Negara Kesatuan Republik Indonesia (Indonesian)
Republik Indonesia (Indonesian)Nusantara (Kawi)
Garuda PancasilaMotto: Bhinneka Tunggal Ika Unity in DiversityNational ideology: Pancasila[1][2]:117Anthem: Indonesia Raya"Great Indonesia"Capital
and largest cityJakarta6°10.5′S 106°49.7′E / 6.1750°S 106.8283°EOfficial languagesIndonesian (national and official language)Recognized languagesOver 700 native languages and international languages (English, Arabic, etc.)Ethnic groups
(2000)Javanese 40.6%Sundanese 15%Madurese 3.3%Minangkabau 2.7%Betawi 2.4%Bugis 2.4%Banten 2%Banjar 1.7%other 29.9%Demonym(s)IndonesianGovernmentUnitary presidential constitutional republic
• Vice President Ma'ruf Amin
• House Speaker Puan Maharani
• Chief Justice Muhammad SyarifuddinLegislaturePeople's Consultative Assembly
• Upper houseRegional Representative Council
• Lower housePeople's Representative Council
• Land1,919,440 km2 (741,100 sq mi) (15th)
• 2011 estimate237,424,363 (4th)
• 2011 census237,424,363[3]
• Density123.76/km2 (320.5/sq mi) (84th)GDP (PPP)2011 estimate
• Total$1.126 trillion[3] (15th)
• Per capita$4,744[3] (122nd)GDP (nominal)2011 estimate
• Total$834.331 billion[3] (17th)
• Per capita$3,514[3] (107th)Gini (2011)36.8mediumHDI (2011) 0.617[4]medium · 124thCurrencyRupiah (IDR)Time zoneUTC+7 to +9 (various)Driving sideleftCalling code+62ISO 3166 codeIDInternet TLD.id
Indonesia, ()[5][6] officially the Republic of Indonesia, (Indonesian: Negara Kesatuan Republik Indonesia; Republik Indonesia; Nusantara) is a nation in Southeast Asia and Oceania. As the biggest archipelago country in the world, Indonesia has 18,108 islands. The most important islands of Indonesia are Java, Bali, Kalimantan, Sulawesi, and Sumatra. The capital of Indonesia is Jakarta, on the island of Java. The current president is Joko Widodo. Modern Indonesia began on the 17th of August 1945. At 10 o'clock on that Friday morning, Sukarno read Indonesia's Declaration of Independence. Indonesia's Independence Day is a national holiday.
Indonesia is the fourth most populated country in the world with 238,452,952 people (2004 est.) Half of the population lives in Java, There are 111 people per km2. The land area is 1.904 million km2, or slightly smaller than Mexico. The official national language of Indonesia is Bahasa Indonesia, but 749 native languages are also spoken in different parts of Indonesia, and widely native languages spoken in Indonesia include Javanese, Balinese, and Sundanese. Indonesia's neighbors are Australia to the south, Singapore to the northwest, and Philippines to the northeast. Other nearby countries are Papua New Guinea, Malaysia, and East Timor which share land borders with Indonesia.
Indonesia has the most active volcanoes of any country in the world. It is also close to fault lines so there are many earthquakes and tsunamis.
Most people in Indonesia follow Islam, but Indonesia is not an Islamic country by law. Indonesia has the largest Muslim population on earth. Other religions Indonesians follow include Christianity (Protestanism and Catholicism), Hinduism, Buddhism and Kong Hu Cu.History[change | change source]
Pre World War II[change | change source]
Indonesia has a written history as far back as the 7th century and a much longer oral history. Before the colonial Dutch came in the 1596, much of what is now Indonesia was many different kingdoms. Often they were fighting each other.
Indonesia was colonized by the Netherlands in the 17th century and renamed the Dutch East Indies. During this time, the Dutch captured thousands of Malagasy people from Madagascar and forced them to work on pepper plantations in their colonies as slaves.[7] The Dutch treated the islands like their property until World War II.
During World War II, the Japanese drove out the Dutch and took control of Indonesia. After Japan surrendered in the war, Indonesia claimed its independence on the 17th of August 1945. The proclamation was read by Sukarno in Jakarta. Sukarno later became Indonesia's first President.
British troops came into Indonesia to restore peace and to rescue Europeans who had been prisoners of the Japanese. The British troops also had the job of shipping home 300,000 Japanese troops. The Indonesian Republicans fought the British troops, because it was expected that the British would give Indonesia back to the Dutch. The Indonesian Republicans killed many of the Japanese prisoners, before they could be sent home. They also began killing people from minority groups who might be against the new Republic. Many European and Indonesian European people were killed. Many Chinese business people and other minority groups were killed or made homeless. In Java there were many thousands of homeless people.
In 1946, the Dutch came back. When the British left in 1947, there were 55,000 Dutch soldiers in Indonesia. The Dutch action was called "Operatie Product" or "Politionele Acties". The Indonesian Republicans fought the Dutch until 1949. But the Indonesian Republicans were badly organised and often fought among themselves.As the Dutch forced the Republican soldiers out of different areas, they moved in more troops until there were 100,000 Dutch troops. The Dutch refused to obey the United Nations who said they should stop the fighting in Indonesia. The United States of America organised for meetings between Dutch and Indonesian leaders. The Dutch finally agreed to recognise Indonesia's independence in November 1949.
Because of the fighting and the bad organisation, it took a long time for the country to become peaceful, and for the economy to get better. Many Indonesian soldiers had died, between 45,000 and 100,000. Also, a very large number of civilians, Indonesians, Europeans and Chinese, had died; perhaps as many as 200,000.Provinces[change | change source]
Indonesia has 34 provinces. Five of them have special status. Each province has its own legislature and governor. The provinces are divided into regencies (kabupaten) and cities (kota).These are further divided into districts (kecamatan), and again into village groupings (either desa or kelurahan).
Indonesian provinces and their capitals – listed by region(Indonesian name in parentheses if different from English)* are provinces with Special StatusPeople and culture[change | change source]
There are people of many different cultural groups living in Indonesia, has more than 700 ethnic groups. It is affected by Indians, Chinese people, Arabs, Malays and Europeans. The Javan hawk-eagle is the national bird.Album[change | change source]
Wisma 46, Indonesia's tallest office building, in the middle of Jakarta skyscraper.
Jalan Thamrin, the main avenue in Central Jakarta
Provinces of Indonesia
Malioboro, the most famous street in Yogyakarta city
Trans Jogja Bus. A bus rapid transit system in Yogyakarta city
A selection of Indonesian food, including Soto Ayam (chicken soup), sate kerang (shellfish kebabs), telor pindang (preserved eggs), perkedel (fritter), and es teh manis (sweet iced tea)
An Indonesian Army infantryman participating in the U.N.'s Global Peacekeeping Operation Initiative
Pindad Panser "Anoa" shown during Indo Defense and Aerospace Expo 2008
B-25 Mitchell bombers of the AURI in the 1950s
A Javanese engineer closes one of the gun bay doors on a Dutch Buffalo, January 1942.
GE U20C in Indonesia, #CC201-05
GE U20C "Full-Width Cabin" in Indonesia, #CC203-22
GE U20C full computer control locomotive in Indonesia, #CC204-06References[change | change source]
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