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Orange Money was rolled-out for the first time in December 2008, in Côte d'Ivoire, with basic services: cash-in and cash-out, airtime top-up, Orange bills payment.After a quiet launch, Orange organised a wide-ranging advertising campaign in Côte d'Ivoire in 2009 gaining between 100,000 and 150,000 subscribers in a year.
This money is known as Oeang Republik Indonesia (ORI; oeang being the old spelling of uang ("money")). Following the negotiated peace treaty in The Hague of 1949, the ORI was withdrawn, and replaced by an internationally recognised Indonesian rupiah.
Orange's former head office in Paris at 6, Place d'Alleray. Orange's head office, since 2012, is based at 78, Rue Olivier de Serres in the 15th arrondissement of Paris. [153] The company's former head office was based at 6, Place d'Alleray in the 15th arrondissement of Paris. [154] The building was the head office from 1998 until 2012.
The first coin-like products found in Indonesia date from the 9th century Buddhist Sailendran dynasty and were produced in Indonesia until the 12th century: gold and silver massa (emas is the modern Indonesian word for "gold"), tahil and kupang, often described with the letter ma for massa or the image of sandalwood flower.
Dana is a digital financial service based in Jakarta, Indonesia, which acts as a digital payment to replace conventional wallets.Founded in 2018, Dana is a digital wallet registered with Bank Indonesia with four licenses including electronic money, digital wallet, money transfer, and digital financial liquidity.
The rupiah immediately fell 7%, with foreign money quickly leaving the country. The investor confidence in Indonesia was shaken, and due to previous deregulations, much of the Indonesian stock market was owned by foreign investors. Local confidence in the currency was also undermined as the population followed suit, selling rupiah for dollars.
Under Indonesian law originally enacted by the Dutch, the government was responsible for the issue of money with values below Rp5 (in Dutch times gulden), and hence all coins bore the name of Indonesia, rather than the central bank. The denominations were Rp0.01, Rp0.05, Rp0.10, Rp0.25 and Rp0.50.
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