Cuitan Gus Nadir Soal Banjir Viral, Buzzer Anies Makin Kalap, Seret Walikota Surabaya Tri Rismaharini

11.06

Beritaterheboh.com -  Viral di Twitter cuitan Prof Nadirsyah Hosen yang berkicau soal banjir.

Cuitan ini pun kemudian membuat salah satu pendukung Anies Baswedan tersinggung berat hingga membawa-bawa Walikota Surabaya Tri Rismaharini

Seperti diketahui, DKI Jakarta dikepung banjir pada hari pertama tahun 2020, Rabu (1/1/2020). Banyak warganet membuat cuitan di Twitter yang mengkritisi kinerja Gubernur DKI Jakarta Anies Baswedan selama hampir 3 tahun.


Bahkan Partai Demokrasi Indonesia Perjuangan (PDIP) mempertanyakan janji Gubernur Anies Baswedan setelah banjir besar yang melanda ibukota pada hari pertama tahun 2020. Menurut PDIP, Anies tak serius merealisasikan program penanggulan banjir seperti janji kampanye saat Pilkada DKI Jakarta 2017.


"Hal ini menjadi renungan kita bersama bahwa janji kampanye terkait banjir di Jakarta bukanlah janji yang mudah untuk dipenuhi, diperlukan pemimpin dengan aksi kongkrit yang nyata, bukan sekadar solusi yang bersifat pendekatan kata-kata, bahwa janji politik juga harus disertai dengan solusi yang realistis dan terukur," kata Ketua Fraksi PDIP di DPRD DKI Jakarta, Gembong Warsono di DKI Jakarta, Kamis, 2 Januari 2020 sebagaimana dilansir dari Tempo.co


Selama dua tahun ini, kata Gembong, praktis tidak ada eksekusi program penanggulangan banjir yang kongkret dari Anies. Menurut dia, program normalisasi sungai yang didengungkan Anies seakan hanya menjadi narasi fiksi tanpa ada eksekusi nyata.


Tak hanya itu ramai-ramai netizen pun mengingatkan soal janji kampanye Anies Baswedan.


"Saya paling kesal ketika masalah protes Anies dianggap pasti Ahoker. Masalah pujian Anies pasti Maniezer.


Diamlah !

Banjir gak bisa milih Pendukung Anies atau Ahok. Malah ngmg Ahoker gak move on.

Jangan mancing kemarahan warga.Pak@aniesbaswedan tolong tenangkan buzzer mu, tulis akun @LieDetectorID



Ekspresi kemarahan kepada Pemerintah Prov. DKI karena banjir ini tidak bisa diartikan sebagai nyinyiran/sisa2 kompetisi Pilkada semata. Ini adalah ekspresi tuntutan warga terhadap akuntabilitas pemimpinnya. Pahami itu dulu, tulis akun andreadianto



Yang fenomenal cuitan Profesor Nadirsyah Hosen yang viral hingga diretweet hingga 5000 kali dan disuka lebih dari 11 ribu netizen.

Pilih pemimpin yg kerjanya benar. Ketika banjir datang air tidak memilih apa agamamu. Bagiku, agamaku. Bagimu, agamamu. Bagi kita, banjir semua.  Sudah bisa dipahami sekarang?, tulis Gus Nadir.

Cuitan ini pun lantas dibalas oleh pendukung Anies Baswedan dengan menyeret-nyeret Walikota Surabaya Tri Rismaharini.

Surabaya DIKEPUNG Banjir. Ini mah udah jelas banget pasti Gubernurnya Anies Baswedan
Coba @na_dirs ini Anies gak bisa kerja, masa Surabaya dikepung banjir?
Dulu gak banjir, sejak Anies jadi Gubernur DKI kenapa Surabaya banjir?
Coba jelasin nih 😀, tulis akun @helmifelis

Sontak saja cuitan ini pun menuai buliyan warganet




 Maksudnya ini?

1 Februari 2019???

Antara kemunduran ato ga bisa move on nih?

Hrs gitu ya caranya?



 Beda mas bro surabay di kepung banjir walikotanya sigap dan si persiapkan sebelumnya,makanya cepat surut,jangan bandingkan sama junjungan anda yang hanya bisanya bacot saja dan si tambahi tim sorak pula.



 Kami warga Surabaya merasakan sendiri tidak ada banjir di Surabaya. Itu berita tahun lalu. Bu Risma bekerja nyata bukan hanya berkata kata. Makanya tahun ini Surabaya bebas banjir. Mas @helmifelis mampir Surabaya yuk, lihat perbedaannya.



 Saudara saudara sebangsa setanah air tercinta,, mohon di maafkan apapun cuitan si hello fenis ini ,, kejiwaannya sedang terganggu karena gagal mendapatkan 5M dana buzzer... Kita yang waras harap memakluminya,, kita doakan semoga diterima disisi Allah SWT... Amin....




(bt) 



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Jakarta Banjir Bawa Korban Jiwa, Ahok BTP Unggah Cuitan Ini...

10.36

Beritaterheboh.com - Mantan Gubernur DKI Basuki Tjahaja Purnama (BTP) alias Ahok berbicara soal banjir yang melanda Jakarta. Ahok berduka atas meninggalnya warga korban banjir Jakarta.

"Turut berduka cita atas korban-korban meninggal #banjir2020 di Jakarta dan sekitarnya," cuit Ahok di akun Twitter @basuki_btp, Jumat (3/1/2020).

Ahok meminta warga yang bermukim di daerah aliran sungai untuk selalu waspada. Ahok berharap bencana banjir segera berakhir.

"Untuk warga yang tinggal di DAS, agar selalu waspada. Semoga bencana banjir ini cepat berlalu dan kondisi pulih kembali," tulis Ahok.


Banjir di Jakarta akibat hujan yang mengguyur sejak Selasa (31/12/2019) sore hingga Rabu (1/1/2020). Banjir juga melanda daerah penyangga Jakarta.

Catatan Badan Nasional Penanggulangan Bencana (BNPB), ada 30 korban jiwa akibat banjir di Jabodetabek. Data itu bersumber dari BPBD setempat, TNI, Polri, Pusat Krisis Kesehatan hingga Kementerian Sosial.

"Kemudian kita cross-check semua, terus kita kumpulkan. Banyak yang cocok, yang tidak cocok tetap kita tambahkan. Jadi sekarang hasilnya ada 30 orang meninggal," kata Kapusdatinkom BNPB Agus Wibowo kepada detikcom di kantorBNPB, Jalan Proklamasi,Matraman, Jakarta Timur, Kamis (2/1).(detik.com)




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Gubernur Anies Singgung Pengendalian Air di Hulu, Bupati Bogor Beri Jawaban Telak!

08.36

Beritaterheboh.com - Bupati Bogor Ade Yasin angkat bicara menanggapi pernyataan Gubernur DKI Jakarta Anies Baswedan mengenai pengendalian air di Hulu Sungai Ciliwung untuk mengatasi permasalahan banjir di ibu kota.

Menurut Ade, sejauh ini pihaknya, selaku kepala daerah di wilayah hulu, sudah menangani semaksimal mungkin mengendalikan air untuk beberapa aliran sungai, salah satunya membalikan fungsi lahan serapan.

"Rasanya begini, kalau air itu kan di hulu, ya kita kan punya hulu, jadi saya pikir upaya yang kita lakukan nobat (nongol babat) merobohkan vila-vila tanpa izin atau juga yang berdiri di atas lahan Perhutani sudah kita upayakan," kata Ade saat ditemui di Kecamatan Nanggung, Kabupaten Bogor pada Kamis (2/1/2020).

Dalam permasalahan Banjir Jakarta, lanjut Ade Yasin, sebaiknya antara daerah khususnya yang dilintasi aliran sungai dari Kabupaten Bogor tidak saling menyalahkan.

"Dan juga sungai itu juga bukan kewenangan kita masalahnya, tetapi kita berusaha meminimalisir sampahnya. Di sini tidak perlu saling menyalahkan ya, karena kalau saya harus membela diri ya saya juga bisa, karena kita adanya di atas. Tapi kan enggak bisa begitu juga dalam kondisi seperti ini kita harus saling legowo tidak harus saling menyakahkan," ungkapnya.

Ia pun mencontohkan kepala daerah lainnya yang wilayahnya juga dialiri oleh sungai dari Kabupaten Bogor tetap berkomunikasi dengan baik mengatasi persoalan ini.

"Sama dengan Bekasi, kan aliran Sungai Cikeas dan Sungai Cileungsi ke Bekasi tetapi Wali Kota Bekasi tidak menyalahkan kami, malah kita kontak-kontaan saling membantu, harusnya gitu," katanya.

Sebelumnya, Gubernur Anies Baswedan menyebut permasalahan banjir bukan karena program normalisasi Kali Ciliwung yang belum selesai.

"Kuncinya itu ada pada pengendalian air, sebelum masuk pada kawasan pesisir. Kalau bisa dikendalikan, InsyaAllah bisa dikendalikan. Tapi selama membiarkan air mengalir begitu saja, selebar apa pun sungainya, maka volume air akan luar biasa. Karena makin banyak kawasan yang digunakan untuk perumahan, sehingga air mengalir ke sungai," kata Anies.(suara.com)



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7 of Our Top Stories From 2019 - The New York Times

7 of Our Top Stories From 2019 - The New York Times

19.02
7 of Our Top Stories From 2019 - The New York Times

[Want to get New York Today by email? Here’s the sign-up.]

It’s Thursday.

Weather: It’s sunny, with a high in the upper 40s.

Alternate-side parking: In effect until Monday (Three Kings Day).


Image
Credit...Brittainy Newman/The New York Times

President Trump’s taxes, El Chapo’s trial and Jeffrey Epstein’s death: Our stories on these topics were among our most-read articles of 2019.

But to kick off 2020, we took a look back at some other examples of our in-depth journalism from the New York region.

Lovers in Auschwitz, reunited 72 years later. He had one question.

David Wisnia and Helen Spitzer were Jewish inmates in Auschwitz. Amid the horrors there, they became lovers. When they reunited in Manhattan, Ms. Spitzer confirmed what Mr. Wisnia long suspected: She was the reason he survived the death camp.

Her “Prince Charming” turned out to be a crazed hit man on the run

Blanche Wright thought he was a lawyer. She became his prisoner. After a drug-fueled killing spree, he was dead and she was sent to prison. It was the first place in her life where Ms. Wright would feel, as strange as it sounds, free.

114,000 students in New York City are homeless. These two let us into their lives.

Darnell is 8 and commutes 15 miles a day to school. Sandivel is 10, and shares a bedroom in Brooklyn with her mother and four brothers. For thousands of homeless students, school is the only stable place they know.

A frantic life as a cab-dodging, tip-chasing food app deliveryman

When you order delivery, an army of workers mobilize. Orders arrive on their phones as they navigate bicycles through vehicular traffic. One of the largest food delivery companies, DoorDash, used to keep tips. Then the Times reporter Andy Newman hopped on a bike.

Inside the rise and fall of a multimillion-dollar Airbnb scheme

The Airbnbs were in TriBeCa and SoHo, on the Upper East Side and in Harlem. At the center of them, according to a lawsuit, was a former real estate broker, Max Beckman. In an interview, he puffed from a Juul and said, “We’re not criminals.”

The sunless world of immigrants in Queens

They may be unsafe and windowless, but for poor immigrants, illegal basement apartments can be a refuge. For one couple, it was a way to save money and help to pay their daughter’s college tuition. In Queens, those apartments are common.

How reckless loans devastated a generation of taxi drivers

Mohammed Hoque earned about $30,000 a year driving a taxi. He was offered a taxi medallion — which would let him be his own boss — for $50,000. He emptied his bank account and signed some papers. He said he had no idea that the contract he had signed required him to pay $1.7 million. A spate of deaths by suicides has underscored the financial plight many taxi drivers face.

Want more news? Check out our full coverage.

The Mini Crossword: Here is today’s puzzle.


The first babies of 2020 were born at midnight on New Year’s Day, in Brooklyn and on Staten Island. [ABC NYC]

The state’s population shrank by 0.4 percent compared with a year ago. [Gothamist]

Governor Cuomo wants to force phone companies to block robocalls. [New York Post]


A showing of “What She Said: The Art of Pauline Kael,” with a post-screening panel, is at the Film Forum in Manhattan. 7 p.m. [$15]

Create miniature works of art at the Poe Park Visitor Center in the Bronx. 10 a.m. [Free]

The Brooklyn Comedy Collective hosts an improv hour at 58 North Third Street in Brooklyn. 9 p.m. [$7]

— Melissa Guerrero

Events are subject to change, so double-check before heading out. For more events, see the going-out guides from The Times’s culture pages.


Katie Van Syckle reports:

After 43 years, the Annex Antiques Fair and Flea Market in Chelsea, once a sprawling collection of hundreds of vendors, closed on Sunday. It had lost the lease on its last patch of asphalt at 29 West 25th Street.

Once New York City’s largest flea market, it included seven separate lots over the years. The spaces were known for their fine antiques that occasionally landed in museum collections.

Alan Boss, who opened the first space in 1976, said that he leased the lot on the weekends and that the landlords did not renew the agreement.

[This flea market has sold its last collectible.]

Vendors said they didn’t know where they would now sell their wares. Some of them, however, had complained of mistreatment and erratic behavior by Mr. Boss and his wife, Helene. They said this behavior had also contributed to the decline of the Bosses’ markets.

Ms. Boss denied those allegations.

The son of a Bronx grocer, Mr. Boss opened the first flea market on Sixth Avenue between 24th and 25th Streets when Manhattan’s West Side blocks were still filled with printing companies and sewing machine shops.

As the venues grew during the 1980s and ’90s, shoppers descended on the neighborhood. Mr. Boss said he watched Andy Warhol build collections: “He bought vintage watches. He bought cookie jars. Nobody cared about cookie jars until he started collecting them.”

Real estate development in the 1990s in Chelsea edged out the spaces, and the locations shifted. Mr. Boss opened the Antiques Garage on West 25th Street in 1994, and it closed in 2014. He opened the Hell’s Kitchen Flea Market on West 39th Street in 2003, and that closed in 2018.

Jeremiah Moss, the author of “Vanishing New York,” a book exploring the impact of gentrification on 21st-century New York, said the closing of the Annex markets was another example of a loss of the qualities that made the city unique.

“All of these idiosyncratic spaces, when they’re destroyed they’re invariably replaced by something very uniform and sanitized,” he said.

It’s Thursday — Happy New Year.


Dear Diary:

In summer 1991, the man who would become my husband and I were in Midtown when the sky opened up. We were caught in a downpour without an umbrella.

As we crossed Sixth Avenue a few blocks north of Radio City Music Hall, I hesitated in front of a huge puddle that was blocking my way to the sidewalk.

My boyfriend assessed the situation, picked me up like a groom carrying his bride over a threshold and waded into the puddle.

He deposited me gently on the sidewalk, and we began to hear applause. A group of hot dog vendors huddled under an awning were expressing their approval.

— Rae Merlet


New York Today is published weekdays around 6 a.m. Sign up here to get it by email. You can also find it at nytoday.com.

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Berkah Fauzi Nurut dengan Ahok, Kini Bersyukur, Tak Dihantui Banjir. Begini Pengakuannya

18.36
Beritaterheboh.com - Ahmad Fauzi (47) penghuni Rusunawa Jatinegara, Jakarta Timur mengaku bersyukur kekinian tidak lagi dihantui banjir. Meski, awlanya Fauzi mengatakan sempat menolak untuk direlokasi dari Kampung Pulo, Jatinegara, Jakarta Timur di era Gubernur DKI Jakarta Basuki Tjahaja Purnama (BTP) alias Ahok.

Belakangan dia nurut dengan Ahok. Fauzi menuturkan sudah lima tahun belakangan ini menjadi penghuni Rusunawa Jatinegara.

Selamat lima tahun menetap di sana, Fauzi mengaku bersyukur lantaran tak lagi menjadi korban banjir Jakarta.

"Ya bersyukur sih. Cuma kan lain kepala lain pendapat. Kalau secara pribadi sih saya alhamdulillah betah di sini, nggak dihantui hawa takut sama air lagi," kata Fauzi di Rusunawa Jatinegara, Jakarta Timur, Kamis (2/1/2019).

Fauzi mengaku awalnya sempat menolak untuk direlokasi ke Rusunawa Jatinegara. Ketika itu, Fauzi menolak untuk direlokasi lantaran tak ingin meninggalkan Kampung Pulo yang merupakan tanah kelahirannya itu.

"Lingkungan sosial di Kampung Pulo kan hebat, asik gitu, apalagi saya lahir dan besar di situ, yang bikin berat itu," katanya.

Lebih lanjut, Fauzi pun menceritakan bagaimana saat-saat dirinya masih tinggal di Kampung Pulo dan menjadi korban banjir Jakarta. Fauzi mengungkapkan satu hal yang paling diingat saat dilanda banjir ialah perasaan stres.

"Paling ingat stres pastinya sih. Saya waktu itu dagang juga pas di Kampung Pulo, tahun 2011 itu saya dagang cuma gitu, apa yang saya belanjain kalau banjir besar itu mau nggak mau kerendem. Itu yang bikin kepikiran sampai stres. Apalagi kalau air udeh naik, kepikiran anak dan istri harus pindahin ke mana," ungkapnya.

Adapun, Fauzi berharap dengan bencana banjir kali ini pemerintah provinsi DKI Jakarta segera dapat menemukan solusinya. Dia berharap pemerintah provinsi DKI Jakarta di bawah kepemimpinan Anies Baswedan itu dapat lebih perhatian terhadap warganya.

"Pemerintah harusnya lebih perhatian lagi, cuma kedepannya nunggu deal aja sama mereka maunya gimana. Solusinya harus yang terbaik buat mereka dan pemerintah. Tapi yang utama untuk warga," tutupnya. (suara.com/artikel asli)

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7 of Our Top Stories From 2019 - The New York Times

7 of Our Top Stories From 2019 - The New York Times

18.32
7 of Our Top Stories From 2019 - The New York Times

[Want to get New York Today by email? Here’s the sign-up.]

It’s Thursday.

Weather: It’s sunny, with a high in the upper 40s.

Alternate-side parking: In effect until Monday (Three Kings Day).


Image
Credit...Brittainy Newman/The New York Times

President Trump’s taxes, El Chapo’s trial and Jeffrey Epstein’s death: Our stories on these topics were among our most-read articles of 2019.

But to kick off 2020, we took a look back at some other examples of our in-depth journalism from the New York region.

Lovers in Auschwitz, reunited 72 years later. He had one question.

David Wisnia and Helen Spitzer were Jewish inmates in Auschwitz. Amid the horrors there, they became lovers. When they reunited in Manhattan, Ms. Spitzer confirmed what Mr. Wisnia long suspected: She was the reason he survived the death camp.

Her “Prince Charming” turned out to be a crazed hit man on the run

Blanche Wright thought he was a lawyer. She became his prisoner. After a drug-fueled killing spree, he was dead and she was sent to prison. It was the first place in her life where Ms. Wright would feel, as strange as it sounds, free.

114,000 students in New York City are homeless. These two let us into their lives.

Darnell is 8 and commutes 15 miles a day to school. Sandivel is 10, and shares a bedroom in Brooklyn with her mother and four brothers. For thousands of homeless students, school is the only stable place they know.

A frantic life as a cab-dodging, tip-chasing food app deliveryman

When you order delivery, an army of workers mobilize. Orders arrive on their phones as they navigate bicycles through vehicular traffic. One of the largest food delivery companies, DoorDash, used to keep tips. Then the Times reporter Andy Newman hopped on a bike.

Inside the rise and fall of a multimillion-dollar Airbnb scheme

The Airbnbs were in TriBeCa and SoHo, on the Upper East Side and in Harlem. At the center of them, according to a lawsuit, was a former real estate broker, Max Beckman. In an interview, he puffed from a Juul and said, “We’re not criminals.”

The sunless world of immigrants in Queens

They may be unsafe and windowless, but for poor immigrants, illegal basement apartments can be a refuge. For one couple, it was a way to save money and help to pay their daughter’s college tuition. In Queens, those apartments are common.

How reckless loans devastated a generation of taxi drivers

Mohammed Hoque earned about $30,000 a year driving a taxi. He was offered a taxi medallion — which would let him be his own boss — for $50,000. He emptied his bank account and signed some papers. He said he had no idea that the contract he had signed required him to pay $1.7 million. A spate of deaths by suicides has underscored the financial plight many taxi drivers face.

Want more news? Check out our full coverage.

The Mini Crossword: Here is today’s puzzle.


The first babies of 2020 were born at midnight on New Year’s Day, in Brooklyn and on Staten Island. [ABC NYC]

The state’s population shrank by 0.4 percent compared with a year ago. [Gothamist]

Governor Cuomo wants to force phone companies to block robocalls. [New York Post]


A showing of “What She Said: The Art of Pauline Kael,” with a post-screening panel, is at the Film Forum in Manhattan. 7 p.m. [$15]

Create miniature works of art at the Poe Park Visitor Center in the Bronx. 10 a.m. [Free]

The Brooklyn Comedy Collective hosts an improv hour at 58 North Third Street in Brooklyn. 9 p.m. [$7]

— Melissa Guerrero

Events are subject to change, so double-check before heading out. For more events, see the going-out guides from The Times’s culture pages.


Katie Van Syckle reports:

After 43 years, the Annex Antiques Fair and Flea Market in Chelsea, once a sprawling collection of hundreds of vendors, closed on Sunday. It had lost the lease on its last patch of asphalt at 29 West 25th Street.

Once New York City’s largest flea market, it included seven separate lots over the years. The spaces were known for their fine antiques that occasionally landed in museum collections.

Alan Boss, who opened the first space in 1976, said that he leased the lot on the weekends and that the landlords did not renew the agreement.

[This flea market has sold its last collectible.]

Vendors said they didn’t know where they would now sell their wares. Some of them, however, had complained of mistreatment and erratic behavior by Mr. Boss and his wife, Helene. They said this behavior had also contributed to the decline of the Bosses’ markets.

Ms. Boss denied those allegations.

The son of a Bronx grocer, Mr. Boss opened the first flea market on Sixth Avenue between 24th and 25th Streets when Manhattan’s West Side blocks were still filled with printing companies and sewing machine shops.

As the venues grew during the 1980s and ’90s, shoppers descended on the neighborhood. Mr. Boss said he watched Andy Warhol build collections: “He bought vintage watches. He bought cookie jars. Nobody cared about cookie jars until he started collecting them.”

Real estate development in the 1990s in Chelsea edged out the spaces, and the locations shifted. Mr. Boss opened the Antiques Garage on West 25th Street in 1994, and it closed in 2014. He opened the Hell’s Kitchen Flea Market on West 39th Street in 2003, and that closed in 2018.

Jeremiah Moss, the author of “Vanishing New York,” a book exploring the impact of gentrification on 21st-century New York, said the closing of the Annex markets was another example of a loss of the qualities that made the city unique.

“All of these idiosyncratic spaces, when they’re destroyed they’re invariably replaced by something very uniform and sanitized,” he said.

It’s Thursday — Happy New Year.


Dear Diary:

In summer 1991, the man who would become my husband and I were in Midtown when the sky opened up. We were caught in a downpour without an umbrella.

As we crossed Sixth Avenue a few blocks north of Radio City Music Hall, I hesitated in front of a huge puddle that was blocking my way to the sidewalk.

My boyfriend assessed the situation, picked me up like a groom carrying his bride over a threshold and waded into the puddle.

He deposited me gently on the sidewalk, and we began to hear applause. A group of hot dog vendors huddled under an awning were expressing their approval.

— Rae Merlet


New York Today is published weekdays around 6 a.m. Sign up here to get it by email. You can also find it at nytoday.com.

We’re experimenting with the format of New York Today. What would you like to see more (or less) of? Post a comment or email us: nytoday@nytimes.com.

Let's block ads! (Why?)



2020-01-02 10:09:00Z
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Bebas dari Lapas Gunung Sindur, Ini Yang Dilakukan Buni Yani

18.06

Beritaterheboh.com - Terpidana kasus pelanggaran UU ITE, Buni Yani, bebas dari Lapas Gunung Sindur, Jawa Barat. Buni Yani disebut mendapatkan cuti bersyarat.

"Iya (Buni Yani bebas) hari ini," ujar Kepala Lapas (Kalapas) Kelas III Gunung Sindur, Sopiana, kepada detikcom, Kamis (2/1/2020).

"Beliau (mendapatkan) cuti bersyarat," imbuh Sopiana.

Buni Yani mulai menghuni Lapas Gunung Sindur sejak 1 Februari 2019. Dia divonis hukuman 18 bulan penjara.

Buni Yani divonis bersalah melanggar Pasal 32 ayat 1 Undang-Undang Informasi dan Transaksi Elektronik (UU ITE) dalam putusan di Pengadilan Negeri (PN) Bandung terkait potongan video Basuki Tjahaja Purnama alias Ahok ketika masih menjabat Gubernur DKI menjadi 30 detik pada 6 Oktober 2016.

Ketika dimintai konfirmasi terpisah, salah satu pengacara Buni Yani bernama Aldwin Rahadian menyatakan kliennya langsung menuju rumah setelah bebas dari Lapas Gunung Sindur siang tadi.

"Beliau ingin istirahat. Berkumpul bersama keluarga," kata Aldwin yang baru saja pulang dari umrah ini.(detik.com)



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