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Touring the world's capitals, President Joko Widodo clearly has little taste for the sort of diplomacy enjoyed by predecessor Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono in his single-minded pursuit of foreign investment.
Extolling the virtues of doing business in Indonesia, Widodo wants capital for urgently needed infrastructure development and to reenergize the manufacturing sector as the new driver of a revived Indonesian economy.
It has been more than six months since devastating forest fires in Sumatra and Kalimantan caused the annual havoc not only in Indonesia but also in neighboring Singapore and parts of Malaysia. There were loss of life, health hazards and massive environmental degradation.
With another dry season just around the corner and about 50 hotspots already detected by the Meteorology, Climatology and Geophysical Agency (BMKG) in Sumatra and the Riau archipelago, the question that needs to be asked is just how ready we are to deal with yet another potential disaster.
Last month's incident, in which two armed Chinese Coast Guard vessels seized back a captured trawler inside Indonesia's 12-nautical mile territorial limit has presented the Joko Widodo government and the Indonesian military with a whole new ball game in the South China Sea they can hardly ignore.
Jakarta may not be a claimant to the disputed Spratly Islands, but China's assertion that the 200-ton Kway Fey was in 'traditional Chinese fishing grounds' suggests Beijing does not recognize Indonesia's 200-mile economic exclusion zone (EEZ) either.
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