September 19, 2008

Suspected bomb threat at Freeport proves empty

By Markus Makur

In a bid to prevent further bombings at copper and gold miner PT Freeport Indonesia, Papua Police on Wednesday disposed of bags suspected to contain explosives near Freeport's power plant and water facilities.

Following a tip, the Mimika Police Mobile Brigade sent a bomb disposal team at 11:30 p.m. local time (9:30 p.m. Jakarta time) to the scene to dispose of the bags, placed by a fence at the Smirna Church in the Timika Indah housing complex.

The bomb squad scoured the area for two hours while a patrol team and riot unit were deployed to the scene.

Mimika Police chief Adj. Sr. Comr. Godhelp C. Mansnembra told reporters Thursday that police received information about the presence of bags which looked like they contained explosives, at a garbage dump near the power generating facility at the residential complex.

However, the bags were found to be empty, except for the identity card of a Canadian citizen.

Police said they believed the bags were stolen and had been discarded at the dump.

"The bags were placed against the wall. The perpetrators were likely scared and got rid of them at the garbage dump. This was not a threat because we didn't find any life-threatening items inside," Mansnembra said.

PT Freeport Indonesia has been the target of a flurry of bombings over the past week, from blasts at the Kali Kabur bridge at Mile 39, to a blast at a gas station on Mile 50. A blast also occurred at the main power relay station near Moses Kilangin International Airport in Timika.

Five members of the National Police's forensics laboratory were not allowed to board an Airfast Indonesia flight at the Airport. The airline has been chartered by Freeport.

National Police are planning to file a lawsuit against the air charter company, Mansnembra said.

"The officers were returning to Jakarta and carrying with them chemical substances from the scene of the bridge bombing," he said.

"They were already seated in the plane when the captain ordered them to disembark."

Mansnembra said the captain's actions violated National Police investigation regulations.

"The forensics officers clearly understood Indonesian civil aviation regulations and had secured the chemical substances," he said.

"The captain, however, kept insisting they get off the aircraft."

The forensics officers eventually took a Garuda Indonesia flight back to Jakarta.

"If Garuda was willing to let the officers on board with chemical substances, why not Airfast?" Mansnembra said. [The Jakarta Post]   

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September 17, 2008

Institute offers to plug mud leaks

By Indra Harsaputra

The 10 November Institute of Technology (ITS) in Surabaya is offering a new solution to control the hot mudflows at the Lapindo Brantas Inc. mining site in Porong and a new way to manage the dumping of mudflow waste.

The new technology was invented and developed by an ITS team of experts in cooperation with the UN Environmental Program (UNEP) and United Stated Agency for International Development (USAID).

ITS team leader I Nyoman Sutantra said the technology was based on the Bernoulli Theory.

It would stop the flows by rerouting the hot mudflow through a dam of pipes of 50 centimeters in diameter and 50 meters in height, each erected right on the source of the flow, he said.

The flow, he added, would go back down the pipes to be diverted, once it reached their top end.

"We have conducted research and a series of experiments to analyze the validity of the idea. We are confident this could deal with the mudflow," he told The Jakarta Post on Monday.

He said his team, in cooperation with the private sector, was ready to finance the implementation of the solution to control the mudflow that has badly affected local residents and the provincial economy.

The new technological solution comes following a series of failures of other technologies previously proposed to stop the mudflow, including the insertion of stone balls into the holes and various methods suggested to divert the flow.

Regarding the method that his team has proposed to deal with the mudflow, Sutantra said it was designed to prevent further destruction of the environment and possible flash flooding during the rainy season.

The team sees the current handling by the Sidoarjo Mudflow Handling Agency (BPLS) as being not effective enough, since the mudflow is partly dumped into a giant pond and partly diverted into the Porong River.

This, according to his team, has damaged the environment and could trigger flash flooding in the city during the rainy season.

Since October, 2006, the volume of mudflow containing oil and gas and dumped into the river has reached 69 million cubic meters.

This has formed a layer of sediment four meters thick on the riverbed, thus reducing its depth and causing it to overflow, producing odorous gases in the surrounding areas.

"What we want to introduce is to divert the hot mud to the downstream wetlands, where shrimp ponds belonging to villagers are located," Sutantra said.

The mudflow, he said, could be rerouted through 20-kilometer pipelines to the wetlands. "Then we will no longer need to dump the hot mud to the storage pond or the river," he added.

The new dump site, he said, could be planted with mangroves that could absorb the salt content and toxic substances in the hot mud and the site could later be developed into farmland.

"This will be the best alternative win-win solution and the safest way to salvage the environment and help save the Surabaya residents from a possible environmental and social disaster," he said.

"But this will be very costly as the development of the dump site requires the acquisition of thousands of hectares of shrimp and fish ponds belonging to local people," he added.

Sutantra also said that should the method be applied, the current giant pond could be developed into a residential complex and apartments to help the housing crisis in the capital city.

Meanwhile, the BPLS deputy chairman overseeing operational affairs, Soffian Hadi, said the current disposal of hot mud into the river was an effective way of dealing with the problem.

The sediments, he assured, would be washed out to sea by the rains in the coming rainy season. [The Jakarta Post]

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