A legacy project of outgoing President Joko Widodo, Nusantara
has suffered construction delays and funding shortages due to
the COVID-19 pandemic, a lack of foreign investment, and more
recently, resignations of project leaders.
In Saturday's celebration of the country's independence from
Japanese rule that ended in 1945, the number of attendees was
cut to 1,300 guests, down from 8,000 initially, as lodgings and
food supply were limited, Jokowi, as the president is popularly
known, said earlier this week.
Hundreds of attendees from local communities and construction
workers joined the ceremony under red umbrellas, with several
under-construction buildings behind them.
Mulyana, a 38-year-old construction worker at the new capital,
said he spent the last nine months to build a ministry office
building which was partially used on Saturday for the
celebration amid limited infrastructure to move the materials.
"For five months we work in 24-hour shifts, due to limited
access we need two to three hours (daily) to move the concrete
using heavy equipment," Mulyana, who like many Indonesians has a
single name, told Reuters on Friday, adding that when he came a
year ago, water and electricity supply were limited at the site.
Nusantara is being built in a forested pocket in the eastern
side of Borneo island, about 1,200 km (745 miles) from the
current capital, Jakarta, on Java island.
Jokowi has sought to shore up confidence in the $32 billion
mega-project in recent months, breaking ground for hotels and
office buildings and holding the first cabinet meeting in the
eagle-shaped new state palace.
But he has also said plans to relocate thousands of civil
servants to Nusantara could be postponed, subject to the
readiness of the capital city, after previously ordering them to
pack up and move in September.
Incoming president Prabowo Subianto, who also attended
Saturday's ceremony, has promised to continue Nusantara.
A parallel celebration was also held in Jakarta, where most of
the music and dances were performed.
(Reporting by Willy Kurniawan in Nusantara, Writing by
Bernadette Christina; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman)
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