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The city, PIK 2, is worth about $16 billion and is intended to drive tourism to the area. Bloomberg reported the developers are in touch with partners in China and Singapore to build a port at PIK 2. Indonesian business tycoons are moving ahead with an ambitious real estate project: building a new city in North Jakarta to boost tourism. The publicly traded parent company behind the project — PT Pantai Indah Kapuk Dua — has a $16 billion market capitalization. AdvertisementRepresentatives for Kusuma at PT Pantai Indah Kapuk Dua and Agung Sedayu Group did not respond to requests for comment from Business Insider.
Persons: Agung, Sugianto Kusuma —, Salim, Anthoni Salim, Agung Sedayu, Kusuma, It's, Joko Widodo Organizations: Bloomberg, Salim Group, PT, Hatta, Forbes, Nusantara, Kusuma, Agung Sedayu, Business Locations: North Jakarta, The, China, Singapore, Agung Sedayu, Kapuk, Soekarno, Indonesia, Jakarta, East Kalimantan, Borneo, Kapuk Dua, Agung
The Punan people of the island of Borneo were once rumored to have tails, so elusive did they seem to their neighbors in the 19th century. Over decades, the Indonesian government stripped the Punan of their ancestral lands and encouraged them, sometimes forcibly, to settle in ready-built villages. By the 1990s, anthropologists believed that the group’s traditional hunter-gatherer lifestyle had vanished. In 2002, a census of the Punan in eastern Borneo focused only on the villages, because so few nomads were thought to exist. But with funding from the National Science Foundation, the scientists made contact with the nomadic group in 2018, and began collecting data with the aim of ensuring their health and welfare.
Persons: Stephen Lansing, Pradiptajati Organizations: Santa Fe Institute, Riady, for Nanotechnology, National Science Foundation Locations: Borneo, Indonesian, Tangerang, Indonesia
"We didn't just win the election but we won it in a landslide," said CPP spokesperson Sok Eysan. Hun Sen, 70, has ruled Cambodia for nearly four decades, with an increasingly heavy hand in recent years that has all but wiped out the opposition. Last week, Hun Sen signalled that Western-educated military general Hun Manet "could be" prime minister by next month. A group of parliamentarians from across Southeast Asia said the election was a "coronation for Hun Sen and his cronies". PM Hun Sen called on them to "confess" or face legal consequences.
Persons: Hun, Hun Manet, Sok Eysan, Hun Sen, Matthew Miller, Washington, Hun Sen's, Miller, Eva Kusuma Sundari, Prak Chan Tul, Chanta Lach, Simon Lewis, Kanupriya Kapoor, Michael Perry Organizations: Cambodian People's Party, Candlelight Party, Pro, State Department, ASEAN Parliamentarians, Human Rights, Thomson Locations: PHNOM PENH, United States, Cambodia, Phnom Penh, Southeast Asia, Washington
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