Jakarta,
Dec 26 (Antara) - Indonesia, which has so far encountered problems with
its frontier areas both on land and the outer islands, will provide
certifications to outlying islands to guarantee their status at home and
in international affairs.
Besides this, it will also put in order foreign investors who run
businesses on the outlying islands. "We will summon foreign investors
and will inquire about their business activities on the outlying
islands. If necessary, we will move them to other islands if their
businesses do not accord with the conditions of the concerned isles,"
Agrarian and Spatial Planning Minister Ferry Mursyidan Baldan stated on
Tuesday.
The minister made the remarks while elaborating on his plan regarding
the presence of foreign investors who operate business ventures on
several Indonesian outlying islands.
Ferry
said he will review the presence of the investors. In line with the
plan, the minister said all outer islands will be certified.
"It
is all clear. Irrespective of whether or not the islands are inhabited,
they will be given certificates on behalf of the state. If there are
business ventures on them, we will summon the operators to inquire what
they are doing there," Ferry remarked.
He pointed out that if the matter concerns the borders of outlying
islands, then one cannot operate a business venture on them at will. All
countries in the world adopt this approach, he added.
"We can just move them to the other islands if the investors run a
tourism business on it but if it concerns environment or culture
tourism, the business can continue there as long as it provides benefits
to the local people and does not merely carry out exploitation," the
minister stated.
However, he stressed that the land of the outlying islands will continue to belong to the state.
He affirmed that the prosperity of the local people residing in border
areas was one of the key points in making an island in the border areas
that are the frontline of the state.
Therefore,
the Agrarian and Spatial Planning Ministry has set itself a target to
complete the certification of 92 outlying islands in the country in
2015.
"I
have to complete the certification target of all the outlying islands
in 2015. We have checked it and found that we have the same data as that
with the Ministry of Maritime Affairs and Fisheries on the number of
outlying islands, which reaches 92," the minister noted.
Ferry
said his ministry and the Ministry of Maritime Affairs and Fisheries
had already reached an agreement on the definition of the outlying
islands where the land had been measured and did not get submerged when
the tidal water was on the rise.
"We will give certificates, which constitute a state document to them,
so that they will have a firm standing at home and the international
court. If there is a dispute, we will have the data," the minister
asserted.
The Indonesian archipelago comprises 17,504 islands and 92 of them are
located in the frontier areas in ten provinces that share their maritime
borders with ten foreign countries. According to official records, 26
districts share their borders with neighboring countries.
Defense
Minister Ryamizard Ryacudu was earlier scheduled to visit some outlying
islands such as the southernmost Indonesian island of Ndana Rote, which
borders Australia.
"The
defense minister flew out to the southernmost Indonesian island on
board an Indonesian Army helicopter," stated Commander of the Wirasakti
Military District Command 161 Brigadier General Ahmad Yuliarto.
Ndana, which is one of Indonesia's outlying islands in the East Nusa
Tenggara (NTT) province, was formerly managed by an Australian tourism
business agent. However, the Australian citizen abandoned the business
after the Indonesian Military (TNI) deployed its personnel there to
prevent foreign parties from annexing the island.
The
other Indonesian islands that border Australia and Timor-Leste are
Mengudu Island in East Sumba district and Batek Island in Kupang
district.
Yuliarto
remarked that after visiting the Ndana Rote Island, Ryacudu inspected
the border regions between Indonesia and Timor-Leste in Mota Ain, Belu
district, to hold a dialog with former East Timor residents who chose to
become Indonesian citizens following the UN-sponsored referendum of
1999.
Apart from the outlying islands, the government will also manage its
border areas on land. The new government promised to take concrete steps
to develop the border areas. Among the first steps towards the
implementation of the program is budgeting. President Joko
Widodo (Jokowi) affirmed that so far, 27 ministries under the previous
government had allocated the budget for the program to develop backward
areas.
"Together, the budget swelled, but implementation was not effective.
The infrastructure and services remained in doldrums," Jokowi said while
visiting the border city of Atambua, NTT.
The president emphasized that the government will improve the
conditions in border areas by adopting the "one-stop service integrated
system." "Services must be fast. We must not lag behind other countries," he stressed.
Management of the border areas, including the small isles, has not been
well-organized and integrated. The 27 ministries with the budget
allocated for frontier area development tend to each go their own way.
Backwardness and social imbalance between the two sides of the borders
such as between Kalimantan and Sarawak of Malaysia are potential factors
that encourage illegal logging and smuggling across the borders.
Reports have even surfaced about Indonesians disowning their
citizenship and claiming to be Malaysians, so that they can live a
better life.
Relations
between the two communities across the borders have been good. They
belong to the same race and use the same language. They are different
only in terms of their prosperity. According to a member of
the East Kalimantan Regional Legislative Assembly (DPRD) Abdul Djalil
Fatah, people in the frontier areas said they would give up their
Indonesian citizenship and become Malaysians if the government failed to
address their problems. The provinces in Kalimantan sharing
borders with Sarawak have submitted budget proposals to build roads in
the border areas. The roads will be needed to facilitate economic
development.
Roads
would also be needed for security purposes and to curb cross-border
smuggling. However, all plans are still in the pipeline.
There
were even talks of a bigger plan to open palm oil plantations along the
border areas to improve the economic conditions of the local people.
***2***
(T.A014/INE) EDITED BY INE
(T.A014/A/BESSR/F. Assegaf) 26-12-2014 12:44: |
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