http://www.asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=5367&Itemid=226

      Why Can't Jakarta Build a Road?      
      Written by Our Correspondent     
      Friday, 26 April 2013  
        
             
            Road to nowhere 
      Vital elevated roadway on hold as the city and the contractor blame each 
other

      One day a month or two ago, work suddenly and mysteriously ceased on a 
crucial 3.4 km throughway linking congested Central Jakarta to equally 
congested Kampung Melayu in East Jakarta. In a city regularly listed as being 
among the world's 10 worst cities for traffic, the elevated piece of road is 
supposed to make things a little easier.

      The roadway has been under construction since late 2010, snarling traffic 
and creating various road delays in the process. The end - and relief  seemed 
near. But it wasn't until a newspaper reporter saw that work had stopped that 
anybody in the government bothered to tell the public what was going on. The 
company doing the job pulled back because it was no longer being paid by the 
city. But like many things here, it is not all that simple. 

      Jakarta Deputy Governor Basuki Tjahaja Purnama said the city 
administration stopped payment with the crucial road link 90 percent complete 
to order a government audit. Basuki wondered why the road, which was started 
under the previous administration that left office in 2012, wasn't already 
finished. "I just want to check to see if the project has any indication of 
default," he said. 

      The state-owned construction company doing the work, Istaka Karya, said 
the city made a mess by not disbursing additional funds; the city says funding 
for the Rp840 billion (US$86.4 million) project was supposed to end in December 
and that there is no budget for the road in 2013. City officials say additional 
funding can't be released without an audit.

      But yet another official, Sarwo Handayani, chief of the Jakarta 
Development Planning Agency, told a local newspaper that there is still funding 
to complete the road. "It is impossible that the continuation of the project 
was not budgeted in the City Budget. We certainly budgeted it. But let me check 
again," she said.

      "It may very well be that an audit is a good idea but it shows the 
difficulty the new Jokowi administration faces in getting things done," said a 
western consultant. "To stop this flyover in the middle of the city, prolonging 
the traffic misery because they cut off the funds, I fail to see how that helps 
ease possible irregularities. It still has to be finished." Basuki said Istaka 
Karya decided to put the project on hold, not the city administration, telling 
reporters that the contractor "maybe ran out of money." The contractor says it 
has until June to complete the contract. 

      To say the connector is crucial is an understatement - it will allow 
thousands of cars an hour to pass above a road called Jalan Casablanca that is 
already overflowing with shopping malls and is barely passable. A similar 
overpass in the south of the city begun about the same time opened several 
months ago. Indonesia and Jakarta may be booming economically but life is 
getting worse daily on the streets of a metropolitan area with more than 25 
million people that aspires to international status. 

      New Jakarta Governor Joko "Jokowi" Widodo vowed to clean up the traffic 
situation when he came into office in September - as did his predecessor Fauzi 
Bowo during the five years of his term. The World Bank, the governor and others 
have predicted total gridlock for the city as early as 2014 if something isn't 
done. Mass transit projects are discussed but delayed and new interior roads 
like the stalled flyover are rarely built, despite developers being allowed to 
throw up one megamall after another with no supporting infrastructure. 

      As Indonesia has continued to prosper, with gross domestic product 
expanding at an average 5.4 percent over a decade, and rising to 6.10 percent 
in the fourth quarter of 2012, cars and motorcycles have expanded right along 
with GDP. It is estimated that 200 new cars are sold in Jakarta every day, 
along with 1,000 new motorbikes. Public transport is sparse, crowded and 
unreliable. It takes anywhere from 90 minutes to two hours to get to work. The 
number of new vehicles is increasing by 11.26 percent every year, according to 
the traffic department, while the number of new roads has only increased by 
0.01 percent - in effect, zero. 

      Police say that 20.7 million people enter and leave the city daily - 56.8 
percent of them in their own vehicles. When the government banned cars with 
fewer than three passengers from a few key roads at rush hours that just 
created a whole new class of low-level entrepreneur - "jockeys" who stand along 
the roadways with their fingers out indicating they are willing to ride to the 
driver's destination for the equivalent of about one US dollar. 

      Back at the road there is a tantalizing small gap just waiting for the 
roadbed to be lifted into place by one of the now-silent cranes. The City 
Council has called on the administration to immediately pay the additional Rp 
24 billion needed to resume construction, demanding that the roadway be 
completed as soon as possible. 

      "The longer the city administration holds back on the payment, the longer 
the public will have to wait for construction of the elevated road to be 
finished," a councilman told the Jakarta Globe, blaming red tape for the 
refusal to disburse funds. He faulted Governor Joko for failing to make good on 
his campaign promise to streamline the bureaucracy.

      Kasman Muhammad, president director of Istaka Karya, told the news portal 
Vivanews.com: "I actually predicted the funds would be disbursed in March," 
adding that the company could not speed up construction due to the limited 
budget and lack of workers.

      Kasman said the company's employees stopped working because they were not 
convinced that the city would disburse any more funds.

      "Up to present, we have Rp 24 billion [$2.5 million] in arrears for 
workers' salaries in the project construction," he told Vivanews, adding that 
the city administration had stopped disbursing funds in January. 

      Meanwhile, it's a Friday evening and traffic is stuck in virtually every 
direction in Jakarta. It is what they call here "macet total" - a total traffic 
jam. If you happen to be in your car or on a crowded bus on such an evening you 
have plenty of time to think about why it has to be like this.
     


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