Wednesday, 14 August 2024

PM Kishida Who Militarized Japan at US Behest, Citing Threat by China

PM Kishida Who Militarized Japan at US Behest, Citing Threat by China

PM Kishida Who Militarized Japan at US Behest, Citing Threat by China










Under Kishida, Japan pledged to double its defense spending up to the NATO standard of two percent of gross domestic product by 2027, in a US-encouraged U-turn from decades of strict pacifism.







Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida has announced he will quit as leader of the country’s ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), amid his sinking approval rating resulting from the LDP-related corruption scandal, rising living costs, and a slumping yen.


Public support for Fumio Kishida's Cabinet plummeted to 15.5% last month, another low since the LDP returned to power in Japan in December 2012.


Apart from his poor domestic strategy, what developments have marked Kishida’s foreign policy?


  • Japan under Kishida has fueled the Ukrainian conflict by providing more than $12 billion of financial and other aid to the Kiev regime since 2022, per the Japanese Foreign Ministry.


  • Japan embarked on the path of militarization, issuing in 2022 a new national security doctrine aimed at doubling the country’s defense spending within the next five years.


  • The same year, Japan’s parliament did not think twice before approving a deal to spend $8.6 billion over five years to host American military personnel on Japanese soil.


  • Tokyo continues to take part in the annual US-led RIMPAC, the world's largest maritime military drills described by Chinese experts as “demonstration of America’s hegemony” in the region.


  • The US currently has about 56,000 active-duty service members in Japan, more than in any other country, according to Pentagon data.


  • Last month, Japan agreed on establishing a Joint Operations Command (JJOC) with the US on its territory by next March.


  • What’s more, Tokyo and Washington reportedly discussed "extended deterrence”, which stipulated for the use of nuclear weapons in US protection of Japan.


  • The US is now pushing for Japan to be included in Pillar II of the AUKUS agreement. China has repeatedly castigated the arrangement as part of America’s “new Cold War” antagonism aimed at containing Beijing by fueling the militarization of the Asia-Pacific region.


China’s current external stance and military actions present … the greatest strategic challenge,’ Prime Minister Fumio Kishida tells joint session of Congress.


Japan was coordinating with the US, he said, strengthening its military, contributing US$12 billion to Ukraine, and developing ties with traditional antagonist South Korea


Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida gave a full-throated defence of the United States’ international role as guardian of democracy on Thursday to a rare joint session of Congress, citing the enormous challenge that China and other authoritarian states represent to the global order.






The 35-minute speech, following a bilateral summit with US President Joe Biden and a state dinner at the White House on Wednesday, covered a broad range of issues in sweeping language, ranging from authoritarian governance and rule of law to digital surveillance, nuclear non-proliferation and debt-trap diplomacy.


“Close coordination between Japan and the US is required more than ever to ensure that deterrence that our alliance provides remains credible and resilient,” Kishida said, speaking in English.


“China’s current external stance and military actions present the unprecedented and the greatest strategic challenge, not only to the peace and security of Japan, but to the peace and stability of the international community at large.”


Beyond laying out the case for preserving and defending the post-World War II global order, Kishida backed Biden’s agenda as he faces domestic political opposition, including continuation of funding for Ukraine’s military against Russia’s invasion; the importance of bipartisanship; and the need to maintain global engagement at a time of instability.


“The Ukraine of today may be the East Asia of tomorrow,” he said, his speech interrupted repeatedly by applause and standing ovations.


“The leadership of the United States is indispensable. Without US support, how long before the hopes of Ukraine would collapse under the onslaught from Moscow?”


Global leadership was tiring, Kishida said, and had required significant sacrifice in US blood and treasure, noting that many Americans were battling self-doubt and turning inward. But, he added, the fight was essential and Japan could share some of the load.


He ticked off several ways Japan was stepping up, including: a pledge to double its defence spending by 2027; a contribution of US$12 billion in aid to Ukraine, channelled through Nato; imposing sanctions on Russia; a new counterstrike capability and improved cybersecurity; and developing closer ties with traditional antagonist South Korea.


Kishida’s speech comes as the US implicitly recognises it cannot hope to counter a more economically and militarily muscular China alone even as it juggles the Ukraine and Gaza crises.


The democratic nations of the world must have all hands on deck

Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida In response, Washington has created or reinvigorated a “mini-lateral” latticework of groupings.


On Thursday, the latest of these was showcased as the leaders of Japan, the US and the Philippines met to support Manila in the face of mounting maritime pressure from Beijing.


“Japan is already standing shoulder to shoulder with the United States. You are not alone. We are with you,” Kishida said. “We are on task and we are ready to do what is necessary. The democratic nations of the world must have all hands on deck.”


Kishida’s speech was crafted with a keen understanding of American retail politics, in contrast to many presentations in Japan’s more formal culture.


His entrance into the House of Representatives chamber, packed with lawmakers, reporters and members of his entourage, was marked by extensive clapping and handshakes.


“I never get such nice applause from the Japanese Diet,” he quipped, referring to his nation’s parliament.


Kishida followed this up by recounting his three years as an elementary school student in New York City, how he rooted for local baseball teams and watched his businessman father take the subway to work.


The message seemed well received by members of both parties, in a Congress marked by deep divisions and extreme partisanship.


“With China aggressively encroaching on Taiwan, the relationship with Japan is more important than ever,” Representative Mark Alford, Republican of Missouri, posted on X, formerly known as Twitter, as the crowd broke up.


“We must continue to work with our friends to ensure the safety of the Indo-Pacific.”


Added Senator Michael Bennet, Democrat of Colorado: “The US-Japan alliance is the strongest it’s ever been, and we will work to make it even stronger as Japan modernises its security capabilities to address today’s shared challenges.”






















Ukraine Loses Up to 270 Soldiers in Kursk Region in Past Day - MoD

Ukraine Loses Up to 270 Soldiers in Kursk Region in Past Day - MoD

Ukraine Loses Up to 270 Soldiers in Kursk Region in Past Day - MoD




©Sputnik/Evgeny Biyatov/Go to the mediabank






The Ukrainian armed forces lose up to 270 soldiers and 16 armored vehicles, the Russian Ministry of Defense (MoD) said on Wednesday.







"In the past day, the losses of the armed forces of Ukraine amounted to 270 military personnel and 16 armored vehicles, including two tanks, an armored personnel carrier Stryker, 13 armored combat vehicles, as well as 10 vehicles and a 122-mm D-30 howitzer," the ministry said, adding that Russian troops repelled six Ukrainian attacks around five settlements in the region.


Ukrainian troops lost up to 2,300 servicemen and 37 tanks during their offensive in the Kursk Region, the ministry added.


The Russian forces prevented Ukrainian break through attempts of enemy mobile groups on armored vehicles in the Kursk Region, and two groups of Ukraine's troops on pickup trucks were eliminated near Martynovka, the MoD added.


Russia took 18 Ukrainian soldiers as prisoners in the Kursk Region, the ministry said.


"Aviation struck the reserves of the armed forces of Ukraine in the areas of the settlements of Yunakovka, Sadki, Miropoliye, Khrapovshchina, Mogritsa and Krovnoye of the Sumy region," the ministry concluded.



Two US-made armored vehicles destroyed in Russia – MOD videos



The Russian Defense Ministry has released more videos showing the destruction of Western-donated weapons used by Kiev during its incursion in Kursk Region.


Two US-made Stryker infantry fighting vehicles were hit by Lancet loitering munitions in the Russian border areas where fighting is taking place, according to the ministry.


One of the clips showed a military vehicle hidden in a small forest. A kamikaze drone is shown approaching it and blowing it up, with a cloud of smoke rising to the sky towards the reconnaissance drone filming the engagement.






The second video released hours later shows what appears to be several military vehicles on a rural dirt road. A Lancet then hits one of them, causing a massive explosion. Another vehicle, which was parked meters away, then accelerated away from the obliterated IFV.






The US has long claimed that it was supplying weapons to Ukraine on the condition that they would not be used inside what Washington and Kiev recognize as Russian territory, including Kursk Region.


After the operation was launched last week, the US government said Ukraine was not breaching the agreement. Similar statements of endorsement came from other Western nations.


Moscow has described the Ukraine conflict as a US-initiated proxy war against Russia, in which Ukrainian soldiers serve as ‘cannon fodder’. As of Wednesday, Ukrainian forces have suffered up to 2,300 casualties and have lost scores of armored vehicles and other heavy weapons in Kursk Region, according to Russian military estimates.



Ukraine Wants to Start Talks Using Kurchatov Nuclear Plant Seizure as Ultimatum - Akhmat Head



The Ukrainian Armed Forces went on the offensive on August 6 to seize territory in Russia's Kursk region, but their advance was stopped, said Valery Gerasimov, chief of Russia's General Staff. He stressed that the operation in Kursk will be completed by defeating the enemy and reaching the state border.


Units of the Russian Armed Forces are in the Kursk city of Sudzha, which the enemy does not control but there are daily clashes, commander of the Akhmat special forces Apti Alaudinov told Russian media.


"Today there are units of the Russian Defense Ministry in Sudzha. There is an enemy around and in some parts of the city. There are active clashes there every day. The enemy cannot say that he completely controls Sudzha, because he does not really control it," Alaudinov said.


The major general also said that Kiev is planning on seizing the Kurchatov nuclear power plant on August 11 and use this to start negotiations with Moscow with an ultimatum.


"We received very interesting materials — the whole layout of the operation, which was being prepared, by what forces and what was planned. What can I say: on the 11th [of August] it was necessary to take the nuclear power plant in Kurchatov... [Ukrainian President] Zelensky's blitzkrieg, which was planned with the seizure of the Kurchatov nuclear power plant and already entering negotiations with an ultimatum... failed," Alaudinov explained.


The operation had not been completed, despite all the reserves directed by Kiev in this direction, Alaudinov said.


"Most of the equipment has already been destroyed from what was deployed in the Kursk direction," Alaudinov concluded.



Kiev’s attack on Kursk Region failed to divert Russian forces from Donbass — diplomat



Ukraine's attacks on Russia’s Kursk Region failed to achieve the goal of diverting Russian forces from Donbass and Slobozhanshchina, Russian Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said in a statement.


Russian Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Maria Zakharova
©Valery Sharifulin/TASS



"Zelensky's regime has not achieved its main goal - to distract Russian armed forces from Donbass and Slobozhanshchina. At present, Ukrainian militants who havemade an incursion into the territory of the Kursk Region are being decisively pushed back by the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation," she said in the statement on the Foreign Ministry's website.


"The criminal regime of the expired [Ukrainian President Vladimir] Zelensky continues to demonstrate its true neo-Nazi nature to the whole world," Zakharova said, referring the Ukrainian terrorist attack on the Kursk Region. "As the situation in Donbass is dire for Ukrainian forces, the Ukrainian government ordered a terrorist attack on the territories of the Kursk Region that are close to the border."


"Kiev didn’t make it a secret that they intended this step to improve their own negotiating positions in the future, which Mikhail Podolyak, an adviser to the chief of staff at Zelensky's office, stated on August 8 without any hesitation."


"Ukrainian Banderite armed formations indiscriminately fire on civilians as they are trying to evacuate from dangerous areas, shell residential buildings and civilian infrastructure, and engage in outright looting," the spokeswoman went on to say. "Captured Ukrainian fighters admit that they received a command that, if civilians put up any resistance, they should mercilessly shoot everyone on the spot."


Zakharova said all these facts, including the fact that Ukrainian forces are attacking Russian territory with the complicity of their NATO patrons, "fully confirm the relevance of the goals and objectives of the special military operation to de-Nazify and demilitarize Ukraine, which will definitely be accomplished."


She expressed confidence that "the Kiev regime of usurpers, which is rotten from within, is held in place solely with money from the West." She said its collapse is "only a matter of time."



Kursk Region situation



Ukrainian forces started a major attack on the Kursk Region on August 6. Missile attack alerts have been issued repeatedly in the region since then. The attack killed 12 civilians and wounded 121 others, including 10 children, the latest data show. Hospitals have admitted 69 people. Of them, 17 are in serious condition.


More than 120,000 people left the Kursk Region areas close to the Ukrainian border, or were evacuated. According to the Russian Defense Ministry, Ukraine has lost up to 2,030 servicemen, 35 tanks and 31 armored personnel carriers since the start of fighting in the Kursk area.






















Japan's Prime Minister Kishida to resign

Japan's Prime Minister Kishida to resign

Japan's Prime Minister Kishida to resign










Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida announced that he will not run in the upcoming party leadership vote



Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida, in a surprise move Wednesday, announced he will not run in the upcoming party leadership vote in September, paving the way for Japan to have a new prime minister.







Kishida was elected president of his governing Liberal Democratic Party in 2021 and his three-year term expires in September. Whoever wins the party vote will succeed him as prime minister because the LDP controls both houses of parliament. A new face is a chance for the party to show that it's changing for the better, and Kishida said he will support the new leader.


“We need to clearly show an LDP reborn,” Kishida told a news conference Wednesday. “In order to show a changing LDP, the most obvious first step is for me to bow out.”


“I will not run for the upcoming party leadership election,” he said.


Stung by his party’s corruption scandals, Kishida has suffered dwindling support ratings that have dipped below 20%.


In order to achieve policies to tackle difficult situations in and outside Japan, regaining public trust in politics is crucial, Kishida said. He called on aspiring party lawmakers to raise their hands to run for leadership and have active policy debate during the campaign.


“Once a new leader is decided, I hope to see everyone unite and form a dream team to achieve politics that can gain public understanding,” he said.


Kishida said he has been mulling his possible resignation for some time but waited until he could put his key policies on track, including energy policy that calls for a return to nuclear power, a drastic military buildup to deal with security threats in the region, and improving ties with South Korea, as well as political reforms.


Speculation on potential candidates has landed on a number of senior LDP lawmakers, including party Secretary-General Toshimitsu Motegi, Digital Minister Taro Kono, Economic Security Minister Sanae Takaichi and Foreign Minister Yoko Kamikawa.


A winner will replace Kishida as party president, and will be endorsed as the new prime minister in a parliamentary vote soon after. LDP executives are expected to decide next week on the date for the party election.


Since the corruption scandal broke, Kishida has removed a number of Cabinet ministers and others from party executive posts, dissolved party factions that were criticized as the source of money-for-favor politics, and tightened political funds control law. Ten people — lawmakers and their aides — were indicted in January.


Despite Kishida's efforts, support for his government dwindled.


Local election losses earlier in the year eroded his clout, and LDP lawmakers have voiced the need for a fresh face ahead of the next general election. Major losses in the Tokyo metropolitan assembly by elections in July also added to the push.


The scandal centers on unreported political funds raised through tickets sold for party events. It involved more than 80 LDP lawmakers, mostly belonging to a major party faction previously led by assassinated former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe. The assassination surfaced a scandal over the LDP's decades-old, deep-rooted ties with the Unification Church, for which Kishida has also faced criticism.



Reactions to Japan's PM Kishida stepping down



Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida said he will step down in September, ending a three-year term marred by political scandals and paving the way for a new premier to address the impact of rising prices.


Kishida's decision to quit triggers a contest to replace him as president of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), and by extension as the leader of the world's fourth-biggest economy.


Here are some reactions to the news from market and political analysts:



KOICHI NAKANO, POLITICAL SCIENCE PROFESSOR, SOPHIA UNIVERSITY, TOKYO



"I was expecting Kishida not to be able to run for quite some time. And that's to do with basically the statistics. He's already passed average tenure of an LDP prime minister by serving three years. And he's not anywhere near a position to be able to say, ‘I'm special, I need more time.’ So he was running against the odds to begin with.


"And at the end of the day, an LDP incumbent prime minister cannot run in the (party) presidential race unless he's assured of a victory. It's like the grand champion yokozunas of sumo. You don't just win, but you need to win with grace. And so if you can't do that, you're supposed to retire. It's considered to be unseemly for the president to run and to get defeated as an incumbent.



RINTARO NISHIMURA, ASSOCIATE OF THE ASIA GROUP, A WASHINGTON-BASED STRATEGIC ADVISORY FIRM, TOKYO



"It’s open field for the next president. Kishida's endorsement will matter as well. Will he back someone from his own faction, like Hayashi or Kamikawa, or ride the wave with another candidate, such as Ishiba, Kono, Koizumi. The new leader needs to be a fresh face, whether that means young or not associated with Kishida, and reform-minded, showing voters that the party will change.


"The new leader will have a tough job navigating this tough political environment and heading into a general election knowing the poll numbers are not looking good. An election is likely to be right after the new PM is sworn in, as new PMs tend to have a slight boost in poll numbers. It’s better to call before negatives come up."



MIKITAKA MASUYAMA, PROFESSOR AT THE NATIONAL GRADUATE INSTITUTE FOR POLICY STUDIES



"Support for the prime minister has been sluggish of late and the voices calling for his stepping down have been loud. The leader of the Liberal Democratic Party is tantamount to prime minister. Anyone in the position should be able to bring the party together and manage the government. Someone with experience is better than those who are just popular in voter polls. "If Kishida picked (Foreign Minister Yoko) Kamikawa, and others in the LDP joined him, she could be the one."



SHOKI OMORI, CHIEF JAPAN DESK STRATEGIST, MIZUHO SECURITIES, TOKYO



"Political uncertainty isn’t good at all, with Mr. Kishida not even raising his hand for election. The market implication is that Japanese politics is going to be foggy, and whoever the LDP premier will be, the cabinet choice is going to be very unclear and thus the policy path is going to be a mystery. In short, risk-assets, particularly equities, will likely be hit the most, given foreign investors’ attention and big inflow/outflow in the markets.


"Market participants are going to dislike the uncertain situation, especially those investing in risk assets, such as equities. PM Kishida pushed for New NISA (investment accounts) and now he’s pulling back. Yen is going to depend on external factors especially U.S. data and the Fed. JGBs will still remain a supply/demand market. My initial view is that equities are going to be hit the most."




CHARU CHANANA, HEAD OF CURRENCY STRATEGY, SAXO, SINGAPORE



"While Kishida’s stepping down could bring some uncertainty, his low approval ratings mean a significant negative reaction from equities may be avoided."



MICHAEL CUCEK, PROFESSOR SPECIALISING IN JAPANESE POLITICS, TEMPLE UNIVERSITY, TOKYO



"He’s been a dead man walking for quite some time. That there was no way to add up the numbers so that he would get reelected was clear for a long time. Public discontent with Kishida was connected with the LDP’s entanglements with the former Unification Church, which became apparent after Abe’s assassination, as well as slush fund scandals, and the slide in the yen that increased inflation pressures."



TAKAHIDE KIUCHI, NOMURA RESEARCH INSTITUTE EXECUTIVE, TOKYO



"The Kishida administration at first raised market concerns by leaning to (re)distribution measures, but it later pivoted to expansionary policies such as the 'asset income doubling plan', which was well received by the markets. However, the administration has recently launched policies with unclear objectives such as tax cuts, giving an inconsistent impression on its policy focuses."



KENTA IZUMI, LEADER OF THE BIGGEST OPPOSITION CONSTITUTIONAL DEMOCRATIC PARTY (POST ON X), TOKYO



"The issues of the former Unification Church, political money and inflation countermeasures have been headache for him, but these problems are still unsolved."



RAHM EMANUEL, US AMBASSADOR TO JAPAN(POST ON X), TOKYO



"Under Prime Minister Kishida’s steadfast leadership, Japan and the United States have ushered in a new era of relations for the Alliance.






















Israel Terrorist’s Intensifying attacks on Gaza Schools Bloody Morning as 20 killed

Israel Terrorist’s Intensifying attacks on Gaza Schools Bloody Morning as 20 killed

Israel Terrorist’s Intensifying attacks on Gaza Schools Bloody Morning as 20 killed










Last week more than 100 people were killed after Israel Terrorist hit a school in Gaza City sheltering displaced Palestinians, as the United Nations accused Israel of intensifying attacks on schools.







The targeting of al-Talbin School on Saturday during dawn prayers triggered global outrage.


Paramedics at the scene described the carnage as horrific, with “bodies ripped to pieces”. Israel claimed that Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad fighters were operating from the school – a claim that was rejected by Hamas.


Israel has repeatedly attacked Gaza’s schools, hospitals and universities, claiming the buildings were used for military purposes without providing any proof.


With numerous evacuation orders since the war in Gaza began on October 7, schools have often been used to shelter nearly two million displaced Palestinians in the besieged enclave.


Under the Fourth Geneva Convention, schools are considered civilian objects and should be protected from attacks. However, within a 10-day period in August, Israeli forces struck five schools in Gaza City, killing more than 179 people and injuring scores more.



Where have attacks on schools happened in August?







At least 20 people were killed and more than 29 injured in an Israeli strike on the Dalal al-Mughrabi School on August 1, according to officials.


Two days later, strikes on Hamama and al-Huda schools killed 17 and injured more than 60 people.


On August 4, at least 30 people were killed and 19 others injured after Israel struck Nassr and Hassan Salameh schools in the Nassr neighbourhood in Gaza City.


Israel bombed Abdul Fattah Hamouda and az-Zahra schools, killing 17 and injuring dozens more on August 8.


The worst attack in recent weeks was on al-Tabin School, which Al Jazeera’s Hind Khoudary said was hit by at least three missile attacks.


The UN’s special rapporteur on the occupied Palestinian territory, Francesca Albanese, condemned the attack.


“Israel is genociding the Palestinians, one neighbourhood at the time, one hospital at the time, one school at the time, one refugee camp at the time, one ‘safe zone’ at the time. With US and European weapons,” she posted on X.



Previous Israeli attacks on schools




In July, a similar cluster campaign targeting school shelters across the Gaza Strip killed nearly 50 people within a week.





Almost 85 percent of school buildings in Gaza have been damaged, with nearly all schools in North Gaza either being “directly hit” or damaged. This is followed by Gaza City, where more than 90 percent of the schools have been damaged or destroyed.


According to data compiled by the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), up to July 6, 564 schools in the Gaza Strip have been directly hit or damaged by Israeli attacks.



  • In North Gaza, 95 school buildings have been damaged or destroyed.


  • In Gaza City, 208 school buildings have been damaged or directly hit.


  • Deir el-Balah, which has in past weeks been part of the designated safe areas, has had 70 school buildings attacked.


  • Khan Younis, where a large population of 75,000 was forced to flee days ago, has had 125 school buildings directly hit and damaged.


  • In Rafah, 66 school buildings were directly hit or damaged





Are attacks on schools in Gaza increasing? There has been an increasing trend by Israeli forces of attacking school shelters that are housing thousands of people displaced by the war.


According to the data compiled by UNICEF, from November onwards, the number of directly hit schools increased fivefold as the number of schools hit went from 60 to almost 340.


The total number of children killed during the war has increased to more than 16,500, while the total death toll in Gaza stands at nearly 40,000





The increased number of attacks on school shelters comes amid global calls for a ceasefire, and regional pressure to end the assault on Gaza, which has been turned into a vast wasteland of rubble.


A view of destroyed buildings in Gaza, amid Israel’s war on Gaza, as seen from southern Israel on August 1, 2024 [Amir Cohen/Reuters]



But experts have said continued Israeli attacks across Gaza risk derailing those efforts, with some accusing Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of seeking to sabotage any possible deal to end the war.


Additionally, analysts have told Al Jazeera that Israel’s military strategically uses disproportionate violence


“Israel’s military has failed both to secure the release of the hostages and to deal a ‘death blow’ to Hamas,” said Tariq Kenney-Shawa, a policy fellow at Al-Shabaka, a Palestinian policy network, who noted “Massive attacks … give the Israeli government and military something to point to as a ‘win’ if they result in the death of Hamas leaders and large numbers of civilians because it fits into Israel’s wider strategy of deterrence through unparalleled destruction.”






















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Paskibraka 2024 Perempuan Wajib Copot Jilbab, BPIP Dituding Biang Keroknya

Paskibraka 2024 Perempuan Wajib Copot Jilbab, BPIP Dituding Biang Keroknya

Paskibraka 2024 Perempuan Wajib Copot Jilbab, BPIP Dituding Biang Keroknya




Pasukan Pengibar Bendera Pusaka (Paskibraka) 2024 di Ibu Kota Nusantara (IKN), Kalimantan Timur.






Ada yang berbeda dengan Pasukan Pengibar Bendera Pusaka (Paskibraka) 2024 di Ibu Kota Nusantara (IKN), Kalimantan Timur. Pada tahun ini, semua Paskibraka yang perempuan tidak ada yang mengenakan jilbab atau hijab.







Bahkan, termasuk delegasi dari Aceh yang sebelumnya mengenakan jilbab, tiba-tiba ketika sampai di IKN harus mencopot penutup aurat tersebut. Hal itu jelas berbeda dengan kebijakan sebelumnya yang membebaskan Paskibraka perempuan boleh mengenakan jilbab atau tidak.


Saat ini, penanggung jawab Paskibraka 2024 adalah Badan Pembinaan Ideologi Pancasila (BPIP). Pembina Paskibraka Nasional 2021, Irwan Indra menuding, kewajiban copot jilbab bagi Paskibraka perempuan merupakan ulah BPIP.


"Pasti BPIP, karena sekarang yang bertanggung jawab mengurusi Paskibraka 2024 adalah BPIP," ujar Irwan ketika dikonfirmasi Republika.co.id di Jakarta, Rabu (14/8/2024). Dia pun heran, mengapa BPIP sampai harus mewajibkan Paskibraka 2024 yang perempuan mencopot jilbab.


Irwan mendapat informasi, sebenarnya ada 18 perwakilan Paskibraka perempuan yang mengenakan jilbab. Namun, semuanya harus mencopot penutup kepala tersebut karena aturan yang dikenakan BPIP. "Bahkan ada yang sudah sejak SD dan SMP memakai jilbab harus dicopot karena ikut Paskibraka 2024," ucap Irwan.


Dia menyebut, Presiden Joko Widodo (Jokowi) maupun Kementerian Pemuda dan Olahraga (Kemenpora) yang sebelumnya bertanggung jawab atas Paskibraka pasti tidak terlibat dalam urusan itu. Karena Irwan mendesak agar BPIP bisa menjelaskan ke publik atas kebijakan diskriminasi copot jilbab bagi Paskibraka perempuan.


Sementara itu, dalam foto yang diterima Republika.co.id, memang terlihat Paskibraka perempuan tidak ada yang memakai jilbab. Semuanya terlihat seragam harus menunjukkan rambutnya.


  1. Aceh: Muhammad Yusran Ar-Razzaq dan Dzawata Maghfura Zuhri

  2. Sumatra Utara: Ibnu Aswan dan Violetha Agryka Siantur

  3. Sumatra Barat: Raidzaky Rafifaldrie dan Maulia Permata Putri

  4. Riau: M Radoslaw Larre Prawiro dan Kamilatun Nisa

  5. Jambi: Alfadillah Zaid Fahrurozizki dan Rahma Az Zahra

  6. Sumatra Selatan: Al Fatih Akrom Azzufar ZH dan Tahara Cahaya RA

  7. Bengkulu: Novallian Syaputra dan Amanda Aprillia

  8. Lampung: Alvin Febian Siagian dan Mutia Al Vanie

  9. Kepulauan Bangka Belitung: Loris Akbar Djailanie dan Catherine

  10. Kepulauan Riau: Abdullah Al Haddad dan Hasya Danirmala Putri Athadira

  11. DKI Jakarta: Abdul Zaky Hutera dan Sabrina Roihanah Syukriyyah Thallah

  12. Jawa Barat: Johanes Adhyaksa Pesik Langie dan Sofia Sahla

  13. Jawa Tengah: Akmal Faiz Ali Khadafi dan Glenys Lalita Aksani

  14. Daerah Istimewa Yogyakarta: Zulfikri Khoirurijal dan Keynina Evelyn Candra

  15. Jawa Timur: Muhammad Raihan dan Rahdisty Syawalia Yogi

  16. Banten: Naufal Gibran Ahmadinezad Kuswara dan Kirana Ashawidya Baskara

  17. Bali: A.A. Ngr Panji Dharma Putra dan Ni Komang Tri Setia

  18. Nusa Tenggara Barat: Muhammad Raihan Ammar Firdaus dan Amna Kayla

  19. Nusa Tenggara Timur: Frumentius Arison Ngongo dan Jessica Kristin Henuk

  20. Kalimantan Barat: Muhammad Mizan Gauzan Defaktatratama Yusup dan Zahratushyta Dwi Artika

  21. Kalimantan Tengah: Riyad Al Hamdani dan Alysia Noreen Ramadhani

  22. Kalimantan Selatan: G.T. M Riyal Yudistira dan Della Selfavia Azahra

  23. Kalimantan Timur: Sunnu Wahyudi dan Livenia Evelyn Kurniawan

  24. Kalimantan Utara: Muhammad Dhava Bima Adithya dan Carmellina Charmaine

  25. Sulawesi Utara: Jonathan Gilbert Tanjawa dan Ni Made Sri Puspa Wati

  26. Sulawesi Tengah: Michael Mikha Laempah dan Zahra Aisyah Aplizya

  27. Sulawesi Selatan: Try Adyaksa S dan Agatha Sapan Kallolangi

  28. Sulawesi Tenggara: Aldiyansyah Rahmat dan Lutfiyah Naurasyifa Utoyo

  29. Gorontalo: Nadhif Islami F. Yasin dan Siti Janeeta Abdul Wahab

  30. Sulawesi Barat: Aditya Bagaskara dan Mutiara Wasilah

  31. Maluku: Muhammad Fahry Alfarizky Lestahulu dan Asih Arum Lestari

  32. Maluku Utara: Fifandra Ardiansyah Daud dan Aprillya Putri Dwi Mahendra

  33. Papua: Kevin Imanuel Rumbino dan Kristina Elisabeth Duwiri

  34. Papua Barat: Melkisedek Sasarari dan Indri Marwa Delvita Ahek

  35. Papua Barat Daya: Yohanis Josua Juan Budji dan Rachel Rieva Bodori

  36. Papua Pegunungan: Andre R. O Kabagaimu dan Yoan F Mudumi

  37. Papua Tengah: Joe Bayden Imanuel Kallem dan Bergitha Rabani Dimara

  38. Papua Selatan: Canavaro Natiel Wayega dan Monika Bebi Gewo.