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Keeping it in the family
After a decade of concealing their enormous wealth, the Soeharto offspring
suddenly have found themselves back in the limelight
nside Samruk, Kazakhstan's new state holding company
Kazakhstan’s president, Nursultan Nazarbayev,
has decreed the creation of a state holding company, roughly on
Singaporean/Malaysian lines, to oversee
and rationalize the country’s lucrative but inchoate collection of state-owned
companies and foster corporate governance. Eric Ellis reports on a confrontation
of cultures

Interview with Sir Richard Evans, Samruk chairman
A British corporate warhorse, Sir Richard Evans, has been hired to pull the Samruk operation together
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Sri Lankan tea maker Dilmah is taking a leaf from the wine industry to label its beverage as high-end and chic
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Squeezed between the mullahs and George W. Bush, and with war and a nuclear future looming, many moderate Iranian families are planning their escape
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Sanctions? Coke and Pepsi found a way around them and are battling for market share in Tehran with local Zamzam Cola

A short walk with Eric
Newby
Warriors with scimitars and muskets have given way to warlords with AK-47s and
mobile phones, but there are still hidden valleys of timeless peace and beauty
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Five years after the war, Kabul is showing signs of economic life. But making money there is still risky business
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With books about George Washington arrayed on a shelf behind him in his office in Kabul, Afghan President Hamid Karzai talked to FORTUNE recently about the nation-building challenges that still confront his country five years after the fall of the Taliban

Afghanistan Gets Back To Business
The country’s newly revitalized banking system throws up colourful characters and eccentric approaches to marketing. But overseeing it all is a rigorous central banker with solid US commercial banking experience
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Whether or not Iran is building nuclear weapons, its auto industry, the largest in the Middle East, is learning how to cope with privation—and planning for worse.

One man’s extraordinary journey from middle Australia into the heart of Indonesia’s Islamic world. Or was it into the heart of darkness?
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The royals are ridiculed, Maoists are flexing their muscles and the lucrative climbing industry has had a tough season. Eric Ellis finds all is not well in the troubled Himalayan nation

The Americans have put the mess back into Mesopotamia, says an Iraqi-Australian economist after trying to help the reconstruction of his birthplace

East & Eden
For a truly inspiring Asian experience step off the well-trodden path. The top
10 must-visit holiday hotspots

Even before the Muslim backlash over those notorious cartoons, liberal Denmark was under siege from some demons closer to home

After 15 years on the lam, with $1.5bn missing and facing 18 charges from one of the biggest corporate scandals in Australian history, Abraham Goldberg finally wants to come home

Eric Ellis on the background to the hanging in Singapore last week of an Australian drug-dealer
Naval Gazing
Cruising the tropical islands of the South China Sea

Almost a year later, too little has changed along the tsunami-smashed Sri Lankan coast. Aid was sent but the will to recover seems to have been swept away

Hang Democracy, Let's Trade
Singaporeans don't like to be reminded they do business with Burmese narco-traffickers,
and admit they don't mind punishing the innocent to preserve law and order

Singapore seems determined to hang Melbourne man Nguyen Tuong Van as an act of defiance in the face of international criticism
Gotcha, Goldberg!
The one that got away
When Melbourne rag trade magnate Abraham Goldberg disappeared, $1.5bn went
missing with him. How we tracked down Australia's biggest corporate fugitive

Islamabad's long-delayed sale of state telecom operator PTCL should be encouragement -- and a warning

Reputed to be incubators for terrorists, Islamic schools in Pakistan claim they are innocent – and are still waiting for long-promised Western aid

At 27, Schapelle Corby is probably a bit too young for Warren Zevon but, given her present predicament, she would doubtless appreciate the American singer’s sentiments. Which are surely appropriate now that Jakarta’s most flamboyant lawyer, Hotman Paris Hutapea, has stepped into her troubled life, well practised as he is in law, guns and, particularly, in money


Interview with Pakistan President General Pervez Musharraf
Pakistan’s President General Pervez Musharraf defies conventional politics....
Eric Ellis on the weeping, xenophobic hysteria in Australia over the conviction of Schapelle Corby for smuggling drugs into Indonesia

As an occasional resident of a Sri Lankan fishing village, writer Eric Ellis pitched in to help those ruined by the tsunami. But the plan to finance and organise replacement boats was beset by bureaucracy, connivance and internecine warfare

The Bali expats and intelligentsia are disgusted by Australia’s racist reaction. The other 230 million Indonesians ask, “Schapelle who?”

Sri Lanka’s efforts to rebuild after the tsunami have been slowed by bureaucracy and renewed ethnic tensions. Can President Kumaratunga use the disaster to transform the island’s political culture?

A reporter’s account of one personal mission

Interview with President Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga of Sri Lanka

The trials of Schapelle
There are braying reporters, dozing judiciary members, colourful lawyers and
assorted hangers-on basking in the limelight and baking in the Indonesian heat.
Centre stage, an Australian woman's life is at stake

As an occasional resident of a Sri Lankan fishing village, writer Eric Ellis pitched in to help those ruined by the tsunami. But the plan to finance and organise replacement boats was beset by bureaucracy, connivance and internecine warfare. But as Ellis' diary shows, it was a story with a happy ending

Sri Lanka's expat elite are kicking off their high heels and rolling up the sleeves of their linen shirts with some acts of extraordinary generosity that few thought them capable of. Eric Ellis reports.

After the apocalypse; A journey to find loved ones in the devastation of southern Sri Lanka defies description - the jaw drops; the eyes glaze; the soul weeps. And the politicians fiddle as the people wail.

Whatever will be, will be, especially in a timeless village in Andalucian Spain. Until, that is, it is "discovered" by the invading hordes of New Europe and beyond.
How a frozen-food salesman from New Jersey - a former refugee from war-torn Afghanistan - built his country's largest wireless network

It’s election time in Kabul and a motley assortment of carpet-baggers, do-gooders and telephone salesmen are gathering for the big day.

Finance Minister Ashraf Ghani is battling warlords, cabinet colleagues, indifferent global donors and stomach cancer as he struggles to salvage Afghanistan’s ravaged economy. If he fails, the world could pay an enormous price. Eric Ellis reports from Kabul
In the days after the bombing of the Australian Embassy in Jakarta, The Bulletin journeys into Indonesia's hardline Islamic world
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He was one of Mahathir Mohamad’s closest business allies. Now a new Prime Minister has cut the mogul down to size
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The rise of the tribute band has closely followed John Howard's conservative ascent. What price Kissteria's Gene Simmons clone as next PM?
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Has Asia, home to the world’s most dynamic economies, a region which provided the world’s first modern female leader, suddenly become enlightened?
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The hopes of a generation of Indonesians were destroyed in the rubble of the Sari Club
This weekend's Bali bombing commemoration has upset the island's Hindu elders, who say the gods will not be pleased
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Indonesia holds a world record that Jakarta doesn’t like to make public: the most pirate-infested seas on the planet
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ALLAH'S ASSASSINS *winner of 2003 Walkley Award, Asia-Pacific reporting
The Bali bombers were rootless young men recruited from the dusty poverty of a village in West Java - their overseer a worldly West Javanese, burning with Islamic zeal and with the contacts to organise and bankroll their jihad. Eric Ellis retraces their steps as they moved from village to town meeting the fixers, financiers and bombmakers, and finally assembling and detonating the devices that would kill and maim so many in a Kuta Beach tourist precinct
Indonesian forces have historically sought ties with Islamic groups only to suit their purposes, as Eric Ellis reveals
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The determination of authorities in Indonesia to execute any convicted Bali bombers raises many questions about Australia's role in the investigation, writes Eric Ellis in Jakarta
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An elaborate purification ritual may have exorcised some of Bali's demons, but the killers still to face justice there are monsters on the loose. In Kuta, ERIC ELLIS talks to the policeman heading the investigation and examines the secretive world of 'Indonesia's Arabs."
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As well as the lives of many, the nightclub bombs destroyed any lingering illusions that Bali was a tranquil haven somehow isolated from Indonesia's current malaise. Eric Ellis reports from Kuta Beach.
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As dawn broke on the chaos that was Kuta Beach, Eric Ellis searched Ground Zero Kuta for survivors of Australia's worst terrorist outrage
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Why is the only shopping mall with a UN seat suddenly near the very centre of the terrorist map? Eric Ellis seeks signs of foment amid Singapore's frangipani
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After
many years avoiding the place, Eric Ellis has been to Bali too. What's more, he
has decided to stay. The smell of scented candles is in the air
as he explains why
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The poached salmon we were eating in New York was perfectly edible. But, enhanced by the fiery sambal with its chili, garlic and cumin ingredients we had enjoyed on holiday in Bali, it would have been sublime.....from Upper East to further east
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Critic
Robert Hughes is due to face court again over his near-fatal car crash in
Western Australia. In the strange mix of culture and chaos that is Broome, Eric
Ellis gauges the
Shock of the Broome
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The aftermath of an accident that nearly killed social historian Robert Hughes could be a metaphor for Australia and its myriad complexities. Was it just another bloody car crash, mate, asks Eric Ellis.
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ON
A dusty afternoon in Dili, capital of a haunted land that is soon to be
proclaimed the 190th member of the United Nations, a babel of languages issues
from the foreign clientele at the City Café. Here, at $2.40 a shot, a caffe
latte costs either what most of East Timor's 800,000 people earn in a day, or
1/70th the average per diem of the 20 or so UN workers patronising the cafe
while the
Dili Dynasty....
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The
House of Tata, big and historic, is one of India's most beloved companies. It is
also a mess. Eric Ellis goes
inside the House of Tata
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A
quarter of a century on, Sydney Opera House designer Joern Utzon finally breaks
his silence on the thwarting of his vision and explains why we all have paid a
price. He also dispels a long-standing myth about his inspiration. ERIC ELLIS
reveals Utzon's
Orange Peel Opera House
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As
its leaders come to grips with the new rules of the digital age, the city-state
once known for its stuffiness begins to loosen the reins on pop culture and
political discussion in
Liberalising Singapore

THE QUIET inlets of Uliss Bay provide
shocking evidence of the depths to which Vladivostok has sunk since the collapse
of the Soviet Union and the mighty military-industrial complex that nourished
this city in
Russia's Wild East
PARIS.
Raining. Its 10.20 in the morning and Henri Cartier-Bresson is 20 minutes late.
I consult a waiter in bad French. “C’est Cafe Carousel ici, n’est-ce pas?”
“Oui, monsieur.”
A clear-eyed Frenchman, one of only two other people in the cafe and holding a grubby knapsack adorned with protest buttons – Nuclear? Non merci!” – looks up from his booth across the room. “Do you need help?” he asks, in English to start a rare interview with Henri Cartier-Bresson
THE
lighting was low, the room mesmerized by Diana Ross' Endless Love. The leggy
temptress lovingly wrapped her right hand around the long slender tube, caressed
it tenderly with her other hand before putting its head carefully to her mouth.
Its
Karaoke Kulture
The
continent watched glumly as a New Economy rose--faster than Yahoo!'s share
price--from Silicon Valley. Now, with a raft of homegrown start-ups ready to
make waves, it's Asia's turn as the
Asian Internet Lifts Off
Ironically,
the neglect of almost 400 years of colonialism--from the benign Portuguese
version to the brutal Javanese approach--offers East Timor its best prospect for
a viable post-independence economy. That neglect grows wild and plentiful in the
jungle hills of this verdant half-island: some of the world's finest strains of
arabica coffee plants, untouched by chemicals or human hands and, in an ideal
world, destined for the West's trendy coffee shops. Call it the Starbucks
Economy as
East Timor Descends...
More than 30,000 bulls will die this year in the name of Spanish sport. Opponents are vocal but can do little to dampen the passion or staunch the flow of blood. ERIC ELLIS reports from Huelva about the Stain on Spain
A
mangy goat draped in a crude Indonesian flag saved an East Timorese family of
six from a grisly death last week. When the militiamen of the Besi Merah Putih--Red
and White Iron--came to the home of a goatherd in the village of Liquica, they
offered him an ultimatum: he and his wife would be beheaded and his four
children disemboweled if he didn't display loyalty to Jakarta. The goatherd
wasted no time. "My wife quickly made this bandeira [flag] from two old shirts,"
he recalls. The bloodthirsty mob was mollified, for the moment at least.
Can East Timor Avoid Civil War?
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Climate control in the Singapore Press
You don't have be a spook to be a Singaporean journalist. But it doesn't hurt. A report from a society where the challenge for journalists is testing the undefined boundaries that are so much a part of their culture.

A series tracking the revolutionary re-invention of America

The Sweet And Sour Sides Of The Silk Road
On the Karakoram Highway between China and Pakistan
The consistency of Timboon Gourmet Feta Cheese isn't great at 5,500m above sea level. Tasty, 'tis true, but the thin air makes it a little hard to spread on crunchy Kashgar bagels.