Indonesian Political, Business & Finance News

Dozens of Illegally Parked Vehicles Towed from North Jakarta District Court, Mostly Motorcycles

| | Source: KOMPAS Translated from Indonesian | Regulation
Dozens of Illegally Parked Vehicles Towed from North Jakarta District Court, Mostly Motorcycles
Image: KOMPAS

JAKARTA - The North Jakarta Transportation Sub-Department (Sudin) has enforced regulations against illegal parking in front of the North Jakarta District Court on Wednesday (22/4/2026). They towed 13 violating vehicles, consisting of five cars and eight motorcycles. The Head of Traffic and Road Transport Operations Section (LLAJR) of the North Jakarta Transportation Sub-Department, Yulza Ramadhoni, stated that officers also removed valve cores from tyres of vehicles that could not be towed due to limited fleet capacity. Owners of the towed vehicles are requested to retrieve them from the North Jakarta Transportation Sub-Department office at Simpang Lima Semper, Koja. “The violators will later be subject to sanctions, including the issuance of statements of undertaking and also ticketing sanctions from the North Jakarta Traffic Unit,” she said. Meanwhile, the Head of the North Jakarta Transportation Sub-Department, Rudy Saptari, assured that they will conduct periodic monitoring to prevent illegal parking from recurring at the location. “Of course, with the coordination already carried out with the District Court, periodic supervision will be done, both by placing officers and through appeals by the District Court to ensure that visitors do not park on the roadway and pavements,” said Rudy. His side will coordinate with the Parking Management Unit (UP) regarding the handling of illegal parking attendants in the area. The Transportation Department will coordinate with the North Jakarta District Court to ensure that the practice of illegal parking around the location does not recur. “In the future, we will also try to coordinate with the court to see if there is any land that can be used to accommodate visitors, especially those attending trials or having business at the court,” he added.

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