diva Mustika, a student from Pamekasan Junior High School, East Java, won the gold medal at the International Mathematics Contest held in Romania between March 22 to 29, Antara news agency reported.

Speaking to journalists, Diva said she was glad that she had been able to win the competition, which she said had been very tight. “Thank God I won. I will study harder,” she said.

Indonesia sent 10 students to the competition in Romania. Diva is not the first Pamekasan student to win an international science competition. Oktavian Latief, a student from SMA Negeri 1 Pamekasan won gold at the International Physics Olympiad in 2006. Another student, Shohibul Maromi, won the same award in 2010.

“I thank Diva for giving a good name to Indonesia and Pamekasan on the international stage,” Pamekasan Regent Kholilurrahman said as quoted by Antara.


Student found dead in waterway in Serpong

The body of a high school student was found in a waterway on Jl. Pare in the Bumi Serpong Damai housing estate in Serpong , South Tangerang, on Wednesday.

Serpong Police chief Comr. Hibertus Omposungi identified the student as Taher Achmad, 16, from SMK Bina Kesehatan Cendakia in Tangerang. Omposungi refused to comment on the possible cause of the student’s death.

“We are still looking into the death of the student and will be sending the body to Tangerang General Hospital for an autopsy. Only autopsy results can explain the cause of death,” he said.

US, Pakistan Set for Second Day of Talks

Top U.S. and Pakistani officials are set to meet for the second day of the U.S.-Pakistan Strategic Dialogue in Washington, after making progress on developing a more sustainable partnership Wednesday.

U.S. Secretary of State Hilary Clinton and Pakistani Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi will continue to discuss a Pakistani list of proposals - including requests for more military equipment such as drone aircraft, aid for improving the country's energy industry, and economic stimulus efforts.

Qureshi told reporters Wednesday that the first day of talks yielded a U.S. agreement to "fast track" delivery of key military supplies to Pakistan. He said he is happy that U.S.-Pakistani ties are progressing from a relationship to a partnership.

Clinton said the United States stands with Pakistanis as they rebuild communities and "rid their country of those who seek to destroy it."

She also said advancing the security of Pakistanis means more than military aid. She said the country's chronic problems, such as joblessness and energy shortages, need to be addressed. She mentioned Washington's $7.5 billion civilian aid program as evidence of that commitment.

Pakistani officials have shown interest in a deal similar to Washington's civilian nuclear power agreement with India. But U.S. officials have been reluctant to endorse such a deal, saying the process with India took several years of sustained talks.

The Pakistani foreign minister said he hopes for continued U.S. "constructive engagement" on Pakistan's long-running dispute with India over Kashmir.

Qureshi also said his country is "doing its part" to facilitate peace in Afghanistan. He said the unprecedented Pakistani border security effort, along with Islamabad's own offensive against the Taliban, have had a significant impact in Afghanistan which is now being acknowledged by Kabul authorities.

Saudi Arabia Arrests More than 100 Al-Qaida Suspects

Saudi Arabia has announced one its largest anti-terrorist sweeps in years, arresting more than 100 people suspected of involvement in al-Qaida plots. More than half of those detained are said to be from Yemen.

The Saudi Defense Ministry released a statement that those arrested are thought to be part of a terror network and two small cells that planned to attack oil and security targets in the kingdom.

The ministry said the suspects have ties to al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula, the Yemen-based off-shoot of Osama bin Laden's terrorist network.

That link - plus the naming of 51 Yemenis as being involved in the plots - comes as the Saudi government tries to reinforce the border with its southern neighbor, in part, to contain the spillover from one of Yemen's civil conflicts.

A Somali, an Eritrean and a Bengali are also among those arrested - a foreign element that provides a new challenge to the Saudi government, which has focused strongly on countering terror domestically.

Khaled al-Maeena is the editor-in-chief of the Saudi English newspaper Arab News. "Saudi Arabia, which has done so much with the rehab [rehailitation] program - getting people, inducing them to take the right path - suddenly finds itself with these people who are outside the pale of the law, are trying to commit acts of violence, creating confusion that leads to bloodshed," he said.

Saudi Arabia has taken pride in its efforts to bring militants back into society. But there have been high profile set-backs, including a failed assassination attempt against a top security official last year by a supposedly reformed extremist.

The announcement on Wednesday of the pre-emptive arrests and confiscation of explosives is the latest in an otherwise largely successful attempt in recent years to prevent terror attacks in the country, the birthplace of many top al-Qaida leaders.