Refleksi :  Kalau desak-desakan kendaraan ini karena rezim berkuasa tidak 
mengerti atau mungkin juga tidak mempunyai politik perencanaan regional dan 
sistem transportasi umum yang dibutuhkan sesuai dengan pertumbuhan demografi. 
Tentu  juga hal ini dihantui oleh korupsi yang mendarah daging dikalangan 
penguasa NKRI. 65 tahun dirgahayu? 

http://www.smh.com.au/world/motorbike-madness-at-end-of-ramadan-20100908-151au.html

Motorbike madness at end of Ramadan 
Tom Allard HERALD CORRESPONDENT 
September 9, 2010 
 
Going home ... millions of Indonesians laden with gifts leave Jakarta to return 
to their villages to celebrate Idul Fitri Photo: Reuters

JAKARTA: The annual exodus of Indonesians back to their villages has brought 
chaos on the country's dilapidated roads, with motorists complaining of 
interminable delays and reports of traffic snarls stretching for dozens of 
kilometres.

Known as mudik - going home - as many as 30 million Indonesians return to their 
villages by car, boat, train, plane and, most typically for the working poor, 
by motorcycles, to celebrate Idul Fitri, which starts tomorrow at the end of 
the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan.

The biggest movement of people comes from Jakarta - an estimated 3 million 
people leave laden with gifts and cash to hand out to friends and relatives.

Despite a ban on more than two people riding on a motorcycle, it is not 
uncommon to see entire families and their presents on the one small motor 
scooter, children sandwiched between their parents and gifts dangling from the 
side.

More than 200 people have died in the past few days as a result of accidents, 
most of them involving motorcycles.

But the two-wheelers are typically faster than cars.

The Ministry of Transport has set up a system allowing mobile phone users to 
SMS information about traffic jams and receive updates on the latest congestion 
points.

On the internet, accessible by third-generation mobile phones, there is TV 
footage of traffic points, interactive maps and information on bus and train 
timetables.

But the technology cannot make up for the sheer numbers or for Indonesia's 
system of poorly maintained and narrow roads, augmented by the occasional toll 
road.

Rudi Aliyafi, a Jakarta resident travelling with his family to his wife's 
village in Central Java, says it has taken him 18 hours to drive 475 kilometres.

''It can be really boring for the kids,'' he said of the marathon journey.

While Jakarta's exit routes are clogged, the city itself - usually in perpetual 
gridlock - will see its streets almost deserted for a blissful few days.


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