Need to build awareness on child marriage risks: BKKBN, ministry

The National Population and Family Planning Agency (BKKBN) and the Ministry of Women’s Empowerment and Child Protection (PPPA) have highlighted the need to build awareness on the risks of child marriage.

“One of the things we need to do is make it clear that understanding reproductive health is important,” BKKBN head Hasto Wardoyo said during an online coordination meeting with the PPPA Ministry here on Thursday.

Education on reproductive health is essential to change people’s views on sex education, which is still considered a taboo subject, he added.

Girls contemplating marriage at the age of 16 need to know that their body and bones still need to undergo a period of growth and transformation, Wardoyo said.

Girls also need to know that if they become pregnant at a very young age, their bones will stop growing and they will be more susceptible to diseases at an older age when they experience menopause and osteoporosis,. he explained.

In addition, education on cervical cancer should also be provided to girls since the risk of cervical cancer can rise due to sexual intercourse at a young age, he said.

Meanwhile, Minister of Women’s Empowerment and Child Protection I Gusti Ayu Bintang Darmawati, said that child marriage can increase poverty and the risk of stunting.

β€œThe impact of child marriage is enormous. Not only dropping out of school, but it will also have an impact on health, infant mortality, maternal mortality, and poverty,” Darmawati noted.

Based on data from the World Health Organization (WHO) in 2020, mothers under the age of 20 are at a greater risk of giving birth to premature babies, low body weight, and complications in pregnancy, the minister said.

The prevalence rate of child marriage in Indonesia is currently still relatively high at 10.35 percent, she noted.

To prevent child marriage, the ministry side has launched a movement called Gebyar PPA, which is a follow-up to the national strategy for preventing child marriage, she informed.

However, education on child marriage and its risks should be promoted at the grassroots level, Darmawati said.

“For this reason, education about child marriage at an early age must be encouraged to the grassroots level,” she stated.

Source: Antara News

Rimbun Air plane crash victims’ cadavers brought to Mimika

Rimbun Air plane crash victims’ corpses retrieved from the accident site in Bilogai, Sugapa, Intan Jaya, arrived at Mozes Kilangin Airport, Timika, 8:33 a.m. local time (UTC+9), and taken to Mimika Regional Hospital for identification.

The Timika Search and Rescue (SAR) Office Head, George Mercy L. Randang, stated that airline officials will then take charge of the three victims’ bodies and will hand them over to the respective families once the identification process is completed at the hospital.

The victims have been identified as Mirza, the pilot; Fajar, the co-pilot; and Iswahyudi, the flight engineer, and all were reported to be in recognisable conditions that would simplify the identification process, he noted.

The SAR Office confirmed the successful retrieval of the aircraft’s black box after being discovered at the accident site on Wednesday night. The black boxes along with six SAR rescuers are expected to arrive in Timika before Thursday noon.

“Last night, the joint SAR team had retrieved the aircraft’s black boxes located in the aircraft tail. The SAR team along with the black boxes returned to the Sugapa base and is expected to deliver them to Timika on Thursday. Upon arrival in Timika, the black boxes would be secured at the Timika SAR Office or at an air force base while awaiting the National Transportation Safety Committee (KNKT) team’s arrival to Timika,” Randang informed.

Randang also expressed gratitude to all members of the joint SAR team and other parties who assisted the team to locate the PK-OTW Rimbun Air crash site and retrieve the victims’ bodies.

“Representing the SAR Office, I express our gratitude to all parties that contributed to the evacuation operation until the successful retrieval of the victims’ bodies and being moved to Timika,” he stated.

Source: Antara News

Jakarta to convert parks near Grogol Terminal into MSME kiosks

The Jakarta administration is planning to transform parks near West Jakarta’s Grogol bus terminal to build kiosks for local micro, small, and medium enterprises under the Jakpreneur program.

“The region (representatives) proposed three kiosk points for the Grogol Petamburan sub-district. One of them is near the terminal,” head of SMEs at the SME, Cooperatives, and Trade Industry Office (PPKUKM), Adhitya Pratama Yudha, said here on Thursday.

The proposed areas include two kiosk points near Grogol Terminal β€” one in front of Terminal 2 and a park on Dokter Susilo Street, he informed.

The third area is located at Taman Tugu Reformasi (Reformation Monument Park) on Kyai Tapa Street, Grogol Petamburan sub-district, he added.

The two locations have been proposed given the high number of residents who have the potential to become MSME consumers or buyers, Yudha said.

“So, residents’ needs in the region can be met by Jakpreneurs, the expectations are like that,” he added.

The proposal will be discussed by officials at the Provincial Office, he said. They will consider the feasibility of the sites and other matters before finally building the kiosks, he added.

However, Yudha said that he could not confirm how many Jakprenuer MSME kiosks will be built in the area. “(About how many kiosks) will be discussed to determine how many stalls will stand,” he remarked.

He also could not provide details on how many MSME Jakprenuer players are expected to use the kiosks.

However, Yudha assured that the discussion would be strengthened so that kiosks can be built in these areas and used by business players.

“Our target is this purpose must be realized by December this year,” he said.

The Jakarta administration’s Jakpreneur Program is aimed at bolstering the ecosystem of micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs) so they can rise and grow again amid the pandemic, he added.

Source: Antara News

Tracing gambir’s glory in Riau Islands

Not many people know that gambir, or Uncaria plant, which is also popularly known as gambier or cat’s claw, once thrived in Riau Islands province and served as its main export commodity.

The glory of gambir can be traced back to the days of the Sultanate of Johor-Riau-Pahang-Lingga, which was centered on the Port of Hulu Riau (Carang River). Now, the area has become the administrative region of Tanjungpinang city.

The Hulu Riau Port was a transit port that connected the western and eastern worlds, according to Indonesian Historiography, quoted by the Kemdikbud.go.id/bpnbkepri/ website.

Spices like pepper and gambir were exported from the port, the website states.

Merchant ships from Java, Sulawesi, and Malay and foreign kingdoms, such as Siam, China, Persia, Arabia, Portugal, the Netherlands, England, and France docked and traded there, it adds.

When the trade center shifted from Hulu Riau Port to Sri Bintan Pura Port of Pelantar Tanjungpinang around the 17th century, gambir remained an important export commodity for Riau Islands, it says.

At the time, West Sumatra was claimed to be the largest supplier of gambir in the archipelago and the world, accounting for 80 percent of the supply. However, gambir produced by Riau Islands was also shipped to Bangladesh, India, Pakistan, Taiwan, Japan, South Korea, France, and Switzerland, according to the website.

Gambir was a promising export commodity for Riau Islands in the 1820-1830s. In 1824, Riau Islands exported 48,600 piculs (equivalent to 62.5 kilograms) of gambir. In 1832, the province’s exports crossed 80 thousand piculs.

Origins

According to Riau Islands chronicler, Anastasia Wiwik Swastiwi, one of the official written sources on gambir in Riau Islands is the book Tuhfat Al-Nafis, penned by litterateur Raja Ali Haji.

The book describes how gambir was first brought from Sumatra in 1743, during the reign of Yang Dipertuan Muda (Prince) of Riau II Daeng Celak. He sent Punggawa Tarung and Penghulu Jedun to obtain gambir seeds from Perca Island or Sumatra.

Then, gambir seedlings were planted from Bintan Island to Batam Island.

Another valid source is a collection of ancient Malay manuscripts, Swastiwi informed. Quoting a passage from the manuscript she said: “Those who go to Cembul island and Bulang (Batam) and will (plant or trade) pepper and gambir in my land, do not cause turmoil.”

Swastiwi revealed that when gambir seeds were first planted on Bintan Island, thousands of workers were brought directly from China to plant them in gardens owned by the Bugis and Malay nobles.

The workers were stationed in the Senggarang area of Tanjungpinang, she said.

However when Sultan Mahmud Riayat Shah (Sultan of Johor-Riau-Pahang-Lingga) moved the kingdom’s principality to Daik, Lingga in 1787, the Chinese residents did not move, she informed.

They chose to stay on Bintan Island and cultivate their own gambir plants, she said. They progressed from planting it, processing it, to selling it to become gambir masters, she added.

As a result, now there is a large Chinese population descended from the workers residing in Senggarang, Swastiwi noted. This is proved by the existence of Chinatown or Chinese villages, with the majority of residents living in coastal areas, she said.

In Senggarang there once stood a gambir warehouse belonging to a Chinese gambir trader named Ling Sing She. He passed away long ago, but his descendants are still alive and have settled in Tanjungpinang.

Senggarang community leader Jo Seng (71) claims to have witnessed how the gambir business was conducted by Ling Sing She at that time. In fact, Jo Seng’s house is not far from the warehouse.

According to him, Ling Sing She planted gambir in Engkang Anculai, Bintan district. Once it was ready to be processed, it was shipped using a gambir seine to the Senggarang platform, he said. Gambir was then stored at the warehouse, he added.

“Every day he dried gambir on a wooden platform without any layers. After drying, it was sold to gambir masters,” Jo Seng said at his residence in Senggarang on Tuesday.

However, since a century ago, gambir warehouses have become rare.

Today, the word “gambir” only brings to mind a road in Tanjungpinang. The road itself was a gambir trade center between farmers and masters whose ethnicity ranged from Chinese to Javanese.

Golden age to decline

In 1850, gambir was not sold based on its weight but piece by piece, according to historical researcher at the Cultural Value Preservation Center (BPNB) in Riau Islands, Dedi Arman.

The price of 10 thousand cuts of gambir was 5 Spanish dollars, he added.

In the archives of the Political Report of Riau, in 1860, the gambir trade also brought prosperity to Tanjungpinang, he said. It was witnessed on paved roads as well as renovated, beautiful houses and temples of the Chinese community, he added.

However, in the 20th-century, the gambir business in Riau Islands slowly began to decline. One of the factors was a fall in global demand, which caused gambir prices to plummet, he observed.

The expansion of gambir plantations also worsened the environmental damage, he pointed out. Gambir processing requires wood for burning, which triggered massive deforestation, he said.

Gambir business was no longer feasible because the operational costs were quite high and the revenues could not cover the expenses, he said. Plus, its production required a lot of labor, he remarked.

“Finally, one by one the gambir businesses closed,” Arman said.

Benefits of gambir

As gambir is considered to have myriad benefits, its sap is often extracted for use by the Riau Islands people and the global pharmaceutical industry.

In the past, rural residents of the Riau Islands used gambir for nginang or nyirih, a local practice that involves chewing combinations of spices for good health.

As it can also make breath fragrant, gambir is used as a topical medicine for toddlers’ gums.

Riau’s gambir is known for its quality because of its high tannin content. The difference is in the leaves of the plant grown here. Gambir of “shrimp” type has more advantages than other types. This type has more leaves and produces more sap.

Thanks to its tannin content, gambir can even prevent diarrhea. It also can be utilized to antidote alcohol and metal toxins.

Restoring gambir’s glory

Swastiwi urged the Riau Islands administration to re-plant gambir on vacant land.

This needs to be the main focus for the local administration, rather than other agricultural commodities that have never been tested successfully, she affirmed.

Planting gambir needs to be followed by socialization about its utilization and supported by large market uptake, she said.

However, the obstacle of selling gambir today is that its market demand has tended to fall, she added.

The uses of gambir also need to be reviewed, she noted. The use of the plant should be bolstered for certain innovative products, so its ecosystem can be maintained, she said.

For example, she pointed out, the use of gambir in clothing dyes is no longer promising because there are many other cheaper and easy-to-find products in the market.

There is no reason for the government and Riau Islands residents to not re-explore gambir’s past glory for future prosperity, she remarked.

Source: Antara News

G20 Presidency to bring medium- to long-term positive impacts

Economist at Permata Bank Josua Pardede has estimated that Indonesia’s presidency during the G20 summit in 2022 will bring positive impact for Indonesia, both in the medium and long term.

“This is because with the appointment, Indonesia is projected to have a bigger bargaining power, especially in the finance track,” Pardede told ANTARA here on Thursday.

He opined that several primary discussions in the finance track comprised economic recovery, sustainable growth, financial inclusion, as well as international tax.

With this discussion, the summit is expected serve as a platform for various agreements that would proffer benefits for the Indonesian economy, he added.

As a whole, Pardede expressed optimism that the initial cooperation during the G20 presidency would yield concrete benefits to drive the country’s economy.

Earlier, Minister of Communication and Informatics Johnny G. Plate had noted that Indonesia’s G20 presidency reflects the country’s real action in global leadership, which includes economic recovery.

“This is specifically to advance cooperation and collaboration to expedite global economic recovery and build sustainable global resiliency,” Plate noted in a press statement as quoted on Wednesday.

The transfer of leadership from Italy to Indonesia will be conducted during the G20 Summit in Rome at the end of October this year.

Indonesia will then officially assume the presidency for G20 from December 1, 2021, until November 2022, based on the theme of “Recover Together, Recover Stronger.”

The G20 presidency for the 2021-2022 period will be the first time that Indonesia will chair the G20 leaders’ meeting, ever since the forum, which has contributed 85 percent of the world’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP), was established in 1999.

Source: Antara News

BNI unveils innovations to empower transactional banking business

State-owned PT Bank Negara Indonesia (BNI) has announced three innovations to strengthen its transactional banking business to allow customers to conduct financial transactions more efficiently and thereby increase productivity.

“We are optimistic on the transactional banking services and its solutions, especially those designed for corporate institutions, can contribute optimally to BNI’s total fee-based income by 2021 end,” BNI institutional relations director Sis Apik Wijayanto said here on Thursday.

The three innovations include online bank guarantees that provide customers the opportunity to submit bank guarantees while monitoring the process through the BNIDirect platform until the transaction is completed, he expounded.

The second innovation offers financing solutions through the financial supply chain management platform to make it easier for customers to make supply chain transactions with vendors and suppliers, he said.

The third innovation β€” the open banking solution in the form of Application Programming Interface or API Corporates β€” can integrate customer system applications with BNI transactional services, he added.

Wijayanto said users of transactional banking services grew 16.4 percent (yoy) during the pandemic from 58.6 thousand users in June 2020 to 68.2 thousand users in June 2021.

The trend of fee-based income from transactional banking business until the first half of 2021 reached 37.9 percent (yoy), with the volume of rupiah equivalent transactions increasing by 11 percent, making the average current account balance swell by 8.6 percent, he informed.

“We believe that income trends from transactional businesses continue to increase solidly along with market conditions that are improving by positive economic growth and ecosystems,” he observed.

He said he hoped that the transactional banking services business can multiply BNI’s fee-based income by 2021 end, adding that BNI is also continuing to modernize its transactional infrastructure by building an integrated platform, the BNIDirect Cash Management System.

The integrated platform offers features including Bank Online Guarantee, FSCM Platform, BNI Trade Online, Virtual Account and integrated digital solutions through API Corporates, he noted.

“There are currently more than 283 types of API Corporates used by more than four thousand ministry and institutional partners of state-owned enterprises and multinational companies,” he added.

Source: Antara News

BTN secures OJK’s permit for opening of online accounts

State-owned bank PT Bank Tabungan Negara (Persero) Tbk had officially obtained permit from the Financial Services Authority (OJK) for the online onboarding service to open accounts.

In a statement on Thursday, IT and Operations Director of BTN Andi Nirwoto noted that the service will complement various digital transformation products that BTN is developing as well as increase customer acquisition and e-channel users.

The online account opening feature will also become a gateway for various digital services that the bank is preparing.

“For us, becoming digital is obligatory in order to facilitate our customers to conduct banking transactions. Currently, we are designing various integrated digital services to offer a new experience to our customers,” Nirwoto noted.

The online account opening services will be integrated through both the bank’s website and the BTN mobile banking application.

A new account can also be opened in three easy and quick steps: access online onboarding menu, filling out the data and identity card, and conducting verification.

Meanwhile, in addition to preparing the online onboarding service to open an account, BTN is designing to enhance the online onboarding loan feature.

Through this feature, potential debtors can apply for Home Ownership Credit (KPR) with various digital solutions without having to visit BTN’s branch offices.

“This is done, so that the verification and SLA online submission process can be improved,” Nurwoto explained.

He also highlighted that thus far, BTN’s various digital services continued to show significant user growth.

The bank was recorded to own portals and applications, such as BTN Property, Rumah Murah BTN, and BTN Mobile Banking, including within it QRIS (Quick Response Code Indonesian Standard) and cardless withdrawal, as well as e-Mitra Bank BTN.

BTN is also planning to unveil several digital services: Smart Residence, Virtual Branch, New Internet Banking Business, EDC Platform, API Platform Management, Agen Batara or PPOB and the development of BTN Properti.

“All of this is part of the efforts to build a digital housing ecosystem, which of course, is done to facilitate customers,” Nirwoto said.

Source: Antara News

BRI promotes East Java MSMEs in Canada to bring them trade globally

State-owned lender Bank Rakyat Indonesia (BRI) showcased ‘Proud of Made in Indonesian Products’ at the ‘2021 Food and Beverage Trade Show’ in Canada to open up opportunities for East Java MSMEs to reach the global market.

The trade show was held at the Indonesian Trade Promotion Center in Vancouver, Canada.

“This is an active step by BRI to encourage Indonesian MSMEs to advance and breakthrough the world market,” SEVP treasury & global Services at BRI, Achmad Royadi, said in a statement received here on Thursday.

Royadi affirmed that the activity, which was conducted in August this year, was part of an effort to foster Indonesian MSMEs and help them grow.

He said BRI has also opened and maintained networks between the local and international markets because national economic recovery needs real, tangible steps focused on the rise of Indonesian MSMEs.

“This is evidence of BRI’s strong commitment to continue to help and nurture Indonesian MSMEs, even though they are in the midst of a crisis. BRI hopes that MSMEs can survive and keep rising in the new normal set by the government,” he expounded.

The activity was a continuation of the implementation of ‘Local Keren Jatim: Road to Brilianpreneur 2021’, which was held on August 9, 10, and 13 this year, he said.

BRI helped several MSMEs in East Java to participate in the exhibition with Archipelago Marketplace Inc. serving as the intermediary, he informed.

Archipelago Marketplace Inc. is an e-commerce marketplace platform for Indonesian MSMEs, he added.

The platform was established in the United States and acted as a buyer at the Local Keren Jatim event, he said. It also introduced a number of MSMEs during the event, Royadi added.

“The international-level promotion of MSME aims to introduce high-quality food and beverage products which are made in Indonesia to the world. Later, we hope that MSMEs can go global and be involved in the global food product trade chain,” he added.

Indonesian MSME commodities showcased at the exhibition were mostly from the food and beverage segment, encompassing coffee, snacks, processed spice products, processed fruits, and other local specialties from Indonesia, he informed.

Source: Antara News