Tanjungpinang (ANTARA News) - Warga Tionghua Kota Tanjungpinang, Provinsi Kepulauan Riau (Kepri), dinilai lebih menghargai jasa-jasa mantan Presiden RI, Soeharto yang wafat pada Minggu (27/1).
Tokoh masyarakat Kota Tanjungpinang, Toni B (62), Kamis mengatakan, warga Tionghua yang tinggal di pusat kota lebih proaktif mengibarkan bendera merah putih setengah tiang sebagai peringatan hari berkabung nasional atas wafatnya pengusaha orde baru itu.
"Saya salut. Mereka (warga Tionghua) lebih menghargai Pak Harto," kata Toni yang juga pensiunan TNI AL.
Sedangkan sebagian besar masyarakat kurang peduli terhadap hari berkabung nasional yang ditetapkan Presiden SBY dengan mengibarkan bendera setengah tiang selama tujuh hari.
"Kalau perkantoran pemerintah itu wajar mengibarkan bendera setengah tiang," ucapnya yang saat ini berprofesi sebagai pengacara.
Nyaris tidak tampak bendera setengah tiang di sebagian besar perumahan masyarakat Tanjungpinang.
"Tapi coba lihat di pusat kota dan beberapa perumahan warga Tionghua, semuanya pasang bendera setengah tiang," ungkapnya.
Dalam hal ini, katanya, warga Tionghua dinilai memiliki rasa nasionalisme yang tinggi dan mematuhi imbauan pemerintah RI.
"Harusnya pemerintah daerah menginstruksikan jajarannya hingga ke tingkat RT/RW agar menyarankan kepada warganya mengibarkan bendera setengah tiang," katanya.
Ia mengaku sebagai salah seorang warga yang kurang suka dengan beberapa kebijakan Soeharto ketika masih berkuasa.
Namun jasa-jasa Soeharto sehingga memperoleh Bintang Maha Putera patut dihargai semua pihak.
"Kini Pak Harto telah wafat, tak baik mengungkit-ungkit kesalahannya. Dia pantas dapat penghargaan dari negara ini," katanya.
Salah seorang warga Tionghua Kota Tanjungpinang, Lim Awang (60) mengatakan, jasa-jasa Soeharto yang dinobatkan sebagai Bapak Pembangunan RI pantas dikenang. Jasa-jasanya begitu besar dalam mempertahankan NKRI dari intervensi negara asing.(*)
Clinton Spurns Calls to Quit Race
Odds and Allegiances Shift Further to Obama
By Dan Balz, Anne E. Kornblut and Perry Bacon Jr.
Washington Post Staff Writers
Thursday, May 8, 2008; A01
Now facing almost insurmountable odds, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (N.Y.) came under fresh pressure yesterday to end her campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination against Sen. Barack Obama (Ill.), but she vowed to remain in the race "until there is a nominee."
Clinton's narrow win in Indiana late Tuesday provided none of the boost that her campaign advisers had anticipated. Her small margin, coupled with Obama's runaway victory in the North Carolina primary, shifted the dynamics of the Democratic race dramatically and sharply against her overnight.
In a conference call with reporters, campaign officials offered as upbeat an assessment of the contest as they could muster. Asked whether Clinton had discussed dropping out, senior adviser Howard Wolfson flatly told reporters: "No."
In her conversations with advisers yesterday, they said, Clinton talked about looking ahead to the next campaign, in West Virginia, where she should hold an advantage on Tuesday.
"Her feeling is she's made a commitment to let the people in the remaining states have their chance to express their voice, and she'll move forward with that part of the campaign in a way that will both make the case for her but also be constructive for the Democratic Party," said Geoff Garin, a top strategist in the campaign.
Another Clinton adviser said that there is at best a 10 percent chance that she will end her candidacy before the last primaries, on June 3. Privately, however, several advisers acknowledged that her route to the nomination has become far more difficult as a result of Tuesday's voting. "It's narrowed," said one adviser, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to be candid.
This adviser said the fundamentals of the race had not changed as much as perceptions of Obama's prospects for winning. "It's just that the atmosphere shifted, as it shifted in her favor coming out of Ohio and again after Pennsylvania, " the adviser said. "It's shifted back. Not to where it was pre-Ohio, but there's been a substantial shift back."
Garin said the real change is in the commentary about the race. "I think that there are pundits who think she should get out," he said. "She has faced those calls before and has continued onward."
Clinton advisers hope to ride out the rest of the week, knowing there will be talk about whether she will quit the race. They think that a big victory in West Virginia would give her a new platform to make a case for herself.
But Tuesday's results brought more than cable news chatter about her situation. Former senator George McGovern (S.D.), the party's 1972 nominee, announced that he was shifting his support from Clinton to Obama, and said it is time for Democrats to unite to defeat Sen. John McCain (Ariz.), the presumptive GOP nominee, in November.
"I do think the mathematics are all with Senator Obama," he said on CNN. Adding that he was not attempting to force Clinton out of the race prematurely, he expressed hope for an early decision. He added: "What we have to avoid is following a course that will deliver an election to John McCain that he otherwise couldn't get."
Obama remained in Chicago yesterday, where his advisers stressed his mathematical advantage in pledged delegates. The candidate is scheduled to return to Washington today to meet with uncommitted superdelegates and attend a high-dollar fundraiser.
Clinton will campaign in West Virginia and South Dakota today, and Oregon and Kentucky tomorrow. Her husband, former president Bill Clinton, has a full day of events in West Virginia today.
Obama picked up four more superdelegates yesterday, including one, Virginia Del. Jennifer L. McClellan, who had previously backed Clinton. In a conference call with reporters, leading Obama supporters urged uncommitted superdelegates to move quickly to support the senator from Illinois. "This is the moment," said Sen. John F. Kerry (Mass.), the party's 2004 nominee.
Clinton won the endorsement of Rep. Heath Shuler (N.C.), whose district she carried on Tuesday.
Several undecided Democrats indicated that their Obama endorsements were just a matter of time. Rep. Jason Altmire (Pa.), whose district went overwhelmingly for Clinton, said he would nonetheless back Obama if he maintains leads in the major indicators: pledged delegates, states won and popular votes.
But, he said, he will wait to see how the coming contests unfold. "The mountain that I'm giving her to climb is very steep. It's an almost impossible task," he said.
One superdelegate who remains unwaveringly committed to Clinton said it is now "very, very difficult" to envision a scenario under which she could defeat Obama.
"There are a number of reasons for her not to drop out immediately, not the least of which is a lot of people want her to stay in, and how she handles herself from here on out, if she's not the winner, could help pave the way forward for the party," the superdelegate said, speaking on the condition of anonymity to talk freely about the race.
Another Clinton supporter said privately that the candidate has but one option: "Withdraw gracefully and help unify the party to beat McCain." Asked how quickly she would quit the race, the veteran of past presidential campaigns said he would recommend "as soon as this weekend."
Clinton, determined to show her resilience in the face of the fresh calls to leave the stage, made a midday trip to West Virginia, where she brushed aside questions about whether she risks dividing the party by continuing to run.
"I'm staying in this race until there's a nominee, and I obviously am going to work as hard as I can to become that nominee," she told reporters after giving a short stump speech on the front lawn of a building at Shepherd University.
Clinton was asked about her decision to lend her campaign an additional $6.4 million, which her advisers confirmed yesterday morning. That brings to at least $11 million the amount she has leveraged from her and her husband's personal wealth.
"It's a sign of my commitment to this campaign," Clinton said. "It's a sign of how much I believe in what we're trying to do. My supporters have been incredibly generous. They are putting money into this campaign on an hourly basis."
Obama's huge financial advantage looms as a significant problem for Clinton. At a fundraiser in Washington last night, at which she was hoping to raise about $500,000, she reiterated that she would stay in the race and said to those concerned about the drawn-out contest that "there is no cause for alarm," adding: "Sometimes you've got to calm people down a little bit."
"We have to figure out who would be the stronger candidate," Clinton said. "We have plenty of time to make the case against John McCain. I landed in New Hampshire on a Thursday night nine points down and I won on Tuesday."
She appealed for money in her speech on Tuesday night and the campaign issued an e-mail request hours later. Her advisers indicated yesterday that she has not ruled out lending her campaign more money.
Clinton advisers sketched out a scenario that they said could still deliver the nomination, though they acknowledged privately that the odds are long. It includes winning three of the final six primaries -- West Virginia, Kentucky and Puerto Rico -- and holding down Obama's margin in Oregon or even winning the state. Obama is favored in Montana and South Dakota.
Next, Clinton still hopes to win the battle over seating disputed delegations from Florida and Michigan with full voting rights. Keeping alive this fight, at a minimum, gives the Clinton team the opportunity to argue that Obama will need more than 2,025 delegates to win the nomination. The Democratic National Committee's Rules and Bylaws Committee plans to meet May 31 to take up the two states' challenges.
If all the Florida and Michigan delegates were seated and voting, the winning number would be 2,209. Clinton's campaign wants superdelegates to accept its logic that Obama is further from the magic number than his campaign says.
Finally, Clinton needs to prevent Obama from winning endorsements from a substantial number of uncommitted superdelegates before the primaries end. "If enough move, that's it," one Clinton adviser said.
The Clinton team booked a room at a Capitol Hill restaurant for a meeting with superdelegates. The campaign described it as a casual gathering for their liaisons but canceled it when told that the House was in an uproar over the housing bill and so nobody could come.
Clinton did meet with some uncommitted superdelegates individually. House Budget Committee Chairman John M. Spratt Jr. (S.C.) told her cordially that his state had gone overwhelmingly for Obama, and that he could not endorse her, Spratt spokesman Chuck Fant said. He pledged to stay neutral for now.
One Clinton adviser, speaking on the condition of anonymity to be frank, said: "If the supers weren't buying it before, it's hard to see how they'll buy it now."
Bacon was traveling with Clinton in West Virginia. Staff writers Jonathan Weisman in Washington and Anita Kumar in Richmond contributed to this report.
Nedved Segera Putuskan Pensiun
Chivasso - Lebih dari 15 tahun malang melintang di sepakbola profesional, Pavel Nedved siap mengumumkan kapan akan pensiun dari dunia yang membesarkan namanya itu.
Kepastian masa depan Nedved memang masih samar. Meski menjadi pemain penting Juventus selama tujuh musim, kontraknya yang bakal berakhir di penghujung musim ini belum ada tanda-tanda diperbarui.
Faktor itulah yang diduga kuat menjadi alasan Nedved segera menyatakan pensiun. Selain itu pemain berusia 35 tahun ini juga berambisi ingin menyudahi karirnya saat masih berada di puncak kejayaannya.
"Ada saatnya mengatakan cukup karena pikiran ini tidak bisa terus tertekan, meskipun badan bisa tahan. Tapi saat ini adalah saat yang tepat meninggalkan pertandingan, dengan Juve kembali ke Eropa," tandasnya seperti dilansir Football Italia, Kamis (8/5/2008).
"Saya akan mengakhiri semua ketidakpastian ini dalam waktu dekat," tegas Nedved.
Jika kontraknya tidak diperpanjang, Nedved sangat mungkin pensiun setelah musim ini berakhir. Namun ada kemungkinan ia masih ambil bagian di Euro 2008 mengingat masih banyaknya desakan untuk memanggilnya masuk ke skuad Republik Ceko.
Eriksson Menuju Benfica
Manchester - Kemungkinan besar Sven-Goran Eriksson segera hengkang dari Manchester City ke Benfica setelah kedua belah pihak menegaskan sedang melakukan pembicaraan kerja.
Peluang terjadinya perpisahan antara Eriksson dan City memang sudah mengemuka cukup lama. Kekecewaan pemilik klub Thaksin Shinawatra dan pendekatan manajemen The Citizen kepada Luis Felipe Scolari menjadi satu dari sekian banyak indikasi perceraian itu.
Kabar perpisahan tersebut makin menguat setelah Eriksson mengaku telah berbicara dengan pihak Benfica untuk menangani tim mereka musim depan. Tak tanggung-tanggung, Presiden klub Luis Felipe Vieira dan Direktur sepakbola Benfica Rui Costa menjadi perwakilan dari pembicaraan ini.
"Saya telah bertemu dengan orang-orang Benfica. Saya mempertimbangkan tawaran yang ada dan mungkin akan menjadi langkah ke depan bagi karir saya. Jadi, kita lihat saja nanti," tandas Eriksson seperti dikutip AFP, Kamis (8/5/2008).
"Pihak klub memang berbicara dengan Eriksson, tapi sampai detik ini belum ada kesepakatan mengenai kontrak, gaji dan masa tinggal yang sudah disepakati," demikian pernyataan pihak Benfica.
Jika benar Eriksson keluar dari City dan bergabung dengan Benfica, maka pengalaman menukangi tim asal Portugal itu akan menjadi pengalaman ketiga pelatih asal Swedia ini. Sebelumnya Eriksson sempat menangani Benfica di era 80an dan 90an.
Lippi: Dua Gelar Buat MU
Jakarta - Manchester United kini mendapat tantangan berat dari Chelsea di ajang Premiership dan Liga Champions. Dukungan buat MU disuarakan Marcello Lippi yang yakin "Red Devils" akan bisa meraih juara ganda.
Menjelang akhir musim kompetisi, MU dan Chelsea saling dihadapkan pada dua grand finale. Yang pertama, di Liga Primer Inggris yang akan menjalani partai terakhirnya akhir pekan ini, dengan Cristiano Ronaldo cs lebih punya keuntungan dalam hal jumlah selisih gol.
"Chelsea mengalahkan mereka di (partai) liga tapi United (saat itu) tidak dalam keadaan terbaik. Itu jadi dorongan besar buat Chelsea, meski mungkin mereka tahu itu takkan berarti apa-apa karena United akan memenangi laga sisanya untuk meraih titel," tutur Lippi kepada situs UEFA yang dikutip Goal, Jumat (8/5/2008).
Partai puncak kedua antara "Setan Merah" kontra "Si Biru" lantas akan dijalani pada partai puncak Liga Champions. Lippi sekali lagi yakin kalau Chelsea-lah yang nantinya akan tertunduk lesu.
"Chelsea dalam kondisi bagus tapi saya pikir United punya sedikit keuntungan di final
Prediksi Lippi tersebut tak lepas dari keberadaan Sir Alex Ferguson sebagai manajer MU. Dia menilai kalau Fergie adalah sosok luar biasa yang mampu memotivasi para pemainnya untuk mencapai kesuksesan.
"Anda bisa lihat setiap pemain United siap mengorbankan diri untuk tim. Tak ada yang memikirkan diri sendiri, semuanya fokus kepada tim dulu. Untuk bisa sukses di setiap kompetisi Anda harus punya manajer hebat," lugas Lippi.
Sementara itu, menyoal Ronaldo yang sudah tampil gemilang musim ini buat MU, Lippi menukas, "Sulit membayangkan dia bisa berkembang mengingat level yang sudah dicapainya. Anda tak boleh lupa bahwa dia melakukan segalanya dalam kecepatan supersonik jadi wajar membuat kesalahan ketika Anda bermain dalam kecepatan seperti itu."
"Mungkin jika dia melambatkan gaya bermainnya dia bisa mengurangi tingkat kesalahan. Tapi dia tak perlu melakukannya karena kualitas utamanya adalah melakukan hal-hal hebat dengan kecepatan," tandas Lippi, yang sempat tidak menyukai gaya bermain Ronaldo itu.
Atletico Kembali ke Zona Champions
Barcelona - Cukup satu hari Sevilla berada di zona Champions setelah Atletico Madrid kembali menduduki posisi empat berkat kemenangan 2-0 atas Espanyol.
Dua gol kemenangan Atletico dicetak oleh dua strikernya Sergio Aguero dan Diego Forlan di paruh pertama. Dengan tambahan tiga angka, Atletico naik satu strip ke posisi empat dengan 61 poin, unggul tiga angka dari Sevilla.
Sementara bagi Espanyol, kekalahan ini menutup peluang mereka untuk bisa berlaga di Eropa musim depan. Tim besutan Ernesto Valverde berada di posisi 11 dengan 48 angka.
Adapun penampilan Espanyol di Olympico de Montjuic, Jumat (9/5/2008) dinihari WIB tak seperti biasanya. Ewerthon cs bahkan tampil tertekan hampir di sepanjang babak pertama.
Gawang Inaki Lafuente pun jebol dua kali, buah dari kealpaan lini belakang timnya yang gagal menutup pergerakan dua striker Atletico, Aguero dan Forlan. Dua gol hanya dalam tempo tiga menit pun tercipta, masing-masing di menit 27 oleh Aguero dan 30 lewat kaki Forlan.
Kondisi Espanyol tak banyak berubah di paruh kedua, meski Pablo Zabaleta dkk tak lagi tampil tertekan. Meski mampu menciptakan beberapa peluang, namun gol balasan tak kunjung tercipta.
Tim tamu juga tak ketinggalan membuka kesempatan memperbesar keunggulan. Namun usaha Forlan cs juga tak membuahkan hasil. Skor 2-0 untuk Atletico bertahan hingga peluit panjang dibunyikan wasit Carlos clos Gomez.
Friday, May 9, 2008
Warga Tionghoa Hargai Jasa HM Soeharto
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