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 Indonesia| Facts & Figures |
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| President:
Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono (2004) Land area: 699,548 sq mi (1,811,831 sq
km); total area: 741,096 sq mi (1,919,440 sq km) Population (2011 est.): 248,216,193 (growth
rate: 1.04%); birth rate: 17.76/1000; infant mortality rate: 26.99/1000;
life expectancy: 71.62
Capital and largest city (2009 est.):
Jakarta, 9.121 million Other large cities:
Surabaya 2.509 million; Bandung 2.412 million; Medan 2.131 million; Semarang 1.296 million Monetary unit: Rupiah More Facts & Figures |
GeographyIndonesia is an archipelago in Southeast Asia
consisting of 17,000 islands (6,000 inhabited) and straddling the equator.
The largest islands are Sumatra, Java (the most populous), Bali,
Kalimantan (Indonesia's part of Borneo), Sulawesi (Celebes), the Nusa
Tenggara islands, the Moluccas Islands, and Irian Jaya (also called West
Papua), the western part of New Guinea. Its neighbor to the north is
Malaysia and to the east is Papua New Guinea.
Indonesia, part of the “ring of
fire,” has the largest number of active volcanoes in the world.
Earthquakes are frequent. Wallace's line, a zoological demarcation between
Asian and Australian flora and fauna, divides Indonesia.
GovernmentRepublic.
HistoryThe 17,000 islands that make up Indonesia were
home to a diversity of cultures and indigenous beliefs when the islands
came under the influence of Hindu priests and traders in the first and
second centuries
A.D.
Muslim invasions began in
the 13th century, and most of the archipelago had converted to Islam by
the 15th century. Portuguese traders arrived early in the next century but
were ousted by the Dutch around 1595. The Dutch United East India Company
established posts on the island of Java, in an effort to control the spice
trade.
After Napoléon subjugated the Netherlands
in 1811, the British seized the islands but returned them to the Dutch in
1816. In 1922, Indonesia was made an integral part of the Dutch kingdom.
During World War II, Japan seized the islands. Tokyo was primarily
interested in Indonesia's oil, which was vital to the war effort, and
tolerated fledgling nationalists such as Sukarno and Mohammed Hatta. After
Japan's surrender, Sukarno and Hatta proclaimed Indonesian independence on
Aug. 17, 1945. Allied troops, mostly British Indian forces, fought
nationalist militias to reassert the prewar status quo until the arrival
of Dutch troops.
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