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Jakarta Post
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India marks milestone in peaceful nuclear energy program

India has officially entered the second stage of its three-stage nuclear power program.

14 hours ago
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Empowering the future, strengthening youth engagement

As we look toward the Youth Pledge centennial in 2028, the government has an opportunity to reverse the current trend of clamping down on dissent and instead embrace youth voice through policies that engage the younger generation in active nation building. ...

15 hours ago
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Finding legal certainty for Indonesia's ambitious spaceport program

To claim its rightful place in the global space race, Indonesia must bridge the gap between its unparalleled equatorial advantage and the legal vacuum stalling its national spaceport. ...

16 hours ago

The Latest

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The world is learning to work around America

As the era of American hegemony comes to an end, the outlines of what may come next are coming into view.

17 hours ago
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Stability, criticism and the eroding meaning of Indonesia’s democracy

While Indonesia’s tradition of consensus is celebrated as a cultural jewel, it is increasingly being weaponized to hollow out democratic dissent. The legacy of colonial mentality and elite cooptation has transformed "deliberation" into a tool for maintaining a fragile, uncontested status quo.

18 hours ago
Opinion premium

Analysis: Meikarta to Tanah Abang: Public housing in private hands

of its plan to deliver 3 million homes, the government is partnering with state-owned PT Kereta Api Indonesia (KAI) and PT Astra International to build 1,000 low-cost flats on KAI-owned land in Tanah Abang, Central Jakarta, financed through Astra’s corporate social responsibility (CSR) scheme. While the model appears efficient, it raises a key question: Is this a sustainable solution to Indonesia’s housing shortage, or merely a stopgap that masks deeper structural gaps and potential quid pro quo dynamics?

19 hours ago
Editorial premium

Second time surrender

From "free and active" to a silent subordinate: Prabowo’s recent concessions to Washington signal a dangerous erosion of Indonesian sovereignty.

20 hours ago
Academia

Why Asia is hardest hit by the Gulf energy crisis

Those most exposed to energy market disruption share a set of structural characteristics: heavy reliance on imported fossil fuels, limited fiscal space and constrained energy systems that make it difficult to switch to alternatives quickly.

1 day ago
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Lose and lose in the Strait of Hormuz

The pattern repeats: when political escalation occurs, Hormuz becomes a bargaining chip.

1 day ago
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Not about food: The brutal truth about malnutrition

Distributing food isn't always the solution to stunting in Indonesia; it is also about investing in community health workers so as to formalize and elevate an existing system that forms the backbone of maternal and child care in the remotest regions.

1 day ago
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The great correction: Seismic changes in Indonesian stock market

After a geopolitical shock and a transparency crisis, the Indonesian stock market is undergoing a painful but necessary evolution toward global standards.

1 day ago
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Indonesia’s oil shock response is a matter of a communication failure

Indonesia’s response to the 2026 oil shock is technically sound but narratively broken, leaving sound fiscal moves overshadowed by visible costs. To bridge this gap, the government must move beyond policy design and master the art of transparent, integrated communication to reclaim its credibility.

1 day ago
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Indonesia’s airspace torn between sovereignty and partnership

If Indonesia approves new military overflight arrangements with the United States, it will face a high-stakes balancing act between strategic partnership and national autonomy. In an era of shifting global power, control of Indonesia’s skies must remain a matter of substance, not just symbolism.

1 day ago
Opinion premium

Analysis: Protection or control? Govt blocks children’s access to social media

Over the past two weeks, the government has begun overseeing the implementation of Communications and Digital Ministerial Regulation No. 9/2026. The policy reflects a national push to strengthen protections for children, though concerns have emerged regarding its effectiveness and its potential impact on children’s access to information and freedom of expression.

1 day ago
Editorial premium

Bracing for ‘Godzilla’

As a "Godzilla-like" El Niño looms, Indonesia must move beyond complacency and apply the lessons of history to protect its food security and its future.

1 day ago
Academia

Trump returns to a failing Hormuz strategy

US President Donald Trump returns to weary and failing playbook with Hormuz blockade threat

2 days ago
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What if discrimination is not about religion?

Beyond the national slogan lays a primal human reflex that treats difference as a threat; to truly protect religious freedom in Indonesia, we must look past the pulpit and address the biological machinery of fear that governs us all.

2 days ago
Academia

War tests BRICS and reveals its limits

Despite calls for mediation, the grouping of so-called Global South nations has remained fragmented, highlighting its role as a "club" akin to the G7 rather than a forum for collective action.

2 days ago
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The coming inflation-deflation whipsaw

Markets must grapple with both the immediate threat of higher inflation from geopolitical tensions and conflagrations, as well as the longer-term risk of AI-driven deflation.

2 days ago
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Why user states must share the burden of Indonesia’s sea-lanes

As the case of the Strait of Hormuz in the Iran war illustrates amid escalating global tensions, Indonesia can no longer afford to be the sole guardian of the world’s most dangerous maritime choke points: It’s time for user states to pay their fair share.

2 days ago
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Opposition critique is the oxygen of a flourishing democracy

Rather than a threat to stability, opposition is the very condition necessary for stability and the key ingredient of a thriving democracy.

2 days ago
Opinion premium

Analysis: Low-interest lending push may strain KDMP beyond limits

The administration of President Prabowo Subianto plans to add another state-backed business line for Red and White Cooperatives (KMP) in the form of low-interest lending as part of ongoing efforts to combat predatory and illegal loans. However, the high-risk and heavily regulated nature of the financing business could strain the cooperatives’ already limited repayment capacity and even threaten their survival. As such, the plan risks squandering a significant portion of the Village Fund, which has effectively been pledged as collateral for Red and White Village Cooperatives (KDMP) debt.

2 days ago
Editorial premium

Indonesian law for Myanmar general

For the sake of both national integrity and humanity, the Attorney General’s Office should proceed with the necessary investigations to bring the act of genocide case involving the Myanmar junta leader before an Indonesian court. 

2 days ago
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Europe’s skepticism about US firms reaches Asia

As geopolitical tensions rise between Washington and Brussels, US companies are increasingly exposed to reputational and regulatory risk in Europe. This shift has consequences for global trade and open economies, including in Asia.

3 days ago
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Oil, gas and coal are officially a systemic financial risk

As geopolitical shocks turn the global energy market into an "everything crisis", the shift from volatile commodities to stable renewable infrastructure is no longer just a climate goal; it is a financial necessity.

3 days ago
Academia

Clean nickel paradox vs. fossil fuel dominance

The Indonesian nickel industry is currently navigating a profound paradox: a world that desperately needs our mineral wealth but increasingly demands it to be "clean" and low-emission.

3 days ago
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Hedging security in the Gulf is risky

The US' strategic credibility has been dealt a severe blow, and the Gulf states have ended up in an exceptionally unenviable position.

3 days ago
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Break the straitjacket: Why Indonesia must raise its fiscal ceiling to 5 percent

Twenty-two years on the three-percent budget deficit cap has become a self defeating constraint. 

3 days ago
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Justice sans borders: Southeast Asia’s bold stand against Myanmar junta

While traditional diplomacy falters in the face of Myanmar’s military violence, a quiet legal revolution is brewing in Southeast Asia: By turning to domestic courts in Timor-Leste and Indonesia, survivors are testing a bold, universal legal theory to ensure that victims of mass atrocities finally have their day in court.

3 days ago
Opinion premium

Analysis: Death of peacekeepers forces Prabowo to rethink Middle East strategy

For months, President Prabowo Subianto has been crafting his own strategic approach to the Middle East, often departing from some of Indonesia’s traditional foreign policy principles, including on the question of establishing relations with Israel. Central to this strategy was joining the Board of Peace (BOP) set up by United States President Donald Trump in January, a move widely criticized at home as abandoning Indonesia’s long-held support for Palestinians in their long struggle for an independent state.

3 days ago

Today's ePost

Fri, April 17, 2026

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