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View all search resultsWith the new e-ticket system in place, the Jakarta police seek to fully cease manual ticketing at traffic checkpoints which often fosters a "negative perception" of the police among the public.
From 2012 to 2016, according to Statistics Indonesia (BPS), there were on average 6,600 traffic accidents every year in the capital. Roughly 700 people died each year and thousands of others were injured.
According to 2017 INRIX traffic data, Jakarta has the 12th worst traffic on earth, with 20 percent of Jakartans’ driving time being spent in congestion. To make matters worse, some of the city’s riders and drivers are notoriously rowdy. Thus, even the city’s most law-abiding drivers could easily lose their temper.
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