INDONESIA: Mixed progress on MDGs 

JAKARTA, 5 November 2008 (IRIN) - Indonesia is on track to achieve the goal
of halving the number of citizens living in abject poverty and hunger by
2015, a joint government-UN report, Let's Speak Out for MDGs, stated. 

But the report, detailing Indonesia's latest progress in achieving the UN
Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), revealed the country had made little
progress in providing safe drinking water, reducing maternal mortality,
improving child nutrition or tackling several environmental issues. 

The 2008 report released on 29 October stated that the number of Indonesians
living on less than US$1 per day had declined significantly, from 20.6
percent in 1990 to 15.4 percent this year, against 24.2 percent at the
height of the economic crisis in 1997-1998. 

The report stated, however, that 15.4 percent represented more than 34
million Indonesians categorised as poor. Based on recent trends, it should
still be possible to reduce the poverty rate to 7.5 percent by 2015 but the
report was compiled before the global economic crisis. 

"This report shows good cause for optimism that many of the MDGs will be
reached in Indonesia at the national level," El-Mostafa Benlamlih, UN
Resident Coordinator for Indonesia, was quoted as saying in a statement. 

"But the same cannot be said of many poorer provinces and districts which,
by any measure, have remained behind," he stated. 

Although the national poverty rate has decreased, local figures range widely
from a 4.3 percent poverty rate in Jakarta to around 20 percent in Central
Java, and almost 40 percent in Papua. 

Abdurrahman Syebubakar, programme manager in the poverty reduction unit at
the UN Development Program (UNDP) in Indonesia, said that despite progress,
there had been disparities in achievements among the regions, with a
significant number of districts and provinces in the outer islands unlikely
to meet some of the goals. 

Off-targets 

Benlamlih said even in national aggregate terms, some of the targets such as
maternal mortality rates and access to potable water "show very little
progress". 

School enrolment has risen to nearly 95 percent and primary schools have
equal numbers of boys and girls, while in secondary schools there are more
girls than boys, reflecting progress in efforts to promote gender equality,
the report stated. 

The mortality rate for children under five has fallen to 44 per 1,000 live
births, suggesting Indonesia will likely reach the 2015 target of 32 deaths
or less per 1,000 live births. 

The proportion of children immunised against measles has increased to 72
percent in infants and 76 percent among children 12 to 23 months old, but it
needs to be much higher, the report stated. 

The report also cited an HIV/AIDS prevalence of 5.6 percent per 100,000
nationally but at present there is no indication that the country is halting
the spread of the syndrome. 

About 2.5 percent of the population in the eastern Papua region are living
with HIV and there could be 500,000, or even a million, people infected with
HIV/AIDS by 2010 unless effective action is taken, it stated. 

The number of mothers who die during childbirth remains high, at 307 per
100,000 live births, far from the target of 110 in 2015. 

In 2006, only 57.2 percent of the population had access to safe drinking
water. In the same year, the proportion of households with safe sanitation
was 69.3 percent. Many of the systems are sub-standard, with septic tanks
frequently leaking, contaminating ground water. 

"Although they may be safer for the user of the toilet, they are very unsafe
for water supplies," the report stated. "We may seem to be doing well but
that's probably an illusion. We will need to invest more," it concluded. 

atp/bj/mw[END]



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