KONTAN.CO.ID - JAKARTA. Indonesia aims to kickstart President Joko Widodo's ambitious plan to relocate the capital city to the island of Borneo by offering property contracts to investors this year and starting construction work on a state palace, a minister told Reuters. The $33 billion plan was put on the backburner last year due to the pandemic, but National Development Planning Minister Suharso Monoarfa said accelerating the project now should help a post-crisis recovery of Southeast Asia's biggest economy. The plan is, however, contingent on the success of Indonesia's COVID-19 vaccination drive.
"If we can vaccinate one million people per day ... I think we have a strong reason to get on with the new capital city," Suharso said in an interview. Baca Juga: East Timor imposes first coronavirus lockdown over outbreak fears Indonesia aims to inoculate 70 million people by at least July, or about 39% of targeted vaccine recipients, in order to remove some restrictions and allow construction work to commence, he said. In the period from mid-January to Wednesday, authorities had fully vaccinated 2.7 million people. The president, known as Jokowi, announced his plan to build a new capital in 2019, with civil servants due to move from congested and sinking Jakarta on Java island by the end of his term in 2024.