The Sun (Malaysia)

Indonesia rations purchases of staples, eyes fuel price cuts

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JAKARTA: Indonesian police have ordered retailers to ration purchases of staple foods to contain panic buying amid a spike in coronaviru­s cases in the country, while the president weighed up a cut in fuel prices to reflect tumbling oil prices.

Indonesian­s have been stocking up on basic necessitie­s, as well as medical supplies, since President Joko Widodo or Jokowi announced the first confirmed cases of the disease in the world’s fourth most populous country on March 2.

Shops have seen long queues of customers stocking up on items such as dried noodles, despite authoritie­s telling the public there was no need for panic buying.

The police’s criminal investigat­ion division has sent a letter to all stakeholde­rs ordering the rationing of purchase of rice for personal use at a maximum of 10kg, sugar at 2kg, cooking oil at four litres and instant noodles at two cartons, according to a copy of the letter reviewed by Reuters.

Police spokesman Argo Yuwono said rationing applied only in areas affected by the virus outbreak. Indonesia has reported 172 cases and at least five deaths as of Tuesday, with most clustered around Jakarta.

“If there is any increase of staple food prices, we will check where the bottleneck­s are and we will take action against hoarding,” Yuwono said via text message.

Prices of garlic, sugar and onions have jumped recently due to disruption­s in imports from China and a late sugarcane harvest, though authoritie­s said new supplies were being imported.

Police officers and state food procuremen­t agency Bulog yesterday inspected supplies of staples in markets around Jakarta, including at wholesale markets, Bulog said in a statement.

Bulog has 1.5 million tonnes of rice in its warehouses, enough to meet rising demand due to the spread of the virus, as well as for the month of Ramadan beginning in late April, the firm said.

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