16 Pages Number 54 3rd Year Price: Rp 3.000,-
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4 American hostages killed by pirates off Somalia PAGE 6
The 33rd BAF expected to show off superior program PAGE 8
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Thursday, February 24, 2011
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Rescue workers search for victims buried under the rubble near the Canterbury Television building in Christchurch, New Zealand, Wednesday night, Feb. 23, 2011. Students from across Asia are feared among the dead in the CTV building that collapsed in Tuesday’s earthquake, with police saying Wednesday that they were “100 percent certain” no one trapped in the rubble was alive. AP Photo/Kyodo News, Shuzo Shikano
Lohan due back in court for jewelry theft case PAGE 12
NZ earthquake toll at 75 dead, 300 missing Associated Press Writer
CHRISTCHURCH, New Zealand – The siblings sat huddled together Wednesday on sodden grass, staring at smoldering remains of the office tower that collapsed with their mother inside when a powerful earthquake tore apart one of New Zealand’s largest cities.
WEATHER FORECAST CITY
TEMPERATURE OC
DENPASAR
23 - 32
JAKARTA
23 - 32
BANDUNG
20 - 29
YOGYAKARTA
22 - 32
SURABAYA
23 - 33
SUNNY
BRIGHT/CLOUDY
RAIN
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There had been no word from Donna Manning since her workplace came crumbling down Tuesday during a magnitude-6.3 quake that has killed at least 75 people and left some 300 missing. But she was tough, her 18-year-old daughter Lizzy insisted through tears, a “Superwoman” who would do anything to survive. Then a police officer approached. She knelt before Lizzy and her 15year-old brother Kent in the rain.
And she began to speak: “I have some horrible news ...” The teens’ faces crumpled, and their father wrapped them in an embrace. There was no hope left for anyone trapped inside the building, the officer said gently. Donna, a television presenter — their Superwoman — was gone. It was one of the darkest moments of Wednesday’s desperate hunt for any signs of life in the twisted rubble in the city of Christchurch, as Prime Minister John Key declared the
quake a national disaster and analysts estimated its cost at up to $12 billion. Hundreds of troops, police and emergency workers raced against time and aftershocks that threatened to collapse more buildings. They picked gingerly through the ruins, poking heat-seeking cameras into gaps between tumbles of bricks and sending sniffer dogs over concrete slabs. More teams rushed in from Australia, Asia, the United States and Britain, along with a military field hospi-
tal and teams to help repair power, water and phone lines that were damaged in all corners of the city of some 350,000 people.The news was grim at the Canterbury Television building, a seven-story concrete-and-glass structure that housed the regional TV network where Manning was a morning presenter and other businesses, including an English language school used by young visitors from Japan and South Korea.
Indonesian fans demand football chief quit
protester, Wawan, who had arrived in the capital by bus from Yogyakarta to attend the demonstration. “He is an ex-convict in corruption cases. He will never be able to develop Indonesian soccer,” he added. Waving banners reading “Nurdin must step down”, the protesters chained the entrance to the PSSI’s office and announced that the association had been “sealed”. About 200 riot police stood guard and an armoured vehicle was on standby. Similar protests also took place in a number of other cities across the country, in-
cluding Palangkaraya in central Kalimantan where dozens of protesters burned a picture of Halid. Angry football fans also took to the streets of various cities around the country on Tuesday. Football’s world governing body FIFA in 2007 called for fresh elections to replace Halid after he was convicted of graft. But he refused to step down despite being behind bars. He was released in September 2008. Indonesia’s was runner-up to Malaysia in the AFF Suzuki Cup in December but overall its performance in recent years has been lamentable.
Agence France Presse
JAKARTA – Hundreds of Indonesian soccer fans protested Wednesday against corruption in the national league and demanded the resignation of the disgraced Football Association (PSSI) chief. About 1,000 demonstrators rallied outside PSSI headquarters at Senayan stadium and called for association
chairman and convicted embezzler Nurdin Halid to step down after eight years in the job. They said he should not be allowed to contest an upcoming leadership election to extend his eight-year reign, amid a revolt within the association’s ranks and the creation of a rebel league. “Our national football team hasn’t achieved anything under his leadership,” said one
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