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 Go Indonesia A - Go Deeper  

SOS Children in Indonesia

SOS Children Indonesia

Spread across an archipelago of thousands of islands between Asia and Australia, Indonesia has the world's largest Muslim population. Conflict and violence across the archipelago has harmed, traumatized and displaced children and women on a massive scale. The vast majority of Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) are women and children and is estimated to be some 1.4 million. Indonesia's population grows by about 3 million each year and has high urban population growth, straining its cities capacity to provide housing and social services.

SOS Children began working in Indonesia in 1972 when the first village was built in Lembang, 16km north of Bandung on West Java. SOS Children's Village Lembang began with 13 family houses. It now has a kindergarten, a primary school for over 600 pupils, two vocational training centres providing courses in computer technology, carpentry and metalwork, a social centre and a medical centre. A youth house in Bandung provides accommodation for older children on the verge of independence and finishing their education or vocational training.

The charity built a community in Jakarta in 1984 in Cibubur, on the outskirts of the capital of Jakarta. It has 15 family houses and a youth house, as well as a nursery for 75 children, both from the village and the neighbourhood. The older children attend private or state elementary and secondary schools. At the centre of the village is a 'pendopo', a traditional Indonesian assembly hall, which is used for meetings, parties, dancing and even sports events.

Children at the SOS Children's Village Jakarta

Semarang was the site for the next charity village in 1984, in the capital of Central Java, on the north coast of the island. The village has 14 family homes and a youth house for the older boys, as well as a nursery for up to 75 children. In one corner of the village there are a number of ponds which supply the village with fresh fish, and each SOS family has its own vegetable patch. Some of the youngsters also run a small chicken farm.

SOS Children Bali is situated on the main road from Java to the Balinese capital of Denpasar and has 12 family homes. A large orchard provides the village with fresh fruit, and two small ponds supply fresh fish. Children are brought up following Balinese cultural traditions. Sport is very popular at this village and the girls' volleyball team has been very successful. The SOS nursery provides pre-school education for 75 children from the village and the surrounding neighbourhood, and there are three youth houses in Denpasar for adolescents taking their first steps towards independence.

The charity decided to build a village on the island of Flores was taken after the devastating earthquake in December 1992. SOS Children Flores opened in 1995 in the village of Waturia, 14km west of the district capital of Maumere.

As the island is frequently struck by earthquakes, the village buildings have special earthquake-proof roof constructions and the floors have been raised to provide protection in the event of a tsunami. There are twelve family houses and a youth house for the older boys. Vegetable gardens have been laid out for each house to provide the families with fresh vegetables and fruit trees were also planted. In 1997 the SOS nursery was opened for children from the village and the neighbourhood.

In 1999, heavy fighting in East Timor between government troops and independence fighters led SOS Children to establish an emergency relief programme, providing shelter at the SOS Children's Village Flores for a group of 130 children from an orphanage in Dili, the capital of East Timor capital. The children stayed in the charity's care for the duration of the war.

SOS Children and the Boxing Day tsunami

On the morning of 26 December 2004, a tsunami, caused by an earthquake off the coast of Indonesia, struck the coastal areas of the Indian Ocean. More than 130,000 people died in Indonesia, and even more lost their homes and thousands of children were separated from their parents. The 200km coastline between the cities of Banda Aceh and Meulaboh was the worst affected area and many families fled the peninsula to seek refuge in neary Medan.

SOS Children was one of the first NGOs offering support to the survivors in Aceh province after the tsunami struck and continues to provide long-term assistance in the area. Many children lost their families and the loss of homes, infrastructure and belongings continues to affect communities.

SOS Children continues to provide communities with the support needed to regain their livelihoods and is currently constructing three new SOS Children's Villages. The villages are located in Meulaboh, Medan and Banda Aceh, and will provide up to 450 children with a new family home. Also under construction are three nursery schools, where children from the new villages and the local community will receive a basic education, and two mosques, to enable the continuation of traditional cultural and spiritual practices.

Country Map

SOS Children Sponsorship Locations in Indonesia

Local contacts

SOS Desa Taruna Indonesia
JI. Sari Endah 9
Gegerkalong
Bandung 40152 / Indonesia
Tel +62/22/201 28 81
Fax +62/22/201 10 26
e-mail sosindo@bdg.centrin.net.id

Indonesia Child Sponsorship

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Selected Articles
THE SIGNIFICANCE OF CEPT FOR INDONESIA: INDONESIA'S TRADING WITH ASEAN COUNTRIES
Indonesia's main trading partner in ASEAN is Singapore. For example in 1990 the value of Indonesia's exports to ASEAN countries totalled US$ 2,515 million...the ASEAN countries is dropping. This is in line with Indonesia's policy to try to bypass Singapore as a transit country...
March 23, 1992; Indonesian Commercial Newsletter

INDONESIA'S TRADE SURPLUS WITH THE US DOWN STEADILY
Indonesia's trade surplus with the US has continued to decrease for the past three years. Indonesia is even estimated to have had a trade deficit with the US in 1991. The decreasing amount of Indonesia's trade surplus with the US has been caused by the fact...
February 24, 1992; Indonesian Commercial Newsletter

Indonesia: The Great Transition.(Critical essay)
Indonesia: The Great Transition. Edited by John Bresnan. New York...in the United States. Its editor is John Bresnan, an Indonesia specialist based at Columbia University. The book is...the editor's term, the great transition experienced by Indonesia. Using a multi-dimensional approach, it encompasses ...
December 1, 2006; Contemporary Southeast Asia

Indonesia's booming textile sector signals growth area for U.S. cotton.
Indonesia's Booming Textile Sector Signals Growth Area for U.S. Cotton Textiles have played a major role in Indonesia's economic growth, which is one of the fastest in the...credit terms, the United States traditionally has been Indonesia's major cotton supplier and U.S. cotton is expected to...
January 1, 1991; AgExporter

INDONESIA'S AUTOMOTIVE INDUSTRY JOINS BBC ASEAN PROGRAM
Indonesia has finally signalled its willingness to take part in...Complementation' (BBC) ASEAN program in the near future. However, Indonesia suggests that this program be applied not only to holders...the tough negotiations among participants. Nonetheless, Indonesia's decision to participate in this ...
July 11, 1994; Indonesian Commercial Newsletter

INDONESIA - Part 1 - The Prospects.
Indonesia can only produce 950,000 b/d of crude oil and less than...oilfields can be offset by production from new fields, Indonesia now consumes 1.2 million b/d of oil. Oil and condensate...from 1.5m b/d in early 2001 and 1.6m b/d in 1997. But Indonesia's OPEC quota, excluding condensate/NGL, is 1.399m ...
February 28, 2005; APS Review Oil Market Trends

Indonesia.
Indonesia Hannah R. Messerli Capital: Jakarta Population: 211,100,000 (2001) Language: Bahasa Indonesia (primary); also Javanese, Dutch and English used widley...064,217 (2000) per Bandan Pusat Statistik, Republic of Indonesia Total receipts: $5.44 billion (1997) GDP: IDR1,444,617...
December 22, 2002; Country Reports

Results from Indonesia Open Badminton Championship
Results from Indonesia Open Badminton Championship JAKARTA...results from the second round of the Indonesia Open Badminton Championship played...1-Pi Hongyan (France), bt Gilang Vega (Indonesia) 11-0, 11-1 Fransisca Ratnasari (Indonesia...
December 16, 2004; Xinhua News Agency

NEW BREAKTHROUGHS REQUIRED TO ATTRACT FOREIGN TOURISTS INTO INDONESIA
Indonesia's tourism industry is indeed having a bad time. Amidst...tourist arrivals, the special tourist packages which Indonesia has launched in a bid to increase such numbers have turned...the outbreak of a series of incidents and disasters in Indonesia. Many players in the tourism industry and related ...
April 27, 1998; Indonesian Commercial Newsletter

THE DEVELOPMENT OF KWH METER INDUSTRY IN INDONESIA: Imports tend to decline
Indonesia meets its KWH meter requirements with its own production...receiving foreign funding. Most electricity projects in Indonesia are financed with foreign loans. For details of imports of KWH meters, see the table: Indonesia imports KWH meters mostly from European countries and...
September 23, 1991; Indonesian Commercial Newsletter



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