What’s wrong with Indonesia’s contact tracing?
Blastoff: Billionaires compete in space tourism
US and French astronauts make ISS spacewalk
Bumpy road to Indonesia’s ‘Silicon Valley’
Amman Introduces a New Corporate Identity [Ad]
Why are we seeing fewer Indonesian LGBT films?
Tokyo residents support 'unavoidable' ban on oversea fans
‘Like the end of the world’: Beijing faces worst sandstorm in decade
Artists turn to Times Square ahead of Broadway’s comeback in April
Japan's children of the tsunami shaped by tragedy
Anies Baswedan voted in Lebak Bulus in South Jakarta. The former education and culture minister and his family arrived at the polling station at 11:00 a.m., three hours later than scheduled. They were welcomed by dozens of volunteers and residents, who recited prayers as well as salawat (religious chants) for him. “Whatever the result is, we leave it to God. We are ready to win and to lose,” Anies said.
(The Jakarta Post / Indra Budiari)