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Ciomas is a town and an administrative district in Bogor Regency, West Java, Indonesia. It is located east of the provincial border with Banten Province, about 21 kilometres southwest of the regency capital Cibinong , and 3 kilometres west of the city center of Bogor , to which it is largely suburban. [ 3 ]
This article is part of a series on: Subdivisions of Indonesia; Level 1; Provinces (provinsi or daerah istimewa) (GDP; GDP per capita; HDI; poverty rate); Island population)Level 2
He was captured in 2017 at Babakan Ciparay District, Bandung for being involved in terrorism and sentenced in the same year. [13] He was released in 2021 after completing his sentence in full term. [14] As revealed by his step-grandfather, the perpetrator was very polite but was a very reclusive person.
Sectoral Police (Polsek) are led by a Police Superintendent (AKBP) or Police Commissioner (Kompol) (for urban divisions), while in other Poldas, Polseks are led by officers of Police chief inspector (AKP) rank for Rural areas. In some areas which are remote like Papua, a Polsek may be led by a Police Inspector 2nd Class (Ipda).
Port of Kuala Tanjung, Batubara Regency, North Sumatra; Port of Bakauheni, South Lampung Regency, Lampung; Port of Belawan, Medan, North Sumatra; Port of Tanjung Api-Api, Banyuasin Regency, South Sumatra
Bandung: 487 7,065,000 Bandung metropolitan area has more dense urban population than Surabaya metropolitan area. 3 Surabaya: 911 6,499,000 Surabaya metropolitan area has a larger population than Bandung metropolitan area, but comprises more rural areas than the later. 4 Medan: 478 3,632,000 Medan is the largest urban area outside of Java island.
Bandung Regency (Kabupaten Bandung) is an administrative landlocked regency located to the south, southeast, east and northeast of the city of Bandung.The northern parts of the Bandung Regency are effectively part of Greater Bandung (technically the whole of the Regency is within the Bandung Metropolitan Area), with the southern third being less urbanized and jutting upwards from the Valley ...
Football hooliganism has had a long history in Indonesia, with at least 95 football-related deaths between 2005 and 2018. [14] [15] [16] Several teams' fan clubs have so-called "commanders", and riot police units are present at many matches, with flares often being used to disperse rioting crowds invading the pitch. [17]