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INDONESIA FLAG
THIS IS THE FLAG
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INDONESIA MAP
THIS THE MAP
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THE CAPITAL
JAKARTA
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INDONESIA BORDER
he Australia–Indonesia border[1] is a maritime boundary running west from the two countries' tripoint maritime boundary with Papua New Guinea in the western entrance to the Torres Straits through the Arafura Sea and Timor Sea and terminating in the Indian Ocean. The boundary is, however, broken by the "Timor Gap", where Australian and East Timorese territorial waters meet and where the two countries have overlapping claims to the seabed. Australia and Indonesia also share a common maritime border in the Indian Ocean between Australia's oversea territory of Christmas Island and the Indonesian island of Java.

An interesting characteristic of the maritime border between the two countries is the separation of the ownership of the seabed (essentially the continental shelf) and ownership of the water column (exclusive economic zone), each with their own boundary. Ownership over the seabed gives the country rights over all mineral resources in the seabed while ownership of the water column allows a country over fishing rights and other resources of the water in the specified area. The treaty establishing this and the western parts of the border as well as that between Christmas Island and Java, signed in 1997, has however not been ratified and is not in force. This was because the independence of East Timor required amendments to the 1997 treaty and agreement over them by the two parties is still pending.

the Timor Gap

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THIS THE POPULATION FOR INDONESIA
THE POPULATION IS 229,964,720
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INDONESIA SPEAKS BAHASA
YOU CAN LEARN HOW TO SPEAK
BAHASA  BY GOING ONLINE AND CLICK ON
NATIVE AND THEY WILL LEARN YOUR
LANGUAGE . WRITE BAHASA TO INPROVE YOUR GRAMMAR OR CONVERSATION.
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The largest ethnic group in Indonesia is the Javanese who make up 41% of the total population. The Javanese are concentrated on the island of Java but millions have migrated to other islands throughout the archipelago.[3] The Sundanese, Malay, and Madurese are the next largest groups in the country.[3] Many ethnic groups, particularly in Kalimantan and Papua, have only hundreds of members. Most of the local languages belong to Austronesian language family, although a significant number, particularly in Papua, speak Papuan languages. The Chinese Indonesian population makes up a little less than 1% of the total Indonesian population according to the 2000 census.[3] Some of these Indonesians of Chinese descent speak various Chinese dialects, most notably Hokkien and Hakka.

The division and classification of ethnic groups in Indonesia is not rigid and in some case are unclear as the result of migrations, also cultural and lingusitic influences; for example some may agree that Bantenese and Cirebonese are belongs to different ethnic group with their own distinct dialect, however another might consider them as Javanese sub-ethnic, the member of larger Javanese people. The same case also with Baduy people that share soo much similarity with Sundanese people that can be considered as belongs to the same ethnic group. The example of hybrid ethnicity is Betawi people, the result of mixture of different ethnicities in Indonesia also with Arab and Chinese since the era of colonial Batavia (Jakarta).
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INDONESIA INDUSTRIES
Industries: petroleum and natural gas, textiles, apparel, footwear, mining, cement, chemical fertilizers, plywood, rubber, food, tourism .
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