Home Ministry accelerates Integrated Population Document Service implementation

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Oleh Eko Budiono, Selasa, 18 Juli 2017 | 15:47 WIB - Redaktur: Filmon Warouw - 552


Jakarta, InfoPublik – Home Ministry's director general for population and civil registration, Zudan Arif Fakrulloh, said that his office had accelerated the implementation of integrated population document service throughout Indonesia.

Currently, the service, also known as ‘three in one’ and ‘four in one’, are spread across 222 regencies/cities in 29 provinces. Unfortunately, West Kalimantan, West Papua, West Nusa Tenggara, East Nusa Tenggara, and Maluku provinces have not implement the services.

“We will keep urging all regional Population and Civil Registration Agencies to implement it this year,” said Zudan on Monday (7/17).

He added that there were four provinces whose all the regencies/cities had implemented the service (100%), namely Central Java, Jakarta Special Capital Region, Gorontalo, and Lampung. Meanwhile, there were four provinces whose regencies/cities had implemented it for 80 percent, namely Banten, Bangka Belitung, Yogyakarta Special Region, and North Sumatra.

The numbers of regencies/cities that implemented the system were 35 in Central Java (100%), 12 in South Sulawesi (50%), 6 in Banten (80%), 3 in Riau (25%), 7 in East Kalimantan (70%), 6 in Bangka Belitung (85.71%), 7 in South Kalimantan (54%), 4 in Bali (44%), 3 in Riau Islands (35%), 17 in East Java (44%), 3 in North Kalimantan (60%), 18 in North Sumatra (54.55%), 1 in Papua (3.44%), and 6 areas in Jakarta Special Capital Region (100%).

Meanwhile, South East Sulawesi implemented it in 3 regencies/cities (17%), West Sulawesi in 3 regencies/cities (50%), North Maluku in 3 regencies/cities (30%), North Sulawesi in 12 regencies/cities (80%), Jambi in 2 regencies/cities (18%), 14 regencies/cities in West Java (51.85%), 4 in Yogyakarta Special Region (80%), 7 in Bengkulu (70%), 10 in West Sumatra (52.63%), 6 in Gorontalo (100%), 4 in South Sumatra (20%), 15 in Lampung (100%), 14 in Central Sulawesi (31%), and 2 in Aceh (8%). (Translator: Erik Limantara)