Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Postal codes in Indonesia, known in Indonesian as kode pos consist of 5 digits. The first digit indicates the region in which a given post office falls in, The second and third digits indicate the regency (kabupaten) or city (kota madya), The fourth digit indicates the district or kecamatan within the kabupaten or kota,
Regencies are roughly equivalent to American counties, although most cities in the United States are below the counties. [1] Following the implementation of decentralization beginning on 1 January 2001, regencies and city municipalities became the key administrative units responsible for providing most governmental services. [2]
[1] [2] Most of them are operated by Transportation Ministry technical operation units and state-owned PT Angkasa Pura I & II. Based on the 2009 Aviation Law, the government had to transfer air navigation service management from airport operators to a non-profit institution by January 2012 to improve Air traffic services (ATS).
A free-trade zone, known as Batam metropolitan area, is established around Batam. 11 Denpasar: 176 1,326,000 Denpasar is the second largest urban area outside of Java and Sumatra, after Makassar. The urban area is known as Sarbagita. 12 Cirebon: 106 1,146,000
Mojokerto Regency's area is 969.36 km 2, located between 15 m and 3,156 m above sea level. It is divided into northern and southern regions by the Brantas River . The southern region has several mountains, which includes Welirang Mountain (3,156 m), Anjasmoro Mountain (2,277 m) include, and Penanggungan Mountain (1693m).
Tangerang District is an administrative district of Tangerang City, in Banten Province of Indonesia, on the island of Java. It covers an area of 15.79 km 2, and had a population of 126,244 at the 2010 Census [2] and 153,859 at the 2020 Census; [3] the official estimate as at mid 2023 was 165,575. [1]
Tangerang (Sundanese: ᮒᮍᮨᮛᮀ, Indonesian pronunciation: [taˈŋəɾaŋ]) is the city with the largest population in the province of Banten, Indonesia.Located on the western border of Jakarta, it is the sixth largest city proper in the nation (excluding Jakarta, which is classed as a province containing five administrative cities and one regency).
Article 18 paragraph 1 of the 1945 Constitution states that "the Unitary State of the Republic of Indonesia is divided into provincial regions and those provincial regions are divided into regencies and city, whereby every one of those provinces, regencies, and municipalities has its regional government, which shall be regulated by laws."