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Image by Belinda Lopez

Featured on Radio National’s Awaye! 

A radio documentary about the Arhuacos, an indigenous tribe in northern Colombia.  After years of being caught in the crossfire of a quasi-civil war driven by the supply and demand for cocaine, the Arhuacos have found an ingenious way to regain control of their lands and to stop cocaine production. At the same time they’ve developed a strategy to regenerate their sacred forest country.


One of a series of articles published as the Jakarta Globe’s correspondent for COP15. Links to other articles follow.

Concerns Grow Over UN Forest Scheme

Link to Web     Link to PDF

Copenhagen. A world away from the official climate talks are the forests of the world’s developing nations. Agreements may be made (and unmade) in carpeted conference halls by world leaders, but it is local forest communities who will now be on the frontline of the fight against deforestation — and the many ways governments and companies may be able to make a quick buck in the process. Read More

Broadcast on FSRN (US).

Listen to the story here

In Indonesia, the former leaders of Aceh’s separatist movement, GAM, are celebrating. The legitimate political party set up by former GAM rebels, Partai Aceh, has secured at least 30 of the 69 provincial parliament seats. The win represents something of a moral victory for the ex GAM leaders, who spent decades fighting the Indonesian military.

Belinda Lopez followed some ex-militants who took her to their former jungle hideouts.

Published on Asia Sentinel

Indonesia’s conservative Muslim party abandons Valentines to woo voters

Indonesia’s most conservative Islamic party, briefly considered wooing young voters politically for upcoming national elections with chocolates and flowers on Valentine’s Day before pulling up short and abandoning the plan in the mistaken idea that the holiday is “too Jewish.”

The PKS, whose name in English is the Prosperous Justice Party, has had a difficult time “finding a formula to reach” more liberally-minded young voters, a party member, Mujtahid Rahman Yadi acknowledged. So it decided on the affectionate approach – Valentine’s gifts attached to stickers bearing mug shots of their candidates for Indonesia’s April legislative elections.

The romantic plan to use hearts and flowers to attract voters was dreamed up by the same party that pushed through a controversial anti-pornography law in the country last year, banning acts that “violated public morality” and “incited sexual desire”, (which, until some late revisions, would have included bikinis in Bali). Read More

Published in the Jakarta Globe. View PDF of publication.

journalist Jose Belo. Photo by Lirio da Fonseca.

Journalist Jose Belo. Photo by Lirio da Fonseca.

East Timor’s Justice Minister denies she will block the long-anticipated removal of Indonesia’s criminal defamation law that is still used in the fledging nation, despite using it to bring an action against a journalist who published a series of articles accusing her of corruption.
Jose Belo, the publisher of the respected investigative weekly newspaper Tempo Semanal, will defend his paper against defamation charges for a series of articles he published in October last year, accusing Justice Minister Lucia Lobato of corruption, collusion and nepotism in the handing out of government tenders. Read More

Published in the Jakarta Globe. View PDF of publication here.

Pole dancers keep spinning as they wait for the government to decide if their art is illegal.


It looks like a giant condom!” Arianna Starr — Penthouse Pet, former Miss Nude Australia, striptease school teacher and tonight’s performer at Blowfish nightclub in South Jakarta — is staring at the costume the club’s management wants her to wear.

Since the controversial antipornography law was passed in Indonesia, it seems even the barons of Jakarta’s nightlife are getting worried about “violating public morality,” in this case, letting their risque Australian performers show a little skin. Read More

Published in the Jakarta Globe. View PDF of publication here.

For a publishing empire that has lasted 35 years, spawned more than 500 books on travel and is now heaving into the digital age, Lonely Planet began rather modestly, on a London park bench in 1970.
A 20-year-old woman named Maureen sat on the opposite side of a seat occupied by Tony, 23, who was reading a magazine. He remarked that it was a good place to read on a Thursday afternoon.
“That was a good pick-up line,” says a now 61-year-old Tony Wheeler, who got the girl in the end. Maureen became his wife and the co-founder of Lonely Planet.
But had they been seated on the same bench sometime this decade, their exchange might never have happened. Read More