Edisi 16 Oktober 2014 | International Bali Post

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Entertainment

Thursday, October 16, 2014

Kesha sues producer Dr. Luke for sex abuse

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Agence France-Presse

The handicraft export of Bali showed quasigrowth as a result of the growth that could only be enjoyed by entrepreneurs or large investors. Meanwhile, small artisans yielding the products exported by the entrepreneurs just got the dregs of the sector.

LOS ANGELES - American pop star Kesha on Tuesday sued her producer Dr. Luke for allegedly abusing her sexually and emotionally for years, while threatening to harm her career. Famous for hits such as “TiK ToK” and “We R who we R,” Kesha, 27 -- who signed with his Kemosabe label at 18 -charged the producer, real name Lukasz Gottwald, forced her to take drugs and drink alcohol so that he could abuse her sexually when she was under the influence, court documents show. The singer also said that she remembered waking up naked after Gottwald, 41, forced her to take some pills, but that she could not remember how she got where she awoke. She also alleged that Gottwald’s berating of her as overweight caused her bulimia. She has said publicly she went to rehabilitation for the eating disorder. Kesha further alleged that her pro-

ducer alienated her from her family when she moved to Los Angeles, and threatened to destroy her career if she reported these incidents. Dr. Luke maintains that Kesha is sullying his name in an effort to cut short her contract. The producer’s attorney, Christine Lepera, called the charges malicious lies. Kesha’s attorney, Mark Geragos, said she is seeking damages, and rejected the producer’s counter-suit. “This is just another pathetic and entirely predictable example of Dr. Luke’s continued abuse, and a misguided attempt to keep Kesha under his tyrannical control,” he argued. “This lawsuit has absolutely no basis

Associated Press

kidnapped by Boko Haram militants in April. Tuesday marked six months since the girls were abducted. Keys kicked off a protest with 30 others at the consulate general of Nigeria, holding

16 Pages Number 205 6th year

Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP

in fact, the law or reality. Kesha is focused on reclaiming her voice and her freedom. She is determined to move on with her life and her career by putting this dark period behind her.”

Alicia Keys holds protest for lost Nigerian girls

NEW YORK — Alicia Keys held a protest in New York City on Tuesday to raise awareness about the 200plus Nigerian schoolgirls who were

Alicia Keys

AP Photo/Kathy Willens

signs that read “We Are Here” and “Safe Schools Now!” They chanted “Bring back our girls” and “When do we want them? Now! Now! Alive!” as New Yorkers walked up the street during lunch hour, while others stopped to capture photos and video. Keys, who is pregnant, said in an interview that she felt touched to take action because she is a mother. Her son, Egypt, turned 4 on Tuesday. “Today is my son’s birthday and it is also making me stand in solidarity with all the mothers of the Chibok girls who have been abducted for six months and are still missing. And it is just outrageous that that’s going on,” the 33-year-old said as others chanted behind her. Keys recently launched the movement “We Are Here,” which fights for social justice. She also recorded and released a song with the same name. She was joined by her husband, producer-rapper Swizz Beatz. She said people need a reminder that the schoolgirls are still missing. “Some people have even told me they’ve heard things about ‘there’s been progress,’ but there hasn’t been progress because the girls aren’t back,” Keys said. “So I think that we get mixed information. We don’t know, so we just have to keep being made aware of what’s happening.”

IBP/Yudi Karnaedi

Handicraft export only enjoyed by capital owners Bali Post

DENPASAR - The handicraft export of Bali showed quasi-growth as a result of the growth that could only be enjoyed by entrepreneurs or large investors. Meanwhile, small artisans yielding the products exported by the entrepreneurs just got the dregs of the sector. Chairman of the Center for Business Economic Data Analysis, the Faculty of Economics, University of Udayana, Dr. Sudjana Budhi, worried about such conditions that could make the small artisans thrown out of the market. “Meanwhile, newcomers came to dominate the market, so that in just a matter of time the small crafters will get out of the business as craftsmen,” said Sudjana Budhi, in Denpasar. According to him, craftsmen were artists without having a business skill, so that their life was governed by the market

carrier. Besides, craftsmen did not have a strong association like the cement plants having built their oligopoly strength so that they could control consumers in the matter of pricing. “This problem is never revealed because most of the policy makers will think that their losses occur due to a lack for skill. Actually there are issues of resource competency, access to information and market network that they should get to attain a decent living,” he said. Nevertheless, the government still had a hope to get up and

fix the people’s economy so that their life would not become a riding horse forever. Many alternatives could be taken by the county or municipal government and central government. “Currently, it has been provided with the mechanism of the state budget in the form of partnership between business, local government and state budget in order to realize a business zone that can be exploited,” he said. Based on data released by the Central Statistics Agency, the foreign exchange earnings from the export of goods of Indonesia continued to decline within the past three years, namely from USD 203.5 billion in 2011 to USD 182.6 billion in 2013, or showed a decline of USD 20.9 billion or by 10.29 percent. The same trend was also seen in the export of Bali dropping from USD 652.3 million to USD 528.5 million in the same period or a decrease of 18.98 percent. (kmb27)


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