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North Kalimantan

Coordinates: 3°00′N 116°20′E / 3.000°N 116.333°E / 3.000; 116.333
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North Kalimantan
Kalimantan Utara
Province of North Kalimantan
Provinsi Kalimantan Utara
Coat of arms of North Kalimantan
Motto(s): 
Benuanta (Tidung)
بنوانتا
Our land that needs to be developed and safeguarded
   North Kalimantan in    Indonesia
OpenStreetMap
Map
Coordinates: 3°00′N 116°20′E / 3.000°N 116.333°E / 3.000; 116.333
Established17 November 2012[1]
CapitalTanjung Selor
2°50′45″N 117°22′00″E / 2.84583°N 117.36667°E / 2.84583; 117.36667
Largest cityTarakan
3°19′30″N 117°34′40″E / 3.32500°N 117.57778°E / 3.32500; 117.57778
Government
 • BodyNorth Kalimantan Provincial Government
 • GovernorZainal Arifin Paliwang (Gerindra)
 • Vice GovernorYansen Tipa Padan
Area
 • Total70,650.73 km2 (27,278.40 sq mi)
Highest elevation
(Mount Apad Runan)
2,080 m (6,824 ft)
Population
 (mid 2023 estimate)[2]
 • Total746,201
 • Density11/km2 (27/sq mi)
Demographics
 • Ethnic groupsMalays, Bajau, Banjarese, Buginese, Bulungan, Dayak, Kenyah, Tahol, Tausūg, Lundayeh, Tidung
 • ReligionIslam (70.97%)
Christianity (28.32%)
- Protestant (21.10%)
- Catholic (7.22%)
Buddhism (0.65%)
Hinduism (0.06%)[3]
 • LanguagesIndonesian (official)
Dayak, Tidung, Sabah Malay (regional)
Time zoneUTC+8 (WITA)
GDP (nominal)2022
 - Total[4]Rp 138.7 trillion (26th)
US$ 9.3 billion
Int$ 29.2 billion (PPP)
 - Per capita[5]Rp 190.6 million (3rd)
US$ 12,837
Int$ 40,056 (PPP)
 - Growth[6]Increase 5.34%
HDIIncrease 0.725 (21st) – high
Websitekaltaraprov.go.id

North Kalimantan (Indonesian: Kalimantan Utara) is a province of Indonesia. It is located on the northernmost of Kalimantan, the Indonesian part of the island of Borneo. North Kalimantan borders the Malaysian states of Sabah to the north and Sarawak to the west, and by the Indonesian province of East Kalimantan to the south. Tanjung Selor serves as the capital of the province, while Tarakan is the largest city and the financial centre.

Formed on 25 October 2012, North Kalimantan was separated from the province of East Kalimantan to reduce development disparity and Malaysia's influence over the territory.[7] North Kalimantan covers 70,650.73 square kilometres and consists of four regencies and one city. It had a population of 524,656 at the 2010 Census[8] and 701,784 at the 2020 Census,[9] making it at that time the least populous province in Indonesia,[10] until the subsequent creation in 2022 of the new provinces of South Papua (which became the new least populous province), West Papua and Southwest Papua. The official estimate as at mid 2023 was 746,201 people (comprising 391,845 males and 353,356 females).[2] Most of the province is sparsely populated.

History

[edit]

North Kalimantan is the territory of the Sultanate of Bulungan, which was founded by a group of coastal Kayan. Around the 16th century, a Kayan princess called, Asung Luwan, married a visiting nobleman from Brunei, called Datuk Mencang. From this line a princely state was established, centred in Tanjung Selor, which had territory of Bulungan, Tana Tidung, Malinau, Nunukan, Tarakan, and some part of Sabah. Bulungan was a vassal of Berau, which in turn was a vassal of Kingdom of Kutai. During subsequent wars, the territory fell into the hands of Brunei and after agreements were made with the Sultanate of Sulu, the territory officially came under Sulu control. In 1777, the royal family converted to Islam, with the king Wira Amir changing his name to Aji Muhammad, and title to Sultan Amirul Mukminin. In 1853, The Dutch signed a Politiek Contract to impose their sovereignty over the Bulungan kingdom, Sulu was not able to respond as it was also in a war with Spain. Then in 1881, the British North Borneo Company (BNBC) was formed, placing North Borneo (present-day Sabah) under British jurisdiction, and claiming the region of Tawau. While under Dutch control, the sultan was forced to hand over control of the Bahau river, Pujungan river, and Apo Kayan. After long negotiation with the British, the Dutch recognised the British borders in 1915 which became modern the border between Sabah and North Kalimantan. During World War II, the Japanese occupying forces had an agreements with Bulungan in which they shared natural resources and in exchange the region largely escaped the Romusha system.[11][12]

Bultiken Tragedy

[edit]

In 1963, during the Indonesia–Malaysia confrontation, the Sultanate of Bulungan's position on the formation of Malaysia was ambiguous. In April 1964, it was reported that a document was found proving the ties between Bulungan aristocracy and Malaysia and in conflict would support the formation of Malaysia and in turn join Malaysia. On 24 April 1964, leader of regional military commands Mulawarman, Brigadier General Soeharjo ordered the capture and killing of Bulungan aristocracy. On 2 July 1964, Lt B. Simatupang and Captain Buntaran were received cordially by the Sultan of Bulungan. By 3 July 1964, the palace was invaded by units of Brawijaya 517, the palace was burned and looted, and members of the royal family killed. According to Burhan Djabier in his 1991 book, East Kalimantan: The Decline of a Commercial Aristocracy, the central TNI leadership did not act or replace him because, Brigadier General Soeharjo was a known leftist and politically connected.[13] Most leftists and the PKI were hostile to royals causing parallels the East Sumatra revolution. This is also the position of the sultanate, as according to Dato' Seri Pangeran Sanusi Hussin, the PKI was responsible for the burning of the royal palace and ethnic cleansing.[14]

The surviving royal family fled and became citizens of Malaysia. In 2017, the royal family announced that they were in the process of becoming Indonesian citizens.[14]

Transport

[edit]

Tarakan Airport also known as Juwata International Airport on the eponymous island serves the province, as well as an international ferry port with services to Malaysia from Tawau. There are no international land crossings – entrance into the mainland of the province is by ferry from Tarakan or by road from the south. Large stretches of the roads in this province are of unpaved muddy ditches.[15]

The airport area and runway is also shared with Suharnoko Harbani Air Force Base, a Type A airbase of the TNI-AU (Indonesian Air Force). The airbase is named after the former Minister of Industry of Indonesia, Suharnoko Harbani, who was also formerly an Air Force officer. Formed in 2006, the establishment of this air base is essentially part of the strategy and efforts to realize the defense of the country from the potential and development of threats that will threaten the Indonesia as well as the organization's demands from the Air Force Operations Command II in Makassar to facilitate control of its duties. Before the formation of the Air Base, there was already an Indonesian Air Force post which was under the Balikpapan Air Force Base but due to the development of situation and tension with Malaysia in Ambalat, the leadership of the Air Force decided to form a new airbase. Due to the airport is used both by military and civil aviation, so the apron is also used together. In July 2014, the airport authority initials to build 183 meters taxiway to the military apron which can accommodate 4 Sukhoi and 2 Hercules together and the project is predicted to be finished in December 2014.[16]

The Trans-Kalimantan Highway (Jalan Trans Kalimantan) was finished at early 2019 under the administration of President Joko Widodo. The route connects Pontianak, West Kalimantan with Tanjung Selor, the capital city of North Kalimantan.[17][18]

Government and administrative divisions

[edit]

North Kalimantan is divided into four regencies (kabupaten) and one city (kota), listed below with their areas and their populations at the 2010 Census[8] and 2020 Census,[9] together with the official estimates as at mid 2023.[2]

Kode
Wilayah
Name of
City or
Regency
Area
in
km2
Pop'n
2010
Census
Pop'n
2020
Census
Pop'n
mid 2023
Estimate
Capital HDI[19]
2018 Estimates
65.01 Bulungan Regency 13,181.92 112,663 151,844 165,775 Tanjung Selor 0.712 (High)
65.02 Malinau Regency 38,911.80 62,580 82,510 85,073 Malinau 0.717 (High)
65.03 Nunukan Regency 14,247.50 140,841 199,090 217,923 Nunukan 0.656 (Medium)
65.04 Tana Tidung Regency 4,058.71 15,202 25,584 27,470 Tideng Pale 0.670 (Medium)
65.71 Tarakan City 250.80 193,370 242,756 249,960 Tarakan City 0.756 (High)
Totals 70,650.73 524,656 701,784 746,201 Tanjung Selor 0.705 (High)

The province now forms one of Indonesia's 84 national electoral districts to elect members to the People's Representative Council. The North Kalimantan Electoral District consists of all of the 4 regencies in the province, together with the city of Tarakan, and elects 3 members to the People's Representative Council.[20]

Demographics

[edit]
Historical population
YearPop.±%
1971 119,199—    
1980 176,923+48.4%
1990 232,494+31.4%
2000 315,011+35.5%
2010 524,656+66.6%
2020 701,784+33.8%
2023 746,201+6.3%
Source: Statistics Indonesia 2024 and earlier. North Kalimantan formed a part of East Kalimantan Province until 25 October 2012.

Ethnicity

[edit]

Ethnic groups in North Kalimantan consists of Malays, Dayaks, and Javanese (predominantly), with a significant population of the Tidung, Bulungan, Bajau, Bugis, Suluk, Banjarese, Murut, Lun Bawang / Lun Dayeh, and the other ethnic groups which exist in the province.

Religion

[edit]

Religion in North Kalimantan (2022)[21]

  Muslim (73.41%)
  Protestantism (19.52%)
  Roman Catholic (6.43%)
  Buddhism (0.56%)
  Hinduism (0.05%)
  Confucianism (0.02%)
  Others (0.01%)

According to the 2020 census, 507,780 people are Muslims, 137,540 are Protestants, 42,260 are Roman Catholics, 4,165 follow Buddhism, 344 are Hindus, 151 are Confusians and 11 follow folk religions.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "J.D.I.H. - Dewan Perwakilan Rakyat". Archived from the original on 26 November 2022.
  2. ^ a b c Badan Pusat Statistik, Jakarta, 28 February 2024, Provinsi Kalimantan Utara Dalam Angka 2024 (Katalog-BPS 1102001.65)
  3. ^ "Provinsi Kalimantan Utara Dalam Angka 2019". www.kaltara.bp.go.id (in Indonesian). BPS Provinsi Kalimantan Utara. Retrieved 17 February 2020.
  4. ^ Badan Pusat Statistik (2023). "Produk Domestik Regional Bruto (Milyar Rupiah), 2022" (in Indonesian). Jakarta: Badan Pusat Statistik.
  5. ^ Badan Pusat Statistik (2023). "Produk Domestik Regional Bruto Per Kapita (Ribu Rupiah), 2022" (in Indonesian). Jakarta: Badan Pusat Statistik.
  6. ^ Badan Pembangunan Nasional (2023). "Capaian Indikator Utama Pembangunan" (in Indonesian). Jakarta: Badan Pembangunan Nasional.
  7. ^ "Kalimantan Utara Menggeliat" (in Indonesian).
  8. ^ a b Biro Pusat Statistik, Jakarta, 2011.
  9. ^ a b Badan Pusat Statistik, Jakarta, 2021.
  10. ^ "Badan Pusat Statistik Provinsi Kalimantan Utara". Archived from the original on 28 April 2019. Retrieved 30 April 2019.
  11. ^ "Kesultanan Bulungan yang Enggan Berperang". Indonesia.go.id (in Indonesian). 22 September 2019. Retrieved 12 September 2021.
  12. ^ "The rise and fall of Bulungan sultanate, a Muslim kingdom with Kayan roots • KajoMag". KajoMag. 7 June 2021. Retrieved 12 September 2021.
  13. ^ Raditya, Iswara N (23 August 2017). "Tragedi Pembantaian Bulungan di Perbatasan Malaysia". tirto.id (in Indonesian). Retrieved 12 September 2021.
  14. ^ a b "50 Tahun Hijrah ke Malaysia, Raja Bulungan Ingin Balik Indonesia". liputan6.com (in Indonesian). 9 March 2017. Retrieved 12 September 2021.
  15. ^ "North Kalimantan: Indonesia's Newest Province and Southeast Asian Geopolitical Tensions".
  16. ^ Fransina (11 October 2014). "Bangun Taxiway 183 Meter dari Apron Lanud Tarakan".
  17. ^ "Foto: Menyusuri Trans Kalimantan, Jokowi Tinjau Program Padat Karya – Katadata.co.id". 19 December 2019.
  18. ^ "Borneo road, railway projects 'world's scariest environmental threat'".
  19. ^ "Pembangunan Manusia | Provinsi Kalimantan Utara". Archived from the original on 12 June 2021.
  20. ^ Law No. 7/2017 (UU No. 7 Tahun 2017) as amended by Government Regulation in Lieu of Law No. 1/2022 and Regulation of General Elections Commission No. 6/2023.
  21. ^ "Jumlah Penduduk Menurut Agama" (in Indonesian). Ministry of Religious Affairs. 31 August 2022. Retrieved 29 October 2023.
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