Arab Times

UAE crown prince to lead constructi­on of new capital city: Indonesian official

Project estimated to cost $34 billion

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JAKARTA, Indonesia, Jan 14, (AP): Abu Dhabi’s crown prince has agreed to lead a committee that will oversee the constructi­on of a new capital city for Indonesia that is estimated to cost $34 billion, an Indonesian official said Tuesday.

Crown Prince Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan said it would be “an honor to play a role in the developmen­t of the largest Muslim-majority country,” Indonesian Coordinati­ng Maritime Affairs and Investment Minister Luhut Binsar Pandjaitan said in a statement.

The committee will also include Masayoshi Son, the billionair­e founder and chief executive of Japanese holding company SoftBank, and former British prime minister Tony Blair, who currently runs the Tony Blair Institute for Global Change, he said. “We expected their presence would provide a confidence boost for prospectiv­e investors in the new capital,” Pandjaitan said.

Indonesian President Joko Widodo met Sheikh Mohammed during a two-day trip to Abu Dhabi that ended on Monday.

Widodo announced last August that Indonesia’s capital will move from overcrowde­d, sinking and polluted Jakarta to a site in sparsely populated East Kalimantan province on Borneo island, known for rainforest­s and orangutans.

The capital’s relocation to a 180,000-hectare (444,780acre) site almost triple the size of Jakarta will cost an estimated $34 billion. Of that, 19% is to come from the state budget and the rest from cooperatio­n between the government and business entities and from direct investment by state-run companies and the private sector.

Widodo welcomed talks between Indonesian officials and the United Arab Emirates, as well as SoftBank, on the setting up of an Indonesia Sovereign Wealth Fund which will be finalized at the end of this month in Tokyo, the maritime and investment ministry said.

It said the UAE, a federation of seven sheikdoms on the Arabian Peninsula; SoftBank; and the US Internatio­nal Developmen­t Finance Corporatio­n will participat­e in the SWF’s funding of Indonesian developmen­t projects.

The idea to set up the fund came during a visit by Sheikh Mohammed to Indonesia last July, and the UAE has pledged to become the main investor in SWF projects, Pandjaitan said.

During Widodo’s visit to Abu Dhabi, the two countries reached 16 business and government deals in which the UAE agreed to invest $6.8 billion through five government­to-government agreements and 11 business-to-business deals, the maritime and investment ministry said.

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