Indonesia names new capital, approving shift from Jakarta
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Indonesia has
named its new capital Nusantara, as lawmakers approve the shift from Jakarta to
Kalimantan -- a jungle-covered area on the east of Borneo island.
The new name translates to
"archipelago" in the Indonesian language.
Concerns over the sustainability of the
congested and rapidly sinking political center of Jakarta prompted the need for a new
capital, and the nation's House of Representatives officially
passed a bill on Tuesday regarding the relocation.
"The relocation of the capital city to
Kalimantan is based on several considerations, regional advantages, and
welfare. With the vision of the birth of a new economic center of gravity in
the middle of the archipelago," said Suharso Monoarfa, the country's
Minister of National Development Planning, according to Indonesia Parliament
TV.
President Joko Widodo first announced the
capital would be relocated in 2019, citing concerns over Jakarta's
environmental and economic sustainability.
Jakarta sits
on swampy ground near the sea -- making it especially prone to flooding -- and
is one of the fastest-sinking cities on Earth, according to the World Economic
Forum. The former capital has been dropping into the Java Sea at an alarming
rate due to over-extraction of groundwater.
It is also one of the world's most
overpopulated urban regions. It is home to more than 10 million people, with an
estimated 30 million in the greater metropolitan area, according to the United
Nations.
On Tuesday, the bill to relocate the capital
was passed by approvals from eight fractions and only one fraction rejecting
it, according to the chairman of Indonesia's House of Representative Puan
Maharani. Indonesia's Parliament comprises nine groups of political parties
known as fractions.
Legislators have stressed the importance of
careful consideration of the new development's environmental impact. According
to data from the National Planning and Development Agency, the total land area
for the new capital city will be around 256,143 hectares (around 2,561 square
kilometers) -- almost all of it converted from forest area.
Indonesia owns the majority of Borneo, the
world's third-largest island, with Malaysia and Brunei each holding parts of
its northern region.
Sri Mulyani, Indonesia's Minister of Finance,
said in a press conference on Tuesday there will be five stages of development
in the new capital city.
The first stage is expected to begin in 2022
and run through 2024, with development expected to last until 2045, Monoarfa
said.
Previous estimates have said the ambitious
project would likely cost around 466 trillion rupiah ($32 billion), CNN
Indonesia reported.


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