| The Jakarta Post
Tuesday, September 28, 2004
Bambang Nurbianto, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta
Dozens of expatriates were shocked by the recent visit of officials of
the Jakarta administration to their apartments at Taman Rasuna in Kuningan,
South Jakarta. The officials carried forms that they were required to
be filled out.
"We were shocked because they came to our apartments in the evening
without prior information. They told us to just fill out the forms. They
said they wanted to reregister all expatriates in the city," James
Davis, one of the foreign tenants, said on Monday.
"I did not know there was a new regulation about expatriates in
the city because I have been living in the apartment for two years without
any problems," he said, recalling his experience two months ago.
Davis was only one of around 36,000 foreigners in Jakarta, who were surprised
by the administration's new policy on foreigners. Only recently they found
out that it was the policy of the Jakarta Population and Civil Registration
Agency.
Agency head Sylviana Murni explained that the registration of expatriates
by the agency was part of the implementation of the newly enacted Bylaw
No. 4/2004 on Population and Civil Registration, which stipulates a number
of new obligations for foreigners.
"Under the new bylaw, all foreigners are required to register themselves
with the agency. The agency will issue a document for each foreigner,
depending on his or her status -- temporary visitor, temporary resident
or permanent resident," she told the press after the dissemination
of the bylaw on Monday.
She said a foreigner with a visitors permit or visa would receive a letter
explaining that he or she had reported his or her presence in Jakarta.
A foreigner with an temporary stay permit would get a foreigner or visitors
identity card (KIP) and a certificate listing family members (SKSKP).
And a foreigner with a permanent stay permit will receive an identity
card for foreigners (KTP WNA) and card listing family members (KK).
Sylviana said her office would issue a guideline for the implementation
of the bylaw next week. The guideline would be used by relevant officials
to carry out their tasks, including conducting raids against those who
violated the bylaw.
With the implementation of the bylaw, she said, foreigners would be the
targets of operasi yustisi (raids against those who live in the capital
without ID cards).
In the past, such a raid was only held for local migrant workers, who
usually move to the city after the Idul Fitri holidays to work as laborers
or in the informal sector. The raids are usually conducted at companies
and boarding houses where migrant workers live.
"We will also conduct operasi yustisi at hotels, apartments, as
well as boarding and rented houses," she said, adding that those
who violated the bylaw could be sentenced to a maximum of three months
in prison or pay a Rp 5 million (US$ 549.45) fine.
Sylviana did not clearly say when the raid would take place but stressed
that it would be after her office finished drafting the guideline.
Jufri, a staff member at the agency, said there were thousands of foreigners
in the city, who had violated their stay permits. He added that many foreigners
used tourist visas to work in various sectors.
"Many of them are working at karaoke clubs, discotheques or even
as prostitutes," he said. |