"Podem ainda não estar a ver as coisas à superficie, mas por baixo já está tudo a arder" - Y. B. Mangunwijaya, escritor indonésio, 16 de Julho de 1998.
A protester throws rock at riot police officers during a protest against lavish allowances given to parliament members, in Jakarta, Indonesia, Thursday, Aug. 28, 2025. AP Photo/ Achmad Ibrahim
People walk through "Terowongan 4444" or 4444 tunnel, built from plastic bottles collected from several rivers over the course of three years, at a plastic museum constructed by Indonesia's environmental-activist group Ecological Observation and Wetlands Conservation in Gresik regency near Surabaya, Indonesia, September 28, 2021. Prasto Wardoyo/ Reuters
Cardboard cutouts of U.S. President Joe Biden, center, Indonesian President Joko Widodo, back right, and former U.S. President Donald Trump, back left, are used as physical distancing markers at a noodle restaurant inside a shopping mall amid concerns of the spread of COVID-19 in Jakarta, Indonesia.
"Locked up all day in a tiny, squalid hut with barely enough space to lie down, Rauf is a prisoner to his mental health issues and carers whose only way of coping is to shut him away."
"We will give the award to President Kim Jong-un because he has been consistent in carrying out the ideals of the great leader, Kim Il Sung, which is to fight imperialism.
Depois de Salma, a Barbie muçulmana “nascida” na Indonésia, a que fiz a devida referência aqui no blogue, agora é a polémica, também made inIndonésia, em torno de toques de telemóvel que reproduzem versículos do Alcorão:
“El choque del conservadurismo islámico con las nuevas tecnologías motiva una nueva polémica en Indonesia, donde las autoridades religiosas no se ponen de acuerdo sobre la idoneidad de usar versos del Corán como timbre del teléfono móvil.”