HEADLINE | Indonesia celebrates first independence day at future capital

.An aerial view of the flag-hoisting ceremony at ground zero of Indonesia’s future capital in Sepaku, Kalimantan. PHOTO: AFP

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SEPAKU, INDONESIA (AFP) – Indonesia celebrated its first independence day at its future capital in the ancient rainforests of eastern Borneo yesterday as the nation plans a move away from slowly sinking, traffic-clogged Jakarta.

Nusantara, which is 2,000 kilometres from Jakarta, is set to become the new political centre of the world’s fourth-largest country.

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It is a legacy project of President Joko Widodo but environmentalists have warned it could accelerate the destruction of tropical jungles home to long-nosed monkeys and orangutans.

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Attendees stand by a lookout point where a flag-raising ceremony was held at ground zero of Indonesia’s future capital in Sepaku, Penajam Paser Utara, East Kalimantan on August 17, 2022, on the country’s 77th Independence Day. (Photo by ADEK BERRY / AFP)

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The government is preparing to ramp up infrastructure projects to open the doors to the city – which will cover about 56,180 hectares on Borneo island – by the time Widodo leaves office in 2024.

“The main point (of the ceremony) is to take the spirit of the 77th Independence Day to strengthen our resolve and spirit to build the new capital,” said State Capital Authority head Bambang Susantono, who will govern the new city.

After the national flag was hoisted by officials to mark the occasion, workers at the site cheered in unison that they were “ready to develop Nusantara”, which means archipelago in Indonesian.

Jakarta is home to 30 million people in its greater metro area and it has long been plagued by serious infrastructure problems and flooding exacerbated by climate change.

It is sinking as much as 25 centimetres a year in some areas — double the global average for major coastal cities — with some experts predicting up to a third of the megalopolis could be underwater by 2050.

Government officials say the new capital will take decades to be fully completed and inhabited by its planned population of two million people and will help spread economic growth to an underdeveloped region.

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