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View all search resultsTo commemorate its 40th anniversary, The Jakarta Post is holding an exhibition called “Portraits of a Nation: Indonesia's Journey of Change and Resilience”, which recounts key stories from the country’s recent past through photographs taken by the newspaper’s photojournalists.
In this day and age we are no stranger to being greeted by our device’s screen light every time we wake up, or seeing pictures of our friends on holiday while scrolling through our social media feeds. Almost everyone today has done it, since the flow of information and trends in the media today seem to have become the core of our lives as humans.
Indonesia’s leading English-language newspaper kicked off 2023 by conducting a readers’ survey that involved 225 respondents, with five survey participants selected readers of a special event held on Monday at The Jakarta Post studio in Palmerah, Jakarta.
With the COVID-19-induced recession and the changing media landscape, thanks to the arrival of news aggregator sites and social media platforms, it is not always easy for us to continue doing good journalism. Yet it is difficult to imagine Indonesia without The Jakarta Post.
According to a State-Owned Enterprises (SOE) ministerial decree issued on Wednesday, a copy of which was obtained by the Post, Nezar will serve as PT Pos Indonesia's director of institutional affairs, replacing former director Noer Fajriansyah.
The Jakarta Post's editorial team has seen it all, from the May 1998 riots, the 2004 Boxing Day tsunami in the Indian Ocean and the deadly flooding in 2013 that submerged much of Jakarta, to the New Order government’s threat to shut us down entirely.
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