Asia | New city, new start?

Indonesia’s new capital is built on vanity 

President Jokowi doesn’t seem to be in any mood to leave politics behind 

A general view of Garuda Palace, the future Presidential Palace, and ministerial offices under construction in the new capital city of Nusantara, Indonesia
Photograph: Reuters
|Singapore

THE LEGACY of Joko Widodo (or Jokowi) was meant to be graft-free politics and an infrastructure revolution in Indonesia. On the face of it, the outgoing president has partially succeeded on the latter. During his decade in power, Jokowi’s government has overseen around 200 projects. The grandest was officially opened on August 17th, when Nusantara, an entirely new capital city carved out of the jungles of Borneo, hosted festivities to mark Indonesia’s 79th independence day. The ceremony highlighted two uncomfortable questions. One is whether Nusantara is an infrastructure leap too far: a giant vanity project doomed to fail. The other is whether Jokowi will really quit politics when his term ends in October and he is supposed to hand over power to Prabowo Subianto.

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This article appeared in the Asia section of the print edition under the headline “New city, new start?”

From the August 24th 2024 edition

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