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Indonesia Has So Many Islands You Can Now Name One After Yourself
By Lauren Steele
What do you get for the person who has everything? How about the namesake of a Southeast Asian island? The Indonesian government took a tally of their islands and as of this week, the official total count has jumped from 13,446 to 14,572. CIA numbers estimate that the archipelago is actually made up of more than 17,500 islands total.
Yes, that’s a lot of islands. And as it turns out, 6,000 of these islands are uninhabited, and a good portion of them don’t even have a name. That’s where you (or a bunch of affluent investors and narcissists) come in.
According to Indonesia’s Coordinating Minister for Maritime Affairs, Luhut Binsar Panjaitan, the government is going to try to profit from these remote and nondescript scraps of land in the ocean by allowing foreigners or entities to manage them and even give them the right to name them. Out of the 6,000 uninhabited islands in the archipelago, nearly 4,000 have the potential to become tourist destinations — so one day you could be hosting travelers on an island bearing the name of your choice.
There is one catch: just because you get to name the island doesn’t mean that the island is yours. The Indonesian government is not selling the land, but simply selling the rights to name it. This means that you could pay to name the island anything you like, but the island and everything on it still belong to Indonesia.
http://www.mensjournal.com/travel/a...s-you-can-now-name-one-after-yourself-w461941
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'Name your own island,' Indonesia tells investors
Investors willing to commit funds to developing some of Indonesia's more remote islands, thousands of which are still officially unnamed, will soon be able to leave their mark on the map ... literally.
"We would offer them the right to name the island, but they would not be able to name it as they wish," Ridwan Djamaluddin, a deputy minister for infrastructure at the Coordinating Ministry for Maritime Affairs, told Asia Focus.
"It would still have to go through a process of approval and be in accordance with the related Home Affairs Ministry regulation.
"This is just one of the many ways in our strategy to lure investors here. This could be an incentive for them," he added.
The Coordinating Minister for Maritime Affairs, Luhut Binsar Pandjaitan, told a news conference on Jan 9 that the country still had 4,000 islands with no names. The Indonesian archipelago has 17,508 islands and stretches roughly 5,000 kilometres from west to east across the equator, with a total land area of 1.9 million square kilometres.
Should there be any foreign investors interested in turning an island into a tourism destination, Mr Luhut said they would be allowed to name the island. A Japanese investor, for example, could name an island Yokohama, but it would still be under Indonesian sovereignty, he stressed.
Turning some islands into tourist destinations, he said, would be a quick way to create job opportunities for local residents, stimulate the economy and increase tax revenues.
Data from the Investment Coordinating Board showed that in 2014, total investment in tourism was US$684.9 million, out of which $511.8 million was foreign investment. The tourism ministry has set a target for the sector to contribute 9.2% to gross domestic product (GDP) by 2019, compared with about 4% in 2014. The goal is to attract 20 million foreign tourist arrivals and generate $20 billion in revenue compared with $10.7 billion in 2014.
Damos Dumoli Agusman, the secretary of the directorate-general for legal affairs and international treaties at the Foreign Ministry, said that approval of any foreign investment to manage small islands and their surrounding waters should place a priority on the national interest, in accordance with the 2014 law on coastal areas and small island management.
"In order to gain a permit to manage the island, the investor must ensure among other things that that the island is uninhabited, ensure public access to the island, and [operate] in cooperation with an Indonesian partner," he told Asia Focus.
Mr Ridwan said Japanese investors had already expressed interest in at least three islands, though they are named already: Morotai in North Maluku which borders on the Philippines; the Natuna Islands in the northern maritime frontier area bordering the South China Sea; and Sabang in Aceh.
"We offer them the historical ties that Japan has with Morotai and by plane, it's only a four-and-a-half-hour flight from Japan," he said.
Morotai was a battleground when Japan fought the Allied forces during World War II, which ended with Japan's surrender in September 1945. A Japanese soldier hid for 30 years in the island's jungles until he was found in 1974.
Arista Atmadjati, a tourism lecturer at Universitas Gadjah Mada in Yogyakarta, said there was potential for Indonesia to develop its uninhabited, remote or outermost islands into tourist destination aimings at a niche market.
"It would be no problem for tourists in this market to visit far-flung islands. There are already islands in Indonesia that serve such purposes and they are very well known among a very segmented group of foreign vacationers," he said.
He said that promoting Morotai, with its historical connection to Japan, was a good example of a way to distribute foreign tourist arrivals away from major destinations such as Bali, Yogyakarta or Lombok to other parts of the vast archipelago.
But he is not in favour of giving foreign investors the right to name an island. "It's not as if we have run out of ideas to name our own islands. It should not be a difficult task for us to come up with our own names," he said.
Maritime activist Armand Manila, meanwhile, sees a broader threat to the country's maritime identity beyond the mere matter of names.
"Privatisation or commercialisation of coastal areas could sink local residents into structural impoverishment," said Mr Manila, who is the acting secretary-general of the People's Coalition for Equal Fisheries (Kiara), a grouping of environmental and social groups.
He said local residents had the traditional rights to passage in the waters off an island, to fish in its surrounding maritime area, access to clean water, and to benefit from the environment's natural resources.
"They could lose these rights due the commercialisation and privatisation of an island," he said. "There are already examples of local people being barred from fishing in their traditional fishing grounds because they lie within 1.5 kilometres of the coastline of a privately managed island.
"They are being evicted from their source of livelihood because they are considered to have the potential to destroy the maritime environment which serves as the island's tourism attraction."
http://www.bangkokpost.com/business...ame-your-own-island-indonesia-tells-investors
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Hey Pak Luhut, I want to name an island too >> Katarawaii
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