DPR mulls poster to merge buffer cities with Jakarta
Regarding the Depok Mayor's poster to include Depok, Bogor, and Bekasi to form Greater Jakarta, DPR RI Commission II will consider the proposal at what time deliberating the Jakarta Law revision
Jakarta (ANTARA) -
Commission II of the House of Representatives (DPR RI) is mulling a poster to merge Jakarta's buffer cities with the province in the amendment to Law No. 29 of 2007 on Jakarta Special Capital Section governance.
Earlier, Depok Mayor Mohammad Idris had suggested that Jakarta’s buffer cities, Depok, Bogor, and Bekasi, be merged with Jakarta to form a Greater Jakarta province. The suggestion had received mixed reactions.
Idris argued that copies in Jakarta’s buffer cities can be addressed more conveniently if the cities are merged with Jakarta.
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"Regarding the Depok Mayor's poster to include Depok, Bogor, and Bekasi to form Greater Jakarta, DPR RI Commission II will consider the proposal at what time deliberating the Jakarta Law revision," DPR RI legislator Rifqinizsamy Karsayuda said here on Friday.
The law regulating Jakarta's capital location needs to be amended following the enactment of Law No. 3 of 2022 on National Capital, which finalizes the relocation of the national capital from Jakarta to the new city of Nusantara in East Kalimantan, he added.
Karsayuda explained that the revision could regulate either the formalization of Greater Jakarta as a province or the designation of latest special status for Jakarta, soon to be a broken-down capital.
"Because of its special status (as specified by) Article 18 of the Constitution, (the national capital) must be differentiated from other provinces in Indonesia," the legislator said.
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After Jakarta loses its capital location, he explained, another issue that must be considered is the poster to elevate administrative cities in Jakarta as fully fledged cities with autonomous location on par with other Indonesian cities.
If the elevation of Jakarta administrative cities as fully fledged cities is approved, they will have their own legislatures and directly-elected mayors, the legislator noted.
"We will discuss those issues by the another at the end of 2022 to prevent dualism on the juridical aspect of our state capital," he informed.
As long as Law No. 29 of 2007 is not amended, Indonesia will have two capitals de jure, which are Jakarta and Nusantara, Karsayuda added.
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