Yati Dahlia, a traditional dancer, at her house in Bumi Harapan, close to the core development region of Indonesia’s new capital city.
Indonesia’s New Capital
Indonesia’s new capital city in the eastern corner of Indonesian Borneo (Kalimantan) is going ahead as debate rages over whether it will be a blessing or a curse.
The chief of a local tribe, Sultan Paser Aji Muhammad Jarnawi, at the Dayak cultural house in Penajam Paser Utar, East Kalimantan.
FOTO Indonesia’s New Capital City (IKN) - Aerial photography of Bukit Raya Village, located in the Sepaku area, as one of the locations affected by the construction of Indonesia’s new capital city (IKN).
The road to the New Capital City (IKN) of Indonesia, which is in North Penajam Paser. Left and right of the road there are oil palm plantations and Industrial Plantation Forests.
FOTO Indonesia’s New Capital City (IKN) - A mother, passing a simple house owned by a resident in the village of Bukit Raya, Sepaku District. This village is one of the areas affected by the New Capital City (IKN).
The hauling road for Industrial Plantation Forests in the Terunen area, owned by PT ITCI Hutani Manunggal (IHM), which is in the New Capital City Core area (IKN).
A child is on the terrace of a simple house, in Bukit Raya Village, Sepaku Region, North Penajam Paser Regency.
Balik tribal chief Sibukdin stand by the construction of a dike in Sepaku, close to the core development region of Indonesia’s new capital city in East Kalimantan.
People in Bukit Raya Village, Sepaku District, North Penajam Paser Regency, live their days normally, even though the area is close to the construction of Indonesia’s New Capital City (IKN).
Logging trucks transport wood from the Industrial Plantation Forest area belonging to PT ITCI Hutani Manunggal (IHM). This area is the core area of the New Capital City (IKN) of Indonesia.
This undated handout showing computer-generated imagery released by Nyoman Nuarta on January 18, 2022 shows a design illustration of Indonesia’s future presidential palace in East Kalimantan, as part of the country’s relocation of its capital from slowly sinking Jakarta to a site 2,000 kilometres (1,200 miles) away on jungle-clad Borneo island that will be named “Nusantara”. Picture: AFP.
Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/inquirer/indonesias-new-capital/image-gallery/857d65a3fd6397e54caff8cc992c2041