City Council supports Monas fence
City Council supports Monas fence
Ahmad Junaidi, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta
Despite protests from the public, the City Council gave the green
light on Wednesday to the city administration's plan to build a
four-kilometer-long fence encircling the National Monument
(Monas) Park in Central Jakarta.
The council's approval comes despite an earlier pledge to
reject the plan.
The chairman of the council's Commission D for developmental
affairs, Sayogo, said after a hearing with officials from the
City Parks Agency that the commission supported the Rp 9 billion
(about US$970,000) project, which is meant to prevent vendors and
prostitutes from operating in the park.
"The project must go forward because (the funding for) it has
been allocated in this year's city budget. However, we hope the
administration will make further efforts to inform the public
about the project," said Sayogo, who is a member of the
Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI Perjuangan) faction.
Nine of the 11 commission members -- six from PDI Perjuangan,
the largest faction in the council -- threw their weight behind
the project.
One of the councillors opposed to the plan, Mukhayar from the
Justice Party, said the fence would reduce the green area open to
the public and would discourage people from holding rallies.
"The plan will restrict the voice of the people because the
park is a popular place to hold rallies," he said.
Monas Park has long been a favorite gathering place for
Jakartans, who have few other options in a city lacking in parks
and open areas.
Used to host the Jakarta Fair until the 1980s, Monas Park's
only function now is as a center of recreation for Jakartans.
A lecturer at the University of Indonesia's School of
Architecture, Karnaya, also attended the hearing at the
invitation of the City Parks Agency. Though he ultimately
supported the project, he said he had reservations.
"I am personally disappointed with the plan, but it is a last-
ditch effort to protect the park," said Karnaya, who has been a
consultant to the administration for about two decades.
Karnaya said the fence was necessary to overcome Jakartans'
inability to keep the 82-hectare park as clean and orderly as
parks in more developed countries.
In a meeting with landscape experts from Trisakti University
on Monday, the councillors supported the view that the project
should be canceled.
Earlier this year, the city began a Rp 14 billion renovation
of the Hotel Indonesia traffic circle on Jl. Thamrin in Central
Jakarta.
The renovated traffic circle, which had been a very popular
location for rallies, will have a five-degree declivity and will
enjoy a constant drizzle from the water fountain in its center.
The new design is believed to be aimed at preventing rallies at
the traffic circle.