Based
on an article about Indonesia
written by Stephen Backshall, it was said that Jakarta
is one of the fastest growing cities in the world. Currently, Jakarta
as the capital city of Indonesia
sprawls over 656 km2 of northern Java and its inexorable expansion continues
both east to Tangerang and west towards Bekasi districts with which it now
almost imperceptibly blends.
From
a mere 900,000 inhabitants in 1945, the current population is well over
10,000,000. In reality, the number of people living in greater Jakarta
which is known by the typically Indonesia
acronym of Jabodetabek (Jakarta-Bogor-Depok-Tangerang-Bekasi), can never be
known accurately, censuses having proved unreliable. Despite a 1971 moratorium
that declared the city closed to immigrants, the population continues to grow
at a rate of around 200,000 every year, many of the newcomers being unskilled
migrants from rural Java.
The
capital has some of the country’s finest museums including the Maritime Museum in Sunda Kelapa, the
Fatahillah or Jakarta History Museum, the Fine Arts and Ceramic Museum, the Bank Indonesia Museum ,
and the Wayang Museum
in Jakarta Kota and best of all, the National Museum in the centre of the Jakarta
city. The latter having raided many of Indonesia ’s
most famous archaeological sights for its exhibits, provides an excellent
introduction to the culture and history of the entire archipelago. The location
is on the western edge of Medan Merdeka (Merdeka
Square ), in the centre of which stands the Nasional
Monument (Monas), a concrete and
gold column 137m high which has become a symbol of the city.
Immediately
to the south lies the Golden Triangle, a square-kilometre cluster of
ostentatious skyscrapers, muscular 1960s-style “Heroes of the Revolution” monuments
and multistorey shopping plazas, with plenty of markets to trawl through by day
and bars to hit in the evening.
Even
in the most prosperous parts of Jakarta ,
one can still find tiny but numerous kampong, twilight worlds of murky
alleyways, open sewers, crying children and scurrying vermin. It is this
stupefying juxtaposition of outstanding wealth and appalling poverty that many
find so offensive. Large sections of Jakarta
remain ugly and inefficient, the vast metropolis ringed by endless crumbling suburbs,
traversed and vectored by congested eight-lane expressways and malodorous
canals, huge shiny office blocks sharing the roadside with rubble-strewn
wasteland and slums. It remains a wonder, especially given the notorious
corruption, the Jakarta works at
all.