The Borneo Post

Indonesia willing to barter palm oil, coffee for Russian fighter jets

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JAKARTA: Indonesia said yesterday it would trade palm oil, coffee and tea for Russian fighter jets, saying it wanted to capitalise on internatio­nal sanctions on Moscow as Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov was due to arrive for a visit.

Indonesia and Russia signed a memorandum of understand­ing to exchange 11 Russian- made Sukhoi fighters for key commoditie­s in Moscow last week, a spokesman for Indonesia’s trade ministry said.

“The idea was proposed last year and some people suggested Indonesia should trade the jets with our main commoditie­s,” spokesman Marolop Nainggolan told AFP.

The EU and US have targeted Russia with sanctions for alleged meddling in the US presidenti­al election and its annexation of Ukraine’s Crimea.

However, Indonesian Trade Minister Enggartias­to Lukita has said the sanctions, which have forced Russia to seek new markets to import from, could be good news for Jakarta.

“It’s an opportunit­y which should not be lost from our grasp,” he said in Moscow last week.

The deal, to be carried out between Russia’s Rostec and PT Perusahaan Perdaganga­n Indonesia, could be an opening for a further bilateral trade deal that extended to energy and aviation, Lukita said.

The exact timeframe and value of the exchange were not clear.

Details of the barter came as Lavrov was to begin his two-day visit to Southeast Asia’s biggest economy later Tuesday. — AFP

 ??  ?? This photo taken on August 6, shows a man riding a bicycle past an oil palm plantation in Aceh. Indonesia said yesterday it would trade palm oil, coffee and tea for Russian fighter jets, saying it wanted to capitalise on internatio­nal sanctions on...
This photo taken on August 6, shows a man riding a bicycle past an oil palm plantation in Aceh. Indonesia said yesterday it would trade palm oil, coffee and tea for Russian fighter jets, saying it wanted to capitalise on internatio­nal sanctions on...
 ??  ?? Commonweal­th Bank (CBA) chief executive office Ian Narev. Commonweal­th Bank of Australia yesterday scrapped its chief executive’s bonus for damaging the bank’s reputation amid allegation­s it broke money-laundering and counter-terrorism financing laws,...
Commonweal­th Bank (CBA) chief executive office Ian Narev. Commonweal­th Bank of Australia yesterday scrapped its chief executive’s bonus for damaging the bank’s reputation amid allegation­s it broke money-laundering and counter-terrorism financing laws,...

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